Alias the Lone Wolf eBook

Louis Joseph Vance
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 352 pages of information about Alias the Lone Wolf.

Alias the Lone Wolf eBook

Louis Joseph Vance
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 352 pages of information about Alias the Lone Wolf.

It was all very theatrical and inspiring—­to Monsieur Duchemin, too; who, lost in the shuffle of Nant and content to be so, murmured to himself that serviceable and comforting word of the time, “Profiteers!” and contemplated with some satisfaction his personal superiority to such as these.

But there was more and better to come.

There remained in the car a mere average man, undistinguished but by a lack of especial distinction, sober of habit, economical of gesture, dressed in a simple lounge suit such as anybody might wear, beneath a rough and ready-made motorcoat.  When the car stopped he had stood up in his place beside the chauffeur as if meaning to get out, but rather remained motionless, resting a hand on the windshield and thoughtfully gazing northwards along the road that, skirting the grounds of the Chateau de Montalais, disappeared from view round the sleek shoulder of a hill.

Now as the pattern chauffeur shut the door to the tonneau with the properly arrogant slam, the man who lingered in the car nodded gravely to some private thought, unlatched the door, got down, and turned toward the cafe, but before following his companions of more brilliant plumage paused for a quiet word with the chauffeur.

“We dine here, Jules,” he announced in English.

Settling into place behind the wheel Jules saluted with fine finish and deference.

“Very good, Mr. Phinuit, sir,” he said meekly, in the same tongue.  To this he added, coolly, without the least flicker of a glance aside, without moving one muscle other than those involved by the act of speech, and in precisely the tone of respect that became his livery:  “What’s the awful idea, you big stiff?”

Mr. Phinuit betrayed not the slightest sense of anything untoward in this mode of address, but looked round to the chauffeur with a slow, not unfriendly smile.

“Why,” he said pleasantly—­“you misbegotten garage hound—­why do you ask?”

In the same manner Jules replied:  “Can’t you see it’s going to rain?”

Mr. Phinuit cocked a calm, observant eye heavenwards.  Involuntarily but unobtrusively, under cover of the little tubbed trees that hedged the terrasse apart from the square, Duchemin did likewise, and so discovered, or for the first time appreciated, the cause of the uncommonly early dusk that loured over Nant.

Between the sentinel peaks that towered above the valley black battalions of storm cloud were fraternising, joining forces, coalescing into a vast and formidable army of ominous aspect.

“So it is,” Mr. Phinuit commented amiably; indeed, not without a certain hint of satisfaction.  “Blessed if you don’t see everything!”

“Well, then:  what about it?”

“Why, I should say you’d better find a place to put the car under cover in case it comes on to storm before we’re finished—­and put up the top.”

“You don’t mean to go on in the rain?” Jules protested—­yet studiously in no tone of protest.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Alias the Lone Wolf from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.