The Man in the Twilight eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 478 pages of information about The Man in the Twilight.

The Man in the Twilight eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 478 pages of information about The Man in the Twilight.

For some moments the fleshy face was turned towards the window which yielded the hum of busy traffic many stories below them.  His narrow eyes were earnestly reflective, but there was no concern in them.  To the waiting man he was simply measuring the threat against him, and probing its possibilities for mischief.

“Yet this fellow.  He on the run is—­Yes?”

The eyes were smiling as they came back again to Idepski’s face.  The agent nodded, flinging his cigarette end into the porcelain cuspidore beside the desk.

“Which makes me all the more sure of the game,” he said confidently.  “He’s rattled.  He’s so scared to death for himself, and for his purpose, he’s getting out.  It’s as clear as daylight to me.  He feels he’s plumb against it if he stops around.  He knows we’ve located him.  He knows what he’s done to me.  He knows all he wants to know of you.  Well, he reckons there’s no sort of chance for him at Sachigo.  And if he stops there’s no sort of chance for this purpose of his.  He reckons to call off the hounds on his own trail, while the feller Harker carries on the good work of squeezing the Swedes.  That’s how I see it.  And I guess I’m right.  Remember I had a year of hell up there to think in, and when I finally got clear away I had two months’ solitary chasing of those woods to think in, and then, when I made the coast, I had the trip down with the folks on the boat to listen to.  He’s scared for his life, and of anything you hope to hand him.  But he’s more scared for the purpose that made him set up that mill at Sachigo.”

Hellbeam leant back in his chair.  His great paunch protruded invitingly and he clasped his hands over it.

“Maybe you’re right,” he said, with an air intended to conciliate.  “Anyway you’ve picked up some pieces and set them together so they make a fancy shape.  But—­it isn’t good.  No.  Here, I think, too.  I see another, way from you.  Without this fellow Sachigo is—­nothing.  See?  I care nothing because of this Harker.  No.  The other—­that’s different.  Yes.  He the brain has.  All this piece you make.  He is capable of it.  But he is on the run.  Good.  I still sleep well while he runs.  Sachigo?  Bah!  It is nothing without Leslie Martin.  Now, go you.  Hunt this man.  Maybe your year of the woods will help you,” he said, with biting emphasis.  “You know the woods?  Well, don’t quit his trail.  Get him.  Get him alive.”

“Oh, I shall get him.  Your urging ain’t needed.  I’ll get him as you say—­alive.  And he knows it.”

Idepski’s cold eyes hardened with a frigid hatred as he spoke.  He had only been paid for the work hitherto.  Now he was implacable.

“But it’s Sachigo I mean to watch,” he went on, after a brief pause.  “I mean to play in that direction.  It’s the home burrow where you lay your traps once your quarry’s on the run.”

Hellbeam nodded.

“That’s good sense.”

“Sure it is,” retorted the agent.  “I’m glad you see it that way,” he added with a smile under which the financier grew restive once more.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Man in the Twilight from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.