The Vultures eBook

Hugh Stowell Scott
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 346 pages of information about The Vultures.

The Vultures eBook

Hugh Stowell Scott
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 346 pages of information about The Vultures.

“It is essential in the first place,” he continued, “that we should understand each other; we the conquerors and you the conquered.”

With a gesture he divided the party assembled into two groups, the smaller of which consisted only of Kosmaroff and another.  And then he looked out of the window with his woman-like, reflective smile.

“We the Russians, and you the Poles.  I fear I have not made myself quite clear.  I understand, however, that we are to trust the last comer entirely, which I do with the more confidence that I perceive that he understands very little of what we are saying.”

Captain Cable’s solid, weather-beaten face remained rigid like a figure-head.  He looked at the speaker with an ill-concealed pity for one who could not express himself in plain English and be done with it.

“Our circumstances are such that no correspondence is possible,” continued the speaker.  “Any agreement, therefore, must be verbal, and verbal agreements should be quite clear—­the human memory is so liable to be affected by circumstances—­and should be repeated several times in the hearing of several persons.  I understand, therefore, that, after a period of nearly twenty years, Poland—­is ready again.”

There was a short silence in that dim and quiet room.

“Yes,” said Kosmaroff, deliberately, at length.

“And is only awaiting her opportunity.”

“Yes.”

One of the Brothers of Liberty, possibly the secretary of that body, which owned its inability to put anything in writing, had provided a penny bottle of ink and a sticky-looking, red pen-holder.  The speaker took up the pen suspiciously, and laid it down again.  He rubbed his finger and thumb together.  His suspicions had apparently been justifiable.  It was a sticky one!  Then he lapsed into thought.  Perhaps he was thinking of the pen-holder, or perhaps of the history of the two nations represented in that room.  He had a thoughtful face, and history is a fascinating study, especially for those who make it.  And this quiet man had made a little in his day.

“An opportunity is not an easy thing to define,” he said at length.  “Any event may turn out to be one.  But, so far as we can judge, Poland’s opportunity must lie in two or three possible events at the most.  One would be a war with England.  That, I am afraid, I cannot bring about just yet.”

He spoke quite seriously, and he had not the air of a man subject to the worst of blindness—­the blindness of vanity.

“We have all waited long enough for that.  We have done our best out on the frontier and in the English press, but cannot bring it about.  It is useless to wait any longer.  The English are fiery enough—­in print—­and ready enough to fight—­in Fleet Street.  In Russia we have too little journalism—­in England they have too much.”

Captain Cable yawned at this juncture with a maritime frankness.

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Project Gutenberg
The Vultures from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.