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For a moment he had an idea of offering him a position in some of the great corporations in which his father was interested, but refrained.
Steven Denby was not the kind of man to brook anything that smacked of patronage and he feared his offer might do that although otherwise meant.
"It means a whole lot more to me than you can think," Denby returned. "I have made up my mind to do it and I think I can get away with it in just the way I have mapped out." Then, with a smile: "Monty, I've a proper respect for your imaginative genius, but I'd bet you the necklace to the tobacco-pouch that you don't understand how much I want to get that string of pearls through the customs."
"The pouch is yours," Monty conceded generously. "How should I guess?
How do I know who's a smuggler or who isn't? Alice says she always gets something through and for all I know may have a ruby taken from the eye of a Hindoo G.o.d in her back hair!"
He looked at his friend eagerly, a new thought striking him. He often surprised himself in romantic ideas, ideas for which Nora was responsible.
"Perhaps you are taking it for someone, someone you're fond of," he suggested.
"Why not?" Denby returned. "If I were really fond of any woman I'd risk more than that to please her."
Monty noticed that he banished the subject by speaking of Alice Harrington's _penchant_ for smuggling.
"I hope Mrs. Harrington won't run any risks," he said. "In her case it is absolutely senseless and unnecessary."
"Oh, they'd never get after her," Monty declared. "She's too big. They get after the little fellows but they'd leave Mrs. Michael Harrington alone."
"Don't you believe it," his friend answered. "They're doing things differently now. They're getting a different cla.s.s of men in the Collector's office."
"I suppose you'd like the old style better," Monty observed.
"Oh, I don't know," said the other. "It's more risky now and so one has to be cleverer. I've often heard it said the hounds have all the fun and the fox none.
"I'm not so sure of that, Monty; I think a fox that can fool thirty couple of hounds and get back to his earth ought to be a gladsome animal."
"I'll find out when we're in West Street, New York," Monty said grimly.
"I'll take particular notice of how this fox acts and where the hounds are. If you harp on this any more I shall lose my appet.i.te. What about Voisin's?"
"Eat lightly," Denby counseled him. "I'm going to treat you to a remarkable meal to-night; I know the chef at the Amba.s.sadeurs, and the wine-steward feeds out of my hand."
"I don't see why you shouldn't buy necklaces like that if you have those Amba.s.sadeurs waiters corralled. They soaked me six francs for a single peach once," Monty said reminiscently. But he wondered, all the same, how it was Steven should be able to fling money away as he chose.
His friend looked at him shrewdly. "You're thinking I ought to patronize the excellent Duval," he observed. "Well, sometimes I do. I think I've patronized most places in Paris once."
"Steve, you're a mystery," Monty a.s.serted.
"I hope I am," said the other; "I make my living out of being just that."
They walked in silence to the Rue St. Honore, Monty still a bit uneasy at being in a crowded place with a friend in whose pocket was a million francs' worth of precious stones. Once or twice as the pocket gaped open he caught a glimpse of the worn pigskin pouch. Steven was taking wholly unnecessary risks, he thought.
As they were leaving Voisin's together after their luncheon it happened that Monty walked behind his friend through the door. Deftly he inserted his hand into the gaping pocket and removed the pouch to his own. He chuckled to think of the object lesson he would presently dilate upon.
When they were near one of those convenient seats which Paris provides for her street-living populace Monty suggested a minute's rest.
With an elaborate gesture he took out the pouch and showed it to Denby.
"Did you ever see this before?" he demanded.
"I've got one just like it," his friend returned without undue interest.
"Useful things, aren't they, and last so much longer than the rubber ones?"
"My pouch," said Monty, beginning to enjoy his own joke, "looks better inside than outside. I keep in it tobacco I grow in my private orchid house. Look!"
He pulled back the flap and held it out to Denby.
Denby gazed in it obediently with no change of countenance.
"You're not a heavy smoker, are you?" he returned.
Instantly Monty gazed into it. It was empty except for a shred of tobacco.
"Good G.o.d!" he cried. "They've been stolen from me and they put the pouch back!"
"What has?" the other exclaimed.
"The pearls," Monty groaned. "I took them for a joke, and now they're gone!"
He looked apprehensively at Steven, meditating meanwhile how quickly he could turn certain scrip he held into ready money.
Steven evinced no surprise. Instead he rose from his seat and placed a foot upon it as though engaged in tying a lace. But he pointed to the cuff on the bottom of the trouser leg that was on the seat by Monty's side. And Monty, gazing as he was bid, saw his friend's slender fingers pick therefrom a string of pearls.
"I know no safer place," Denby commented judicially. "Of course the customs fellows are on to it, but no pickpocket who ever lived can get anything away from you if you cache it there. On board s.h.i.+p I shall carry it in my pocket, but this is the best place in Paris when one is in strange company."
Monty said no word. His relief was too great and he felt weak and helpless.
"What's the matter?" Denby demanded.
"I want a drink," Monty returned, "but it isn't on you."
CHAPTER THREE
THERE are still restaurants in Paris where a well chosen dinner delights the chef who is called upon to cook it and the waiters who serve. And although it is true that most of the diners of to-day know little of that art which is now disappearing, it happened that Steven Denby was one who delighted the heart of the Amba.s.sadeurs' chef.
Monty was a happy soul who had never been compelled to consult his pocketbook in a choice of restaurants, and Mrs. Michael Harrington was married to a gourmand who well distinguished the difference between that and the indefensible fault of gluttony. Thus both of Denby's guests were in a sense critical. They admitted that they had dined with one who agreed with Dumas' dictum that a dinner is a daily and capital action that can only worthily be accomplished by _gens d'esprit_.
There are few places in Paris where a dinner in summer can be more pleasantly eaten than the balcony at the Amba.s.sadeurs, among slim pillars of palest green and banks of pink roses. In the distance--not too near to be disturbed by the performers unless they chose--the three Americans saw that idol of the place, the great Polin at his best.
French waiters do not bring courses on quickly with the idea of using the table a second time during the dining-hour. The financial genius who calculates _l'addition_ knows a trick worth two of that.
Still a little anxious that Denby might not be able to stand the expense, Monty fell to thinking of the charges that Parisian restaurateurs can make. "They soaked me six francs for a peach here once," he said for the second time that day.
"That's nothing to what Bignon used to charge," Alice Harrington returned. "Once when Michael's father was dining there he was charged fifteen francs. When he said they must be very scarce in Paris, Bignon said it wasn't the peaches that were scarce, it was the Harringtons."