by Fergus Hume
That same evening Eustace came to see Hagar, and told her that he had given notice at Scotland Yard of Smith’s escape, and that the police were now looking for him. While they were talking over this, Vark, pale and scared-looking, made his appearance. He told the engaged pair a piece of news which astonished them not a little.
“I went to the police about Smith,” said he, rubbing his lean hands together, “and I found out that not only one convict escaped, but two.”
“Two!” cried Hagar; “and the second?”
“Is Goliath—your friend Jimmy Dix. He got three years, not two; and he broke prison with Larky Bill.”
“What a fool to come here!” cried Eustace, recovering from his surprise.
“On the contrary, I think he was very wise,” said Hagar; “only I knew him as Goliath, and under that name he was arrested and sentenced. As James Dix, the heir of Jacob, the owner of thirty thousand pounds, no one would suspect him of being an escaped convict. But how did he get rid of his prison clothes?”
“The police told me,” grinned Vark. “The two broke into a house and stole suits to fit ‘em. Bill Smith was wounded by a steel trap, so hid in the ditch where Mr. Lorn found him. Goliath came up here boldly to get his money. If I hadn’t heard his description at Scotland Yard I should never have suspected him.”
“Did you tell them he was here?” asked Lorn, sharply.
“No; but I’ll do so unless he gives me half his money—fifteen thousand pounds. If he does, I’ll smuggle him over to America. If he doesn’t ——”
“Well,” said Hagar, “if he doesn’t, you Judas?”
“I’ll give him up to the police.”
“You beast!” cried the girl, furiously, “you low reptile! You make capital out of everything. Goliath has conferred nothing on you but benefits; why, he warned you about Smith, and so gave himself into your hands; yet you would betray him!”
“I thought you hated the man!” quavered Vark, astonished at this outburst.
“So I do; but I think you might let him enjoy his money in peace. If he has been in jail, he hasn’t deserved it half so much as you.”
“I want half his money,” said the lawyer, sullenly.
“What good will it do?” asked Lorn. “Bill Smith may kill you.”
“I’m not afraid of him!” snapped Vark, turning pale nevertheless. “I have Bolker to stay with me at night, and I’ve got my pistols. Besides, the police are after Bill, so he won’t come here.”
“Yes, he will,” said Hagar, throwing open the door; “he’ll gladly give his own neck to twist yours. Get out of this place, Judas! You poison the air!”
Vark whimpered and protested, but Hagar drove him out and locked the door on him. When in the street, he turned round and shook his fist at the house wherein dwelt the woman he now hated as much as he had loved. She had escaped his toils, she had run clear of the traps he had laid for her; and now, having discharged her trust towards the dead, she was going out into the wide world with the man she loved; poor indeed as regards worldly wealth, but rich in the possession of Lorn’s honest heart. No wonder Vark was wrathful.
The house in which Vark lived, was down by the river, and near that ruinous wharf whither Bill Smith on a certain memorable occasion had dragged Bolker. It was a gloomy old ramshackle mansion, which had seen better days in the early part of the century, but now it was given over to the lawyer, his deaf old house-keeper, and the rats. On the present occasion Bolker was also staying there, by desire of Vark. The wretched solicitor, who had sold so many thieves, and who was now terribly afraid of one, insisted that the lad should stay by him, in case of need. But Nemesis was not to be tricked in that way.
Passing through the gloomy streets on his way to this den, Vark, who had grown a trifle hard of hearing, did not hear the stealthy footfalls of one who stole after him; nor did he see a shadow gliding close at his heels. It was a windy night, and the moon was veiled on occasions by a rack of flying clouds. The lawyer walked slowly on, until he ascended the flight of worn steps which led to his hall door. As he did so, a black cloud swept before the moon, and lingered there so long that Vark could not find the keyhole. When he did so, the door blew open with a crash, and Vark measured his length on the stone pavement of the hall. Bill Smith saw his opportunity of entering the house unnoticed, and flew swiftly up the steps, and past the prostrate man, who was so confused by his fall that he did not know of the man flitting by. At this moment Bill could have killed Vark easily; but he judged that the hall, with the open door, was too public; moreover, he wished to get into the room where the lawyer kept his safe. Vark once dead, and Bill intended to open the safe with his keys, and then escape well laden with plunder. But of all these dark plans against his life and moneys Vark was ignorant.
As he gathered himself up and closed the door, his housekeeper came down the stairs with a candle. Grumbling at her for being late, Vark made her precede him into a little room at the back, looking on to the river. Larky Bill took off his boots, grasped the knife he was carrying, and went after the old man and woman. When he looked through a crack of the door into the room, he started back and swore under his breath, for therein were Bolker and Goliath. Bill began to think he would not be able to kill Vark after all.
He hid in a dark corner as the housekeeper repassed him on the way up the stairs, and then returned to his vantage point near the door of the room, where he could both hear and see. What ensued made him more resolved than ever to kill Vark. Such an ungrateful bloodsucker, thought Bill, did not deserve to live
“I am glad to see you here,” said Vark to Goliath, who rose at his entry. “You got my note asking you?”
“Yes, or I shouldn’t be cooling my heels in this hole of yours?” growled Goliath, savagely. “What do you want?”
“Fifteen thousand pounds,” said Vark, tersely.
“Half the money left by the old ‘un! And why?”
“Because I know you bolted from jail ” replied Vark, coolly, “and that the police are looking for you.”
“Do you intend to give me up?” asked Goliath, grinding his teeth.
Vark rubbed his hands. “Why not?” he snarled. “I gave up Bill Smith and got the reward; but I’d rather have half your money than put you in jail again.”
“I’ve a mind to kill you.”
“Oh, I’m not frightened,” said Vark, with an ugly look. “Bolker sits here, and Bolker has pistols. You can’t kill me.”
“No; I’ll leave Bill Smith to do that,” said Goliath, coolly.
“Bah! I’m not afraid of that ruffian!”
Before Goliath could reply there was a roar like an angry beast’s, the door was burst violently open, and Bill Smith, knife in hand, hurled himself into the room. Vark yelled shrilly like a rabbit caught in a trap, and the next moment was dashed to the ground by the infuriated convict. Bolker ran out of the room crying for the police, and flew through the passage, out of the hall door, and into the windy night. His shrieks roused the neighborhood.
In a flash Goliath saw a chance of gaining a pardon by saving Vark from being murdered. He threw himself on Bill, who was striking blindly with his knife at the struggling lawyer, and strove to wrench him off.
“Let be, curse you!” shrieked the convict. “He sold me; he said he’d sell you! If I swing for it, I’ll kill him!”
“No, d——n you, no!”
Goliath plucked the wretch off the prostrate man like a limpet off a rock; and then commenced a furious struggle between the pair. Vark, wounded and covered with blood, had fainted away. The next moment, while Smith and Goliath were swaying together in a fierce embrace, the room was filled with policemen, brought hither by the shrieking Bolker. Seeing them enter, Bill, wrenching himself free of Goliath, snatched up a revolver, that Bolker had left on the table when he fled, and fired two shots at the prostrate body of his enemy.
“Yah! Brute! Curse you! Die!”
Then he returned to the window which overlooked the river, and kee
ping the police at bay with the pistol, he wrenched it open. Goliath sprang forward to seize him, but Bill, with a howl of rage, dashed the revolver in his face.
“Curse you for rounding on a pal!”
The next moment he had swung himself out of the window, and those in the room heard the splash of his heavy body as it struck the waters of the Thames.
* * * * *
Two months after the foregoing event, a caravan, painted yellow and drawn by a gray horse, was rolling along one of the green lanes leading to Walton-on-Thames. It was the beginning of spring, and the buds were already running along the leafless branches of the trees, while the sharpness of the air was tempered by a balmy breath foretelling the advent of the warm months of the year. Beside the caravan strode a tall dark man arrayed in a rough suit of homespun, and near him walked a woman with an imperial carriage and lordly gait. She wore a dress of dark red, much stained and worn; but her eye was full of fire, and her cheek healthy. The pair were of humble condition, but looked contented and happy. As the horse plodded onward in the bursts of sunlight, the two talked.
“So Vark died, after all, Hagar,” said the man, gravely.
“As you know,” she replied, “the two pistol shots killed him; and Bill Smith was drowned in the river as he attempted to escape. He gave up his life to compass his revenge.”
“I am glad Goliath was pardoned.”
“Oh, as to that,” said Hagar, indifferently, “I am neither glad nor sorry. I think myself that he only strove to save Vark in order to gain pardon.”
“Well, he got what he wanted,” said Eustace, reflectively.
“He wouldn’t if the public hadn’t taken the matter up,” retorted Hagar: “but they made him out a hero. Nonsense! As if Goliath was the man to forgive Vark, who intended to sell him. Well, he is free now, and rich. I dare say he’ll lose all his money in dissipation. He had much better have held on to the pawn-shop, instead of giving it up to Bolker.”
“Bolker is very young to have a business.”
“Don’t you believe it,” replied Hagar, drily. “Bolker is young in years, but old in wickedness. He bought the pawn-shop business with the reward he got from Lord Deacey for recovering the diamonds. Bolker will grind down the poor of Carby’s Crescent, and develop into a second Jacob Dix.”
“You are glad to be away from the pawn-shop?”
“I should think so!” she replied, with a loving glance at Eustace. “I am glad to leave dirty Lambeth for the green fields of the country. I am a gipsy, and not used to the yoke of commerce. Also, my dear, I am glad to be with you always.”
“Are you indeed, Mrs. Lorn?” said her husband, laughing.
“Yes, Mrs. Lorn,” repeated Hagar, very sedately, “I am Mrs. Lorn now, and Hagar of the Pawn-shop, with all her adventures, is a phantom of the past.”
Eustace kissed her, and then chirruped the horse onward. They passed down the lane, across the dancing shadows, and went away hopefully into the green country towards the gipsy life. Hagar of the Pawn-shop had come to her own at last.
Table of Contents
Fergus Hume
CHAPTER I. THE COMING OF HAGAR.
CHAPTER II. THE FIRST CUSTOMER AND
CHAPTER III. THE SECOND CUSTOMER
CHAPTER IV. THE THIRD CUSTOMER AND
CHAPTER V. THE FOURTH CUSTOMER AND
CHAPTER VI. THE FIFTH CUSTOMER AND
CHAPTER VII. THE SIXTH CUSTOMER AND
CHAPTER VIII. THE SEVENTH CUSTOMER
CHAPTER IX. THE EIGHTH CUSTOMER AND
CHAPTER X. THE NINTH CUSTOMER AND
CHAPTER XI. THE TENTH CUSTOMER AND
CHAPTER XII. THE PASSING OF HAGAR.