________________________________________________
_ Mementoes of Average Jones' exploits in his chosen field hang on the
walls of his quiet sanctum. Here the favored visitor may see the
two red-ink dots on a dated sheet of paper, framed in with the card
of a chemist and an advertised sale of lepidopteroe, which drove a
famous millionaire out of the country. Near by are displayed the
exploitation of a lure for black-bass, strangely perforated (a man's
reason hung on those pin-pricks), and a scrawled legend which seems
to spell "Mercy" (two men's lives were sacrificed to that); while
below them, set in somber black, is the funeral notice of a dog
worth a million dollars; facing the call for a trombone-player which
made a mayor, and the mathematical formula which saved a governor.
But nowhere does the observer find any record of one of the
Ad-Visor's most curious cases, running back two thousand years; for
its owner keeps it in his desk drawer, whence the present chronicler
exhumed it, by accident, one day. Average Jones has always insisted
that he scored a failure on this, because, through no possible fault
of his own, he was unable to restore a document the highest
historical and literary importance. Of that, let the impartial
reader judge.
It was while Average Jones was break of that deadlock of events
which, starting from the flat-dweller with the poisoned face,
finally worked out the strange fate of Telfik Bey, that he sat, one
morning, breakfasting late. The cool and breezy inner portico of
the Cosmic Club, where small tables overlook a gracious fountain
shimmering with the dart and poise of goldfish, was deserted save
for himself, a summer-engagement star actor, a specialist in
carbo-hydrates, and a famous adjuster of labor troubles; the four
men being fairly typical of the club's catholicity of membership.
Contrary to his impeccant habit, Average Jones bore the somewhat
frazzled aspect of a man who has been up all night. Further
indication of this inhered in the wide yawn, of which he was in
mid-enjoyment, when a hand on his shoulder cut short his ecstasy.
"Sorry to interrupt so valuable an exercise," said a languid voice.
"But--" and the voice stopped.
"Hello, Bert," returned the Ad-Visor, looking up at the faultlessly
clad slenderness of his occasional coadjutor, Robert Bertram. "Sit
down and keep me awake till the human snail who's hypothetically
ministering to my wants can get me some coffee."
"What particular phase of intellectual debauchery have you been up
to now?" inquired Bertram, lounging into the chair opposite.
"Trying to forget my troubles by chasing up a promising lead which
failed to pan, out. 'Wanted: a Tin Nose,' sounds pretty good, eh?"
"It is music to my untutored ear," answered Bertram.
"But it turned out to be merely an error of the imbecile, or perhaps
facetious printer, who sets up the Trumpeter's personal column. It
should have read, 'Wanted--a Tea Rose."'
"Even that seems far from commonplace."
"Only a code summons for a meeting of the Rosicrucians. I suppose
you know that the order has been revived here in America."
"Not the true Rosicrucians, surely!" said Bertram.
"They pretend to be. A stupid lot who make child's play of it,"
said Average Jones impatiently. "Never mind them. I'd rather know
what's on your mind. You made an observation when you came in,
rather more interesting than your usual output of table-talk. You
said 'but' and nothing further. The conjunction 'but,' in polite
grammar, ordinarily has a comet-like tail to it."
"Apropos of polite grammar, do you speak Latin?" asked Bertram
carelessly.
"Not enough to be gossipy in it."
"Then you wouldn't care to give a job to a man who can't speak
anything else?"
"On that qualification alone?"
"No-o, not entirely. He is a good military engineer, I believe."
"So that's the other end of the 'but,' is it?" said Average Jones.
"Go on. Elaborate."
Bertram laid before his friend a printed clipping in clear, large
type, saying: "When I read this, I couldn't resist the notion that
somehow or other it was in your line; pursuit of the adventure of
life, and all that. Let's see what you make of it."
Average Jones straightened in his chair.
"Latin!" he said. "And an ad, by the look of it. Can our blind
friend, J. Alden Honeywell, have taken to the public prints?"
"Hardly, I think. This is from the Classical Weekly, a Baltimore
publication of small and select patronage."
"Hm. Looks ra-a-a-ather alluring," commented Average Jones with a
prolonged drawl. "Better than the Rosicrucian fakery, anyhow."
He bent over the clipping, studying these words.
L. Livius M. F. Praenestinus, quodlibet in negotium non inhonestum
qui victum meream locare ve lim. Litteratus sum; scriptum facere
bene scio. Stipendia multa emeritus, scientiarum belli, prasertim
muniendi, sum peritus. Hac de re pro me spondebit M. Agrippa.
Latine tantum solo. Siquis me velit convenire, quovis die mane
adesto in publicis hortis urbis Baltimorianae ad signum apri.
"Can you make it out?" asked Bertram.
"Hm-m-m. Well--the general sense. Livius seems to yearn in modern
print for any honest employment, but especially scrapping of the
ancient variety or secretarying. Apply to Agrippa for references.
Since he describes his conversation as being confined to Latin, I
take it he won't find many jobs reaching out eagerly for him.
Anybody who wants him can find him in the Park of the Wild Boar in
Baltimore. That's about what I make of it. Now, what's his little
lay, I wonder."
"Some lay of Ancient Rome, anyhow," suggested Bertram. "Association
with Agrippa would put him back in the first century, B. C.,
wouldn't it? Besides, my informant tells me that Mr. Livius, who
seems to have been an all-around sort of person, helped organize
fire brigades for Crassus, and was one of the circle of minor poets
who wrote rhapsodies to the fair but frail Clodia's eyebrows,
ear-lobes and insteps."
"Your informant? The man's actually been seen, then?"
"Oh, Yes. He's an view as per advertisement, I understand."
Average Jones rose and stretched his well-knit frame. "Baltimore
will be hotter than the Place-as-Isn't," he said plaintively.
"Martyrdom by fire! However, I'm off by the five-o'clock train.
I'll let you know if anything special comes of it, Bert."
Barye's splendid bronze boar couches, semi-shaded, in the center of
Monument Park, Baltimore's social hill-top. There Average lounged
and strolled through the longest hour of a glaring July morning.
People came and went; people of all degrees and descriptions, none
of whom suggested in any particular the first century, B. C. One
individual only maintained any permanency of situation. He was a
gaunt, powerful, freckled man of thirty who sprawled on a settee and
regarded Average Jones with obvious and amused interest. In time
this annoyed the Ad-Visor, who stopped short, facing the settee.
"He's gone," said the freckled man.
"Meaning Livius, the Roman?" asked Average Jones.
"Exactly. Lucius Livius, son of Marcus Praenestinus."
"Are you the representative of this rather peculiar person, may I
ask?"
"It would be a dull world, except for peculiar persons," observed
the man on the settee philosophically. "I've seen very many
peculiar persons lately by the simple process of coming here day
after day. No, I'm not Mr. Livius' representative. I'm only a
town-bound and interested observer of his."
"There you've got the better of me," said Average Jones. "I was
rather anxious to see him myself."
The other looked speculatively at the trim, keen-faced young man.
"Yet you do not look like a Latin scholar," he observed; "if you'll
pardon the comment."
"Nor do you," retorted Jones; "if the apology is returnable."
"I suppose not," owned the other with a sigh. "I've often thought
that my classical capacity would gain more recognition if I didn't
have a skin like Bob Fitzsimmons and hands like Ty Cobb.
Nevertheless, I'm in and of the department of Latin of Johns Hopkins
University. Name, Warren. Sit down."
"Thanks," said the other. "Name, Jones. Profession, advertising
advisor. Object, curiosity."
"A. V. R. E. Jones; better known as Average Jones, I believe?"
"'Experto crede! Being dog Latin for 'You seem to know all about
it."' The new-comer eyed his vis-ii-vis. "Perhaps you--er--know
Mr. Robert Bertram," he drawled.
"Oculus--the eye--tauri--of the bull. Bull's eye!" said the freckled
one, with a grin. "I'd heard of your exploits through Bertram, and
thought probably you'd follow the bait contained in my letter to
him."
"Nothing wrong with your nerve-system, is there?" inquired Average
Jones with mock anxiety. "Now that I'm here, where is L. Livius.
And so forth?"
"Elegantly but uncomfortably housed with Colonel Ridgway Graeme in
his ancestral barrack on Carteret Street."
"Is this Colonel Graeme a friend of yours?"
"Friend and--foe, tried and true. We meet twice a week, usually at
his house, to squabble over his method of Latin pronunciation and
his construction of the ablative case. He's got a theory of the
ablative absolute," said Warren with a scowl, "fit to fetch Tacitus
howling from the shades."
"A scholar, then?"
"A very fine and finished scholar, though a faddist of the rankest
type. Speaks Latin as readily as he does English."
"Old?"
"Over seventy."
"Rich?"
"Not in money. Taxes on his big place keep him pinched; that and
his passion for buying all kinds of old and rare books. He's got,
perhaps an income of five thousand, clear, of which about three
thousand goes in book auctions."
"Any family?"
"No. Lives with two ancient colored servants who look after him."
"How did our friend from B. C. connect up with him?"
"Oh, he ran to the old colonel like a chick to its hen. You see,
there aren't so very many Latinists in town during the hot weather.
Perhaps eighteen or twenty in all came from about here and from
Washington to see the prodigy in 'the Park of the Boar,' after the
advertisement appeared. He wouldn't have anything to do with any of
us. Pretended he didn't understand our kind of Latin. I offered
him a place, myself, at a wage of more denarii than I could well
afford. I wanted a chance to study him. Then came the colonel and
fairy grabbed him. So I sent for you--in my artless professional
way."
"Why such enthusiasm on the part of Colonel Graeme?"
"Simple enough. Livius spoke Latin with in accent which bore out
the old boy's contention. I believe they also agreed on the
ablative absolute."
"Yes--er--naturally," drawled Average Jones. "Does our early Roman
speak pretty ready Latin?"
"He's fairly fluent. Sometimes he stumbles a little on his
constructions, and he's apt to be--well--monkish--rather than
classical when in full course."
"Doesn't wear the toga virilis, I suppose."
"Oh, no. Plain American clothes. It's only his inner man that's
Roman, of course. He met with bump on the head--this is his story,
and he's got a the scar to show for it--and when he came to, he'd
lost ground a couple of thousand years and returned to his former
existence. No English. No memory of who or what he'd been. No
money connection whatsoever with the living world."
"Humph! Wonder if he's been a student of Kippling. You remember
'The Greatest Story in the World; the reincarnated galley slave?
Now as to this Colonel Graeme; has he ever published?"
"Yes. Two small pamphlets, issued by the Classicist Press, which
publishes the Classical Weekly."
"Supporting his fads, I suppose."
"Right. He devoted one pamphlet to each."
Average Jones contemplated with absorbed attention an ant which was
making a laborious spiral ascent of his cane. Not until it had
gained a vantage point on the bone handle did he speak again.
"See here, Professor Warren: I'm a passion ate devotee of the Latin
tongue. I have my deep and dark suspicions of our present modes of
pronunciation, all three of 'em. As for the ablative absolute, its
reconstruction and regeneration have been the inspiring principle of
my studious manhood. Humbly I have sat at the feet of Learning,
enshrined in the Ridgway Graeme pamphlets. I must meet Colonel
Graeme--after reading the pamphlets. I hope they're not long."
Warren frowned. "Colonel Graeme is a gentleman and my friend, Mr.
Jones," he said with emphasis. "I won't have him made a butt."
"He shan't be, by me," said Average Jones quietly. "Has it perhaps
struck you, as his friend, that--er--a close daily association with
the psychic remnant of a Roman citizen might conceivably be
non-conducive to his best interest?"
"Yes, it has. I see your point. You want to approach him on his
weak side. But, have you Latin enough to sustain the part? He's
shrewd as a weasel in all matters of scholarship, though a child
whom any one could fool in practical affairs."
"No; I haven't," admitted Average Jones. "Therefore, I'm a mute. A
shock in early childhood paralyzed my centers of speech. I talk to
you by sign language, and you interpret."
"But I hardly know the deaf-mute alphabet."
"Nor I. But I'll waggle my fingers like lightning if he says
anything to me requiring an answer, and you'll give the proper
reply. Does Colonel Graeme implicitly credit the Romanism of his
guest?"
"He does, because he wants to. To have an educated man of the
classic period of the Latin tongue, a friend of Caesar, an auditor
of Cicero and a contemporary of Virgil, Horace and Ovid come back
and speak in the accent he's contended for, make a powerful support
for his theories. He's at work on a supplementary thesis already."
"What do the other Latin men who've seen Livius, think of the
metempsychosis claim?"
"They don't know. Livius explained his remote antecedents only
after he had got Colonel Graeme's private ear. The colonel has kept
it quiet. 'Don't want a rabble of psychologists and soul-pokers
worrying him to death,' he says."
"Making it pretty plain sailing for the Roman. Well, arrange to
take me there as soon as possible."'
At the Graeme house, Average Jones was received with simple courtesy
by a thin rosy-cheeked old gentleman with a dagger-like imperial and
a dreamy eye, who, on Warren's introduction, made him free of the
unkempt old place's hospitality. They conversed for a time, Average
Jones maintaining his end with nods and gestures, and (ostensibly)
through the digital mediumship of his sponsor.
Presently Warren said to the host:
"And where is your visitor from the past?"
"Prowling among my books," answered the old gentleman.
"Are we not going to see him?"
The colonel looked a little embarrassed. "The fact is, Professor
Warren, Livius has taken rather an aversion to you."
"I'm sorry. How so?"
A twinkle of malice shone in the old scholar's eye. "He says your
Latin accent frets his nerves," he explained.
"In that case," said Warren, obeying a quick signal from his
accomplice, "I'll stroll in the garden, while you present Mr. Jones
to Livius."
Colonel Graeme led the way to a lofty wing, once used as a
drawing-room, but now the repository for thousands of books, which
not only filled the shelves but were heaped up in every corner.
"I must apologize for this confusion, sir," said the host. "No one
is permitted to arrange my books but myself. And my efforts, I
fear, serve only to make confusion more confounded. There are four
other rooms even more chaotic than this."
At the sound of his voice a man who had been seated behind a tumulus
of volumes rose and stood. Average Jones looked at him keenly. He
was perhaps forty-five years of age, thin and sinewy, with a
close-shaven face, pale blue eyes, and a narrow forehead running
high into a mop of grizzled locks. Diagonally across the front part
of the scalp a scar could be dimly perceived through the hair.
Average Jones glanced at the stranger's hands, to gain, if possible,
some hint of his former employment. With his faculty of swift
observation, he noticed that the long, slender fingers were not only
mottled with dust, but also scuffed, and, in places, scarified, as
if their owner had been hurriedly handling a great number of books.
Colonel Graeme presented the new-comer in formal Latin. He bowed.
The scarred man made a curious gesture of the hand, addressing
Average Jones in an accent which, even to the young man's
long-unaccustomed cars, sounded strange and strained.
"Di illi linguam astrinxere; mutus est," said Colonel Graeme,
indicating the younger man, and added a sentence in sonorous
metrical Greek.
Average Jones recalled the Aeschylean line. "Well, though 'a great
ox hath stepped on my tongue,' it hasn't trodden out my eyes,
praises be!" said he to himself as he caught the uneasy glance of
the Roman.
By way of allaying suspicion, he scribbled upon a sheet of paper a
few complimentary Latin sentences, in which Warren had sedulously
coached him for the occasion, and withdrew to the front room, where
he was presently joined by the Johns Hopkins man. Fortunately, the
colonel gave them a few moments together.
"Arrange for me to come here daily to study in the library,"
whispered Jones to the Latin professor.
The other nodded.
"Now, sit tight," added Jones.
He stepped, soft-footed, on the thick old rug, across to the library
door and threw it open. Just inside stood Livius, an expression of
startled anger on his thin face. Quickly recovering himself, he
explained, in his ready Latin, that he was about to enter and speak
to his patron.
"Shows a remarkable interest in possible conversation," whispered
Jones, on his withdrawal, "for a man who understands no English.
Also does me the honor to suspect me. He must have been a wily
chap--in the Consulship of Plancus."
Before leaving, Average Jones had received from Colonel Graeme a
general invitation to spend as much time as he chose, studying among
the books. The old man-servant, Saul, had orders to admit him at
any hour. He returned to his hotel to write a courteous note of
acknowledgment.
Many hours has Average Jones spent more tediously than those passed
in the cool seclusion of Colonel Ridgway Graeme's treasure-house of
print. He burrowed among quaint accumulations of forgotten
classics. He dipped with astonishment into the savage and
ultra-Rabelaisian satire of Von Hutter's "Epistola, Obscurorum
Virorumf" which set early sixteenth century Europe a-roar with
laughter at the discomfited monks; and he cleansed himself from that
tainted atmosphere in the fresh air and free English of a splendid
Audubon "first"--and all the time he was conscious that the Roman
watched, watched, watched. More than, once Livius offered aid,
seeking to apprise himself of the supposed mute's line of
investigation; but the other smilingly fended him off. At the end
of four days, Average Jones had satisfied himself that if Livius
were seeking anything in particular, he had an indefinite task
before him, for the colonel's bound treasures were in indescribable
confusion. Apparently he had bought from far and near, without
definite theme or purpose. As he bought he read, and having read,
cast aside; and where a volume fell, there it had license to lie.
No cataloguer had ever sought to restore order to that bibliographic
riot. To seek any given book meant a blind voyage, without compass
or chart, throughout the mingled centuries.
Often Colonel Graeme spent hours in one or the other of the huge
book-rooms talking with his strange protege and making copious
notes. Usually the old gentleman questioned and the other answered.
But one morning the attitude seemed, to the listening Ad-Visor, to
be reversed. Livius, in the far corner of the room, was speaking in
a low tone. To judge from the older man's impatient manner the
Roman was interrupting his host's current of queries with
interrogations of his own. Average Jones made a mental note, and,
in conference with Warren that evening, asked him to ascertain from
Colonel Graeme whether Livius's inquiries had indicated a specific
interest in any particular line of reading.
On the following day, however, an event of more immediate import
occupied his mind. He had spent the morning in the up-stairs
library, at the unevadable suggestion of Colonel Graeme, while the
colonel and his Roman collogued below. Coming down about noon,
Average Jones entered the colonel's small study just in time to see
Livius, who was alone in the room, turn away sharply from the desk.
His elbow was held close to his ribs in a peculiar manner. He was
concealing something under his coat. With a pretense of clumsiness,
Average Jones stumbled against him in passing. Livius drew away,
his high forehead working with suspicion. The Ad-Visor's expression
of blank apology, eked out with a bow and a grimace, belied the
busy-working mind within. For, in the moment's contact, he had
heard the crisp rustle of paper from beneath the ill-fitting coat.
What paper had the man from B. C. taken furtively from his
benefactor's table? It must be large; otherwise he could have
readily thrust it into his pocket. No sooner was Livius out of the
room than Average Jones scanned the desk. His face lighted with a
sudden smile. Colonel Graeme never read a newspaper; boasted, in
fact, that he wouldn't have one about the place. But, as Average
Jones distinctly recalled, he had, himself, that very morning
brought, in a copy of the Globe and dropped it into the scrap basket
near the writing-table. It was gone. Livius had taken it.
"If he's got the newspaper-reading habit," said Average Jones to
himself, "I'll set a trap for him. But Warren must furnish the
bait."
He went to look up his aide. The conference between them was long
and exhaustive, covering the main points of the case from the
beginning.
"Did you find out from Colonel Graeme," inquired Average Jones,
"whether Livius, affected any particular brand of literature?"
"Yes. He seems to be specializing on late seventeenth century
British classicism. Apparently he considers that the flower of
British scholarship of that time wrote a very inferior kind of dog
Latin."
"Late seventeenth century Latinity," commented Average Jones.
"That--er--gives, us a fair start. Now as to the body-servant."
"Old Saul? I questioned him about strange callers. He said he
remembered only two, besides an occasional peddler or agent. They
were looking for work."
"What kind of work?"
"Inside the house. One wanted to catalogue the library."
"What did he look like?"
"Saul says he wore glasses and a worse tall hat than the colonel's
and had a full beard."
"And the other?"
"Bookbinder and repairer. Wanted to fix up Colonel Graeme's
collection. Youngish, smartly dressed, with a small waxed
moustache."
"And our Livius is clean-shaven," murmured Average Jones. "How long
apart did they call?"
"About two weeks. The second applicant came on the day of the last
snowfall. I looked that up. It was March 27."
"Do you know, Warren," observed Average Jones, "I sometimes think
that part of your talents, at least, are wasted in a chair of
Latin."
"Certainly, there is more excitement in this hide-and-seek game, as
you play it, than in the pursuits of a musty pedant," admitted the
other, crackling his large knuckles. "But when are we going to
spring upon friend Livius and strip him of his fake toga?"
"That's the easiest part of it. I've already caught him filling a
fountain-pen as if he'd been brought up on them, and humming the
spinning chorus from The Flying Dutchman; not to mention the lifting
of my newspaper."
"Nemo mortalium omnibus horis sapit," murmured Warren.
"No. As you say, no fellow can be on the job all the time. But our
problem is not to catch Livius, but to find out what it is he's been
after for the last three months."
"Three months? You're assuming that it was he who applied for work
in the library."
"Certainly. And when he failed at that he set about a very
carefully developed scheme to get at Colonel Graeme's books anyway.
By inquiries he found out the old gentleman's fad and proceeded to
get in training for it. You don't know, perhaps, that I have a
corps of assistants who clip, catalogue and file all unusual
advertisements. Here is one which they turned up for me on my order
to send me any queer educational advertisements: 'Wanted--Daily
lessons in Latin speech from competent Spanish scholar. Write, Box
347, Banner office.' That is from the New York Banner of April
third, shortly after the strange caller's second abortive attempt to
get into the Graeme library."
"I suppose our Livius figured out that Colonel Graeme's theory of
accent was about what a Spaniard would have. But he couldn't have
learned all his Latin in four months."
"He didn't. He was a scholar already; an accomplished one, who went
wrong through drink and became a crook, specializing in rare books
and prints. His name is Enderby; you'll find it in the Harvard
catalogue. He's supposed to be dead. My assistant traced him
through his Spanish-Latin teacher, a priest."
"But even allowing for his scholarship, he must have put in a deal
of work perfecting himself in readiness of speech and accent."
"So he did. Therefore the prize must be big. A man of Enderby's
caliber doesn't concoct a scheme of such ingenuity, and go into
bondage with it, for nothing. Do you belong to the Cosmic Club?"
The assistant professor stared. "No," he said.
"I'd like to put you up there. One advantage of membership is that
its roster includes experts in every known line of erudition, from
scarabs to skeeing. For example, I am now going to telegraph for
aid from old Millington, who seldom misses a book auction and is a
human bibliography of the wanderings of all rare volumes. I'm going
to find out from him what British publication of the late
seventeenth century in Latin is very valuable; also what volumes of
that time have changed hands in the last six months."
"Colonel Graeme went to a big book auction in New York early in
March," volunteered Warren, "but he told me he didn't pick up
anything of particular value."
"Then it's something he doesn't know about and Livius does. I'm
going to take advantage of our Roman's rather un-B.-C.-like habit of
reading the daily papers by trying him out with this advertisement."
Average Jones wrote rapidly and tossed the result to his coadjutor
who read:
"LOST--Old book printed in Latin. Buff
leather binding, a little faded ('It's safe to be
that,' explained Average Jones). No great
value except to owner. Return to Colonel
Ridgway Graeme, 11 Carteret Street, and
receive reward."
The advertisement made its appearance in big type on the front pages
of the Baltimore paper of the following day. That evening Average
Jones met Warren, for dinner, with a puckered brow.
"Did Livius rise to the bait?" asked the scholar.
"Did he!" chuckled Average Jones. "He's been nervous as a cat all
day and hardly has looked at the library. But what puzzles me is
this." He exhibited a telegram from New York.
"Millington says positively no book of that time and description any
great value. Enderby at Barclay auction in March and made row over
some book which he missed because it was put up out of turn in
catalogue. Barclay auctioneer thinks it was one of Percival
privately bound books 1680-1703. Am anonymous book of Percival
library, De Meritis Librorum Britannorum, was sold to Colonel Graeme
for $47, a good price. When do I get in on this?
"(Signed), ROBERT BERTRAM."
"I know that treatise," said Warren. "It isn't particularly rare."
Average Jones stared at the telegram in silence. Finally he
drawled: "There are--er--books and--er--books--and--er--things in
books. Wait here for me."
Three hours later he reappeared with collar wilted, but spirits
elate, and abruptly announced:
"Warren, I'm a cobbler."
"A what?"
"A cobbler. Mend your boots, you know."
"Are you in earnest?"
"Certainly. Haven't you ever remarked that a serious-minded
earnestness always goes with cobbling? Though I'm not really a
practical cobbler, but a proprietary one. Our friend, Bertram, will
dress and act the practical part. I've wired him and he's replied,
collect, accepting the job. You and I will be in the background."
"Where?"
"NO. 27 jasmine Street. Not a very savory locality. Why is it,
Warren, that the beauty of a city street is generally in inverse
ratio to the poetic quality of its name? There I've hired the shop
and stock of Mr. Hans Fichtel for two days, at the handsome rental
of ten dollars per day. Mr. Fichtel purposes to take a keg of beer
a-fishing. I think two days will be enough."
"For the keg?"
"For that noble Roman, Livius. He'll be reading the papers pretty
keenly now. And in to-morrow's, he'll find this advertisement."
Average Jones read from a sheet of paper which he took from his
pocket:
"FOUND--Old book in foreign language, probably
Latin, marked 'Percival.' Owner may recover by
giving satisfactory description of peculiar and obscure
feature and refunding for advertisement. Fichtel,
27 jasmine Street."
"What is the peculiar and obscure feature, Jones?" asked Warren.
"I don't know."
"How do you know there is any?"
"Must be something peculiar about the book or Enderby wouldn't put
in four months of work on the chance of stealing it. And it must be
obscure, otherwise the auctioneer would have spotted it."
"Sound enough!" approved the other. "What could it be? Some
interpolated page?"
"Hardly. I've a treatise in my pocket on seventeenth century
book-making, which I'm going to study to-night. Be ready for an
early start to meet Bertram."
That languid and elegant gentleman arrived by the first morning
train. He protested mightily when he was led to the humble
shoe-shop. He protested more mightily when invited to don a leather
apron and smudge his face appropriately to his trade. His protests,
waxing vehement and eventually profane, as he barked his
daintily-kept fingers, in rehearsal for giving a correct
representation of an honest artisan cobbling a boot, died away when
Average Jones explained to him that on pretense of having found a
rare book, he was to worm out of a cautious and probably suspicious
criminal the nature of some unique and hidden feature of the volume.
"Trust me for diplomacy," said Bertram airily.
"I will because I've got to," retorted Average Jones. "Well, get to
work. To you the outer shop: to Warren and me this rear room. And,
remember, if you hear me whetting a knife, that means come at once."
Uncomfortably twisted into a supposedly professional posture,
Bertram wrought with hammer and last, while putting off, with lame,
blind and halting, excuses, such as came to call for their promised
footgear. By a triumph of tact he had just disposed of a
rancid-tongued female who demanded her husband's boots, a
satisfactory explanation, or the arbitrament of the lists, when the
bell tinkled and the two watchers the back room heard a nervous,
cultivated voice say:
"Is Mr. Fichtel here?"
"That's me," said Bertram, landing an agonizing blow on his
thumb-nail.
"You advertised that you had found an old book."
"Yes, sir. Somebody left it in the post-office."
"Ah; that must have been when I went to mail some letters to New
York," said the other glibly. "From the advertised description, the
book is without doubt mine. Now as to the reward--"
"Excuse me, but you wouldn't expect me to give it up without any
identification, sir?"
"Certainly not. It was the De Meritis Libror--"
"I can't read Latin, sir."
"But you could make that much out," said the visitor with rising
exasperation. "Come; if it's a matter of the reward--how much?"
"I wouldn't mind having a good reward; say ten dollars. But I want
to be sure it's your book. There's something about it that you
could easily tell me sir, for any one could see it."
"A very observing shoemaker," commented the other with a slight
sneer. "You mean the--the half split cover?"
"Swish-swish; whish-swish," sounded from the rear room.
"Excuse me," said Bertram, who had not ceased from his pretended
work. "I have to get a piece of leather."
He stepped into the back room where Average Jones, his face alight,
held up a piece of paper upon which he had hurriedly scrawled:
"Mss. bound into cover. Get it out of him. Tell him you've a
brother who is a Latin scholar."
Bertram nodded, caught up a strip of calf-skin and returned.
"Yes, sir," he said, "the split cover and what's inside?"
The other started. "You didn't get it out?" he cried. "You didn't
tear it!"
"No, sir. It's there safe enough. But some of it can be made out."
"You said you didn't read Latin."
"No, sir; but I have a brother that went through the Academy. He
reads a little."' This was thin ice, but Bertram went forward with
assumed assurance. "He thinks the manuscript is quite rare. Oh,
Fritz! Come in."
"Any letter of Bacon's is rare, of course," returned the other
impatiently. "Therefore, I purpose offering you fifty dollars
reward."
He looked up as Average Jones entered. The young man's sleeves were
rolled up, his face was generously smudged, and a strip of cobbler's
wax beneath the tipper lip, puffed and distorted the firm line of
his mouth. Further, his head was louting low on his neck, so that
the visitor got no view sufficient for recognition.
"Lord Bacon's letter--er--must be pretty rare, Mister," he drawled
thickly. "But a letter--er--from Lord Bacon--er--about
Shakespeare--that ought to be worth a lot of money."
Average Jones had taken his opening with his customary incisive
shrewdness. The mention of Bacon had settled it, to his mind. Only
one imaginable character of manuscript from the philosopher
scholar-politician could have value enough to tempt a thief of
Enderby's calibre. Enderby's expression told that the shot was a
true one. As for Bertram, he had dropped his shoemaker's knife and
his shoemaker's role.
"Bacon on Shakespeare! Shades of the departed glory of Ignatius
Donnelly!"
The visitor drew back. Warren's gaunt frame appeared in the
doorway. Jones' head lifted.
"It ought to be as--er--unique," he drawled, "as an--er--Ancient
Roman speaking perfect English."
Like a flash, the false Livius caught up the knife from the bench
where the false cobbler had dropped it and swung toward Average
Jones. At the moment the ample hand of Professor Warren, bunched
into a highly competent fist, flicked across and caught the
assailant under the ear. Enderby, alias Livius, fell as if smitten
by a cestus. As his arm touched the floor, Average Jones kicked
unerringly at the wrist and the knife flew and tinkled in a far
comer. Bertram, with a bound, landed on the fallen man's chest and
pinned him.
"'Did he get you, Average?" he cried.
"Not--er--this time. Pretty good--er--team work," drawled the
Ad-Visor. "We've got our man for felonious assault, at least."
Enderby, panting under Bertram's solid knee, blinked and struggled.
"No use, Livius," said Average Jones. "Might as well quiet down and
confess. Ease up a little on him, Bert. Take a look at that scar
of his first though."
"Superficial cut treated with make-up paint; a clever job,"
pronounced Bertram after a quick examination.
"As I supposed," said Average Jones.
"Let me in on the deal," pleaded Livius. "That letter is worth ten
thousand, twelve thousand, fifteen thousand dollars--anything you
want to ask, if you find the right purchaser. And you can't manage
it without me. Let me in."
"Thinks we're crooks, too?" remarked Average Jones. "Exactly what's
in this wonderful letter?"
"It's from Bacon to the author of the book, who wrote about 1610.
Bacon prophesies that Shakespeare, 'this vagabond and humble mummer'
would outshine and outlive in fame all the genius of his time.
That's all I could make out by loosening the stitches."
"Well, that is worth anything one could demand," said Warren in a
somewhat awed tone.
"Why didn't you get the letter when you were examining it at the
auction room?" inquired Average Jones.
"Some fool of a binder had overlooked the double cover, and sewed it
in. I noticed it at the auction, gummed the opening together while
no one was watching, and had gone to get cash to buy the book; but
the auctioneer put it up out of turn and old Graeme got it. Bring
it to me and I'll show you the 'pursed' cover. Many of the Percival
books were bound that way."
"We've never had it, nor seen it,"' replied Average Jones. "The
advertisement was only a trap into which you stepped."
Enderby's jaw dropped. "Then it's still at the Graeme house," he
cried, beating on the floor with his free hand. "Take me back
there!"
"Oh, we'll take you," said Warren grimly.
Close-packed among, them in a cab, they drove him back to Carteret
Street. Colonel Ridgway Graeme was at home and greeted them
courtesly.
"You've found Livius," he said, with relief. "I had begun to fear
for him."
"Colonel Graeme," began Average Jones, "you have--"
"What! Speech!" cried the old gentleman. "And you a mute! What
does this mean?"
"Never mind him," broke in Enderby Livius. "There's something more
important."
But the colonel had shrunk back. "English from you, Livius!" he
cried, setting his hand to his brow.
"All will be explained in time, Colonel," Warren assured him.
"Meanwhile, you have a document of the utmost importance and value.
Do you remember buying one of the Percival volumes at the Barclay
auction?"
The collector drew his brows down in an effort to remember.
"An octavo, in fairly good condition?" he asked.
"Yes, yes!" cried Enderby eagerly. "Where is it? What did you do
with it?"
"It was in Latin--very false Latin." The four men leaned forward,
breathless. "Oh, I remember. It slipped from my pocket and fell
into the river as I was crossing the ferry to Jersey."
There was a dead, flat, stricken silence. Then Average Jones
turned hollow eyes upon Warren.
"Professor," he said, with a rueful attempt at a smile, "what's the
past participle, passive, plural, of the Latin verb, 'to sting'?" _
Read next: CHAPTER X - THE ONE BEST BET
Read previous: CHAPTER VIII - BIG PRINT
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