"Why," said Jean, "can"t we all work together and make sure that the plot does not fail?"
"An excellent idea," said Chester.
He spoke to Hal in a whisper: "Watch the house and follow Duval when he comes out."
Hal, accordingly, did not fall in with Jean"s plan.
"I am glad to be out of it," he said. "It"s too dangerous to suit me. No, Victor, there, is different. He likes the spice of danger, and so may you. But I prefer to get my gold easier, in the streets."
Jean shrugged his shoulders in contempt.
"I thought you were a brave man," he said. "Come on, Victor; we have no time for cowards."
He took Chester by the arm and the two walked off down the street, while Hal again concealed himself in the dark alley opposite the Apaches" den, where he waited for Duval to emerge.
His patience was soon rewarded. A dim figure appeared in the doorway and peered cautiously about. Then it slipped quietly to the street and strode rapidly away in the darkness. Hal slipped from his concealment and, keeping a respectable distance behind, set out in pursuit. For several blocks Duval continued slowly; then stopped suddenly at a corner. Hal immediately slunk from sight into the shelter of a doorway.
Duval raised a hand, and a moment later a taxi dashed up and stopped before him. Duval climbed in and the taxi moved away.
Hal, however, was not to be shaken off thus easily. Running forward quickly he succeeded in catching hold of the taxi and pulling himself up behind. In this way he rode for perhaps half an hour.
Abruptly the machine came to a halt and Hal quickly jumped to the ground and into a doorway, where he peered forth in time to see Duval alight.
The man was now without a mask, and Hal perceived the clear countenance of a Frenchman of the upper cla.s.s, whose age must have been somewhere in the thirties. He strode rapidly down the street, and, turning a corner, mounted the steps of a handsome residence just beyond. Hal came around the corner just in time to see his quarry enter the door.
The lad took the number of the house and also the name of the street.
These he impressed firmly upon his memory by repeating them over and over. Then he quietly ascended the steps of the house and tried the door.
It was locked.
The lad descended the steps again and walked round the house, seeking some other means of entrance. In the narrow areaway he saw a small window, apparently opening into the cellar. He tried it. It was unlocked and gave easily before the pressure of his hand.
Hal lay flat upon the ground and pushed his feet through the opening.
Then, slowly, he let his body through until he hung by his hands. He did not know how far his feet might be from the floor, but it was no time to hesitate. He released his hold and dropped.
There came a crash so loud it might have raised the dead.
CHAPTER XXV.
CHESTER AND JEAN.
Chester was confident that Hal could take care of his end of the affair, and he therefore allowed Jean to lead him along without protest. Jean became talkative as they walked along the dark streets.
"It should be easy," he said with enthusiasm. "All we have to do is to get close to the President in the crowd. Can you shoot?"
"A little," replied Chester briefly.
"I"m not a bad shot, either," said Jean. "So, if you should miss with your first shot, I"ll turn loose myself. That will insure success."
"I have been thinking," said Chester, "how it would feel to be shot, and of what is likely to happen to us after we fire. What will the crowd do to us?"
"Oh, we"ll get away, all right," said Jean.
"We"ll never get away," said Chester solemnly. "We shall be torn to pieces before we can move a foot."
"I hadn"t stopped to think of that," said Jean slowly.
"No, I suppose not," replied Chester. "Nevertheless, that is what is bound to happen. And they won"t kill us on the spot, either. They"ll put us to death slowly, by torture."
The lad looked sharply at his companion. Plainly this was an aspect of the case which had not occurred to Jean. He shuddered.
"Do you realize what we are about to do?" Chester went on. "We are going to shoot down, in cold blood, the President of France; the President of our own country. The crowd will go wild. We shall be torn limb from limb."
"Stop it! Stop it!" cried Jean. "Would you have me lose my nerve?"
"And besides," continued Chester, "what has the President done to us that we should seek his life?"
"But," said Jean, "we shall have gold."
"And what good will gold do us after we are dead?"
"True," said Jean. "It won"t do us much good, will it?"
"It won"t do us any good," said Chester.
"But," said Jean, "Duval must have thought of all that. He--"
"Duval knows as well as you or I what will happen to us should we a.s.sa.s.sinate the President," said Chester. "He will have that much more gold for himself."
"Still, we may manage to escape," said Jean hopefully.
"And if we do," said Chester sternly, "what then? Do you suppose Duval will keep faith with us? There will be such a hue and cry as Paris never heard before. Duval will turn us over to the authorities to save his own skin."
"If I thought that," said Jean, "I--"
"Besides," interrupted Chester, "we shall only be aiding the Germans, and not ourselves, and how long do you suppose the Apaches will be allowed to live should the Germans invade Paris?"
"Why--" began Jean, but Chester interrupted again.
"One of their first steps would be to annihilate us," said Chester. "They would ravage the city, tear it into little pieces. Remember, it is our own home, yours and mine. Would you like to see that?"
"No," replied Jean, "but--"
"No matter how you look at it," continued Chester, "you and I are sure to get the worst of it. Now, I don"t know about you; but I am going to have nothing to do with the plot."