<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">V<br/> THE AMBASSADOR’S STICK-PIN</h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap">THE manner of Lanagan’s acquiring the Ambassador’s
stick-pin is nearly, if not quite, as
interesting as the matter of his losing it. His possession
of the pin was simple enough when one understands
the chromatic ways of a police reporter’s
daily routine: and Jack Lanagan was the “star”
police reporter of the city. The surrender of the
pin is as easily understood, when one comes to learn
something of the devious paths the police reporter is
sometimes called on to follow, and the curious and
startling situations into which they sometimes lead.</p>
<p>Thus, when Lanagan, drifting indolently with
the matinée throngs down Powell street, stopped
to hold confab with “Kid” Monahan, that now retired
King of the pickpockets, it was natural enough
that he should remark on a stick-pin of odd design
that replaced the accustomed three-carat in the
“King’s” silk cravat. Gentry who lived by their
wits and other people’s wealth, affect stones of much
size. Some policemen wear them, too.</p>
<p>It was natural enough, that the “King,” proverbially
generous, noticing the glance of interest, should
say, “Here, wear it,” and with a motion as quick<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</SPAN></span>
and as deft as a hummingbird’s flit, transfer the
pin from his tie to that of the newspaper man.</p>
<p>It was then for Lanagan to observe, dryly:</p>
<p>“Your title is certainly earned,” as he extracted
the pin and offered it back. “But this being a pin
of very unusual design, I am afraid I might not be
able to wear it as gracefully while awaiting the possible
appearance of its owner, as can you. Further,
that little exhibition of refined ‘touch’ you just
gave, excites some grave suspicions that you are
back at your old tricks.”</p>
<p>The one-time King knew Lanagan’s outspoken
ways. Further he knew perfectly that, while the
police accepted his declaration, since his last time
out, of fealty to the law, he was a two-timer. The
police were using him, or thought they were, as a
“stool;” Lanagan did not think so.</p>
<p>“If it hadn’t been for what Lombroso classified
as the ‘criminal lobe,’ I might really believe you
had reformed,” Lanagan had told him once. “But
in view of the lynx-like quality of your ears to be
all top and no bottom, I am afraid the stamp of an
extremely low moral resistance is indelibly upon
you.”</p>
<p>And Monahan had only grinned then as now, in
his ingenuous way, uncomprehending, and exalted
Lanagan a notch or two. For some minor favour
in times gone past, Lanagan had earned and held
steadfastly the King’s unswerving loyalty; not an
insignificant asset for a police reporter.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</SPAN></span>“Jack,” said the King in pained sincerity, “I’m
not passing you no chance. Got it down at Small’s.
Was shoved for a finner and I took it out of curiosity.
Funny sticker, ain’t it? If anybody does
make you though, why of course, hand it over. I
like my old spark better anyhow.”</p>
<p>Small, be it said, was probably the thriftiest and
crookedest fence inside the county, with the headquarters
men on the pawnbroker detail taking orders—and
percentages—from him, as faithfully
as they reported to their captain of detectives.
With another of those flits, the King placed back in
his own necktie his customary brilliant, taken from
his vest pocket. Before Lanagan could offer the
other pin back the second time, his companion had
left. Lanagan examined the pin critically.</p>
<p>It was a “funny sticker,” round, of gold and
the size and thickness of a quarter. The back was
plain, fitted with a patent clasp. On the face was
a delicate relief of two eagles, heads out. An eye,
a ruby for an iris, was in the exact centre. Below
the eye were two clasped hands and above, two
crossed swords. Woven around the entire design
was what he at first took to be a snake, but discovered,
on closer scrutiny, to be a rope. It was
a delicate and unusual product of the goldsmith’s
art.</p>
<p>Lanagan puzzled over it for an hour and then
concluded:</p>
<p>“Russian, from the eagles; emblem of a secret<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</SPAN></span>
order, evidently, from the eye; the clasped hands to
signify that an oath has been taken and the axe
or the rope is the headsman, or the hangman, for
a breach of faith. That sounds plausible. But
what particular society does it represent?”</p>
<p>He placed it in his tie and was recalling what he
had read about Russian secret societies, when he
was bumped violently by a short, swarthy individual
who had, unknown to him, been following. As
Lanagan straightened up he caught a quick flash,
as of a message of tacit understanding, in the
other’s eyes, as he gazed straight at the pin. In
another moment a black flat wallet, thin and oblong,
had been slipped adroitly into his inside coat pocket;
a word which sounded like “scoraya” had been
whispered in his ear, and the singular stranger had
departed to the street to jump aboard a passing
car, and disappear toward the ferry.</p>
<p>Lanagan made it a rule to be surprised at nothing,
to accept nothing as coincidence not proved so, and
to ignore no trifles. He was interested; highly interested,
and he wanted to know what “scoraya”
meant. That there was a connection between the
pin and the wallet was, to him, clear. Possibly
“scoraya” might help him.</p>
<p>In Fogarty’s back room, hard by police headquarters,
he found Petroff, Russian interpreter in the police
courts.</p>
<p>“What does a word that sounds like ‘scoraya’
mean?” he asked.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</SPAN></span>“It means ‘hurry,’ ‘at once,’ or any such meaning.
It is what you Americans say, ‘get a move
on,’” said Petroff.</p>
<p>Sitting apart Lanagan unfastened the black sealskin
wallet and drew out a single sheet of paper,
encased in a protection of oiled skin. There were
written on the paper in a bold, strong hand, an even
dozen words; words that sent his breath whistling
through his teeth. It was in English, plain, clear,
and signed by a name that gave even the imperturbable
Lanagan a mighty start.</p>
<p>“Undoubtedly,” mused Lanagan, “they either
have a system believed infallible, or they are mighty
reckless of State secrets—and they are not reckless.
Therefore the system has slipped a cog, and
I am the anointed bearer of the message of His
Serene Majesty, Nicholas. I appear to be on the
knees of the gods,” he went on, as he wandered the
streets, perplexed. “It’s possible, barely possible,
that I am tangled in some monumental hoax. But
I don’t believe it. If I don’t miss my guess I will
be giving the austere Mr. Sampson, damned of all
men of my tribe, the biggest exclusive his sweat-shop
paper has turned out in this generation. But—I
need more coincidences. I am plainly stumped.”</p>
<p>He had stopped by Lotta’s Fountain where the
traffic patrolman was endeavouring to untangle a
jam of trucks and automobiles.</p>
<p>Out of the very air, as though in wierd solution
to his perplexity, it came again:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</SPAN></span>“Scoraya!”</p>
<p>Lanagan wheeled to find the voice. He had
thought he must turn directly upon the man. There
was no one near him save the occupant of a
limousine, two feet away. The passenger was apparently
engrossed in the evening paper. The
window, though, was open. Lanagan watched him
covertly from the corner of his eye.</p>
<p>“Humph! This is getting interesting. Here am
I, a live newspaper sprout, in the dead centre of a
bustling and work-a-day American city, caught as
sure as the sun shines, in the mysteries of a
diplomatic maze between two great nations, and
probably three, that is as twisted as a mediæval intrigue.
At this moment, the whereabouts of little
me and my message, are probably of as much importance
as the comings and goings of the Czar, the
Mikado, or the First Gentleman himself. But the
next gay cat that tries any scoraying on me, will get
the third degree right in Fogarty’s back room.”</p>
<p>The limousine, the traffic jam relieved, pulled
slowly ahead, but Lanagan could have sworn that
the benign gentleman within, just before it did,
turned fully upon him with a scrutiny of deliberate
coolness. It was a casual thing, such as might
have happened to anyone; but it appeared to Lanagan
that there was a look of secret understanding
in the other’s eyes, as they dropped twice to the
stick-pin and returned to Lanagan’s face, as though
in inquiry. Lanagan took the number of the car,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</SPAN></span>
89,776, and then returned to headquarters. He
wanted to see from the police register to whom
machine 89,776 belonged.</p>
<p>When he ran through the pages to the number,
the ragtime air he was whistling—very incorrectly—quickened
in tempo.</p>
<p>“89,776—owner—Boris Koshloff—2224
Pacific Avenue, San Francisco.”</p>
<p>“Aha! Either I am hearing scorayas in my
mind, and either everybody that looks at me excites
my suspicions, or else the Russian Mr. Koshloff is
a link in the very plain chain that is stretching from
me and my pin to His Majesty Nicholas, at St.
Petersburg on one end, and the President in Washington
at the other. Frankly, it looks preposterous
that if Koshloff is on the job, he would use his own
machine. Then again—what if that is the method
chosen to point my path to me? If this message
is to anyone in San Francisco, they must know by
this time that it has gone astray. Barring my own
coincidence in bungling into State secrets via
‘Kid’ Monahan’s touch, and his taste for the
really distinctive in jewelry, it appears that everything
is working out on a very remarkable and
finished system. I shall pay Mr. Koshloff a visit.
He has been too much of a figure of mystery in this
city anyway.”</p>
<p>Boris Koshloff, a wealthy Russian portrait
painter, had dropped into San Francisco with introductions,
some months before. He had earned a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</SPAN></span>
high repute for the elegance of the soirées given at
his house, and had figured in the public prints, moreover,
in other ways. On one occasion, a burglar,
found prowling within the Koshloff’s drawing
room, had been shot and killed by Koshloff, who
thereupon was lionised to a considerable extent by
the neurotic and sentimental elements of his circle.
He had figured again, when a household servant
had fallen from his second story window, receiving
frightful injuries. Although during his raving in
delirium the servant had cried frequently “spare
me! spare me!” and had led some cynical reporters
on the hospital beat to suspect foul play, nothing
was ever proved in face of Koshloff’s explanation
that the servant fell in cleaning windows. After
the man recovered sufficiently, he was removed by
Koshloff to a private hospital, and there he passed
from the scope of the newsgatherers and hence
from public attention.</p>
<p>Now, it might be well to say here, and before the
reader is too far carried away by the story, that the
curious chronicles of the happenings about to be
recorded must rest for all time, for their authentication,
in five quarters: the Russian government, the
American Department of State, Jack Lanagan,
“King” Monahan, and myself.</p>
<p>It is not probable that either the Russian or
American governments would affirm the truth of the
facts recorded. As for the rest—the extraordinary
series of complications following the receipts of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</SPAN></span>
the stick-pin, the use of such a device as the stick-pin,
as the connecting link in a grave international
crisis, the use of the personal courier rather than
cipher-code—they must all be accepted on my
word, the word of Lanagan, or the word of “King”
Monahan, who first received the pin. To such as
are unwilling to accept that proof, the story must
be read solely as a bit of fiction.</p>
<p>Lanagan strolled back to the <i>Enquirer</i>. I had
just finished several yards of real estate junk for
the business office, and was as grouchy as the
brother of the tribe always is, when assigned to do
business office write-ups.</p>
<p>“Fine line for an able-bodied reporter,” said
Lanagan cynically, looking over my shoulder.
“Turn that rot in and come with me and be a real
reporter. I’ll give you a story that will make the
A. P. wires hum to the four corners of the earth—provided
my hunch don’t go altogether wrong.”</p>
<p>He spoke to Sampson, telling him that there was
a bare chance of something turning up on the Russo-Japanese
situation, and asked for me to be detailed
to accompany him.</p>
<p>“Good,” replied Sampson, “get after it. We
haven’t broken a story on that yet. The eastern
papers are having a lot of stuff on the Secretary of
State, though. He has dropped out of sight; the
A. P. is bringing in a story broken by the <i>Sun</i>,
that his supposed sickness was the bunk, and that
as a matter of fact he has been out of Washington<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</SPAN></span>
for a week. Supposed to be in New York on some
confab with the Russian Ambassador who is at the
Waldorf-Astoria. The Ambassador denies any
such conference. It’s a hot yarn. Try to turn up
an end on it out here.”</p>
<p>Lanagan suggested supper and as we lingered
over our coffee and cigars, he briefly outlined the
situation. I read the astounding message and must
confess that I was stirred to a very unprofessional
pitch of excitement. Before taking a car for
Pacific Avenue, we dropped in at police headquarters
where Lanagan met Chief Leslie, that shrewd
thief-taker, and they were in earnest talk for ten
minutes. In his police reporting Lanagan had the
superlative advantage of Leslie’s confidence. That
famous chief had indeed as high a regard for Lanagan’s
work as for that of his own men. Leslie
stood many a “roast” from the opposition papers
for his habit of programming with Lanagan, and
for turning over his men to the service of the newspaper
man more than once.</p>
<p>As we rode to our destination Lanagan instructed
me to take a position, well concealed, opposite the
Koshloff house, wait until midnight, and then if he
did not appear, telephone to headquarters where
Brady and Wilson, two of Leslie’s best men, would
be in readiness with the police automobile. We
were to force the house.</p>
<p>“For it’s just possible,” said Lanagan lightly,
“that I can’t escape delivering my packet. If they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</SPAN></span>
once drop to me, it may be interesting. That ‘burglar’
shot by Koshloff takes on rather a new importance.
Likewise that foreigner, who was all
broken up in an accidental fall from Koshloff’s
second story window. I rather look forward to a
run in with this gentleman of mystery and his retinue
of ‘scorayers.’ But don’t wait after midnight.
Brady will have a search warrant on some
’phony charge or other, and you can tear right in.”</p>
<p>We parted company several blocks from the
Koshloff mansion. It was nearing nine-thirty. I
found a hiding-place almost directly opposite,
slipped in, and in a few moments saw Lanagan walk
briskly up the stairs of the Russian’s house. He
was whistling a bit of ragtime; as usual off key.
His insouciance cheered me. Frankly, I was nervous;
a weakness I cannot seem to overcome. I
have never failed Lanagan yet at a crisis, and I
suppose, on results, am as brave as he. But in my
own heart I know I am not. Possibly gifted with
a little more imagination than he, I can see further;
picture the slab at the morgue, the gang in the
police reporter’s room chipping in for a floral piece
while somebody tries to relieve the strain by saying
something funny; Johnny O’Grady or Jim Bradley,
or some of the others of the old guard delegated to
the pleasant detail of carrying the news home; it
was always the same. I always had that faculty,
as Hamlet says, of thinking too precisely on the
event.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</SPAN></span>The door opened to Lanagan’s ring, and he
passed from my sight to be ushered along the main
hall, down a flight of steps, through another long
hall, carpeted richly, with niches here and there
holding exquisite statuary, to a billiard-room
panelled in richest mahogany. From the conduct
of his guide it was apparent that he was expected.
In the billiard-room two smooth-shaven, trim, keen-eyed
men were playing a desultory game. Surmise
was bulking large within Lanagan’s breast. He
had seen that same type before. Secret service was
stamped as indelibly upon them as his vocation is
stamped upon the upper office man.</p>
<p>A light tattoo on a panelling, an answering tattoo,
another staccato and the panel slid back and the
odour of black cigars was heavy on the air as Lanagan
stepped into a small compartment, the panel
slipping noiselessly shut behind him as his guide
disappeared. At a table were seated two men, facing
him.</p>
<p>One of the two he recognised: Koshloff. But
the other! Lanagan looked hard. There could be
no mistake; those features had been looming from
the front pages of the papers too frequently for any
mistake. Lanagan stood without speaking, but before
his mind’s eye was dancing the front page of
to-morrow’s <i>Enquirer</i>. He would lay a seven
column lead across that page that would carry
around the world.</p>
<p>It was Koshloff who spoke.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</SPAN></span>“You have the packet? Yes? Would you present
it?”</p>
<p>Then, in a low voice to the other, as Lanagan
calmly placed the sealskin wallet upon the table,
Koshloff murmured:</p>
<p>“Assuredly my superiors must know their business.
But I cannot comprehend the disappearance
of Carlos and the transfer of the pin and packet to
the stranger. It must be in order, however. Our
system has never failed.”</p>
<p>He turned a shrewd gaze upon Lanagan, studying
him intently.</p>
<p>“When do you return?” he asked finally.</p>
<p>“Just as soon as I am permitted to,” replied
Lanagan with perfect truth.</p>
<p>“Strange,” muttered Koshloff in the other’s ear.
“Peculiar. It is the answer. We have no choice.
It must be in order.”</p>
<p>Without more ado the packet was opened and
Koshloff presented the slip in silence to his companion.
That man, of massive, intellectual forehead
and deep set, penetrating eyes, scanned it carefully
and pondered long, Koshloff watching him
with half closed but eager eyes.</p>
<p>“Tell your Imperial Master,” said the other,
turning sharply upon Lanagan and speaking with
clean incisiveness, “that you met the Secretary of
State in person, and that the Secretary, speaking
for his excellency the President, says, that the answer
of the President is—yes.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</SPAN></span>The Secretary of State, ten days disappeared
from Washington, out here on the western fringe
of the continent, pledging the attitude of the United
States in the threatened Russo-Japanese conflict and
not a line in any paper in the world to indicate the
whereabouts of the Secretary, his business, or the
definite attitude of the United States in the impending
conflict!</p>
<p>It was the story of a newspaper man’s lifetime.</p>
<p>“Carry the verbal message, or transmit it to your
relief,” instructed Koshloff. “Conditions may not
make packets safe by the time you reach the Orient.
You may go. You have funds? Your pin is
safe?”</p>
<p>“I have,” said Lanagan, who, with two days to
go to pay day, had about sixty-five cents. He indicated
the pin with a gesture and turned on his
heel for the panel, to be stopped by a sudden muffled
uproar from the billiard-room, a sound of excited,
shrill cries, of scuffling.</p>
<p>Neither the Secretary nor Koshloff moved a muscle;
neither did Lanagan. He was thoroughly in
possession of himself. Two panels swiftly and
noiselessly slid open at the farther wall of the room,
and two smooth-shaven, trim, keen-eyed men stepped
into the room alertly and took their places beside
the Secretary’s chair.</p>
<p>“Mr. Secretary travels with the entire secret service
bureau,” Lanagan found time to comment to
himself.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</SPAN></span>There came a tattoo on the panel from the billiard-room.
The Secretary held up his hand for
silence and motioned one of the secret service
agents, who stepped noiselessly to the panel and
listened. The tapping came again.</p>
<p>“Answer,” commanded the Secretary. “It is
over, whatever it was.”</p>
<p>The panel slid open. Through the aperture came
one of the billiard players, flashing a quick, steely
glance upon Lanagan.</p>
<p>“Balked, by the eternal!” shot through Lanagan’s
mind. “The owner of that pin has shown up.
It’s now or never.” He stepped casually to the
panel; it was a fine chance. Once through there,
he could make a fight for the front door,—and the
seven column exclusive in the <i>Enquirer</i>.</p>
<p>Directly before him, fairly filling the space of the
panel, was the other billiard player. It was quick
action. Lanagan shot out his right for the man’s
jaw; but his arm got about half way. A grip like
an iron clamp had him just above the elbow. He
was whirled face about, a secret service man on
either side.</p>
<p>As though nothing had happened, the man
who had first entered through the panel door
spoke:</p>
<p>“There is a person outside somewhat excited
who wishes to speak to Mr. Koshloff. He said to
say it was Carlos.”</p>
<p>Koshloff leaped for the doorway and in a moment<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</SPAN></span>
more had dragged fairly by the hair of his head,
a wild-eyed, dark-visaged person who, when he
straightened up, perceived the pin in Lanagan’s tie
and made a tigerish spring for him, a dirk gleaming
in a half arc as he leaped. But the right fist of
one of the secret agents met him en route, and the
frenzied Carlos was disarmed. He staggered to his
feet, striving vainly to get at Lanagan.</p>
<p>“Thief! Robber! Death to him! Death to him
who dares rob the messenger of His Imperial Majesty,
Nicholas!”</p>
<p>“The gentleman appears to be teething,” remarked
Lanagan.</p>
<p>Koshloff pressed a button and two swart giants
appeared. He indicated Carlos with a nod. “He
wore the pin, but he has failed in his obligation.
He must receive discipline.” The miserable wretch
fell to his knees with upraised hands, supplicating.</p>
<p>“Ah, no, Sire! My wife! My babies! Ten
minutes too late, or I would have had it back and
this sneak thief’s life!”</p>
<p>But Koshloff frowned impatiently and in a second
more Carlos was whisked away, a wierd scream
floating back wearily from some hidden corridor
to indicate the terror that gripped him. There
was something in that scream of fear of more than
the knout. As it rang through Lanagan’s ears,
he recalled the crossed axes and the hangman’s
noose of the pin. It was clear enough. There<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</SPAN></span>
would be another burglar killed. He wheeled upon
Koshloff.</p>
<p>“Professor Koshloff, or whoever or whatever
you are,” he said in a tone of deadly acidity, “that
man is turned up out of here unharmed by so much
as a scratch, or I’ll have you snaked into the city
prison within twenty-four hours, and some other
very general suspicions will incidentally be given
an airing. You may be the right eye or the right
hand of His Serene Majesty Nicholas, but I’m Jack
Lanagan of the San Francisco <i>Enquirer</i>, and in
my own particular bailiwick, something of a czar
myself. You’re a long way from Russia right
now. You’re in little old San Francisco. Did you
get me?”</p>
<p>The catlike quality of Lanagan’s eyes to glow
under the stress of anger or great excitement, exhibited
itself. His face in anger was not what was
calculated to put infants to slumber. He had forgotten
the Secretary for the moment; the agents had
all withdrawn. He was recalled to him when that
person, taking his cigar from his teeth and gazing
upon its ash contemplatively, said in even tones:</p>
<p>“I think possibly you are unduly exercising yourself.
Something of a Czar?” The smooth voice
went on. “Indeed, and it is a pleasure to meet
the Czar of the bailiwick of San Francisco,” and
the Secretary bowed profoundly and gravely.
“Now let us talk business, Mr. Lanagan.</p>
<p>“As for Carlos, his case is absolutely ex-territorial<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</SPAN></span>
so far as we are concerned. Please inform
me how you came by that packet and pin—eavesdropping
in matters of State? Do you young men
of the press hold nothing sacred? Not your country’s
peace or the peace of other nations?”</p>
<p>“So far as that goes,” retorted Lanagan, coolly,
“and not condescending to take note of your
‘eavesdropping,’ we young men of the press have
a duty to our papers which our papers in turn
owe to the people. In this case it is a clear duty.
By what right do you or any other man, president
or not, arrogate to yourself the power to hold this
secret caucus, resting your country’s stand in this
grave affair entirely upon the judgment of one or
two men? You are the servant of the people. Let
the whole people know where you are now and
what you are doing. Get the sentiment of your
country before you plunge into this agreement. I
personally most emphatically disagree with the answer
you are sending back. The public are as
likely to think my way as yours.”</p>
<p>The Secretary looked bored. “It is not possible.”</p>
<p>“With this exception,” grimly. Lanagan turned
for the panel and sought the spring. “It is ten
minutes after twelve,” he said laconically. “I
must leave here. Open the door, if you please.”</p>
<p>Neither man moved. The Secretary said:</p>
<p>“We have not quite covered our ground. You
have not answered my question.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</SPAN></span>“The pin I received from a friend who claimed
to have taken it from a pawnshop. The packet
was put in my pocket by a swarthy man who met
me on the street and who said ‘scoraya.’ So did
another chap in Koshloff’s automobile. I wanted
to see the thing through that so accidentally came
my way.</p>
<p>“Now, when I came in here I did not come
alone. I am fully aware that nations, planning
wars to cost hundreds or thousands of lives, would
not scruple at one. My friends should be breaking
in here now. I told them to give me until
twelve o’clock.</p>
<p>“So far as your man Carlos is concerned, I can
only surmise that he was to meet a courier at the
steamer, but had his pin stolen from him. The
courier then wandered the streets seeking the pin,
and by happy chance tumbled against me wearing
it, and likewise wandering the streets. The other
‘scoraya’ boy I presume was one of Koshloff’s
secret service men, sent out to see that the messenger
reached here safely. He must have likewise
picked me up on the matinée promenade by
accident.”</p>
<p>“Correctly reasoned,” murmured Koshloff.
“And I believe you have cleared the situation. A
most remarkable series of coincidences; but then,
anything may happen in this remarkable city of
yours.”</p>
<p>“Do I go peaceably?” asked Lanagan, glancing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</SPAN></span>
at his watch. His voice hardened a trifle. It was
twelve-thirty.</p>
<p>“After—ah—a bit,” purred Koshloff, and the
next instant was gazing coolly into Lanagan’s police
Colt.</p>
<p>Koshloff lifted his hand with an indolent gesture,
to push the muzzle to one side, took a look
into Lanagan’s eyes, thought better of it, and turned
with mock deprecation to the Secretary. That gentleman
was watching Lanagan with frank admiration.</p>
<p>“We’ve got a place for you, Mr. Lanagan,” he
said, heartily, “any time you care to come to Washington.”</p>
<p>Lanagan was nettled. Here were keen, quick-witted,
level-headed men poking quiet fun at his
spectacular display. Because they were of the quick
intuitions of the exceptional mind, they fathomed
his mind and knew that he would not shoot. Lanagan
felt rather boyish for a fleeting second; got himself
in perspective, as it were, and grinned at the
grotesqueness of the situation. Then that seven-column
scare head in the <i>Enquirer</i>—the exclusive
that was to hum around the world, focussed before
him.</p>
<p>“Open that door!”</p>
<p>Koshloff arose then. There is something singularly
compelling about a blue-nosed revolver six
inches from your temple, regardless of any psychological
conviction you may have that the man is not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</SPAN></span>
going to use it. But whether Lanagan would have
carried the situation through successfully cannot be
answered. For at that moment there came a tapping
on the panel. Koshloff stopped at a signal
from Lanagan. The tapping came again. The
Secretary spoke:</p>
<p>“The situation is becoming strained, however
diverting it may be to all of us. For my part,
here are three men, all presumably of minds trained
to meet sudden exigencies, and yet no one of us can
solve this one. But other matters seem to be pressing.”
The tapping was becoming more insistent.
“Let us call a truce, Mr. Lanagan, of precisely ten
minutes. At the end of that time I give you my
word we will return matters to just their present
condition. It is agreeable?”</p>
<p>“Absolutely,” said Lanagan, pocketing his revolver.</p>
<p>Koshloff sprang across the room and tapped.
He was answered to his satisfaction, for the panel
slid open, and after a whispered consultation with
one of the secret service men, Koshloff stood from
before the panel and—</p>
<p>I, Norton, my hands neatly manacled behind me,
was ushered into the room.</p>
<p>Never will I forget the look on Lanagan’s face.
For at least three seconds, he was jolted out of his
traditional immobility. His look was mingled
alarm, surprise and amusement.</p>
<p>“Poor Norrie!” half-banteringly, half-serious.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</SPAN></span>
“Poor old blunderbuss. I have certainly got him in
a fine mess, him and his sick wife at home.”</p>
<p>I was so glad to see that nothing had happened to
him, that I paid little attention to the other two for
the moment. I was telling him how I waited until
12:15 and had just determined on telephoning
headquarters for Brady and Wilson when, standing
as I supposed well concealed, I was suddenly pinioned
by two figures that seemed to start up from
the earth, handcuffed and hustled across the street
into the room where we now were.</p>
<p>“I must compliment you on your organisation,”
said Lanagan ironically, bowing toward Koshloff.
Around that gentleman’s bearded lips played the
faintest trace of a mocking smile. I could fancy
how that smile ground into the proud soul of Lanagan.</p>
<p>The Secretary was growing impatient.</p>
<p>“The ten minutes, Mr. Lanagan?” he queried.</p>
<p>Lanagan turned and looked at me a long time.
“You should have obeyed orders,” he said finally.
“I told you to give me until twelve; not twelve-fifteen.”</p>
<p>It was the first time in his life Lanagan had
ever criticised me, and it cut to the quick. I knew
then how bitter his disappointment was.</p>
<p>“What is your ‘proposition?’” he said, turning
abruptly to the Secretary, whom I had at once
recognised as well as Koshloff.</p>
<p>“I haven’t any ‘proposition,’ Mr. Lanagan. It<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</SPAN></span>
is simply that neither the Russian government nor
our government can afford to let the world power
know that the Secretary of State journeyed, incognito,
across the American continent, to reach
a diplomatic agreement with Russia. Don’t you
realise what the publication of that unprecedented
thing would mean?”</p>
<p>“My only proposition is a declaration. You
hear most important information. It would undoubtedly
make a splendid news sensation to-morrow
morning. But you cannot possibly see the
great dangers you would involve your country in.
You might as well sit on a barrel of giant powder,
and drop your cigar and expect to save so much
as a collar button, as to print that story now and
avoid war.</p>
<p>“My being here was absolutely a matter imperative
for certain sufficient reasons. It was necessary
that I present myself to Mr. Koshloff in person.
That is all.</p>
<p>“I know newspaper men. Among the Washington
correspondents I number many warm
friends. I will take the judgment upon myself of
placing you both upon your honour. If I permit
you to go free from here, your lips are inviolately
sealed for all time, upon the contents of that telegram.
So far as I am concerned, that cannot be
used until such time as this trouble has been adjusted;
or, let me say, until the present administration
is out of power at Washington.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</SPAN></span>Into the stillness that followed I could distinctly
hear Lanagan’s teeth grind together. Those remarkable
eyes of his seemed fairly to emit a stream
of fire, they blazed so fiercely upon Koshloff and
the Secretary. He threw a sweeping glance around
the room. It was a look for all the world like
you see in the eyes of a caged tiger when he is
aroused. For my part, there was a quick drop
some place under my diaphragm. I was thinking
of my sick wife, and the consequences to her of
being held a State’s prisoner.</p>
<p>His hand went to his pocket and he half drew
his revolver; but it was rather a subconscious act,
I think, than any deliberate design to use it. For
Government, after all, is a potent thing. We fight
for it and die for it. It has a splendid and natural
influence not to be lightly tossed from us. And
here sat one of Government’s highest representatives.
Lanagan’s hand dropped to his side.</p>
<p>“That is better,” said the Secretary. “For
really, Mr. Lanagan, you cannot move from this
room until we say the word. You are as helpless
as though you were shackled. It is late and we
have important work to do. Your answer?”</p>
<p>It was almost pitiable to see Lanagan then. He
of a score of brilliant newspaper victories, the genius
of his craft, who found no situation too difficult
to solve, that striking figure in the newspaper life
of the West who knew no duty save to his paper,
who embodied the best and the highest ideals that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</SPAN></span>
tradition gives to the gentlemen of the Fourth Estate,
was beaten.</p>
<p>The glow had left his eyes and his voice was
dispirited, as he said:</p>
<p>“You have my word, Mr. Secretary, but on one
condition: that Carlos’ life be spared, and that you
start him back with your answer. It was no fault
of his. There is only one man in town who could
have got that pin from him, and I can hardly blame
Carlos for losing it, once Kid Monahan wanted it.”</p>
<p>“That condition must be granted, Mr. Koshloff,”
said the Secretary. Koshloff hesitated. “The
wearer of the pin understands the penalty,” he
began, curtly. “I know. But in this case I personally
request it.” “It is granted,” said Koshloff,
definitely.</p>
<p>Lanagan was morose and savage. The Secretary
proffered cigars, which Lanagan impatiently
refused.</p>
<p>“There is one thing that I would like, however,”
he said with but faint show of graciousness, “and
that is this pin. It will not be worn. I would like
it as a memento; as something tangible to exhibit
some day when I may tell this story, as proof, in
support of, possibly, one of the most unusual experiences
of myself or any other newspaper man.”</p>
<p>“There are but two in existence,” said Koshloff
soberly. “This one belongs to our Ambassador at
Washington. It was sent to me for use in receiving
the imperial message. The other—is in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</SPAN></span>
possession of the Czar, and will be worn by the receiving
courier at St. Petersburg. The penalty attaching
to the loss of the pin, either to myself or
my agents are—well, they are somewhat stringent
and, with the single exception of Carlos, have always
been enforced.”</p>
<p>Lanagan snapped the patent clasp and handed the
pin to Koshloff.</p>
<p>“You see, if I lost it,” with the slightest inflection
on the pronoun, “there would be no Czar of
this ‘particular bailiwick’ to pardon me as you
pardoned Carlos, Mr. Koshloff.”</p>
<p>We walked the long distance back to town and
dropped in at ——. Lanagan had not addressed
a word to me. I knew better than to attempt
to draw him into conversation. I could feel
that he was working the thing over and over again
in his mind. He suddenly burst forth passionately:</p>
<p>“I could have beaten them! I could have beaten
them! And they didn’t convince me at that, that
the story should not have been printed! There’s
too much of this one-man-for-the-nation stuff in
our government, anyhow.”</p>
<p>It was months before Lanagan told me that it
was because of my wife’s feeble health that he
feared to take the risk of having us both bottled
up for a month, by manœuvring further for freedom;
and had added: “Merely another argument
to prove that your true reporter should not marry.”</p>
<p>And as if to justify the truth of Lanagan’s assertion<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</SPAN></span>
to me that the story should have been printed,
within three days the Japanese fleet, scorpion-like,
had struck and crippled that unsuspecting and unready
Russian flotilla.</p>
<p>“Yah!” Lanagan had cried to me in furious
disgust, as he ripped the front page of the <i>Enquirer</i>
with its seven-column war head to tatters, “Statesmen!
Diplomats! Give me one live reporter, and
I’ll teach the whole gang of them the right way!
Do you suppose for one single, solitary, coruscating
second, that if those Japs knew the Secretary
was hobnobbing with the Russian envoy right here
in San Francisco, that the blow would have been
struck? Well, I tell you No! I wouldn’t even
have had to print the message. The story of the
meeting was enough.”</p>
<p>Well, the time limit set by the Secretary has long
since expired, so here is the suppressed story of the
Ambassador’s Stick-Pin, the finest, biggest, cleanest
in its elements of any of his whole career, as
Lanagan mourned to me more than once.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="ph2">VI<br/>
WHATSOEVER A MAN SOWETH</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />