A Thief in the Night: Further adventures of A. J. Raffles, Cricketer and Cracksman. E. W. Hornung
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E. W. Hornung
A Thief in the Night: Further adventures of A. J. Raffles, Cricketer and Cracksman
Published by Good Press, 2021
EAN 4057664610218
Table of Contents
ILLUSTRATIONS
I think she must have seen us, even in the dim light | Frontispiece |
Facing Page | |
Raffles in the strong-room | 54 |
It was the fire-eating and prison-inspecting colonel himself. He was ready for me, a revolver in his hand | 76 |
Raffles was as excited as any of us now; he outstripped us all | 106 |
He kept us laughing in his study until the chapel bells rang him out | 152 |
The ragged trousers stripped from an evening pair | 176 |
Down went the trap-door with a bang | 232 |
No one can make out what this little thick velvet bag's for | 260 |
A Thief in the Night
Out of Paradise
f I must tell more tales of Raffles, I can but go back to our earliest days together, and fill in the blanks left by discretion in existing annals. In so doing I may indeed fill some small part of an infinitely greater blank, across which you may conceive me to have stretched my canvas for the first frank portrait of my friend. The whole truth cannot harm him now. I shall paint in every wart. Raffles was a villain, when all is written; it is no service to his memory to gloze the fact; yet I have done so myself before to-day. I have omitted whole heinous episodes. I have dwelt unduly on the redeeming side. And this I may do again, blinded even as I write by the gallant glamour that made my villain more to me than any hero. But at least there shall be no more reservations, and as an earnest I shall make no further secret of the greatest wrong that even Raffles ever did me.
I pick my words with care and pain, loyal as I still would be to my friend, and yet remembering as I must those Ides of March when he led me blindfold into temptation and crime. That was an ugly office, if you will. It was a moral bagatelle to the treacherous trick he was to play me a few weeks later. The second offence, on the other hand, was to prove the less serious of the two against society, and might in itself have been published to the world years ago. There have been private reasons for my reticence. The affair was not only too intimately mine, and too discreditable to Raffles. One other was involved in it, one dearer to me than Raffles himself, one whose name shall not even now be sullied by association with ours.
Suffice it that I had been engaged to her before that mad March deed. True, her people called it "an understanding," and frowned even upon that, as well they might. But their authority was not direct; we bowed to it as an act of politic grace; between us, all was well but my unworthiness. That may be gauged when I confess that this was how the matter stood on the night I gave a worthless check for my losses at baccarat, and afterward turned to Raffles in my need. Even after that I saw her sometimes. But I let her guess that there was more upon my soul than she must ever share, and at last I had written to end it all. I remember that week so well! It was the close of such a May as we had never had since, and I was too miserable even to follow the heavy scoring in the papers. Raffles was the only man who could get a wicket up at Lord's, and I never once went to see him play. Against Yorkshire, however, he helped himself to a hundred runs as well; and that brought Raffles round to me, on his way home to the Albany.
"We