The Sack of Monte Carlo 13
“Ah!”
“I know the place well, and speak with some authority.”
“Just what we want.”
“Now, there are nine roulette and four trente-et-quarante tables. Each,
I am told, is furnished with £4000 to begin play on for the day; total,
£52,000.”
“Mark this, gentlemen!” cried the agitated Brentin.
“But each table wins per diem, roughly speaking, about £400; so that, if
you select, say, ten o’clock in the evening for your attempt, you may
count on £5200 more—total, say, £58,000.”
“Make a note, gentlemen,” said Brentin, “that we select ten-thirty, to
make sure.”
“That does not take into account the money lying there already staked by
the players, which you may calculate as fully £3000 more.”
“Oh, go slow, Mr. Bailey Thompson, sir, go slow!”
“But where your underestimation is most marked,” said the impressive
little man, sweeping his eyes round the attentive circle, “is in
calculating the reserve in the vaults. In short, I have no hesitation in
saying that, taking everything into consideration, there must be at
least half a million of money lying in the Casino premises,
at—the—very—least!”
In the dead silence, broken only by the taking in of breath, I could
hear Lucy playing the piano down-stairs in the little room behind the
bar.
Mr. Thompson sipped his punch again and looked at us calmly over the rim
of his tumbler.
“And you think the money in the vaults is as easily got at as the rest?”
Bob Hines asked, in a constrained voice.
“That I shouldn’t like to say,” Thompson cautiously replied. “I can tell
you, however, that I have myself twice seen the bank broken; which only
means, by-the-way, that the £4000 at that particular table had been
won.”
“And what happened?”
“Play at that table was merely suspended while a further supply was
being fetched from the vaults.”
“And where are the vaults?”
“Below the building somewhere, but precisely where I cannot tell you;
but I have no doubt, once the rooms are in your possession, and, given
the time, you would have no difficulty whatever in breaking into them.”
Impressive silence again, broken at last by Brentin. “And now, sir, will
you be good enough to give us some idea of the amount of opposition we
are likely to meet with?”
Bailey Thompson looked meditative, and, after a pause, proceeded.
“Outside the building, at every twenty paces or so, you will find men
stationed. They are merely firemen, whose chief duty it is to see no
bomb is thrown into the rooms or deposited outside by the anarchists,
who have frequently threatened it. They are not soldiers, and are not in
any way armed.”
Teddy Parsons breathed heavily and murmured, “Capital!”
“And what force is there inside?”
“There are a great number of men about, attendants and so forth, but I
cannot conceive them capable of any resistance.”
“You don’t imagine they are secretly armed?” asked the palpitating
Teddy.
“Dear me, no, any more than the attendants at an ordinary club!”
“In short,” said Mr. Brentin, “you feel pretty confident that neither
inside nor outside we are likely to encounter a single weapon of
offence?”
“Perfectly confident. Perfectly confident, gentlemen.”
“And what about the army?” Parsons asked. “I understand the Prince of
Monaco has an army of seventy men.”
“Quite correct,” Bailey Thompson replied, “but it is stationed up in
Monaco, at least a mile away.”
“Then it would be some time before they could be mustered.”
“Besides,” Mr. Brentin dryly observed, “they are not likely to be of
much use unless they can swim. We propose to escape on board the
_Amaranth_.”
“That’s your best chance, gentlemen,” said Mr. Thompson—“in fact, your
only practicable one.”
“And you think six of us are enough for the business?” asked Masters.
“You will be the best judges of that, perhaps, when you see the place.
My own feeling is that, to make it all perfectly safe, you should be at
least a dozen.”
“If necessary,” said Mr. Brentin, “we can always impress half a dozen of
our crew. Nothing like a jolly Jack-tar for a job of this kind.”
“If you do,” smiled Bailey Thompson, “you will have to fig them out in
what they call _tenue de ville convenable_. They won’t let them into the
rooms in their common sailor dress. Why, gentlemen, they refused me
admission once because my boots were dusty. Clean hands don’t so much
matter,” he added, in his sly fashion.
Then he rose and remarked, “I must now be returning to Wharton; my poor
old friend Crage is in low spirits, and I have undertaken not to be more
than half an hour away from him. If there is any further information
wanted, however—”
“Just this,” said Hines; “taking it at its worst, and supposing we are
all, or any of us, captured, what do you imagine will be our fate?”
Mr. Thompson shrugged his shoulders. “You will be treated with every
courtesy; you will undoubtedly be tried, but—if only from the fact of
your failing—you will, I should think, be let off easily. If you
succeed, and all of you get clear away, I do not imagine there will be
any serious pursuit, for policy will close the authorities’ mouth; they
will not care to advertise to the world how easily the place can be
looted. In fact, from what I know of them, they will most likely take
particular pains to deny it has ever been done at all. You see,
gentlemen, the entire Continental press is in their pay.”
“There is, no doubt, a criminal court and a prison at Monaco?”
“Oh yes; and if, unfortunately, you are caught, you will all be
sentenced for life, I imagine.”
“I don’t call that being let off easy,” grunted Teddy.
“Perhaps not in theory, but in practice, yes; for in a year or so you
will find yourselves free to stroll about the town, and even down to
Monte Carlo.”
“In fact, bolt?” said Masters.
“Exactly; more especially if your relatives pay due attention to the
jailers and see they want for nothing. In conclusion, gentlemen, I drink
to your enterprise, and wish you all well through it. _Au revoir!_” And
with a courteous bow and wave of his gloved hand (he wore dogskin gloves
the whole time), Mr. Bailey Thompson, accompanied by the jubilant
Brentin, withdrew.
“Well,” I said, “what do you say now?”
There was a brief silence, and then Teddy Parsons observed, “It seems to
me we may as well go.”
“Half a million of money!” murmured Forsyth, meditatively, “and most of
it for hospitals.”
“I think, out of _that_, you might manage to stand me a swimming-bath as
well as a gymnasium, eh?” whispered Bob Hines.
Mr. Brentin returned to us radiant. “Well, gentlemen, what do you think
of it all now?”
“They are coming,” I ventured to say, and the band of brothers nodded.
“But, I say!” spluttered Masters, who had for the most part kept
silent—“who is Mr. Bailey Thompson? Who knows anything about him? Who
can guarantee he won’t give us away to the Monte Carlo people, and have
us all quodded before we can even get a look in?”
Mr. Brentin frowned. “I will answer for Mr. Thompson with my life!” he
cried. “He is a gentleman of the most royal integrity. I have studied
him in every social relation, and I never knew him fail.”
“Oh, well, that’ll do,” interrupted Bob Hines, who had all along shown
some impatience at Brentin’s long speeches. “We only want to know
somebody is responsible for his not selling us, that’s all.”
A responsibility Mr. Brentin undertook with the greatest cheerfulness
and readiness, and that, mind you, for a man who turned out to be
Scotland Yard personified—who, but for his inane jealousy of the French
police and his desire to effect our capture single-handed, would have
been the means of casting five highly strung English gentlemen, and one
excitable American, into lifelong chains; and who, on the very morning
after his interview with us (as he afterwards confessed to me), was
actually at Whitehall concerting plans with the authorities there how
best to catch us _in flagrante delicto_!
How, on the contrary, we caught _him_, and had him deported to the southernmost point of Greece, forms one of my choicest memories, and will now soon be related at sufficient length.
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