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I. — THE WAGER

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IN the little card-room upstairs at the staid old Chronos Club on Gramercy Park a heated argument was going on. It was late on a night something like two years ago, and a long succession of refreshments from the bar downstairs was, without doubt, contributing to the heat. Heberdon, Spurway, Hanwell and Nedham, excellent fellows all, and good friends, had become involved in a discussion which had nothing to do with the game of bridge, and the cards were now lying unheeded on the table, while the players scowled and shook their fingers at each other, and otherwise went through the absurd pantomime of gentlemen annoyed with each other.

"You don't know what you're talking about!"

"Oh, I don't, don't I? Do you?"

"You talk as if you were the fount of all wisdom, and we were humble worshippers at the shrine."

"Your metaphors are mixed."

"Give us credit for some sense, Frank."

"I will, when you show any."

And so on. It appeared not to be a battle royal, but a case of three against one, Heberdon being the one. He was making certain asseverations on the subject of crime and criminals which the others violently and scornfully combated. Heberdon was a lawyer in his early thirties, a good-looking man of a pale, correct and regular cast of features, and of a demeanour exact and punctilious to match. He appeared to be the calmest of the quartet, but it was a calmness more apparent than real; he had his features under better control, that was all.

Like most men of his type, his cold and inscrutable exterior concealed an unbounded egoism and a mule like obstinacy. Opposition put him in a cold fury contradict him often enough, and he would go to any lengths to justify himself. This weakness of character was well known to his friends, and in the beginning they had had no object, save to amuse themselves by baiting him, but in doing so, as is not infrequently the case, they had lost their own tempers—all about nothing.

It had started innocently enough. Heberdon, shuffling the cards, had remarked in accents of scorn, "I see the police have got Corby."

"Who's Corby?" Spurway had asked. Spurway was a pink and portly stockbroker. His ideas were few, but he repeated them often. He was the noisiest of Heberdon's opponents.

"The hold-up man who got six thousand from a customer of the Eastern Trust Company three days ago."

Heberdon's ideas on the subject of crime were a source of diversion to his friends. Spurway had winked at the others. "What do you care?" he asked.

"Nothing," was the indifferent reply. "Only, one hates to see such a display of foolishness. Why, he got clean away with his six thousand without leaving a clue. Six thousand for, maybe, three minutes' work! How long do we have to sweat for six thousand, working honestly?"

"Oh, well, I guess honest work's easiest in the end," Spurway had remarked virtuously.

"It is, if you're a born fool," said Heberdon tartly.

"If he left no clue, how did they land him?" asked Nedham idly. Nedham was also a lawyer, but of a very different type from Heberdon, a large, blond, slow and reliable sort of fellow, with eyes set wide apart in his head and a benignant cast in one of them; in short, a man cut out by nature to be the trusted repository of wills and family skeletons.

"The conceited fool wrote a letter to the newspapers, bragging of his crime."

"Corby a friend of yours?" Hanwell had asked dryly. He was an advertising man, dark, slender and quick. He dealt mostly in personalities, and he knew best how to get under Heberdon's thin skin.

"Don't be an ass, Han."

"Well, you seem to take it to heart, his getting pinched."

"It's nothing, of course, but one hates to see a neat bit of work spoiled by stupid conceit."

"Why don't you set up a correspondence course in crime, Frank?" Hanwell had asked at this juncture.

Heberdon ignored the flippant query. The laughter of the others annoyed him excessively.

"Oh, well, I expect if they hadn't got him one way they would in another," Spurway remarked in his heavy way. "A crook hasn't got a chance in the world. The dice are loaded against him."

Now, Heberdon's hobby was crime and criminals. He possessed quite an extensive library on such matters, and he had likewise gone deeply into the correlated subjects of police methods, locks, disguises, et cetera. He looked upon himself as an expert authority, and, therefore, it greatly increased his irritation to hear a stupid fellow like Spurway laying down the law.

"That shows how little you have thought about it," he had retorted. "That's the impression the police like to give out. That's what we tell ourselves in order to feel comfortable. As a matter of fact, the exact reverse is the truth. Wealth is wide open. All a man has to do is to help himself. With the most ordinary horse sense a crook would run no greater risks than a man in a so-called honest business."

It was these extreme statements which had really started the fray. "Come off!" they cried derisively. "What kind of dope do you use?"

"Oh, when you can't answer an argument it's easy to become abusive!" retorted Heberdon with his irritating superior air.

"The movies have softened your brain!" suggested Spurway.

"I'm not interested in the movie brand of crime," returned Heberdon coldly. "I know something about the real thing."

"But according to the statistics a very great proportion of crimes are solved and the perpetrators punished," remarked Nedham.

"A very great proportion of crimes never get into the newspapers or into the statistics," said Heberdon. "In such cases it is to the interest both to those who have suffered and to the police to conceal them. Even if your argument were well founded it would only prove that criminals have no more sense than other men. I said if he had horse sense."

"In your opinion there's only one really sensible man honest or dishonest," remarked Hanwell dryly. Heberdon ignored him.

"Haven't we got ten thousand police in this town?" demanded Spurway. "How do they occupy themselves?"

"Ten thousand patrolmen," corrected Heberdon. "They have nothing to do with solving crime. That's in the hands of the few hundred men in the Central Detective Bureau. All they do is to look wise and wait for a crook to betray himself."

"It's just a cheap popular stunt to run down the police," observed Spurway. "I don't take any stock in it."

"I'm not running down the police," said Heberdon. "I suppose they do all they can. But what can they do? In fiction, of course, the super-detective performs amazing feats of analysis and deduction, but you've got to remember that the author planned it all out in advance and was able to make things come out just the way he pleased. In life, detectives are just ordinary human beings. If a crook makes his getaway without leaving any clue, the sleuths are up a tree, aren't they? They can't get messages out of the air!"

"There's always a clue!"

"There needn't be, if the crook has good sense."

"That's all right as far as it goes," said Nedham in his slow way; "but you overlook the fact that the whole of society is organised on a law-abiding basis. That is to say, every one of us is behind the policeman, while every hand is raised against the crook He's at a hopeless disadvantage."

"Not at all," retorted Heberdon. "It's only the consciousness of our helplessness that makes us stand behind the police. It's the policeman that's at a disadvantage. The crook prepares his plans in secrecy; he can take as much time as he wants. Every crime is a surprise sprung on society, a fresh riddle to be guessed. It's easier to make a riddle for others to solve than to solve other people's riddles, isn't it?"

"It's not only a question of being caught," said Nedham. "When a man kicks over the traces he becomes an outcast, a stray dog; all the decencies of life are out of his reach."

Heberdon, in his anger, went a little further than he intended. "When a man kicks over the traces he becomes free!" he cried. "He is no longer subject to the absurd and galling rules that bind us down. He lives his own life!"

The other three stared at him in a startled way.

"The policeman has the telephone, the telegraph, the newspapers to help him." Spurway spoke with the air of one laying down an unanswerable proposition.

"Sure," said Heberdon, "so has the crook. Especially. the newspapers. For the newspapers print all the doings of the police, and the crook only has to read them to keep one move ahead."

"But organised society—" began Nedham still pursuing his own line of thought.

"All bluff and intimidation!" interrupted Heberdon. "A man only has to defy what you call organised society to discover how helpless it is!"

"You seem to know," put in Hanwell dryly. Heberdon turned slightly paler. "Can't you engage in a discussion without descending to personalities?" he demanded.

It would be tedious to report the entire discussion. As in all such controversies, once they had set forth their ideas, the participants had nothing to do but repeat them, making up in increased emphasis what their statements lacked in freshness. It soon became a hammer-and-tongs' affair of flat assertion opposed by flat denial. Here they stuck. The slow Nedham became rosy, Spurway turned an alarming purple, Hanwell's face showed a fixed grin like a cat's, and Heberdon's pallor took on a livid hue.

Quite carried away, the latter cried at last, "It's a cinch to stick up a bank nowadays! With a car waiting outside, the engine running, a turn around the corner, and the trick is done!"

This was received with loud jeers.

"Frank Heberdon, the heroic highwayman!"

"Desperado by proxy?"

"Oh, Frank's a new type, the theoretical thief!"

"Leader of the club-lounge gang of yeggs!" Heberdon could not take joshing of this sort. His eyes narrowed dangerously.

"If it's so easy why don't you give us a demonstration?" taunted Hanwell.

"By gad, I will!" cried Heberdon, beside himself.

The others stared, and laughed queerly. They had not expected to be taken up so quickly. Then suddenly a mental picture of the correct Heberdon in the role of hold-up man suggested itself to them, and the laughter became uproarious.

Their laughter was unbearable to Heberdon. "You think I don't mean it!" he cried. "I'll show you!" He snatched his cheque-book out of his pocket. "I've got five hundred to put up on it. Will you match it?"

This effectually stilled their laughter. Spurway, who was the most nearly drunk of the quartet, solemnly drew out his cheque-book and prepared to write. After he had made the first move it was difficult for the other two to draw back, Hanwell, thinking to call Heberdon's bluff, made haste to produce his cheque-book in turn. Only Nedham ventured to remonstrate.

"Come on, fellows, this has gone too far. Think what you're doing!"

Heberdon turned on him with an ugly sneer. "I thought that would show up the short sports!" he said. There was a hateful, jeering quality in his voice that no man with warm blood in his veins could tolerate. Nedham flushed, and, taking out his cheque-book, wrote a cheque and tossed it in the centre of the table.

"I'm content," he said shortly.

Hanwell looked anxious. He would have liked to draw back then, but he lacked the initiative. Grown men, no less than boys, are led into strange situations through their fear of taking a dare.

"Is it five hundred each?" he asked in an uncertain voice.

"Sure," said Heberdon. "That's only fair since I take the risk."

Hanwell wrote his cheque out slowly.

Spurway had signed his. "I suppose we can have them certified in the morning," he remarked solemnly.

"Oh, I hope we're not bona-fide crooks," said Nedham bitterly.

Nedham, once the die was cast, seemed more determined than any of them. "I think it's all damned nonsense," he said, "but since you insist on it, let the consequences be on your own head!" He drew a sheet of paper toward him, and wrote rapidly.

"What are you doing?" asked Hanwell anxiously. "Drawing up a memorandum of the bet."

"Oh, your word is sufficient," said Heberdon patronisingly.

"You don't get the idea," observed Nedham dryly. "You might slip up, you know."

"No fear of that," Heberdon spoke confidently.

"I hope not, for all our sakes. I don't relish being made a fool of any more than the next man. It's just as well to take precautions. We'll seal this and deposit it in the office, where it will be stamped with the receiving stamp and the date. If you should happen to be nabbed by the stupid police, it may save you a jail sentence—or at least mitigate it."

Hanwell's and Spurway's eyes bolted at the ominous sound of the words "jail sentence," but not Heberdon's. Anger blinded him to every consideration save the necessity of justifying himself.

"What conditions do you lay down?" Nedham asked him. "It's your privilege to make your own." Heberdon affected a nonchalant air. "I undertake to stick up a New York City bank single-handed during business hours, and get clean away with a sum exceeding two thousand. Of course, I can't tell what the haul will amount to."

Nedham wrote. Finishing this, he said: "There ought to be a time limit set. I don't suppose any of us can afford to keep this amount of money tied up indefinitely."

"Say within a month, or I forfeit," suggested Heberdon.

Nedham completed writing his statement.

"What would you do with the loot?" Hanwell nervously wanted to know.

"Return it, of course," answered Heberdon with a cool stare. "What do you think I am?"

The paper was passed around the table and signed in characteristic style, Heberdon with bravado, Hanwell with signs of panic, Spurway solemnly closing one eye, and Nedham doggedly with tight lips. It was then enclosed with the cheques, and the envelope sealed with wax. They carried it downstairs to the club superintendent, who, according to instructions, stamped it with the club stamp and put it in the safe. The superintendent understood only that it contained the stakes of a wager, and was to be yielded up on demand of any two of the parties concerned.

A Self-Made Thief

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