<h2><SPAN name="chap04"></SPAN> The Flying Stars </h2>
<p>“The most beautiful crime I ever committed,” Flambeau would say in his
highly moral old age, “was also, by a singular coincidence, my last. It
was committed at Christmas. As an artist I had always attempted to provide
crimes suitable to the special season or landscapes in which I found
myself, choosing this or that terrace or garden for a catastrophe, as if
for a statuary group. Thus squires should be swindled in long rooms
panelled with oak; while Jews, on the other hand, should rather find
themselves unexpectedly penniless among the lights and screens of the Café
Riche. Thus, in England, if I wished to relieve a dean of his riches
(which is not so easy as you might suppose), I wished to frame him, if I
make myself clear, in the green lawns and grey towers of some cathedral
town. Similarly, in France, when I had got money out of a rich and wicked
peasant (which is almost impossible), it gratified me to get his indignant
head relieved against a grey line of clipped poplars, and those solemn
plains of Gaul over which broods the mighty spirit of Millet.</p>
<p>“Well, my last crime was a Christmas crime, a cheery, cosy, English
middle-class crime; a crime of Charles Dickens. I did it in a good old
middle-class house near Putney, a house with a crescent of carriage drive,
a house with a stable by the side of it, a house with the name on the two
outer gates, a house with a monkey tree. Enough, you know the species. I
really think my imitation of Dickens’s style was dexterous and literary.
It seems almost a pity I repented the same evening.”</p>
<p>Flambeau would then proceed to tell the story from the inside; and even
from the inside it was odd. Seen from the outside it was perfectly
incomprehensible, and it is from the outside that the stranger must study
it. From this standpoint the drama may be said to have begun when the
front doors of the house with the stable opened on the garden with the
monkey tree, and a young girl came out with bread to feed the birds on the
afternoon of Boxing Day. She had a pretty face, with brave brown eyes; but
her figure was beyond conjecture, for she was so wrapped up in brown furs
that it was hard to say which was hair and which was fur. But for the
attractive face she might have been a small toddling bear.</p>
<p>The winter afternoon was reddening towards evening, and already a ruby
light was rolled over the bloomless beds, filling them, as it were, with
the ghosts of the dead roses. On one side of the house stood the stable,
on the other an alley or cloister of laurels led to the larger garden
behind. The young lady, having scattered bread for the birds (for the
fourth or fifth time that day, because the dog ate it), passed
unobtrusively down the lane of laurels and into a glimmering plantation of
evergreens behind. Here she gave an exclamation of wonder, real or ritual,
and looking up at the high garden wall above her, beheld it fantastically
bestridden by a somewhat fantastic figure.</p>
<p>“Oh, don’t jump, Mr. Crook,” she called out in some alarm; “it’s much too
high.”</p>
<p>The individual riding the party wall like an aerial horse was a tall,
angular young man, with dark hair sticking up like a hair brush,
intelligent and even distinguished lineaments, but a sallow and almost
alien complexion. This showed the more plainly because he wore an
aggressive red tie, the only part of his costume of which he seemed to
take any care. Perhaps it was a symbol. He took no notice of the girl’s
alarmed adjuration, but leapt like a grasshopper to the ground beside her,
where he might very well have broken his legs.</p>
<p>“I think I was meant to be a burglar,” he said placidly, “and I have no
doubt I should have been if I hadn’t happened to be born in that nice
house next door. I can’t see any harm in it, anyhow.”</p>
<p>“How can you say such things!” she remonstrated.</p>
<p>“Well,” said the young man, “if you’re born on the wrong side of the wall,
I can’t see that it’s wrong to climb over it.”</p>
<p>“I never know what you will say or do next,” she said.</p>
<p>“I don’t often know myself,” replied Mr. Crook; “but then I am on the
right side of the wall now.”</p>
<p>“And which is the right side of the wall?” asked the young lady, smiling.</p>
<p>“Whichever side you are on,” said the young man named Crook.</p>
<p>As they went together through the laurels towards the front garden a motor
horn sounded thrice, coming nearer and nearer, and a car of splendid
speed, great elegance, and a pale green colour swept up to the front doors
like a bird and stood throbbing.</p>
<p>“Hullo, hullo!” said the young man with the red tie, “here’s somebody born
on the right side, anyhow. I didn’t know, Miss Adams, that your Santa
Claus was so modern as this.”</p>
<p>“Oh, that’s my godfather, Sir Leopold Fischer. He always comes on Boxing
Day.”</p>
<p>Then, after an innocent pause, which unconsciously betrayed some lack of
enthusiasm, Ruby Adams added:</p>
<p>“He is very kind.”</p>
<p>John Crook, journalist, had heard of that eminent City magnate; and it
was not his fault if the City magnate had not heard of him; for in
certain articles in <i>The Clarion</i> or <i>The New Age</i> Sir Leopold
had been dealt with austerely. But he said nothing and grimly watched the
unloading of the motor-car, which was rather a long process. A large,
neat chauffeur in green got out from the front, and a small, neat
manservant in grey got out from the back, and between them they deposited
Sir Leopold on the doorstep and began to unpack him, like some very
carefully protected parcel. Rugs enough to stock a bazaar, furs of all
the beasts of the forest, and scarves of all the colours of the rainbow
were unwrapped one by one, till they revealed something resembling the
human form; the form of a friendly, but foreign-looking old gentleman,
with a grey goat-like beard and a beaming smile, who rubbed his big fur
gloves together.</p>
<p>Long before this revelation was complete the two big doors of the porch
had opened in the middle, and Colonel Adams (father of the furry young
lady) had come out himself to invite his eminent guest inside. He was a
tall, sunburnt, and very silent man, who wore a red smoking-cap like a
fez, making him look like one of the English Sirdars or Pashas in Egypt.
With him was his brother-in-law, lately come from Canada, a big and rather
boisterous young gentleman-farmer, with a yellow beard, by name James
Blount. With him also was the more insignificant figure of the priest from
the neighbouring Roman Church; for the colonel’s late wife had been a
Catholic, and the children, as is common in such cases, had been trained
to follow her. Everything seemed undistinguished about the priest, even
down to his name, which was Brown; yet the colonel had always found
something companionable about him, and frequently asked him to such family
gatherings.</p>
<p>In the large entrance hall of the house there was ample room even for Sir
Leopold and the removal of his wraps. Porch and vestibule, indeed, were
unduly large in proportion to the house, and formed, as it were, a big
room with the front door at one end, and the bottom of the staircase at
the other. In front of the large hall fire, over which hung the colonel’s
sword, the process was completed and the company, including the saturnine
Crook, presented to Sir Leopold Fischer. That venerable financier,
however, still seemed struggling with portions of his well-lined attire,
and at length produced from a very interior tail-coat pocket, a black oval
case which he radiantly explained to be his Christmas present for his
god-daughter. With an unaffected vain-glory that had something disarming
about it he held out the case before them all; it flew open at a touch and
half-blinded them. It was just as if a crystal fountain had spurted in
their eyes. In a nest of orange velvet lay like three eggs, three white
and vivid diamonds that seemed to set the very air on fire all round them.
Fischer stood beaming benevolently and drinking deep of the astonishment
and ecstasy of the girl, the grim admiration and gruff thanks of the
colonel, the wonder of the whole group.</p>
<p>“I’ll put ’em back now, my dear,” said Fischer, returning the case to the
tails of his coat. “I had to be careful of ’em coming down. They’re the
three great African diamonds called ‘The Flying Stars,’ because they’ve
been stolen so often. All the big criminals are on the track; but even the
rough men about in the streets and hotels could hardly have kept their
hands off them. I might have lost them on the road here. It was quite
possible.”</p>
<p>“Quite natural, I should say,” growled the man in the red tie. “I
shouldn’t blame ’em if they had taken ’em. When they ask for bread, and
you don’t even give them a stone, I think they might take the stone for
themselves.”</p>
<p>“I won’t have you talking like that,” cried the girl, who was in a curious
glow. “You’ve only talked like that since you became a horrid
what’s-his-name. You know what I mean. What do you call a man who wants to
embrace the chimney-sweep?”</p>
<p>“A saint,” said Father Brown.</p>
<p>“I think,” said Sir Leopold, with a supercilious smile, “that Ruby means a
Socialist.”</p>
<p>“A radical does not mean a man who lives on radishes,” remarked Crook,
with some impatience; “and a Conservative does not mean a man who
preserves jam. Neither, I assure you, does a Socialist mean a man who
desires a social evening with the chimney-sweep. A Socialist means a man
who wants all the chimneys swept and all the chimney-sweeps paid for it.”</p>
<p>“But who won’t allow you,” put in the priest in a low voice, “to own your
own soot.”</p>
<p>Crook looked at him with an eye of interest and even respect. “Does one
want to own soot?” he asked.</p>
<p>“One might,” answered Brown, with speculation in his eye. “I’ve heard that
gardeners use it. And I once made six children happy at Christmas when the
conjuror didn’t come, entirely with soot—applied externally.”</p>
<p>“Oh, splendid,” cried Ruby. “Oh, I wish you’d do it to this company.”</p>
<p>The boisterous Canadian, Mr. Blount, was lifting his loud voice in
applause, and the astonished financier his (in some considerable
deprecation), when a knock sounded at the double front doors. The priest
opened them, and they showed again the front garden of evergreens,
monkey-tree and all, now gathering gloom against a gorgeous violet sunset.
The scene thus framed was so coloured and quaint, like a back scene in a
play, that they forgot a moment the insignificant figure standing in the
door. He was dusty-looking and in a frayed coat, evidently a common
messenger. “Any of you gentlemen Mr. Blount?” he asked, and held forward a
letter doubtfully. Mr. Blount started, and stopped in his shout of assent.
Ripping up the envelope with evident astonishment he read it; his face
clouded a little, and then cleared, and he turned to his brother-in-law
and host.</p>
<p>“I’m sick at being such a nuisance, colonel,” he said, with the cheery
colonial conventions; “but would it upset you if an old acquaintance
called on me here tonight on business? In point of fact it’s Florian, that
famous French acrobat and comic actor; I knew him years ago out West (he
was a French-Canadian by birth), and he seems to have business for me,
though I hardly guess what.”</p>
<p>“Of course, of course,” replied the colonel carelessly—“My dear
chap, any friend of yours. No doubt he will prove an acquisition.”</p>
<p>“He’ll black his face, if that’s what you mean,” cried Blount, laughing.
“I don’t doubt he’d black everyone else’s eyes. I don’t care; I’m not
refined. I like the jolly old pantomime where a man sits on his top hat.”</p>
<p>“Not on mine, please,” said Sir Leopold Fischer, with dignity.</p>
<p>“Well, well,” observed Crook, airily, “don’t let’s quarrel. There are
lower jokes than sitting on a top hat.”</p>
<p>Dislike of the red-tied youth, born of his predatory opinions and evident
intimacy with the pretty godchild, led Fischer to say, in his most
sarcastic, magisterial manner: “No doubt you have found something much
lower than sitting on a top hat. What is it, pray?”</p>
<p>“Letting a top hat sit on you, for instance,” said the Socialist.</p>
<p>“Now, now, now,” cried the Canadian farmer with his barbarian benevolence,
“don’t let’s spoil a jolly evening. What I say is, let’s do something for
the company tonight. Not blacking faces or sitting on hats, if you don’t
like those—but something of the sort. Why couldn’t we have a proper
old English pantomime—clown, columbine, and so on. I saw one when I
left England at twelve years old, and it’s blazed in my brain like a
bonfire ever since. I came back to the old country only last year, and I
find the thing’s extinct. Nothing but a lot of snivelling fairy plays. I
want a hot poker and a policeman made into sausages, and they give me
princesses moralising by moonlight, Blue Birds, or something. Blue Beard’s
more in my line, and him I like best when he turned into the pantaloon.”</p>
<p>“I’m all for making a policeman into sausages,” said John Crook. “It’s a
better definition of Socialism than some recently given. But surely the
get-up would be too big a business.”</p>
<p>“Not a scrap,” cried Blount, quite carried away. “A harlequinade’s the
quickest thing we can do, for two reasons. First, one can gag to any
degree; and, second, all the objects are household things—tables and
towel-horses and washing baskets, and things like that.”</p>
<p>“That’s true,” admitted Crook, nodding eagerly and walking about. “But I’m
afraid I can’t have my policeman’s uniform? Haven’t killed a policeman
lately.”</p>
<p>Blount frowned thoughtfully a space, and then smote his thigh. “Yes, we
can!” he cried. “I’ve got Florian’s address here, and he knows every
costumier in London. I’ll phone him to bring a police dress when he
comes.” And he went bounding away to the telephone.</p>
<p>“Oh, it’s glorious, godfather,” cried Ruby, almost dancing. “I’ll be
columbine and you shall be pantaloon.”</p>
<p>The millionaire held himself stiff with a sort of heathen solemnity. “I
think, my dear,” he said, “you must get someone else for pantaloon.”</p>
<p>“I will be pantaloon, if you like,” said Colonel Adams, taking his cigar
out of his mouth, and speaking for the first and last time.</p>
<p>“You ought to have a statue,” cried the Canadian, as he came back,
radiant, from the telephone. “There, we are all fitted. Mr. Crook shall be
clown; he’s a journalist and knows all the oldest jokes. I can be
harlequin, that only wants long legs and jumping about. My friend Florian
’phones he’s bringing the police costume; he’s changing on the way. We can
act it in this very hall, the audience sitting on those broad stairs
opposite, one row above another. These front doors can be the back scene,
either open or shut. Shut, you see an English interior. Open, a moonlit
garden. It all goes by magic.” And snatching a chance piece of billiard
chalk from his pocket, he ran it across the hall floor, half-way between
the front door and the staircase, to mark the line of the footlights.</p>
<p>How even such a banquet of bosh was got ready in the time remained a
riddle. But they went at it with that mixture of recklessness and industry
that lives when youth is in a house; and youth was in that house that
night, though not all may have isolated the two faces and hearts from
which it flamed. As always happens, the invention grew wilder and wilder
through the very tameness of the bourgeois conventions from which it had
to create. The columbine looked charming in an outstanding skirt that
strangely resembled the large lamp-shade in the drawing-room. The clown
and pantaloon made themselves white with flour from the cook, and red with
rouge from some other domestic, who remained (like all true Christian
benefactors) anonymous. The harlequin, already clad in silver paper out of
cigar boxes, was, with difficulty, prevented from smashing the old
Victorian lustre chandeliers, that he might cover himself with resplendent
crystals. In fact he would certainly have done so, had not Ruby unearthed
some old pantomime paste jewels she had worn at a fancy dress party as the
Queen of Diamonds. Indeed, her uncle, James Blount, was getting almost out
of hand in his excitement; he was like a schoolboy. He put a paper
donkey’s head unexpectedly on Father Brown, who bore it patiently, and
even found some private manner of moving his ears. He even essayed to put
the paper donkey’s tail to the coat-tails of Sir Leopold Fischer. This,
however, was frowned down. “Uncle is too absurd,” cried Ruby to Crook,
round whose shoulders she had seriously placed a string of sausages. “Why
is he so wild?”</p>
<p>“He is harlequin to your columbine,” said Crook. “I am only the clown who
makes the old jokes.”</p>
<p>“I wish you were the harlequin,” she said, and left the string of sausages
swinging.</p>
<p>Father Brown, though he knew every detail done behind the scenes, and had
even evoked applause by his transformation of a pillow into a pantomime
baby, went round to the front and sat among the audience with all the
solemn expectation of a child at his first matinee. The spectators were
few, relations, one or two local friends, and the servants; Sir Leopold
sat in the front seat, his full and still fur-collared figure largely
obscuring the view of the little cleric behind him; but it has never been
settled by artistic authorities whether the cleric lost much. The
pantomime was utterly chaotic, yet not contemptible; there ran through it
a rage of improvisation which came chiefly from Crook the clown. Commonly
he was a clever man, and he was inspired tonight with a wild omniscience,
a folly wiser than the world, that which comes to a young man who has seen
for an instant a particular expression on a particular face. He was
supposed to be the clown, but he was really almost everything else, the
author (so far as there was an author), the prompter, the scene-painter,
the scene-shifter, and, above all, the orchestra. At abrupt intervals in
the outrageous performance he would hurl himself in full costume at the
piano and bang out some popular music equally absurd and appropriate.</p>
<p>The climax of this, as of all else, was the moment when the two front
doors at the back of the scene flew open, showing the lovely moonlit
garden, but showing more prominently the famous professional guest; the
great Florian, dressed up as a policeman. The clown at the piano played
the constabulary chorus in the “Pirates of Penzance,” but it was drowned
in the deafening applause, for every gesture of the great comic actor was
an admirable though restrained version of the carriage and manner of the
police. The harlequin leapt upon him and hit him over the helmet; the
pianist playing “Where did you get that hat?” he faced about in admirably
simulated astonishment, and then the leaping harlequin hit him again (the
pianist suggesting a few bars of “Then we had another one”). Then the
harlequin rushed right into the arms of the policeman and fell on top of
him, amid a roar of applause. Then it was that the strange actor gave that
celebrated imitation of a dead man, of which the fame still lingers round
Putney. It was almost impossible to believe that a living person could
appear so limp.</p>
<p>The athletic harlequin swung him about like a sack or twisted or tossed
him like an Indian club; all the time to the most maddeningly ludicrous
tunes from the piano. When the harlequin heaved the comic constable
heavily off the floor the clown played “I arise from dreams of thee.” When
he shuffled him across his back, “With my bundle on my shoulder,” and when
the harlequin finally let fall the policeman with a most convincing thud,
the lunatic at the instrument struck into a jingling measure with some
words which are still believed to have been, “I sent a letter to my love
and on the way I dropped it.”</p>
<p>At about this limit of mental anarchy Father Brown’s view was obscured
altogether; for the City magnate in front of him rose to his full height
and thrust his hands savagely into all his pockets. Then he sat down
nervously, still fumbling, and then stood up again. For an instant it
seemed seriously likely that he would stride across the footlights; then
he turned a glare at the clown playing the piano; and then he burst in
silence out of the room.</p>
<p>The priest had only watched for a few more minutes the absurd but not
inelegant dance of the amateur harlequin over his splendidly unconscious
foe. With real though rude art, the harlequin danced slowly backwards out
of the door into the garden, which was full of moonlight and stillness.
The vamped dress of silver paper and paste, which had been too glaring in
the footlights, looked more and more magical and silvery as it danced away
under a brilliant moon. The audience was closing in with a cataract of
applause, when Brown felt his arm abruptly touched, and he was asked in a
whisper to come into the colonel’s study.</p>
<p>He followed his summoner with increasing doubt, which was not dispelled by
a solemn comicality in the scene of the study. There sat Colonel Adams,
still unaffectedly dressed as a pantaloon, with the knobbed whalebone
nodding above his brow, but with his poor old eyes sad enough to have
sobered a Saturnalia. Sir Leopold Fischer was leaning against the
mantelpiece and heaving with all the importance of panic.</p>
<p>“This is a very painful matter, Father Brown,” said Adams. “The truth is,
those diamonds we all saw this afternoon seem to have vanished from my
friend’s tail-coat pocket. And as you—”</p>
<p>“As I,” supplemented Father Brown, with a broad grin, “was sitting just
behind him—”</p>
<p>“Nothing of the sort shall be suggested,” said Colonel Adams, with a firm
look at Fischer, which rather implied that some such thing had been
suggested. “I only ask you to give me the assistance that any gentleman
might give.”</p>
<p>“Which is turning out his pockets,” said Father Brown, and proceeded to do
so, displaying seven and sixpence, a return ticket, a small silver
crucifix, a small breviary, and a stick of chocolate.</p>
<p>The colonel looked at him long, and then said, “Do you know, I should like
to see the inside of your head more than the inside of your pockets. My
daughter is one of your people, I know; well, she has lately—” and
he stopped.</p>
<p>“She has lately,” cried out old Fischer, “opened her father’s house to a
cut-throat Socialist, who says openly he would steal anything from a
richer man. This is the end of it. Here is the richer man—and none
the richer.”</p>
<p>“If you want the inside of my head you can have it,” said Brown rather
wearily. “What it’s worth you can say afterwards. But the first thing I
find in that disused pocket is this: that men who mean to steal diamonds
don’t talk Socialism. They are more likely,” he added demurely, “to
denounce it.”</p>
<p>Both the others shifted sharply and the priest went on:</p>
<p>“You see, we know these people, more or less. That Socialist would no more
steal a diamond than a Pyramid. We ought to look at once to the one man we
don’t know. The fellow acting the policeman—Florian. Where is he
exactly at this minute, I wonder.”</p>
<p>The pantaloon sprang erect and strode out of the room. An interlude
ensued, during which the millionaire stared at the priest, and the priest
at his breviary; then the pantaloon returned and said, with staccato
gravity, “The policeman is still lying on the stage. The curtain has gone
up and down six times; he is still lying there.”</p>
<p>Father Brown dropped his book and stood staring with a look of blank
mental ruin. Very slowly a light began to creep in his grey eyes, and then
he made the scarcely obvious answer.</p>
<p>“Please forgive me, colonel, but when did your wife die?”</p>
<p>“Wife!” replied the staring soldier, “she died this year two months. Her
brother James arrived just a week too late to see her.”</p>
<p>The little priest bounded like a rabbit shot. “Come on!” he cried in quite
unusual excitement. “Come on! We’ve got to go and look at that policeman!”</p>
<p>They rushed on to the now curtained stage, breaking rudely past the
columbine and clown (who seemed whispering quite contentedly), and Father
Brown bent over the prostrate comic policeman.</p>
<p>“Chloroform,” he said as he rose; “I only guessed it just now.”</p>
<p>There was a startled stillness, and then the colonel said slowly, “Please
say seriously what all this means.”</p>
<p>Father Brown suddenly shouted with laughter, then stopped, and only
struggled with it for instants during the rest of his speech. “Gentlemen,”
he gasped, “there’s not much time to talk. I must run after the criminal.
But this great French actor who played the policeman—this clever
corpse the harlequin waltzed with and dandled and threw about—he was—”
His voice again failed him, and he turned his back to run.</p>
<p>“He was?” called Fischer inquiringly.</p>
<p>“A real policeman,” said Father Brown, and ran away into the dark.</p>
<p>There were hollows and bowers at the extreme end of that leafy garden, in
which the laurels and other immortal shrubs showed against sapphire sky
and silver moon, even in that midwinter, warm colours as of the south. The
green gaiety of the waving laurels, the rich purple indigo of the night,
the moon like a monstrous crystal, make an almost irresponsible romantic
picture; and among the top branches of the garden trees a strange figure
is climbing, who looks not so much romantic as impossible. He sparkles
from head to heel, as if clad in ten million moons; the real moon catches
him at every movement and sets a new inch of him on fire. But he swings,
flashing and successful, from the short tree in this garden to the tall,
rambling tree in the other, and only stops there because a shade has slid
under the smaller tree and has unmistakably called up to him.</p>
<p>“Well, Flambeau,” says the voice, “you really look like a Flying Star; but
that always means a Falling Star at last.”</p>
<p>The silver, sparkling figure above seems to lean forward in the laurels
and, confident of escape, listens to the little figure below.</p>
<p>“You never did anything better, Flambeau. It was clever to come from
Canada (with a Paris ticket, I suppose) just a week after Mrs. Adams died,
when no one was in a mood to ask questions. It was cleverer to have marked
down the Flying Stars and the very day of Fischer’s coming. But there’s no
cleverness, but mere genius, in what followed. Stealing the stones, I
suppose, was nothing to you. You could have done it by sleight of hand in
a hundred other ways besides that pretence of putting a paper donkey’s
tail to Fischer’s coat. But in the rest you eclipsed yourself.”</p>
<p>The silvery figure among the green leaves seems to linger as if
hypnotised, though his escape is easy behind him; he is staring at the man
below.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” says the man below, “I know all about it. I know you not only
forced the pantomime, but put it to a double use. You were going to steal
the stones quietly; news came by an accomplice that you were already
suspected, and a capable police officer was coming to rout you up that
very night. A common thief would have been thankful for the warning and
fled; but you are a poet. You already had the clever notion of hiding the
jewels in a blaze of false stage jewellery. Now, you saw that if the dress
were a harlequin’s the appearance of a policeman would be quite in
keeping. The worthy officer started from Putney police station to find
you, and walked into the queerest trap ever set in this world. When the
front door opened he walked straight on to the stage of a Christmas
pantomime, where he could be kicked, clubbed, stunned and drugged by the
dancing harlequin, amid roars of laughter from all the most respectable
people in Putney. Oh, you will never do anything better. And now, by the
way, you might give me back those diamonds.”</p>
<p>The green branch on which the glittering figure swung, rustled as if in
astonishment; but the voice went on:</p>
<p>“I want you to give them back, Flambeau, and I want you to give up this
life. There is still youth and honour and humour in you; don’t fancy they
will last in that trade. Men may keep a sort of level of good, but no man
has ever been able to keep on one level of evil. That road goes down and
down. The kind man drinks and turns cruel; the frank man kills and lies
about it. Many a man I’ve known started like you to be an honest outlaw, a
merry robber of the rich, and ended stamped into slime. Maurice Blum
started out as an anarchist of principle, a father of the poor; he ended a
greasy spy and tale-bearer that both sides used and despised. Harry Burke
started his free money movement sincerely enough; now he’s sponging on a
half-starved sister for endless brandies and sodas. Lord Amber went into
wild society in a sort of chivalry; now he’s paying blackmail to the
lowest vultures in London. Captain Barillon was the great gentleman-apache
before your time; he died in a madhouse, screaming with fear of the
“narks” and receivers that had betrayed him and hunted him down. I know
the woods look very free behind you, Flambeau; I know that in a flash you
could melt into them like a monkey. But some day you will be an old grey
monkey, Flambeau. You will sit up in your free forest cold at heart and
close to death, and the tree-tops will be very bare.”</p>
<p>Everything continued still, as if the small man below held the other in
the tree in some long invisible leash; and he went on:</p>
<p>“Your downward steps have begun. You used to boast of doing nothing mean,
but you are doing something mean tonight. You are leaving suspicion on an
honest boy with a good deal against him already; you are separating him
from the woman he loves and who loves him. But you will do meaner things
than that before you die.”</p>
<p>Three flashing diamonds fell from the tree to the turf. The small man
stooped to pick them up, and when he looked up again the green cage of the
tree was emptied of its silver bird.</p>
<p>The restoration of the gems (accidentally picked up by Father Brown, of
all people) ended the evening in uproarious triumph; and Sir Leopold, in
his height of good humour, even told the priest that though he himself had
broader views, he could respect those whose creed required them to be
cloistered and ignorant of this world.</p>
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