<h2><SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN> The Sins of Prince Saradine </h2>
<p>When Flambeau took his month’s holiday from his office in Westminster he
took it in a small sailing-boat, so small that it passed much of its time
as a rowing-boat. He took it, moreover, in little rivers in the Eastern
counties, rivers so small that the boat looked like a magic boat, sailing
on land through meadows and cornfields. The vessel was just comfortable
for two people; there was room only for necessities, and Flambeau had
stocked it with such things as his special philosophy considered
necessary. They reduced themselves, apparently, to four essentials: tins
of salmon, if he should want to eat; loaded revolvers, if he should want
to fight; a bottle of brandy, presumably in case he should faint; and a
priest, presumably in case he should die. With this light luggage he
crawled down the little Norfolk rivers, intending to reach the Broads at
last, but meanwhile delighting in the overhanging gardens and meadows, the
mirrored mansions or villages, lingering to fish in the pools and corners,
and in some sense hugging the shore.</p>
<p>Like a true philosopher, Flambeau had no aim in his holiday; but, like a
true philosopher, he had an excuse. He had a sort of half purpose, which
he took just so seriously that its success would crown the holiday, but
just so lightly that its failure would not spoil it. Years ago, when he
had been a king of thieves and the most famous figure in Paris, he had
often received wild communications of approval, denunciation, or even
love; but one had, somehow, stuck in his memory. It consisted simply of a
visiting-card, in an envelope with an English postmark. On the back of the
card was written in French and in green ink: “If you ever retire and
become respectable, come and see me. I want to meet you, for I have met
all the other great men of my time. That trick of yours of getting one
detective to arrest the other was the most splendid scene in French
history.” On the front of the card was engraved in the formal fashion,
“Prince Saradine, Reed House, Reed Island, Norfolk.”</p>
<p>He had not troubled much about the prince then, beyond ascertaining that
he had been a brilliant and fashionable figure in southern Italy. In his
youth, it was said, he had eloped with a married woman of high rank; the
escapade was scarcely startling in his social world, but it had clung to
men’s minds because of an additional tragedy: the alleged suicide of the
insulted husband, who appeared to have flung himself over a precipice in
Sicily. The prince then lived in Vienna for a time, but his more recent
years seemed to have been passed in perpetual and restless travel. But
when Flambeau, like the prince himself, had left European celebrity and
settled in England, it occurred to him that he might pay a surprise visit
to this eminent exile in the Norfolk Broads. Whether he should find the
place he had no idea; and, indeed, it was sufficiently small and
forgotten. But, as things fell out, he found it much sooner than he
expected.</p>
<p>They had moored their boat one night under a bank veiled in high grasses
and short pollarded trees. Sleep, after heavy sculling, had come to them
early, and by a corresponding accident they awoke before it was light. To
speak more strictly, they awoke before it was daylight; for a large lemon
moon was only just setting in the forest of high grass above their heads,
and the sky was of a vivid violet-blue, nocturnal but bright. Both men had
simultaneously a reminiscence of childhood, of the elfin and adventurous
time when tall weeds close over us like woods. Standing up thus against
the large low moon, the daisies really seemed to be giant daisies, the
dandelions to be giant dandelions. Somehow it reminded them of the dado of
a nursery wall-paper. The drop of the river-bed sufficed to sink them
under the roots of all shrubs and flowers and make them gaze upwards at
the grass. “By Jove!” said Flambeau, “it’s like being in fairyland.”</p>
<p>Father Brown sat bolt upright in the boat and crossed himself. His
movement was so abrupt that his friend asked him, with a mild stare, what
was the matter.</p>
<p>“The people who wrote the mediaeval ballads,” answered the priest, “knew
more about fairies than you do. It isn’t only nice things that happen in
fairyland.”</p>
<p>“Oh, bosh!” said Flambeau. “Only nice things could happen under such an
innocent moon. I am for pushing on now and seeing what does really come.
We may die and rot before we ever see again such a moon or such a mood.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said Father Brown. “I never said it was always wrong to enter
fairyland. I only said it was always dangerous.”</p>
<p>They pushed slowly up the brightening river; the glowing violet of the sky
and the pale gold of the moon grew fainter and fainter, and faded into
that vast colourless cosmos that precedes the colours of the dawn. When
the first faint stripes of red and gold and grey split the horizon from
end to end they were broken by the black bulk of a town or village which
sat on the river just ahead of them. It was already an easy twilight, in
which all things were visible, when they came under the hanging roofs and
bridges of this riverside hamlet. The houses, with their long, low,
stooping roofs, seemed to come down to drink at the river, like huge grey
and red cattle. The broadening and whitening dawn had already turned to
working daylight before they saw any living creature on the wharves and
bridges of that silent town. Eventually they saw a very placid and
prosperous man in his shirt sleeves, with a face as round as the recently
sunken moon, and rays of red whisker around the low arc of it, who was
leaning on a post above the sluggish tide. By an impulse not to be
analysed, Flambeau rose to his full height in the swaying boat and shouted
at the man to ask if he knew Reed Island or Reed House. The prosperous
man’s smile grew slightly more expansive, and he simply pointed up the
river towards the next bend of it. Flambeau went ahead without further
speech.</p>
<p>The boat took many such grassy corners and followed many such reedy and
silent reaches of river; but before the search had become monotonous they
had swung round a specially sharp angle and come into the silence of a
sort of pool or lake, the sight of which instinctively arrested them. For
in the middle of this wider piece of water, fringed on every side with
rushes, lay a long, low islet, along which ran a long, low house or
bungalow built of bamboo or some kind of tough tropic cane. The upstanding
rods of bamboo which made the walls were pale yellow, the sloping rods
that made the roof were of darker red or brown, otherwise the long house
was a thing of repetition and monotony. The early morning breeze rustled
the reeds round the island and sang in the strange ribbed house as in a
giant pan-pipe.</p>
<p>“By George!” cried Flambeau; “here is the place, after all! Here is Reed
Island, if ever there was one. Here is Reed House, if it is anywhere. I
believe that fat man with whiskers was a fairy.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” remarked Father Brown impartially. “If he was, he was a bad
fairy.”</p>
<p>But even as he spoke the impetuous Flambeau had run his boat ashore in the
rattling reeds, and they stood in the long, quaint islet beside the odd
and silent house.</p>
<p>The house stood with its back, as it were, to the river and the only
landing-stage; the main entrance was on the other side, and looked down
the long island garden. The visitors approached it, therefore, by a small
path running round nearly three sides of the house, close under the low
eaves. Through three different windows on three different sides they
looked in on the same long, well-lit room, panelled in light wood, with a
large number of looking-glasses, and laid out as for an elegant lunch. The
front door, when they came round to it at last, was flanked by two
turquoise-blue flower pots. It was opened by a butler of the drearier type—long,
lean, grey and listless—who murmured that Prince Saradine was from
home at present, but was expected hourly; the house being kept ready for
him and his guests. The exhibition of the card with the scrawl of green
ink awoke a flicker of life in the parchment face of the depressed
retainer, and it was with a certain shaky courtesy that he suggested that
the strangers should remain. “His Highness may be here any minute,” he
said, “and would be distressed to have just missed any gentleman he had
invited. We have orders always to keep a little cold lunch for him and his
friends, and I am sure he would wish it to be offered.”</p>
<p>Moved with curiosity to this minor adventure, Flambeau assented
gracefully, and followed the old man, who ushered him ceremoniously into
the long, lightly panelled room. There was nothing very notable about it,
except the rather unusual alternation of many long, low windows with many
long, low oblongs of looking-glass, which gave a singular air of lightness
and unsubstantialness to the place. It was somehow like lunching out of
doors. One or two pictures of a quiet kind hung in the corners, one a
large grey photograph of a very young man in uniform, another a red chalk
sketch of two long-haired boys. Asked by Flambeau whether the soldierly
person was the prince, the butler answered shortly in the negative; it was
the prince’s younger brother, Captain Stephen Saradine, he said. And with
that the old man seemed to dry up suddenly and lose all taste for
conversation.</p>
<p>After lunch had tailed off with exquisite coffee and liqueurs, the guests
were introduced to the garden, the library, and the housekeeper—a
dark, handsome lady, of no little majesty, and rather like a plutonic
Madonna. It appeared that she and the butler were the only survivors of
the prince’s original foreign menage the other servants now in the house
being new and collected in Norfolk by the housekeeper. This latter lady
went by the name of Mrs. Anthony, but she spoke with a slight Italian
accent, and Flambeau did not doubt that Anthony was a Norfolk version of
some more Latin name. Mr. Paul, the butler, also had a faintly foreign
air, but he was in tongue and training English, as are many of the most
polished men-servants of the cosmopolitan nobility.</p>
<p>Pretty and unique as it was, the place had about it a curious luminous
sadness. Hours passed in it like days. The long, well-windowed rooms were
full of daylight, but it seemed a dead daylight. And through all other
incidental noises, the sound of talk, the clink of glasses, or the passing
feet of servants, they could hear on all sides of the house the melancholy
noise of the river.</p>
<p>“We have taken a wrong turning, and come to a wrong place,” said Father
Brown, looking out of the window at the grey-green sedges and the silver
flood. “Never mind; one can sometimes do good by being the right person in
the wrong place.”</p>
<p>Father Brown, though commonly a silent, was an oddly sympathetic little
man, and in those few but endless hours he unconsciously sank deeper into
the secrets of Reed House than his professional friend. He had that knack
of friendly silence which is so essential to gossip; and saying scarcely a
word, he probably obtained from his new acquaintances all that in any case
they would have told. The butler indeed was naturally uncommunicative. He
betrayed a sullen and almost animal affection for his master; who, he
said, had been very badly treated. The chief offender seemed to be his
highness’s brother, whose name alone would lengthen the old man’s lantern
jaws and pucker his parrot nose into a sneer. Captain Stephen was a
ne’er-do-well, apparently, and had drained his benevolent brother of
hundreds and thousands; forced him to fly from fashionable life and live
quietly in this retreat. That was all Paul, the butler, would say, and
Paul was obviously a partisan.</p>
<p>The Italian housekeeper was somewhat more communicative, being, as Brown
fancied, somewhat less content. Her tone about her master was faintly
acid; though not without a certain awe. Flambeau and his friend were
standing in the room of the looking-glasses examining the red sketch of
the two boys, when the housekeeper swept in swiftly on some domestic
errand. It was a peculiarity of this glittering, glass-panelled place that
anyone entering was reflected in four or five mirrors at once; and Father
Brown, without turning round, stopped in the middle of a sentence of
family criticism. But Flambeau, who had his face close up to the picture,
was already saying in a loud voice, “The brothers Saradine, I suppose.
They both look innocent enough. It would be hard to say which is the good
brother and which the bad.” Then, realising the lady’s presence, he turned
the conversation with some triviality, and strolled out into the garden.
But Father Brown still gazed steadily at the red crayon sketch; and Mrs.
Anthony still gazed steadily at Father Brown.</p>
<p>She had large and tragic brown eyes, and her olive face glowed darkly with
a curious and painful wonder—as of one doubtful of a stranger’s
identity or purpose. Whether the little priest’s coat and creed touched
some southern memories of confession, or whether she fancied he knew more
than he did, she said to him in a low voice as to a fellow plotter, “He is
right enough in one way, your friend. He says it would be hard to pick out
the good and bad brothers. Oh, it would be hard, it would be mighty hard,
to pick out the good one.”</p>
<p>“I don’t understand you,” said Father Brown, and began to move away.</p>
<p>The woman took a step nearer to him, with thunderous brows and a sort of
savage stoop, like a bull lowering his horns.</p>
<p>“There isn’t a good one,” she hissed. “There was badness enough in the
captain taking all that money, but I don’t think there was much goodness
in the prince giving it. The captain’s not the only one with something
against him.”</p>
<p>A light dawned on the cleric’s averted face, and his mouth formed silently
the word “blackmail.” Even as he did so the woman turned an abrupt white
face over her shoulder and almost fell. The door had opened soundlessly
and the pale Paul stood like a ghost in the doorway. By the weird trick of
the reflecting walls, it seemed as if five Pauls had entered by five doors
simultaneously.</p>
<p>“His Highness,” he said, “has just arrived.”</p>
<p>In the same flash the figure of a man had passed outside the first window,
crossing the sunlit pane like a lighted stage. An instant later he passed
at the second window and the many mirrors repainted in successive frames
the same eagle profile and marching figure. He was erect and alert, but
his hair was white and his complexion of an odd ivory yellow. He had that
short, curved Roman nose which generally goes with long, lean cheeks and
chin, but these were partly masked by moustache and imperial. The
moustache was much darker than the beard, giving an effect slightly
theatrical, and he was dressed up to the same dashing part, having a white
top hat, an orchid in his coat, a yellow waistcoat and yellow gloves which
he flapped and swung as he walked. When he came round to the front door
they heard the stiff Paul open it, and heard the new arrival say
cheerfully, “Well, you see I have come.” The stiff Mr. Paul bowed and
answered in his inaudible manner; for a few minutes their conversation
could not be heard. Then the butler said, “Everything is at your
disposal;” and the glove-flapping Prince Saradine came gaily into the room
to greet them. They beheld once more that spectral scene—five
princes entering a room with five doors.</p>
<p>The prince put the white hat and yellow gloves on the table and offered
his hand quite cordially.</p>
<p>“Delighted to see you here, Mr. Flambeau,” he said. “Knowing you very well
by reputation, if that’s not an indiscreet remark.”</p>
<p>“Not at all,” answered Flambeau, laughing. “I am not sensitive. Very few
reputations are gained by unsullied virtue.”</p>
<p>The prince flashed a sharp look at him to see if the retort had any
personal point; then he laughed also and offered chairs to everyone,
including himself.</p>
<p>“Pleasant little place, this, I think,” he said with a detached air. “Not
much to do, I fear; but the fishing is really good.”</p>
<p>The priest, who was staring at him with the grave stare of a baby, was
haunted by some fancy that escaped definition. He looked at the grey,
carefully curled hair, yellow white visage, and slim, somewhat foppish
figure. These were not unnatural, though perhaps a shade prononcé, like
the outfit of a figure behind the footlights. The nameless interest lay in
something else, in the very framework of the face; Brown was tormented
with a half memory of having seen it somewhere before. The man looked like
some old friend of his dressed up. Then he suddenly remembered the
mirrors, and put his fancy down to some psychological effect of that
multiplication of human masks.</p>
<p>Prince Saradine distributed his social attentions between his guests with
great gaiety and tact. Finding the detective of a sporting turn and eager
to employ his holiday, he guided Flambeau and Flambeau’s boat down to the
best fishing spot in the stream, and was back in his own canoe in twenty
minutes to join Father Brown in the library and plunge equally politely
into the priest’s more philosophic pleasures. He seemed to know a great
deal both about the fishing and the books, though of these not the most
edifying; he spoke five or six languages, though chiefly the slang of
each. He had evidently lived in varied cities and very motley societies,
for some of his cheerfullest stories were about gambling hells and opium
dens, Australian bushrangers or Italian brigands. Father Brown knew that
the once-celebrated Saradine had spent his last few years in almost
ceaseless travel, but he had not guessed that the travels were so
disreputable or so amusing.</p>
<p>Indeed, with all his dignity of a man of the world, Prince Saradine
radiated to such sensitive observers as the priest, a certain atmosphere
of the restless and even the unreliable. His face was fastidious, but his
eye was wild; he had little nervous tricks, like a man shaken by drink or
drugs, and he neither had, nor professed to have, his hand on the helm of
household affairs. All these were left to the two old servants, especially
to the butler, who was plainly the central pillar of the house. Mr. Paul,
indeed, was not so much a butler as a sort of steward or, even,
chamberlain; he dined privately, but with almost as much pomp as his
master; he was feared by all the servants; and he consulted with the
prince decorously, but somewhat unbendingly—rather as if he were the
prince’s solicitor. The sombre housekeeper was a mere shadow in
comparison; indeed, she seemed to efface herself and wait only on the
butler, and Brown heard no more of those volcanic whispers which had half
told him of the younger brother who blackmailed the elder. Whether the
prince was really being thus bled by the absent captain, he could not be
certain, but there was something insecure and secretive about Saradine
that made the tale by no means incredible.</p>
<p>When they went once more into the long hall with the windows and the
mirrors, yellow evening was dropping over the waters and the willowy
banks; and a bittern sounded in the distance like an elf upon his dwarfish
drum. The same singular sentiment of some sad and evil fairyland crossed
the priest’s mind again like a little grey cloud. “I wish Flambeau were
back,” he muttered.</p>
<p>“Do you believe in doom?” asked the restless Prince Saradine suddenly.</p>
<p>“No,” answered his guest. “I believe in Doomsday.”</p>
<p>The prince turned from the window and stared at him in a singular manner,
his face in shadow against the sunset. “What do you mean?” he asked.</p>
<p>“I mean that we here are on the wrong side of the tapestry,” answered
Father Brown. “The things that happen here do not seem to mean anything;
they mean something somewhere else. Somewhere else retribution will come
on the real offender. Here it often seems to fall on the wrong person.”</p>
<p>The prince made an inexplicable noise like an animal; in his shadowed face
the eyes were shining queerly. A new and shrewd thought exploded silently
in the other’s mind. Was there another meaning in Saradine’s blend of
brilliancy and abruptness? Was the prince—Was he perfectly sane? He
was repeating, “The wrong person—the wrong person,” many more times
than was natural in a social exclamation.</p>
<p>Then Father Brown awoke tardily to a second truth. In the mirrors before
him he could see the silent door standing open, and the silent Mr. Paul
standing in it, with his usual pallid impassiveness.</p>
<p>“I thought it better to announce at once,” he said, with the same stiff
respectfulness as of an old family lawyer, “a boat rowed by six men has
come to the landing-stage, and there’s a gentleman sitting in the stern.”</p>
<p>“A boat!” repeated the prince; “a gentleman?” and he rose to his feet.</p>
<p>There was a startled silence punctuated only by the odd noise of the bird
in the sedge; and then, before anyone could speak again, a new face and
figure passed in profile round the three sunlit windows, as the prince had
passed an hour or two before. But except for the accident that both
outlines were aquiline, they had little in common. Instead of the new
white topper of Saradine, was a black one of antiquated or foreign shape;
under it was a young and very solemn face, clean shaven, blue about its
resolute chin, and carrying a faint suggestion of the young Napoleon. The
association was assisted by something old and odd about the whole get-up,
as of a man who had never troubled to change the fashions of his fathers.
He had a shabby blue frock coat, a red, soldierly looking waistcoat, and a
kind of coarse white trousers common among the early Victorians, but
strangely incongruous today. From all this old clothes-shop his olive face
stood out strangely young and monstrously sincere.</p>
<p>“The deuce!” said Prince Saradine, and clapping on his white hat he went
to the front door himself, flinging it open on the sunset garden.</p>
<p>By that time the new-comer and his followers were drawn up on the lawn
like a small stage army. The six boatmen had pulled the boat well up on
shore, and were guarding it almost menacingly, holding their oars erect
like spears. They were swarthy men, and some of them wore earrings. But
one of them stood forward beside the olive-faced young man in the red
waistcoat, and carried a large black case of unfamiliar form.</p>
<p>“Your name,” said the young man, “is Saradine?”</p>
<p>Saradine assented rather negligently.</p>
<p>The new-comer had dull, dog-like brown eyes, as different as possible from
the restless and glittering grey eyes of the prince. But once again Father
Brown was tortured with a sense of having seen somewhere a replica of the
face; and once again he remembered the repetitions of the glass-panelled
room, and put down the coincidence to that. “Confound this crystal
palace!” he muttered. “One sees everything too many times. It’s like a
dream.”</p>
<p>“If you are Prince Saradine,” said the young man, “I may tell you that my
name is Antonelli.”</p>
<p>“Antonelli,” repeated the prince languidly. “Somehow I remember the name.”</p>
<p>“Permit me to present myself,” said the young Italian.</p>
<p>With his left hand he politely took off his old-fashioned top-hat; with
his right he caught Prince Saradine so ringing a crack across the face
that the white top hat rolled down the steps and one of the blue
flower-pots rocked upon its pedestal.</p>
<p>The prince, whatever he was, was evidently not a coward; he sprang at his
enemy’s throat and almost bore him backwards to the grass. But his enemy
extricated himself with a singularly inappropriate air of hurried
politeness.</p>
<p>“That is all right,” he said, panting and in halting English. “I have
insulted. I will give satisfaction. Marco, open the case.”</p>
<p>The man beside him with the earrings and the big black case proceeded to
unlock it. He took out of it two long Italian rapiers, with splendid steel
hilts and blades, which he planted point downwards in the lawn. The
strange young man standing facing the entrance with his yellow and
vindictive face, the two swords standing up in the turf like two crosses
in a cemetery, and the line of the ranked towers behind, gave it all an
odd appearance of being some barbaric court of justice. But everything
else was unchanged, so sudden had been the interruption. The sunset gold
still glowed on the lawn, and the bittern still boomed as announcing some
small but dreadful destiny.</p>
<p>“Prince Saradine,” said the man called Antonelli, “when I was an infant in
the cradle you killed my father and stole my mother; my father was the
more fortunate. You did not kill him fairly, as I am going to kill you.
You and my wicked mother took him driving to a lonely pass in Sicily,
flung him down a cliff, and went on your way. I could imitate you if I
chose, but imitating you is too vile. I have followed you all over the
world, and you have always fled from me. But this is the end of the world—and
of you. I have you now, and I give you the chance you never gave my
father. Choose one of those swords.”</p>
<p>Prince Saradine, with contracted brows, seemed to hesitate a moment, but
his ears were still singing with the blow, and he sprang forward and
snatched at one of the hilts. Father Brown had also sprung forward,
striving to compose the dispute; but he soon found his personal presence
made matters worse. Saradine was a French freemason and a fierce atheist,
and a priest moved him by the law of contraries. And for the other man
neither priest nor layman moved him at all. This young man with the
Bonaparte face and the brown eyes was something far sterner than a puritan—a
pagan. He was a simple slayer from the morning of the earth; a man of the
stone age—a man of stone.</p>
<p>One hope remained, the summoning of the household; and Father Brown ran
back into the house. He found, however, that all the under servants had
been given a holiday ashore by the autocrat Paul, and that only the sombre
Mrs. Anthony moved uneasily about the long rooms. But the moment she
turned a ghastly face upon him, he resolved one of the riddles of the
house of mirrors. The heavy brown eyes of Antonelli were the heavy brown
eyes of Mrs. Anthony; and in a flash he saw half the story.</p>
<p>“Your son is outside,” he said without wasting words; “either he or the
prince will be killed. Where is Mr. Paul?”</p>
<p>“He is at the landing-stage,” said the woman faintly. “He is—he is—signalling
for help.”</p>
<p>“Mrs. Anthony,” said Father Brown seriously, “there is no time for
nonsense. My friend has his boat down the river fishing. Your son’s boat
is guarded by your son’s men. There is only this one canoe; what is Mr.
Paul doing with it?”</p>
<p>“Santa Maria! I do not know,” she said; and swooned all her length on the
matted floor.</p>
<p>Father Brown lifted her to a sofa, flung a pot of water over her, shouted
for help, and then rushed down to the landing-stage of the little island.
But the canoe was already in mid-stream, and old Paul was pulling and
pushing it up the river with an energy incredible at his years.</p>
<p>“I will save my master,” he cried, his eyes blazing maniacally. “I will
save him yet!”</p>
<p>Father Brown could do nothing but gaze after the boat as it struggled
up-stream and pray that the old man might waken the little town in time.</p>
<p>“A duel is bad enough,” he muttered, rubbing up his rough dust-coloured
hair, “but there’s something wrong about this duel, even as a duel. I feel
it in my bones. But what can it be?”</p>
<p>As he stood staring at the water, a wavering mirror of sunset, he heard
from the other end of the island garden a small but unmistakable sound—the
cold concussion of steel. He turned his head.</p>
<p>Away on the farthest cape or headland of the long islet, on a strip of
turf beyond the last rank of roses, the duellists had already crossed
swords. Evening above them was a dome of virgin gold, and, distant as they
were, every detail was picked out. They had cast off their coats, but the
yellow waistcoat and white hair of Saradine, the red waistcoat and white
trousers of Antonelli, glittered in the level light like the colours of
the dancing clockwork dolls. The two swords sparkled from point to pommel
like two diamond pins. There was something frightful in the two figures
appearing so little and so gay. They looked like two butterflies trying to
pin each other to a cork.</p>
<p>Father Brown ran as hard as he could, his little legs going like a wheel.
But when he came to the field of combat he found he was born too late and
too early—too late to stop the strife, under the shadow of the grim
Sicilians leaning on their oars, and too early to anticipate any
disastrous issue of it. For the two men were singularly well matched, the
prince using his skill with a sort of cynical confidence, the Sicilian
using his with a murderous care. Few finer fencing matches can ever have
been seen in crowded amphitheatres than that which tinkled and sparkled on
that forgotten island in the reedy river. The dizzy fight was balanced so
long that hope began to revive in the protesting priest; by all common
probability Paul must soon come back with the police. It would be some
comfort even if Flambeau came back from his fishing, for Flambeau,
physically speaking, was worth four other men. But there was no sign of
Flambeau, and, what was much queerer, no sign of Paul or the police. No
other raft or stick was left to float on; in that lost island in that vast
nameless pool, they were cut off as on a rock in the Pacific.</p>
<p>Almost as he had the thought the ringing of the rapiers quickened to a
rattle, the prince’s arms flew up, and the point shot out behind between
his shoulder-blades. He went over with a great whirling movement, almost
like one throwing the half of a boy’s cart-wheel. The sword flew from his
hand like a shooting star, and dived into the distant river. And he
himself sank with so earth-shaking a subsidence that he broke a big
rose-tree with his body and shook up into the sky a cloud of red earth—like
the smoke of some heathen sacrifice. The Sicilian had made blood-offering
to the ghost of his father.</p>
<p>The priest was instantly on his knees by the corpse; but only to make too
sure that it was a corpse. As he was still trying some last hopeless tests
he heard for the first time voices from farther up the river, and saw a
police boat shoot up to the landing-stage, with constables and other
important people, including the excited Paul. The little priest rose with
a distinctly dubious grimace.</p>
<p>“Now, why on earth,” he muttered, “why on earth couldn’t he have come
before?”</p>
<p>Some seven minutes later the island was occupied by an invasion of
townsfolk and police, and the latter had put their hands on the victorious
duellist, ritually reminding him that anything he said might be used
against him.</p>
<p>“I shall not say anything,” said the monomaniac, with a wonderful and
peaceful face. “I shall never say anything more. I am very happy, and I
only want to be hanged.”</p>
<p>Then he shut his mouth as they led him away, and it is the strange but
certain truth that he never opened it again in this world, except to say
“Guilty” at his trial.</p>
<p>Father Brown had stared at the suddenly crowded garden, the arrest of the
man of blood, the carrying away of the corpse after its examination by the
doctor, rather as one watches the break-up of some ugly dream; he was
motionless, like a man in a nightmare. He gave his name and address as a
witness, but declined their offer of a boat to the shore, and remained
alone in the island garden, gazing at the broken rose bush and the whole
green theatre of that swift and inexplicable tragedy. The light died along
the river; mist rose in the marshy banks; a few belated birds flitted
fitfully across.</p>
<p>Stuck stubbornly in his sub-consciousness (which was an unusually lively
one) was an unspeakable certainty that there was something still
unexplained. This sense that had clung to him all day could not be fully
explained by his fancy about “looking-glass land.” Somehow he had not seen
the real story, but some game or masque. And yet people do not get hanged
or run through the body for the sake of a charade.</p>
<p>As he sat on the steps of the landing-stage ruminating he grew conscious
of the tall, dark streak of a sail coming silently down the shining river,
and sprang to his feet with such a backrush of feeling that he almost
wept.</p>
<p>“Flambeau!” he cried, and shook his friend by both hands again and again,
much to the astonishment of that sportsman, as he came on shore with his
fishing tackle. “Flambeau,” he said, “so you’re not killed?”</p>
<p>“Killed!” repeated the angler in great astonishment. “And why should I be
killed?”</p>
<p>“Oh, because nearly everybody else is,” said his companion rather wildly.
“Saradine got murdered, and Antonelli wants to be hanged, and his mother’s
fainted, and I, for one, don’t know whether I’m in this world or the next.
But, thank God, you’re in the same one.” And he took the bewildered
Flambeau’s arm.</p>
<p>As they turned from the landing-stage they came under the eaves of the low
bamboo house, and looked in through one of the windows, as they had done
on their first arrival. They beheld a lamp-lit interior well calculated to
arrest their eyes. The table in the long dining-room had been laid for
dinner when Saradine’s destroyer had fallen like a stormbolt on the
island. And the dinner was now in placid progress, for Mrs. Anthony sat
somewhat sullenly at the foot of the table, while at the head of it was
Mr. Paul, the major domo, eating and drinking of the best, his bleared,
bluish eyes standing queerly out of his face, his gaunt countenance
inscrutable, but by no means devoid of satisfaction.</p>
<p>With a gesture of powerful impatience, Flambeau rattled at the window,
wrenched it open, and put an indignant head into the lamp-lit room.</p>
<p>“Well,” he cried. “I can understand you may need some refreshment, but
really to steal your master’s dinner while he lies murdered in the garden—”</p>
<p>“I have stolen a great many things in a long and pleasant life,” replied
the strange old gentleman placidly; “this dinner is one of the few things
I have not stolen. This dinner and this house and garden happen to belong
to me.”</p>
<p>A thought flashed across Flambeau’s face. “You mean to say,” he began,
“that the will of Prince Saradine—”</p>
<p>“I am Prince Saradine,” said the old man, munching a salted almond.</p>
<p>Father Brown, who was looking at the birds outside, jumped as if he were
shot, and put in at the window a pale face like a turnip.</p>
<p>“You are what?” he repeated in a shrill voice.</p>
<p>“Paul, Prince Saradine, A vos ordres,” said the venerable person politely,
lifting a glass of sherry. “I live here very quietly, being a domestic
kind of fellow; and for the sake of modesty I am called Mr. Paul, to
distinguish me from my unfortunate brother Mr. Stephen. He died, I hear,
recently—in the garden. Of course, it is not my fault if enemies
pursue him to this place. It is owing to the regrettable irregularity of
his life. He was not a domestic character.”</p>
<p>He relapsed into silence, and continued to gaze at the opposite wall just
above the bowed and sombre head of the woman. They saw plainly the family
likeness that had haunted them in the dead man. Then his old shoulders
began to heave and shake a little, as if he were choking, but his face did
not alter.</p>
<p>“My God!” cried Flambeau after a pause, “he’s laughing!”</p>
<p>“Come away,” said Father Brown, who was quite white. “Come away from this
house of hell. Let us get into an honest boat again.”</p>
<p>Night had sunk on rushes and river by the time they had pushed off from
the island, and they went down-stream in the dark, warming themselves with
two big cigars that glowed like crimson ships’ lanterns. Father Brown took
his cigar out of his mouth and said:</p>
<p>“I suppose you can guess the whole story now? After all, it’s a primitive
story. A man had two enemies. He was a wise man. And so he discovered that
two enemies are better than one.”</p>
<p>“I do not follow that,” answered Flambeau.</p>
<p>“Oh, it’s really simple,” rejoined his friend. “Simple, though anything
but innocent. Both the Saradines were scamps, but the prince, the elder,
was the sort of scamp that gets to the top, and the younger, the captain,
was the sort that sinks to the bottom. This squalid officer fell from
beggar to blackmailer, and one ugly day he got his hold upon his brother,
the prince. Obviously it was for no light matter, for Prince Paul Saradine
was frankly ‘fast,’ and had no reputation to lose as to the mere sins of
society. In plain fact, it was a hanging matter, and Stephen literally had
a rope round his brother’s neck. He had somehow discovered the truth about
the Sicilian affair, and could prove that Paul murdered old Antonelli in
the mountains. The captain raked in the hush money heavily for ten years,
until even the prince’s splendid fortune began to look a little foolish.</p>
<p>“But Prince Saradine bore another burden besides his blood-sucking
brother. He knew that the son of Antonelli, a mere child at the time of
the murder, had been trained in savage Sicilian loyalty, and lived only to
avenge his father, not with the gibbet (for he lacked Stephen’s legal
proof), but with the old weapons of vendetta. The boy had practised arms
with a deadly perfection, and about the time that he was old enough to use
them Prince Saradine began, as the society papers said, to travel. The
fact is that he began to flee for his life, passing from place to place
like a hunted criminal; but with one relentless man upon his trail. That
was Prince Paul’s position, and by no means a pretty one. The more money
he spent on eluding Antonelli the less he had to silence Stephen. The more
he gave to silence Stephen the less chance there was of finally escaping
Antonelli. Then it was that he showed himself a great man—a genius
like Napoleon.</p>
<p>“Instead of resisting his two antagonists, he surrendered suddenly to both
of them. He gave way like a Japanese wrestler, and his foes fell prostrate
before him. He gave up the race round the world, and he gave up his
address to young Antonelli; then he gave up everything to his brother. He
sent Stephen money enough for smart clothes and easy travel, with a letter
saying roughly: ‘This is all I have left. You have cleaned me out. I still
have a little house in Norfolk, with servants and a cellar, and if you
want more from me you must take that. Come and take possession if you
like, and I will live there quietly as your friend or agent or anything.’
He knew that the Sicilian had never seen the Saradine brothers save,
perhaps, in pictures; he knew they were somewhat alike, both having grey,
pointed beards. Then he shaved his own face and waited. The trap worked.
The unhappy captain, in his new clothes, entered the house in triumph as a
prince, and walked upon the Sicilian’s sword.</p>
<p>“There was one hitch, and it is to the honour of human nature. Evil
spirits like Saradine often blunder by never expecting the virtues of
mankind. He took it for granted that the Italian’s blow, when it came,
would be dark, violent and nameless, like the blow it avenged; that the
victim would be knifed at night, or shot from behind a hedge, and so die
without speech. It was a bad minute for Prince Paul when Antonelli’s
chivalry proposed a formal duel, with all its possible explanations. It
was then that I found him putting off in his boat with wild eyes. He was
fleeing, bareheaded, in an open boat before Antonelli should learn who he
was.</p>
<p>“But, however agitated, he was not hopeless. He knew the adventurer and he
knew the fanatic. It was quite probable that Stephen, the adventurer,
would hold his tongue, through his mere histrionic pleasure in playing a
part, his lust for clinging to his new cosy quarters, his rascal’s trust
in luck, and his fine fencing. It was certain that Antonelli, the fanatic,
would hold his tongue, and be hanged without telling tales of his family.
Paul hung about on the river till he knew the fight was over. Then he
roused the town, brought the police, saw his two vanquished enemies taken
away forever, and sat down smiling to his dinner.”</p>
<p>“Laughing, God help us!” said Flambeau with a strong shudder. “Do they get
such ideas from Satan?”</p>
<p>“He got that idea from you,” answered the priest.</p>
<p>“God forbid!” ejaculated Flambeau. “From me! What do you mean!”</p>
<p>The priest pulled a visiting-card from his pocket and held it up in the
faint glow of his cigar; it was scrawled with green ink.</p>
<p>“Don’t you remember his original invitation to you?” he asked, “and the
compliment to your criminal exploit? ‘That trick of yours,’ he says, ‘of
getting one detective to arrest the other’? He has just copied your trick.
With an enemy on each side of him, he slipped swiftly out of the way and
let them collide and kill each other.”</p>
<p>Flambeau tore Prince Saradine’s card from the priest’s hands and rent it
savagely in small pieces.</p>
<p>“There’s the last of that old skull and crossbones,” he said as he
scattered the pieces upon the dark and disappearing waves of the stream;
“but I should think it would poison the fishes.”</p>
<p>The last gleam of white card and green ink was drowned and darkened; a
faint and vibrant colour as of morning changed the sky, and the moon
behind the grasses grew paler. They drifted in silence.</p>
<p>“Father,” said Flambeau suddenly, “do you think it was all a dream?”</p>
<p>The priest shook his head, whether in dissent or agnosticism, but remained
mute. A smell of hawthorn and of orchards came to them through the
darkness, telling them that a wind was awake; the next moment it swayed
their little boat and swelled their sail, and carried them onward down the
winding river to happier places and the homes of harmless men.</p>
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