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Havoc

Chapter 2 ARTHUR DORWARD'S SCOOP

Word Count: 1978    |    Released on: 28/11/2017

old man?" Bella

ng himself a drink with trembling fingers. He tossed it off before he spoke a word. T

is head in the Chancellor's presence-had made some absurd attem

've had the biggest slice of luck that was ever dealt out to a human being. If only I can ge

n't mea

his forehead a

eclared, "but I've got it here in my pocket, got it in

t w

r ago, would have given a mi

was one of blank but

omething-just what the Chancellor wants you to print. You're

smile of certainty, his

copy of everything that passed and was resolved upon this afternoon between the Czar of Russia, the Emperor of Austria and the Emper

toward the door and back into his friend's face ag

to say that y

k the table w

earth to bring the conversation round to the things I wanted to know about. Then, all of a sudden, he turned to me and seemed to remember who I was and what I wanted. 'Ah!' he said, 'you are Dorward, the American journalist. I remember you now. Lock the door.' I obeyed him pretty quick, for I had noticed they were mighty uneasy outside, and I was afraid they'd be disturbing us every moment. 'Come and sit down,' he ordered. I did so at once. 'You're a sensible fellow,' he declared. 'To-day every one is worrying me. They think that I am not well. It is foolish. I am quite well. Who would not be well on such a day as this?' I told him that I had never seen him looking better in my life, and he nodded and seemed pleased. 'You have come to hear the truth about the meeting of my master with the Czar and the Emperor of Germany?' he asked. 'That's so,' I told him. 'America's more than a little interested in these things, and I want to know what to tell her.' Then he leaned across the table. 'My young friend,' he said, 'I like you. You are straightforward. You speak plainly and you do not worry me. It is good. You shall tell your country what it is that we have planned, what the things are that are coming. Yours is a great and wise country. When they know the truth, they will remember that Europe is a long way off and that the things which happen there are really no concern of theirs.' 'You are right,' I assured him,-'dead right. Treat us openly, that's all we ask.' 'Shall I not do that, my young friend?' he answered. 'Now look, I give you this.' He fumbled through all his

rew a lon

l!" he muttered. "How long is

r a quarter of an ho

has given it to you. Don't let us run any risks, Dorward. Tear it open. Let us know the truth, at any rate. If you h

steps back. Then

ot," he sa

riend in blank and unc

re not going to keep it to yourself? Yo

have to take her chance. I am not here as a philanthropist. I am an American journalist

ndous effort, maintai

rd declared. "I shall head for England. Pearce is there himself, and I tell you it will be just the greatest

oo quiet to be altogether natural. His

ight, you'll never be allowed to cross the frontier. By this time they know that the packet is missing; they know, too, that you are the only man who could have it, whether the Chancellor has told them the truth or not. Open it at once so that we get some good out of it. Th

n no laws and done no one any harm. If there's any slaughtering about, I guess

d,-he was looking into the m

is only a personal ambition-I stand for my country. Sha

declared fiercely. "This is my show, not

ng at the door. The two men looked at one another for a moment, speechless

way our chance,"

ders answered the summons, three men in plain clothes entered. Th

American journalist!" one exclaime

ny prevarication. The three men crossed the room quickly and Bellamy followed in the rear. He

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“Edward Phillips Oppenheim (1866-1946), was an English novelist, in his lifetime a major and successful writer of genre fiction including thrillers. Featured on the cover of Time magazine in 1918, he was the self-styled "prince of storytellers." He composed more than a hundred novels, mostly of the suspense and international intrigue nature, as well as romances, comedies, and parables of everyday life. Perhaps Oppenheim's most enduring creation is the character of General Besserley, the protagonist of General Besserley's Puzzle Box and General Besserley's New Puzzle Box (one of his last works). His work possesses a unique charm, featuring protagonists who delight in Epicurean meals, surroundings of intense luxury, and the relaxed pursuit of criminal practice, on either side of the law. His first novel was about England and Canada, called Expiation (1887); followed by such titles as The Betrayal (1904), The Avenger (1907), The Governors (1908), The Double Life of Mr. Alfred Burton (1913), An Amiable Charlatan (1915), The Black Box (1915), The Double Traitor (1915), The Cinema Murder (1917), The Box with Broken Seals (1919), The Devil's Paw (1920) and The Evil Shepherd (1922).”
1 Chapter 1 CROWNED HEADS MEET2 Chapter 2 ARTHUR DORWARD'S SCOOP 3 Chapter 3 OURS IS A STRANGE COURTSHIP 4 Chapter 4 THE NIGHT TRAIN FROM VIENNA5 Chapter 5 VON BEHRLING HAS THE PACKET 6 Chapter 6 VON BEHRLING IS TEMPTED7 Chapter 7 WE PLAY FOR GREAT STAKES 8 Chapter 8 THE HAND OF MISFORTUNE9 Chapter 9 ROBBING THE DEAD10 Chapter 10 BELLAMY IS OUTWITTED11 Chapter 11 VON BEHRLING'S FATE12 Chapter 12 BARON DE STREUSS' PROPOSAL13 Chapter 13 STEPHEN LAVERICK'S CONSCIENCE14 Chapter 14 ARTHUR MORRISON'S COLLAPSE15 Chapter 15 1516 Chapter 16 THE WAITER AT THE BLACK POST 17 Chapter 17 THE PRICE OF SILENCE18 Chapter 18 THE LONELY CHORUS GIRL19 Chapter 19 MYSTERIOUS INQUIRIES20 Chapter 20 LAVERICK IS CROSS-EXAMINED21 Chapter 21 MADEMOISELLE IDIALE'S VISIT22 Chapter 22 ACTIVITY OF AUSTRIAN SPIES23 Chapter 23 LAVERICK AT THE OPERA24 Chapter 24 A SUPPER PARTY AT LUIGI'S25 Chapter 25 JIM SHEPHERD'S SCARE26 Chapter 26 THE DOCUMENT DISCOVERED27 Chapter 27 PENETRATING A MYSTERY28 Chapter 28 LAVERICK'S NARROW ESCAPE29 Chapter 29 LASSEN'S TREACHERY DISCOVERED30 Chapter 30 THE CONTEST FOR THE PAPERS31 Chapter 31 MISS LENEVEU'S MESSAGE32 Chapter 32 MORRISON IS DESPERATE33 Chapter 33 LAVERICK S ARREST34 Chapter 34 MORRISON'S DISCLOSURE35 Chapter 35 BELLAMY'S SUCCESS36 Chapter 36 LAVERICK ACQUITTED37 Chapter 37 THE PLOT THAT FAILED38 Chapter 38 A FAREWELL APPEARANCE