[The Midnight Passenger by Richard Henry Savage]@TWC D-Link book
The Midnight Passenger

CHAPTER III
39/39

"I raised him seventy-five dollars! He paid like a prince, and, if I mistake not, this is his first and last transaction here.

The picture that he wanted is burned into his heart now." It was but one of a hundred similar intrigues to which Lilienthal had been the successful Leporello, and he calmly betook himself to the continued villainy of his daily life.

He feared also to follow on the footsteps of the crafty Fritz Braun, for in the years of their illicit dealings the weaker nature had been molded by the daring master villain into a habitual subjection.

"He has some little game of his own," chuckled Lilienthal.

"Friend Fritz is a sly one." But the man, now burning with a new purpose in life, the puppet of strange destinies, dreamed only of a golden future as he lingered late that night at the Astor House with Jack Witherspoon.
It was two o'clock before he returned to his lonely rooms to gloat over the picture and its promise of the future meeting.
"I shall be rich," he mused, "and I will follow her to the end of the earth until I read the secret of those wonderful eyes." He little dreamed that even before he had paid Lilienthal the cheque, a carriage had stopped for a moment before Magdal's Pharmacy, and Mr.Fritz Braun had heard, with a wild delight, the whispered words, "The game is won; he will come!" The busy devil prisoned in Braun's heart laughed for very joy..


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books