Despite
the advertisements of rival firms, it is probable that every tradesman
knows that nobody in business at the present time has a position equal
to that of Mr. Nuth. To those outside the magic circle of business,
his name is scarcely known; he does not need to advertise, he is
consummate. He is superior even to modern competition, and, whatever
claims they boast, his rivals know it. His terms are moderate, so much
cash down when the goods are delivered, so much in blackmail afterwards.
He consults your convenience. His skill may be counted upon; I have seen
a shadow on a windy night move more noisily than Nuth, for Nuth is a
burglar by trade. Men have been known to stay in country houses and to
send a dealer afterwards to bargain for a piece of tapestry that they
saw there—some article of furniture, some picture. This is bad taste:
but those whose culture is more elegant invariably send Nuth a night or
two after their visit. He has a way with tapestry; you would scarcely
notice that the edges had been cut. And often when I see some huge, new
house full of old furniture and portraits from other ages, I say to
myself, “These mouldering chairs, these full-length ancestors and
carved mahogany are the produce of the incomparable Nuth.”
It may be urged against my use of the word incomparable that in
the burglary business the name of Slith stands paramount and alone; and
of this I am not ignorant; but Slith is a classic, and lived long ago,
and knew nothing at all of modern competition; besides which the
surprising nature of his doom has possibly cast a glamour upon Slith
that exaggerates in our eyes his undoubted merits.
It must not be thought that I am a friend of Nuth’s; on the
contrary such politics as I have are on the side of Property; and he
needs no words from me, for his position is almost unique in trade,
being among the very few that do not need to advertise.
At the time that my story begins Nuth lived in a roomy house in
Belgrave Square: in his inimitable way he had made friends with the
caretaker. The place suited Nuth, and, whenever anyone came to inspect
it before purchase, the caretaker used to praise the house in the
words that Nuth had suggested. “If it wasn’t for the drains,” she
would say, “it’s the finest house in London,” and when they
pounced on this remark and asked questions about the drains, she would
answer them that the drains also were good, but not so good as the
house. They did not see Nuth when they went over the rooms, but Nuth was
there.
Here in a neat black dress on one spring morning came an old
woman whose bonnet was lined with red, asking for Mr. Nuth; and with her
came her large and awkward son. Mrs. Eggins, the caretaker, glanced up
the street, and then she let them in, and left them to wait in the
drawing-room amongst furniture all mysterious with sheets. For a long
while they waited, and then there was a smell of pipe-tobacco, and there
was Nuth standing quite close to them.
“Lord,” said the old woman whose bonnet was lined with red,
“you did make me start.” And then she saw by his eyes that that was
not the way to speak to Mr. Nuth.
And at last Nuth spoke, and very nervously the old woman
explained that her son was a likely lad, and had been in business
already but wanted to better himself, and she wanted Mr. Nuth to teach
him a livelihood.
First of all Nuth wanted to see a business reference, and when he
was shown one from a jeweller with whom he happened to be hand-in-glove
the upshot of it was that he agreed to take young Tonker (for this was
the surname of the likely lad) and to make him his apprentice. And the
old woman whose bonnet was lined with red went back to her little
cottage in the country, and every evening said to her old man,
“Tonker, we must fasten the shutters of a night-time, for Tommy’s a
burglar now.”
The details of the likely lad’s apprenticeship I do not propose
to give; for those that are in the business know those details already,
and those that are in other businesses care only for their own, while
men of leisure who have no trade at all would fail to appreciate the
gradual degrees by which Tommy Tonker came first to cross bare boards,
covered with little obstacles in the dark, without making any sound, and
then to ‘go silently up creaky stairs, and then to open doors, and
lastly to climb.
Let it suffice that the business prospered greatly, while glowing
reports of Tommy Tonker’s progress were sent from time to time to the
old woman whose bonnet was lined with red in the laborious handwriting
of Nuth. Nuth had given up lessons in writing very early, for he seemed
to have some prejudice against forgery, and therefore considered
writing a waste of time. And then there came the transaction with Lord
Castlenorman at his Surrey residence. Nuth selected a Saturday night,
for it chanced that Saturday was observed as Sabbath in the family of
Lord Castlenorman, and by eleven o’clock the whole house was quiet.
Five minutes before midnight Tommy Tonker, instructed by Mr. Nuth, who
waited outside, came away with one pocketful of rings and shirt-studs.
It was quite a light pocketful, but the jewellers in Paris could not
match it without sending specially to Africa, so that Lord Castlenorman
had to borrow bone shirt-studs.
Not even rumour whispered the name of Nuth. Were I to say that
this turned his head, there are those to whom the assertion would give
pain, for his associates hold that his astute judgment was unaffected by
circumstance. I will say, therefore, that it spurred his genius to plan
what no burglar had ever planned before. It was nothing less than to
burgle the house of the gnoles. And this that abstemious man unfolded to
Tonker over a cup of tea. Had Tonker not been nearly insane with pride
over their recent transaction, and had he not been blinded by a
veneration for Nuth, he would have—but I cry over spilt milk. He
expostulated respectfully: he said he would rather not go; he said it
was not fair, he allowed himself to argue; and in the end, one windy
October morning with a menace in the air found him and Nuth drawing near
to the dreadful wood.
Nuth, by weighing little emeralds against pieces of common
rock, had ascertained the probable weight of those house-ornaments that
the gnoles are believed to possess in the narrow, lofty house wherein
they have dwelt from of old. They decided to steal two emeralds and to
carry them between them on a cloak; but if they should be too heavy one
must be dropped at once. Nuth warned young Tonker against greed, and
explained that the emeralds were worth less than cheese until they were
safe away from the dreadful wood.
Everything had been planned, and they walked now in silence.
No track led up to the sinister gloom of the trees, either of men
or cattle; not even a poacher had been there snaring elves for over a
hundred years. You did not trespass twice in the dells of the gnoles.
And, apart from the things that were done there, the trees themselves
were a warning, and did not wear the wholesome look of those that we
plant ourselves.
The nearest village was some miles away with the backs of all its
houses turned to the wood, and without one window at all facing in that
direction. They did not sneak of it there, and elsewhere it is unheard
of.
Into this wood stepped Nuth and Tommy Tonker. They had no
firearms. Tonker had asked for a pistol, but Nuth replied that the sound
of a shot “would bring everything down on us,” and no more was said
about it.
Into the wood they went all day, deeper and deeper. They saw the
skeleton of some early Georgian poacher nailed to a door in an oak tree;
sometimes they saw a fairy scuttle away from them; once Tonker stepped
heavily on a hard, dry stick, after which they both lay still for
twenty minutes. And the sunset flared full of omens through the tree
trunks, and night fell, and they came by fitful starlight, as Nuth had
foreseen, to that lean, high house where the gnoles so secretly dwelt.
All was so silent by that unvalued house that the faded courage
of Tonker flickered up, but to Nuth’s experienced sense it seemed too
silent; and all the while there was that look in the sky that was worse
than a spoken doom, so that Nuth, as is often the case when men are in
doubt, had leisure to fear the worst. Nevertheless he did not abandon
the business, but sent the likely lad with the instruments of his
trade by means of the ladder to the old green casement. And the moment
that Tonker touched the withered boards, the silence that, though
ominous, was earthly, became unearthly like the touch of a ghoul. And
Tonker heard his breath offending against that si- lence, and his
heart was like mad drums in a night attack, and a string of one of his
sandals went tap on a rung of a ladder, and the leaves of the forest
were mute, and the breeze of the night was still; and Tonker prayed that
a mouse or a mole might make any noise at all, but not a creature
stirred, even Nuth was still. And then and there, while yet he was
undiscovered, the likely lad made up his mind, as he should have done
long before, to leave those colossal emeralds where they were and have
nothing further to do with the lean, high house of the gnoles, but to
quit this sinister wood in the nick of time and retire from business at
once and buy a place in the country. Then he descended softly and
beckoned to Nuth. But the gnoles had watched him through knavish holes
that they bore in trunks of the trees, and the unearthly silence gave
way, as it were with a grace, to the rapid screams of Tonker as they
picked him up from behind—screams that came faster and faster until
they were incoherent.
And where they took him it is not good to ask, and what they did
with him I shall not say.
Nuth looked on for a while from the corner of the house with a
mild surprise on his face as he rubbed his chin, for the trick of the
holes in the trees was new to him; then he stole nimbly away through the
dreadful wood.
“And did they catch Nuth?” you ask me, gentle reader.
“Oh, no, my child” (for such a question is childish).
“Nobody ever catches Nuth.”