登陆注册
37829100000116

第116章 THE GOD OF COINCIDENCE(2)

From the first days of the peace conference it was evident there was a leak. The negotiations had been opened under a most solemn oath of secrecy. As to the progress of the conference, only such information or misinformation--if the diplomats considered it better-as was mutually agreed upon by the plenipotentiaries was given to a waiting world. But each morning, in addition to the official report of the proceedings of the day previous, one newspaper, the Times, published an account which differed from that in every other paper, and which undoubtedly came from the inside. In details it was far more generous than the official report; it gave names, speeches, arguments; it described the wordy battles of the diplomats, the concessions, bluffs, bargains.

After three days the matter became public scandal. At first, the plenipotentiaries declared the events described in the Times were invented each evening in the office of the Times; but the proceedings of the day following showed the public this was not so.

Some one actually present at the conference was telling tales out of school. These tales were cabled to Belgrade, Sofia, Athens, Constantinople; and hourly from those capitals the plenipotentiaries were assailed by advice, abuse, and threats. The whole world began to take part in their negotiations; from every side they were attacked;from home by the Young Turks, or the On to Constantinople Party;and from abroad by peace societies, religious bodies, and chambers of commerce. Even the armies in the field, instead of waiting for the result of their deliberations, told them what to do, and that unless they did it they would better remain in exile. To make matters worse, in every stock exchange gambling on the news furnished by the Times threatened the financial peace of Europe. To work under such conditions of publicity was impossible. The delegates appealed to their hosts of the British Foreign Office.

Unless the chiel amang them takin' notes was discovered and the leak stopped, they declared the conference must end. Spurred on by questions in Parliament, by appeals from the great banking world, by criticisms not altogether unselfish from the other newspapers, the Foreign Office surrounded St. James's Palace and the office of the Times with an army of spies. Every secretary, stenographer, and attendant at the conference was under surveillance, his past record looked into, his present comings and goings noted. Even the plenipotentiaries themselves were watched; and employees of the Times were secretly urged to sell the government the man who was selling secrets to them. But those who were willing to be "urged"did not know the man; those who did know him refused to be bought.

By a process of elimination suspicion finally rested upon one Adolf Hertz, a young Hungarian scholar who spoke and wrote all the mongrel languages of the Balkans; who for years, as a copying clerk and translator, had been employed by the Foreign Office, and who now by it had been lent to the conference. For the reason that when he lived in Budapest he was a correspondent of the Times, the police, in seeking for the leak, centred their attention upon Hertz. But, though every moment he was watched, and though Hertz knew he was watched, no present link between him and the Times had been established- and this in spite of the fact that the hours during which it was necessary to keep him under closest observation were few. Those were the hours between the closing of the conference, and midnight, when the provincial edition of the Times went to press. For the remainder of the day, so far as the police cared, Hertz could go to the devil! But for those hours, except when on his return from the conference he locked himself in his lodgings in Jermyn Street, detectives were always at his elbow.

It was supposed that it was during this brief period when he was locked in his room that he wrote his report; but how, later, he conveyed it to the Times no one could discover. In his rooms there was no telephone; his doors and windows were openly watched;and after leaving his rooms his movements were--as they always had been--methodical, following a routine open to observation.

His programme was invariably the same. Each night at seven from his front door he walked west. At Regent Street he stopped to buy an evening paper from the aged news-vender at the corner; he then crossed Piccadilly Circus into Coventry Street, skirted Leicester Square, and at the end of Green Street entered Pavoni's Italian restaurant. There he took his seat always at the same table, hung his hat always on the same brass peg, ordered the same Hungarian wine, and read the same evening paper. He spoke to no one; no one spoke to him.

When he had finished his coffee and his cigarette he returned to his lodgings, and there he remained until he rang for breakfast.

From the time at which he left his home until his return to it he spoke to only two persons--the news-vender to whom he handed a halfpenny; the waiter who served him the regular table d'hote dinner--between whom and Hertz nothing passed but three and six for the dinner and sixpence for the waiter himself.

Each evening, the moment he moved into the street a plain-clothes man fell into step beside him; another followed at his heels; and from across the street more plain-clothes men kept their eyes on every one approaching him in front or from the rear. When he bought his evening paper six pairs of eyes watched him place a halfpenny in the hand of the news-vender, and during the entire time of his stay in Pavoni's every mouthful he ate was noted--every direction he gave the waiter was overheard.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 文娱大偶像

    文娱大偶像

    因为一个未知的原因,北漂族闫桦来到了一个平行世界。在这个世界,文娱圈却发生了翻天覆地的变化。前世的经典消失的一干二净,被一些闫桦连听都没有听过的作品所取代。不但世界变了,就连人也发生了变化。由一个三十九岁的邋遢大叔变成了一个二十二岁的天才少年。一切从新开始,怀揣着对娱乐圈的向往,对成名的期望,看闫桦如何利用前世的文娱知识,在这个世界成就梦想。
  • 暴躁女配在线治病娇

    暴躁女配在线治病娇

    月素汐作为21世纪夏国特殊事务处理A组的组长,为了复活,只能被迫穿越到一本男频现代血族文里拯救世界。然后,华丽丽地成为了男主变强路上的第一个女炮灰。 不过这没什么,她觉得只要她用爱感化男主,她就可以完成拯救世界的大任,回到原来的世界,走上人生巅峰! 结果,在她满心欢喜的以为养崽成功后,男主却当场黑化,带着傀儡大军来攻打人类,在俘虏她之后还反手关了她小黑屋。月素汐:“……”太暴躁了! 身为驱魔师中的体修杠把子,一拳可以打通五米墙的她,会怕几根锁链和一个小屋子?于是,她跑了。但当她回到原来的世界,看到再次出现在她面前的男主,只觉得一阵牙疼。去特么的病娇,谁还惯着谁了?月素汐一边欲哭无泪的被男主压着亲,一边恶狠狠的想道。 【1v1双宠双洁,脾气暴躁表面直女实际少女心爆棚体修女主VS病娇阴暗后期追妻火葬场血族男主】
  • 大神魂

    大神魂

    一个浩瀚无尽的时空,强者无数,种族繁多,弱肉强食的世界,界与界之间的战争,没有规则,没有正义,没有猎人与猎物,只有鲜与血。
  • 妻无邪

    妻无邪

    从前栗苏苏只道爱与恨这两样浓烈极致的情感是话本里才会有的东西,直到遇见沈玉卿。。。。。后来经历了几多悲喜,栗苏苏觉得爱与恨这两样情感于她委实不太适合,她向来都只喜欢安和平静。。。。只是沈玉卿,我都不与你计较了,咱们好聚好散行不。人生苦短,莫挡了本姑娘的寻欢之路。。。。。
  • 恶魔别碰小白兔

    恶魔别碰小白兔

    女主兮顷雨和男主肖千逸在小时候就认识,长大后在普林斯顿学院邂逅。在好闺蜜林家大小姐林雪儿和喜欢林雪儿的魏家大少爷魏晋宇、萧家二少爷萧腾的帮助下,兮顷雨知道了那个与她做约定的男生就是肖千逸。开启了爆笑校园生活!
  • 造化之子

    造化之子

    天地万物,造化众生,唯长生者,天地之宠,万物之长,纵横浩宇,无所不能。一个少年踏出家门,走上求仙之路,漫漫长路,不知多少岁月,终入上界。经历了无数次的历练,无数次的腥风血雨,暮然回首,自己竟站在了三界之颠。万仙来敌,便让三界无仙!天地不容,看我只手遮天!
  • 我家总裁超宠哒

    我家总裁超宠哒

    时瑶从未想过,自己会把京都最尊贵强大、最冷血无情、最权势滔天的男人“叶枫给睡了,然后被这个男人捧在手心,挂在心尖。婚后,时瑶忙着学习、虐渣、努力花光李枫所有的钱,可是却越花越赚。而叶枫则忙着干三件事,第一事情是宠老婆,第二件事情是宠老婆,第三件事情还是宠老婆!
  • 豪门诱宠:总裁的替身新娘

    豪门诱宠:总裁的替身新娘

    一觉醒来,竟然成了替嫁新娘,她想要摆脱,却被这个坏家伙压在身下,她不甘心,不甘心,就是不甘心。可是,当两颗心在一起之后,她却突然发现,这个坏家伙也不是这么坏。正当她准备接受对方的时候,姐姐竟然突然回来了,整个世界彻底发生了变化,她该何去何从?
  • 零界所

    零界所

    5000年前上古战争中狼烟四起,战争中的亡魂四处飘散无家可归。战争平息迎来本是和平相处,不料战败的灵魂不甘败落,四处聚集冤魂鬼泣侵扰百姓。大帝轩辕为平息冤魂怒气用尽自己天圣名宿开辟阴界领域,收留四处漂泊的孤魂野鬼,借此平息恶魂。为保证现世和阴界平衡建立阴界之门,只可入不可出。所有邪恶的气息都被封印在阴界,长年累月形成强大的暗黑法术。一些心术不正的人妄求权势,偷偷研发控鬼之术想要开启阴界之门获取强大的能量。为保证现世的平安,一群自称为无界之人为保阴界之门和心术不正的术士进行来上千年的战斗。