Captain of Villainy
Danny? Sure ye do. If ye stumble again and yelp I'll break the thick head of ye. Now listen to what I'm expounding. Ye see this letter?" He displayed an old envelope which he had taken from his pocket. "Ye do? 'Tis the penetrating mind ye have, Danny. Take it in your hand. Ye obsarve 'tis addressed to me. No matter.
"Presently we'll be standing in front of the house of Captain von Wever—a God-forsaken Dutchman, Danny. I will knock at the door, and stay in the shadow of it. Ye will stand in the street, and when the Herr Captain puts his head out of the window, Danny, ye'll tell him ye are a boy from the Hôtel d'Angleterre with a note for him from a lady. When he comes down to open the door, I'll attend to the captain, Daniel."
"And phwat will I do then, sor?"
"Ye will trot yer damnedest to Mr. Senet's residence, Danny—'tis but the bit of a walk from here—tell Mr. Senet what I have done and where to find me, and that he's to come to me."
"And if he says 'Why?' sor?"
"Tell the man that 'tis in the name of the Countess of Seyn-Altberg. I'm convinced that will fetch him, hotfoot."
By then the two had gained the crown of the hill and passed on out into the suburbs of Tangiers. Presently they halted before a detached residence that lay dark and silent in the moonlight—a building of the old Mooresque type with a high, blank wall fronting upon the street and broken only by an overhanging latticed balcony on the second story and by the main doorway.
This was a low, arched postern, deep set in the stone walls. Without further words O'Rourke motioned his man to the center of the street, where the moon glare showed him clearly
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