CHAPTER FIFTY
When presently we left the apartment of Dr. Fu-Manchu, Nayland Smith’s face was very stern.
“He was rather obscure,” I said.
“Obscure?”
He turned his piercing grey eyes upon me with a glance almost scornful.
“I thought so.”
Whereupon Sir Denis smiled, that rare smile which when it came must have disarmed his bitterest enemy. He grasped my arm.
“Dr. Fu-Manchu is never obscure,” he said; “he spoke the plain truth, Sterling. And truth is sometimes a bitter pill.”
“But—Maître Foli! He is one of the greatest advocates in France!”
“Certainly. What did you expect? Surely you know that Dr. Fu-Manchu never looks below excellence—living or dead! I warned you that Fu-Manchu arrested and Fu-Manchu convicted were totally different matters.”
We returned to the office of the préfet, and:
“Hello!” Sir Denis exclaimed. “He’s here!”
A stooping but imposing figure was seated in the leathern armchair before the table of the préfet. M. Chamrousse, not yet entirely his own man, following his encounter with the formidable Chinaman, was listening with every mark of deference to his distinguished visitor. The latter ceased speaking, and the préfet stood up as we entered.
“Sir Denis,” said Chamrousse, “this is Maître Foli—Dr. Fu-Manchu’s legal adviser.”
Maître Foli stood up and bowed very formally.
I had recognized him immediately from his photographs published during the progress of a Paris cause célèbre in which he had secured the vindication of his client—a distinguished officer accused of espionage. I judged his age to be close to seventy; his yellow face was a map of wrinkles rendered more conspicuous by a small, snow-white moustache and a tiny tuft of beard under the lower lip.
He was buttoned up in a black, caped overcoat from the lapels of which bulged a flowing tie; and a wide-brimmed hat lay on the carpet beside a bulky portfolio. A close-fitting silk skullcap lent him a mediaeval appearance, which was lost when he adjusted large, slightly tinted spectacles in order more closely to observe us.
It was a memorable situation.
“Your reputation is well known to me, Maître Foli,” said Sir Denis.
“Indeed, yes,” M. Chamrousse murmured, bowing to the famous lawyer.
“But the identity of your present client surprises me.”
“Sir Denis Nayland Smith,” Maître Foli replied in a harsh, strident voice, “I have acted for Dr. Fu-Manchu over a period of some forty years.”
“Is that so?” Sir Denis muttered drily.
“You and I do not see eye to eye in the matters which we know about. You have behaved, and behaved honourably, in accordance with your principles, Sir Denis. Dr. Fu-Manchu has followed another star. His codes are those of a civilization different from ours—and older. A day will come, must come, when you will recognize your outlook—as I have recognized mine—to be limited. His manner of warfare appals you—yet I can only regret, Sir Denis, that a man of your great capacity should have been called upon to oppose the inevitable over a period of so many years.”
He stood up.
“Thank you,” said Sir Denis.
“Will you be good enough”—Maître Foli bowed to the préfet and to Nayland Smith—“to grant me an interview with my client? I desire that this interview should not be interrupted—a desire which I am entitled to express.”
The French official glanced at Sir Denis, who nodded. Maître Foli took up his bulky portfolio and went out, walking very slowly and much stooped. M. Chamrousse followed him.
I stared at Nayland Smith, who had begun to pace up and down the carpet restlessly.
“This man Foli is going to oppose extradition!” he rapped.
“If he succeeds—and he rarely fails—Fu-Manchu will slip through our fingers!”
Presently, M. Chamrousse returned, shrugging apologetically.
“Such is the law,” he said, “and the eminence of Maître Foli offers me no alternative. This Fu-Manchu is a political prisoner...”
A messenger entered to announce the arrival of the Chinese consul.
“Do you mind, M. Chamrousse,” said Sir Denis, “if I see this gentleman privately for a few minutes?”
“But not at all.”
Sir Denis nodded to the speaker and walked rapidly out of the room. Five to ten minutes elapsed, during which there was little conversation between M. Chamrousse and myself, and then:
“The appearance of the great Foli in this case gives me a heavy sense of responsibility,” M. Chamrousse declared. “I fully understand.”
A further interval of silence; and then, heralded by the sound of a bell and the unlocking of doors, Maître Foli rejoined us, portfolio under his arm.
M. Chamrousse sprang to his feet.
“Gentlemen,” said the famous lawyer, groping for that wide-brimmed hat which he had left upon the floor beside his chair, “I am returning at once in order to get in touch with the Chinese Legation in Paris.”
“The Chinese consul is here, Maître Foli.”
That stooping but dignified figure turned slowly.
“I thank you, M. Chamrousse; but this affair is outside the sphere of minor officialdom.”
M. Chamrousse rang a bell; a clerk appeared, who showed Maître Foli out of the office. At the door he turned.
“Gentlemen,” he said, “I know that you look upon me as your enemy; but your enemy is my client. I am merely acting for him.”
He bowed and went out. The door closed. Perhaps half a minute had elapsed when it was flung open again and Nayland Smith hurried in.
“Was that Maître Foli who left a moment ago?” he rapped.
“Yes,” M. Chamrousse replied. “He is anxious to get into immediate touch with the Chinese Legation in Paris.”
Sir Denis stood stock still, then:
“Great heavens!” he said in a low voice—and looked at me almost wildly—“It’s not impossible! It’s not impossible—”
“What do you mean, Sir Denis?”
“The Blessing of the Celestial Vision!”
His words were a verbal thunderbolt; his meaning was all too clear.
“Sterling! Good God! Follow me.”
He rushed from the room, along the passage to the cell occupied by Dr. Fu-Manchu. A guard was on duty at the door. He opened it in response to Sir Denis’s order. We entered. M. Chamrousse was close behind.
A man was seated where Dr. Fu-Manchu had sat; one in figure not unlike whom we had come to seek. But...
“Great heavens!” cried Nayland Smith. “He wasn’t relying on loopholes of the law! He was relying on his genius as an illusionist!”
The man in the yellow robe bowed.
It was Maître Foli!
“Sir Denis,” he said, in his harsh, strident voice, “I have served my purpose for which I have been retained by Dr. Fu-Manchu for a period of more than thirty years. I am honoured; I am happy. I crown a successful career with a glorious deed...”
The light in his eyes—their wild fanaticism—told me the truth.
Maître Foli was a Companion; a victim of those arts which I had so narrowly escaped!
“I shall be committed to a French jail—my sentence may be a long one. I am too old for Devil’s Island; but in any event what does it matter? The Prince is free! The work goes on...”