Rising four stories in height, with extensive cellars underneath wherein were situated among other facilities the mechanism for operating the hydraulic elevators allowing all except the uppermost one to be reached without the guests having to climb stairs, there was considerable justification for the claim by the Grand Republic Hotel to be the largest, best-situated, and most luxurious establishment of its kind in Washington, D.C., and up to the standards of the finest in any other country’s major cities.
Being comprised of delicacies from around the world as well as those found only in the United States, the food and beverages were of a first-rate standard of excellence and prepared and served by an exceptionally well-trained staff. The waiters and waitresses in the magnificent main dining area and smaller rooms where meals of a less public nature could be taken were trained to perfection and, like the rest of the domestic personnel, noted for their discretion. Chosen for their size and bearing, being attired in garments of military cut of a kind that had gone out of use except for ceremonial purposes in the United States Army, the doormen could supply information about most matters pertaining to the capital city and its environment, particularly those of a confidential nature such as where various types of diversion or company could be located. It was rumored that the amount each received as gratuities for his services, especially those of the latter variety, made his salary seem a mere pittance.
Furthermore, the services offered for the protection of the guests’ property had often been praised. Those who wished to do so could leave their surplus money and jewelry in a box that could only be opened by two keys. One was for the possession of the owner and the other was held in a locked steel cupboard, which the duty manager alone could open in his permanently occupied office. The precautions taken were considered a matter of the gravest importance by the management.
From the beginning, the Grand Republic had received custom from the wealthiest families in the United States, whether involved in railroads, internal or overseas shipping, mining of precious metals or coal, or the cattle industry, which had brought prosperity back to a Texas left impoverished by supporting the Confederacy in the Civil War and was now starting to do the same in other states. i Furthermore, since its fame had spread worldwide by word of mouth, it was regarded as de rigueur for such foreign dignitaries who did not receive private accommodation in the capital city to stay there. Although many of the latter brought personal servants, for whom quarters of a lower standard were available on the upper of the four floors, albeit not served by the elevator, all levels of the workforce were carefully selected for competence at their duties and honesty.
To ensure that the latter quality was possessed, nobody was hired without a careful check being made upon their antecedents to ensure they would be trustworthy. Furthermore, the management maintained two efficient former peace officers and a female attendant, who was equally conversant with her duties, on the premises at all times in the capacity of what a later generation would call house detectives. Between them, being able to recognize many confidence tricksters, crooked gamblers, and other members of the criminal fraternity, they were able to keep such undesirables from operating on the premises. There was another part of their duties that was a most effective deterrent to petty or more serious pilfering on the part of the workforce. Not being offered protection by the restrictions that organizers of labor unions of a later day would refuse to permit, regardless of the justification for them being required, even the desk clerks and other senior members of the staff were compelled to don garments of a uniform nature and indicative of each’s status in the hierarchy of the hotel supplied to them on arriving for duty and, regardless of the position held, should there be cause would have their own clothing and persons searched before they were allowed to leave.
Because of the high standard of security employed at the hotel, it was generally assumed by the management and the city’s law-enforcement agencies that a robbery there was impossible to perpetrate.
However, that theory was soon to be disproved in no uncertain fashion.
What was more, the theft was to be carried out from what—despite having some possibilities for allowing unwanted access—was considered to be the safest part of the whole building.
Serving as a storage area for trunks and other items not required in the rooms by the occupants, the roof of the hotel rose in an inverted V. However, around it was what amounted to a wide balcony allowing maintenance work to be carried out. It was well known that the decorative and protective wooden barrier was only a safety measure during the hours of daylight. Each evening, one of the—although the term had not yet come into usage—security force went up and set free the securing bolts that had kept in a nominally safe condition on being replaced at dawn. Doing so allowed it to turn outward on well-oiled hinges if leaned or otherwise pulled upon, and its weak construction would prevent it from supporting any except the lightest of weights. This precaution was intended to prevent the barrier from being used as a means of descending by a ladder or rope to the rooms below, many being fitted with balconies allowing the occupants to go outside and admire the view of their surroundings, but that might otherwise have permitted an unauthorized entrance.
When deciding to steal the extremely valuable jewelry collection brought from Russia by Countess Olga Simonouski, who rumor claimed had less-than-honorable motives for remaining in Washington instead of accompanying her husband on a hunting expedition west of the Mississippi River, Libby Craddock had been all too aware of the difficulties to be encountered. However, by virtue of her upbringing and being possessed of no scruples or fear of possible danger, she had refused to be deterred by considerations of the risks involved. Putting her highly developed skills as an organizer to use, she had found the means by which an entry to the suite occupied by her intended victim could be achieved. With the Countess being absent at a high-society ball and—according to the source of information that had been acquired by one of her confederates—unlikely to be returning until the early hours of the morning, as well as having the good fortune of the weather proving suitable for her needs, she was about to put her scheme into effect.
Standing in the small amount of light given by a three-quarters moon, dressed ready to start the attempt, Libby presented a sight that would have drawn much attention from most masculine eyes. Twenty-five years of age, although she had never lived a life of self-restraint, having the need to keep herself in excellent physical condition, there was little sign of it. Held back by a black scarf, her reddish-brunette hair framed a slightly aquiline face that, although somewhat marred by the coldly calculating glint that never left her hazel eyes—although this was rarely noticed until too late, if at all, by the men upon whom she exerted her undeniable charm for predatory purposes—was currently devoid of makeup and showed the tan acquired by her way of life. Because of the way it was filled, the black leotard that was her sole piece of attire—apart from pumps such as a ballet dancer would use except for not having the well-padded “points” that allow dancing upon the toes for lengthy periods to be performed and a leather belt with a small pouch at the left and an ivory-handled knife with a spear point sheathed on the right—was sensual in the extreme. Close fitting at the neck and between the legs, it clung to her magnificently countered body like a second skin. Exposed by its being sleeveless, her arms had well-developed muscles without these causing any loss to her blatant sexuality.
Clearly being twins about the same age and clad and armed in a similar fashion to Libby, apart from Luigi having a neatly trimmed mustache while Giovanni was clean shaven albeit always having a dark tint to his olive cheeks that made him appear in need of one, the Martinelli brothers were alike in being tall, lithe, and wiry. When moving, they possessed a catlike grace that was of the greatest benefit for their everyday and present occupation and frequently proved most attractive to women. Making use of the latter trait, it had been Luigi—older of the pair by about half an hour—who procured the most important piece of information, which had allowed the reddish-brunette to decide that the time had come for them to carry out the robbery upon the planning of which she had devoted much attention.
There was nothing lithe or wiry about the fourth member of the group standing on the balcony to which they had gained access by a skylight in the roof. In fact, the appearance presented by Stanislaus Padoubny—although few would have known him by that name—was far from prepossessing. With his close-cropped black hair parted down the center and glistening from a liberal application of bay rum, his heavily mustached face was so brutish in aspect as to be close to frightening. Over six feet in height and built on massive lines that his no more extensive garb showed off, if not to advantage offered to the others, a muscular development well above average.
Especially in the case of Padoubny, arranging to have her companions obtain access to the hotel without being detected had been only one of the problems with which Libby was faced while planning the robbery. However, as with each of the others, she had come up with a solution that worked. Making use of an ability at disguise she had learned from her father, who had performed a highly regarded “quick-change” act on the stage, she had been able to make herself able to pass as a stout Irishwoman employed as a member of the housekeeping staff. Although having passed the scrutiny to which all employees were subjected, Bridget O’Toole was prone to take more than just one nip of whiskey when not on duty.
Having made the woman’s acquaintance and studied her sufficiently to be confident the deception would work, as it would not need to be maintained for long and the lateness of the hour rendered the need to mingle with anybody else for any length of time unlikely, Libby had visited her at home and contrived to slip her a drugged drink on the pretense of celebrating a nonexistent sister giving birth to a son. The victim was left in an unconscious state and would not be likely to be discovered before morning, as her husband was working the night shift at his place of employment. Arriving at the hotel, with the leotards under the clothing used for passing unnoticed through the streets—even Padoubny managing to avoid attracting undue attention, having had on the habit of a monk and kept the cowl drawn up to partially conceal his features—Libby had waited for an opportunity to let her companions come in through the entrance. Keeping to the stairs allocated for use by the staff and servants of guests, they had reached the balcony on the roof. Once there, they had removed their outer garments and were now ready for the next vitally important stage of the plan.
While the brothers were carefully and silently allowing a section of the guard rail to hinge forward, Padoubny was unwinding from around his body a manila fiber rope of three-strand construction and laid extra hard for strength and smoothness—of the kind frequently used for making the lariats employed by cowhands in the range country of the West. There was a loop large enough to encircle his torso spliced securely into one end and it had knots at intervals down the remainder of what in a lariat would have been called the stem. Because of his size and bulk, he had been able to carry one of sufficient length for the purposes of the party beneath the monk’s habit, now lying with the other temporarily discarded attire, without its being discernible.
Even without being aware that such ropes were capable of holding firm against the strains imposed by the tugging of a full-grown longhorn bull trying to escape when needed in the West, Libby and the brothers were confident it would do what they required. Therefore, when Padoubny had the loop over his shoulder and allowed the remainder to fall downward, she had no qualms as she took hold of the stem. Waiting for the burly man to adopt a position that would allow him to support the weights that would be imposed respectively by herself and each of the twins, she grasped the stem and started the descent with the ease she had acquired, along with several other equally specialized skills she found of use in the more lucrative occupation upon which she was now engaged, during a life spent performing various kinds of acts at circuses.
Aided by the knots made in the rope for that purpose and her excellent physical condition, Libby made the descent through the unrelieved gloom for three floors to the balcony of the suite that she knew was occupied by the Countess. Although the levels above had been in darkness, a chink of light showed through the curtains of the French windows that she knew gave access to the sitting room. However, a peek through the gap assured her it was unoccupied. Satisfied on that vitally important point, she gave the tug on the rope they had arranged to notify the first of the brothers he could join her.
“There’s nothing from Jinks to warn us we’ve been seen,” Libby announced, turning from where she was looking downward over the balcony as the first of her associates joined her. Not unexpectedly, being a member of an act called the Flying Lombardos and having performed upon the trapeze at the circus where he and his brother Giovanni had met and been recruited by her, he too had made the descent with no greater difficulty despite having a small bull’s-eye lantern hooked on the rear of his waist belt.
“I don’t know why you had to fetch him along,” the older of the twins said petulantly. Although he had never been outside the United States, like his brother he spoke with a pronounced Italian accent. “He’s always likely to be noticed, especially hanging around outside a place like this so late at night.”
“He’s too smart to let himself be noticed and can hide easier than you could,” Libby answered, never pleased when any decision she made was questioned. “Besides, he’s getting a full cut out of the deal and, even though there was nothing for him to do inside, I figured he might as well do something to earn it.”
“It’s just like she said it would be,” Luigi stated. Concluding he would be advised to let the matter drop, he had crossed to look through the chink in the curtain. Turning his attention in that direction, he tried the handle of the French windows and, finding they held firm, went on, “They’re fastened. Can you open them?”
“Of course,” Libby declared with certainty, taking a small roll of leather from the pouch on her belt and opening it while there were indications that Giovanni was commencing the descent. “Give me some light.”
On the order—and it had been that rather than a request—given by the reddish-brunette being complied with, the light from the lantern showed that the leather had concealed several devices Luigi knew to be the set of lock picks she could operate with skill. Selecting one after having illuminated the keyhole and examined it for a moment, she inserted and started to move it. When this failed to produce any effect, she returned it to the slot from which it was taken and chose another. On this occasion, paying no attention to the arrival of the younger twin or his sibling’s telling what had happened sotto voce in their native tongue, which she spoke with reasonable fluency, she met with more success and there was a clicking sound to indicate that the mechanism of the lock had operated. However, when she tried the door, it still refused to open.
“Damn it!” Libby spat out as she replaced the pick and returned the leather container to the pouch. “The top bolt’s been fastened.”
“What can you do, then?” Giovanni growled, never having been enamored of the way in which the reddish-brunette made it plain that she considered herself the dominant partner of their group.
“Is she likely to be in there, Lou?” Libby inquired instead of answering the younger brother’s question.
“Not according to what I know of her,” the older twin answered, sharing his sibling’s sentiments on the subject of the reddish-brunette’s attitude. “She wasn’t any too pleased when I told her I couldn’t take her to the beer garden tonight and said she’d find somebody who would, and I don’t reckon she’d have any difficulty in doing that. What’re you going to do?”
Once again refraining from supplying information as requested, Libby raised her left foot and, with the deft grace of a ballet dancer—or one experienced in the French hand-and-foot boxing style called savate—delivered a sharp kick just above the lock. The noise doing so made was not excessive, but it seemed to be that way to the brothers, and they gazed about them in something close to alarm while each’s right hand went to the knife he had sheathed on his belt. Although Libby had contrived to avoid giving any sign of sharing their perturbation, she felt a touch of relief when the impact caused the windows to open. Satisfied with having given another example of her ability to cope with an unanticipated situation, although she had envisaged something of the sort might arise, she parted the curtain and, without as much as a glance at her companions, stepped across the threshold.
“Now, this is what I call living in a grand fashion!” Giovanni stated, remembering just in time to hold his voice down, gazing around the luxuriously furnished and tidy sitting room with avaricious eyes as he followed Libby inside.
“You can try it when you get your cut of the pot,” the reddish-brunette pointed out, also studying her surroundings. “But I wouldn’t come here if I was you. It doesn’t strike me as being safe from thieves.”
“Thieves couldn’t do what we have,” the younger twin objected with asperity, being of an anarchist persuasion despite always having lived in affluent circumstances and, because of first his parents’ and then he and his sibling’s well-paid acts, never gone short of any material things. Because of his political pretensions, he considered that he was engaged upon the laudable and justifiable removal of wealth from an undeserving member of the upper classes who had extracted it from the downtrodden poor. Putting aside his dislike at it being suggested that he was a thief, he continued sullenly, “Anyway, we haven’t got the swag yet. I’ve heard they’d got a place down in the lobby that’s fitted out special to hold on to their money and jewelry where it can’t be reached by anybody else.”
“They do have, but she told me the Countess always wants to have the jewelry where she can get at it and show it off without needing to fetch it up,” Luigi growled, not any better pleased than Libby was showing herself to be over the lack of faith implied by the second part of his sibling’s comment. “So all of it and any money she doesn’t take with her is kept in a strongbox locked in the dressing table in her bedroom.”
“If she’s gone to some fancy reception, she’ll be wearing all her jewelry,” Giovanni grumbled.
“Not according to what she said,” Luigi answered. “She reckoned the reception wasn’t important enough for her to need to wear more than a few of the lesser pieces, and all the rest will be there.”
“Time’s wasting!” the reddish-brunette snapped. “Let’s go and get whatever she’s left behind.”
“It’s locked” Giovanni stated after he had tested the double doors of the dressing table of the well-equipped bedroom into which he had followed the reddish-brunette and his brother and found was also illuminated by a lamp. “Let’s see you open it.”
“I could do that with a bobby pin if I had one with me,” Libby declared, once again taking out the leather-wrapped set of lock picks. Selecting one, she tried it and, with some satisfaction, found it worked. While opening the doors, she went on, “There’s nothing hard about it.”
Watched by the brothers, the reddish-brunette removed the sizable wooden chest bound with steel bands, which was the most prominent thing to meet her gaze. Placing it on top of the dressing table, she had only a little difficulty before being able to unfasten and remove the padlock so she could raise the lid. Doing so brought into view the contents. Glinting in the light were a number of rings, bracelets, necklaces, pendants, and earrings, all having diamonds, emeralds, rubies, or pearls of a size that caused muted exclamations of delight from the brothers. As the collection was larger than the reports in the newspaper had suggested, even without whatever pieces the Countess was wearing at the reception, Libby was impressed by what she was seeing.
However, before any further comments could be made, the front entrance to the suite was opened and footsteps approached the dressing room.