by the door one of you. Damnation, where is that switch?” He found it with a shout of triumph. Lights flared out in the room. They stared around into every corner. Mr. Sabin was not there. Then Horser saw the door leading into the bed-chamber, and flung himself against it with a hoarse cry of rage. “Break it open!” he cried to the policemen. They hammered upon it with their clubs. Mr. Sabin’s quiet voice came to them from the other side. “Pray do not disturb me, gentlemen,” he said. “I am reading.” “Break it open, you damned fools!” Horser cried. They battered at it sturdily, but the door was a solid one. Suddenly they heard the key turn in the lock. Mr. Sabin stood upon the threshold. “Gentlemen!” he exclaimed. “These are my private apartments. Why this violence?” He held out the paper. “This is mine,” he said. “The information which it contains is bought and paid for. But if the giving it up will procure me the privilege of your departure, pray take it.” Horser was purple with rage. He pointed with shaking fist to the still, calm figure. “Arrest him,” he ordered. “Take him to the cells.” Mr. Sabin shrugged his shoulders. “I am ready,” he said, “but it is only fair to give you this warning. I am the Duke of Souspennier, and I am well known in England and France. The paper which you saw me hand to the porter in the hall as we stepped into the elevator was a despatch in cipher to the English Ambassador at Washington, claiming his protection. If you take me to prison to-night you will have him to deal with to-morrow.” Mr. Horser bore himself in defeat better than at any time during the encounter. He turned to the constables. “Go down stairs and wait for me in the hall,” he ordered. “You too, Skinner.” They left the room. Horser turned to Mr. Sabin, and the veins on