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A Piece of Deception


I.

Many years ago, Alexandria was a refuge for half the runaway swindlers, robbers, and assassins of Europe. It was, in fact (the viceroy will pardon the strength of the expression), the sink of all the rascality of the Eastern and Western Worlds. 

Among the rogues and escrocs who made Egypt the land of their adoption, two scoundrels especially attracted my attraction. These persons (the one of Prussian, the other of French extraction) were both gentlemen in appearance and conversation, — chevaliers d’industrie by trade. The former, James Vauler, was a converted Prussian Jew; the latter, M. Ernest, had lived several years in Paris, and claimed French protection. What the prefect of police in Paris thought of these two worthy men I never heard; but I strongly suspect that a change of climate had become necessary for their health. It soon became certain to me that they had taken high degrees in the blackleg schools of Paris, Berlin, and Vienna. Vauler was a pink-and-white man, with glossy, black, scented whiskers, and large dark eyes full of a smiling and false frankness: Ernest, a sallow little man, had a keen, sharp glance, and a smart, alert, businesslike manner. They were both great talkers, and sang in a fervid, semi-operatic way. 

They arrived from Paris via Marseilles. The first glitter of their diamond rings secured them credit, and produced a general impression, that commercial magnates of enormous wealth and immaculate honesty had arrived to give a new impetus to the trade of Alexandria. They, Arcades ambo, got invited to one or two places, their shallow accomplishments, and the fluency with which they spoke French and Italian, soon making them the talk of all the marriageable… Read More