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. You are in uncommonly good condition for a chap who has just pulled through fever and a bullet hole. By Jove! I wish I could have seen you tackling the Afridis--you were mentioned in the papers after that last scrimmage, and they gave you a rousing send-off. You deserve the Victoria Cross, and you would get it if you were a soldier." "I didn't fight for glory," Jack muttered, bitterly. "I'm the most unlucky beggar alive." Jimmie looked at him curiously. "You don't mean to say," he asked, "that you were hankering for an Afridi bullet or spear in your heart?" "It's the best thing that could have happened. They tell me I bear a charmed life, and I believe it's true. I never expected to come back, if you want to know." "I'm sorry to hear you say that, old man. You need cheering up. Have you any luggage besides that bag?" "I sent the rest on to the _Universe_ office." "Then come to my rooms--you know you left a lot of clothes and other stuff there. You can fix up a bit, and then we'll go out and have a good feed." "As you like," Jack assented, indifferently. "But I must see Hunston first--he will go from the docks to the office, and expect to find me there." They entered a cab and drove westward, through the decorated streets and surging crowds of the city, down Ludgate Hill and up the slope of Fleet street. Jack left his friend in the Strand, before the _Illustrated Universe_ building, with its windows placarded with the paper's original sketches and sheets from the current issue, and it was more than an hour later when he turned up at Jimmie's luxurious chambers in the Albany. He was in slightly better spirits, and he exhaled an odor of brandy. He had a check for five hundred pounds in his pocket, and there was more money due him. "Where's my war-paint?" he demanded. That meant, in plain English, Jack's dress clothes, and they were soon produced from a trunk he had left in Jimmie's care. He made a careful toilet, and then the two sallied forth into the blazing streets and pleasure-seeking throngs. They went to the Continental, above Waterloo Place, and Jack ordered the dinner lavishly--he insisted on playing the host. He chatted in his old light-hearted manner during the courses, occasionally laughing boisterously, but with an artificial ring that was perceptible to his companion. His eyes sparkled, and his brown cheeks flushed under the glow of the red-shaded lamps. "This is a rotten worl
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