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I can see to that. The usual enemy--of a pretty girl--that is all." He broke off with a sudden laugh. Once or twice he had laughed like that, and his manner was restless and uneasy. In a younger man, or one less experienced and hardened, the observant might have suspected some hidden excitement. Lady Orlay turned and looked at him curiously, with the frankness of a friendship which had lasted nearly half a century. "What is it?" He laughed--but he laughed uneasily--and spread out his hands in a gesture of bewilderment. "What is what?" Lady Orlay looked at her fan reflectively as she opened and closed it. "Reginald Cartoner has turned up quite suddenly," she said. "Mr. Mangles has arrived from Washington. You are here from Paris. A few minutes ago old Karl Steinmetz, who still watches the nations en amateur, shook hands with me. This Prince Bukaty is not a nonentity. All the Vultures are assembling, Paul. I can see that. I can see that my husband sees it." "Ah! you and yours are safe now. You are in the backwater--you and Orlay--quietly moored beneath the trees." "Finally," continued Lady Orlay, without heeding the interruption, "you come to me with a light in your eye which I have seen there only once or twice during nearly fifty years. It means war, or something very like it--the Vultures." She gave a little shiver as she looked round the room. After a short silence Deulin rose suddenly and held out his hand. "Good-bye," he said. "You are too discerning. Good-bye." "You are going--?" "Away," he answered, with a wave of the hand descriptive of space. "I must go and pack my trunks." Lady Orlay had not moved when Mr. Mangles came up to say good-night. Miss Julia P. Mangles bowed in a manner which she considered impressive and the world thought ponderous. Netty Cahere murmured a few timid words of thanks. "We shall hope to see you again," said Lady Orlay to Mr. Mangles. "'Fraid not," he answered; "we're going to travel on the Continent." "When do you start?" asked her ladyship. "To-morrow morning." "Another one," muttered Lady Orlay, watching Mr. Mangles depart. And her brief reverie was broken into by Reginald Cartoner. "You have come to say good-bye," she said to him. "Yes." "You are going away again?" "Yes." "And you will not tell me where you are going." "I cannot," answered Cartoner. "Then I will tell you," said Lady Orlay, who, as Paul Deulin had said, was
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