s," he replied,
with a serious face.
The explanation seemed wholly acceptable to Tavender. He mused upon it
placidly for a time, with his reverend head pillowed askew against the
corner of the chair. Then he let his cigar drop, and closed his eyes.
The master of the house bent forward, and noiselessly helped himself to
another glass of whiskey and water. Then, sinking back again, he eyed
his odd guest meditatively as he sipped the drink. He said to himself
that in all the miraculous run of luck which the year had brought him,
this was the most extraordinary manifestation of the lot. It had been
so easy to ignore the existence of this tiresome and fatuous old man, so
long as he was in remote Mexico, that he had practically forgotten him.
But he should not soon forget the frightened shock with which he had
learned of his presence in London, that afternoon. For a minute or two,
there in his sister's book-shop, it had seemed as if he were falling
through the air--as if the substantial earth had crumbled away from
under him. But then his nerve had returned to him, his resourceful brain
had reasserted itself. With ready shrewdness he had gone out, and met
the emergency, and made it the servant of his own purposes.
He could be glad now, unreservedly glad, that Tavender had come to
London, that things had turned out as they had. In truth, he stood now
for the first time on solid ground. When he thought of it, now, the risk
he had been running all these months gave him a little sinking of the
heart. Upon reflection, the performance of having sold the same property
first to Tavender in Mexico and then to the Rubber Consols Company in
London might be subject to injurious comment, or worse. The fact that it
was not a real property to begin with had no place in his thoughts.
It was a concession--and concessions were immemorially worth what they
would fetch. But the other thing might have been so awkward--and now it
was all right!
For an hour and more, till the fire burnt itself out and the guest's
snoring became too active a nuisance, Thorpe sat lost in this
congratulatory reverie. Then he rose, and sharply shaking Tavender into
a semblance of consciousness, led him upstairs and put him to bed.
Three days later he personally saw Tavender off at Waterloo station by
the steamer-train, en route for Southampton and New York. The old man
was in childlike good spirits, looking more ecclesiastical than ever
in the new clothes he
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