a clever piece of work, I
flatter myself, to net Mr. Nat Verney so neatly."
The Englishman began to laugh, but suddenly broke off short as a girl's
face, white and quivering, came between them.
"Who is this man?" the high, breathless voice demanded.
"Which--which is Mr. Nat Verney?"
Rudd looked down at her through narrowed eyes. He was smiling--a
small, bitter smile.
"Waal, Miss Mortimer," he began, "I reckon you have first right to
know----"
She turned from him imperiously.
"You tell me," she commanded Norton.
Norton looked genuinely uncomfortable, and, probably in consequence,
he answered her with a gruffness that sounded brutal.
"It was West. He has been arrested. His own fault entirely. No one
would have suspected him if he hadn't been a fool, and given his own
show away."
"He wasn't a fool!" Cynthia flashed back fiercely. "He was my friend!"
"I shouldn't be in too great a hurry to claim that distinction," remarked
Rudd. "He's about the best-known rascal in the two hemispheres."
But Cynthia did not wait to hear him. She had slipped past, and was
gone.
In her own cabin at last, she bolted the door and tore open that packet
connected with his profession which he had given her the night before.
It contained a roll of notes to the value of a hundred pounds, wrapped
in a sheet of notepaper on which was scrawled a single line: "With
apologies from the man who swindled you."
There was no signature of any sort. None was needed! When Cynthia
finally left her cabin an hour later, her eyes were bright with that
brightness which comes from the shedding of many tears.
* * * * *
The Swindler's Handicap
A SEQUEL TO "THE SWINDLER"
Which I Dedicate to the Friend Who Asked for it.
I
"Yes, but what's the good of it?" said Cynthia Mortimer gently. "I can
never marry you."
"You might be engaged to me for a bit, anyhow," he urged, "and see
how you like it."
She made a quaint gesture with her arms, as though she tried to lift
some heavy weight.
"I am very sorry," she said, in the same gentle voice. "It's very nice of
you to think of it, Lord Babbacombe. But--you see, I'm quite sure I
shouldn't like it. So that ends it, doesn't it?"
He stood up to his full height, and regarded her with a faint, rueful
smile.
"You're a very obstinate girl, Cynthia," he said.
She leaned back in her chair, looking up at him with clear, grey eyes
that met his with absolute freedom.
"I'm not a girl at all, Jack," she said. "I gave up all my pretensions to
youth many, many years ago."
He nodded, still faintly smiling.
"You were about nineteen, weren't you?"
"No. I was past twenty-one." A curious note crept into her voice; it
sounded as if she were speaking of the dead. "It--was just twelve years
ago," she said.
Babbacombe's eyebrows went up.
"What! Are you past thirty? I had no idea."
She laughed at him--a quick, gay laugh.
"Why, it's eight years since I first met you."
"Is it? Great heavens, how the time goes--wasted time, too, Cynthia!
We might have been awfully happy together all this time. Well"--with a
sharp sigh--"we can't get it back again. But anyhow, we needn't
squander any more of it, if only you will be reasonable."
She shook her head; then, with one of those quick impulses that were a
part of her charm, she sprang lightly up and gave him both her hands.
"No, Jack," she said. "No--no--no! I'm not reasonable. I'm just a
drivelling, idiotic fool. But--but I love my foolishness too well ever to
part with it. Ever, did I say? No, even I am not quite so foolish as that.
But it's sublime enough to hold me till--till I know for certain
whether--whether the thing I call love is real or--or--only--a sham."
There was passion in her voice, and her eyes were suddenly full of tears;
but she kept them upturned to his as though she pleaded with him to
understand.
He looked down at her very kindly, very steadily, holding her hands
closely in his own. There was no hint of chagrin on his clean-shaven
face--only the utmost kindness.
"Don't cry!" he said gently. "Tell me about this sublime foolishness of
yours--about the thing you call--love. I might help you, perhaps--who
knows?--to find out if it is the real thing or not."
Her lips were quivering.
"I've never told a soul," she said. "I--am half afraid."
"Nonsense, dear!" he protested.
"But I am," she persisted. "It's such an absurd romance--this of mine, so
absurd that you'll laugh at it, just at first. And then--afterwards--you
will--disapprove."
"My dear girl," he said, "you have never entertained the smallest
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