picture affects the artistic. He ran the diamonds through his

fingers, then scrutinized them again, more closely this time.

Spike watched him with a slight return of hope. It seemed to him

that the boss was wavering. Perhaps, now that he had actually

handled the jewels, he would find it impossible to give them up. To

Spike, a diamond necklace of cunning workmanship was merely the

equivalent of so many 'plunks'; but he knew that there were men,

otherwise sane, who valued a jewel for its own sake.

'It's a boid of a necklace, boss,' he murmured, encouragingly.

'It is,' said Jimmy; 'in its way, I've never seen anything much

better. Sir Thomas will be glad to have it back.'

'Den, you're goin' to put it back, boss?'

'I am,' said Jimmy. 'I'll do it just before the theatricals. There

should be a chance, then. There's one good thing. This afternoon's

affair will have cleared the air of sleuth-hounds a little.'

CHAPTER XXIII

FAMILY JARS

Hildebrand Spencer Poynt de Burgh John Hannasyde Coombe-Crombie,

twelfth Earl of Dreever, was feeling like a toad under the harrow.

He read the letter again, but a second perusal made it no better.

Very briefly and clearly, Molly had broken off the engagement. She

'thought it best.' She was 'afraid it could make neither of us

happy.' All very true, thought his lordship miserably. His

sentiments to a T. At the proper time, he would have liked nothing

better. But why seize for this declaration the precise moment when

he was intending, on the strength of the engagement, to separate his

uncle from twenty pounds? That was what rankled. That Molly could

have no knowledge of his sad condition did not occur to him. He had

a sort of feeling that she ought to have known by instinct. Nature,

as has been pointed out, had equipped Hildebrand Spencer Poynt de

Burgh with one of those cheap-substitute minds. What passed for

brain in him was to genuine gray matter as just-as-good imitation

coffee is to real Mocha. In moments of emotion and mental stress,

consequently, his reasoning, like Spike's, was apt to be in a class

of its own.

He read the letter for the third time, and a gentle perspiration

began to form on his forehead. This was awful. The presumable

jubilation of Katie, the penniless ripper of the Savoy, when he

should present himself to her a free man, did not enter into the

mental picture that was unfolding before him. She was too remote.

Between him and her lay the fearsome figure of Sir Thomas, rampant,

filling the entire horizon. Nor is this to be wondered at. There was

probably a brief space during which Perseus, concentrating his gaze

upon the monster, did not see Andromeda; and a knight of the Middle

Ages, jousting in the Gentlemen's Singles for a smile from his lady,

rarely allowed the thought of that smile to occupy his whole mind at

the moment when his boiler-plated antagonist was descending upon him

in the wake of a sharp spear.

So with Spennie Dreever. Bright eyes might shine for him when all

was over, but in the meantime what seemed to him more important was

that bulging eyes would glare.

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