'I bet she did,' said Jimmy to himself. 'Really,' he said aloud, by

way of lending a helping hand to a friend in trouble, 'I preferred

to walk. I have not been on a country road since I landed in

England.' He turned to the big man, and held out his hand. 'I don't

suppose you remember me, Mr. McEachern? We met in New York.'

'You remember the night Mr. Pitt scared away our burglar, father,'

said Molly.

Mr. McEachern was momentarily silent. On his native asphalt, there

are few situations capable of throwing the New York policeman off

his balance. In that favored clime, savoir faire is represented by a

shrewd blow of the fist, and a masterful stroke with the truncheon

amounts to a satisfactory repartee. Thus shall you never take the

policeman of Manhattan without his answer. In other surroundings,

Mr. McEachern would have known how to deal with the young man whom

with such good reason he believed to be an expert criminal. But

another plan of action was needed here. First and foremost, of all

the hints on etiquette that he had imbibed since he entered this

more reposeful life, came the maxim: 'Never make a scene.' Scenes,

he had gathered, were of all things what polite society most

resolutely abhorred. The natural man in him must be bound in chains.

The sturdy blow must give way to the honeyed word. A cold, 'Really!'

was the most vigorous retort that the best circles would

countenance. It had cost Mr. McEachern some pains to learn this

lesson, but he had done it. He shook hands, and gruffly acknowledged

the acquaintanceship.

'Really, really!' chirped Sir Thomas, amiably. 'So, you find

yourself among old friends, Mr. Pitt.'

'Old friends,' echoed Jimmy, painfully conscious of the ex-

policeman's eyes, which were boring holes in him.

'Excellent, excellent! Let me take you to your room. It is just

opposite my own. This way.'

In his younger days, Sir Thomas had been a floor-walker of no mean

caliber. A touch of the professional still lingered in his brisk

movements. He preceded Jimmy upstairs with the restrained suavity

that can be learned in no other school.

They parted from Mr. McEachern on the first landing, but Jimmy could

still feel those eyes. The policeman's stare had been of the sort

that turns corners, goes upstairs, and pierces walls.

CHAPTER XIII

SPIKE'S VIEWS

Nevertheless, it was in an exalted frame of mind that Jimmy dressed

for dinner. It seemed to him that he had awakened from a sort of

stupor. Life, so gray yesterday, now appeared full of color and

possibilities. Most men who either from choice or necessity have

knocked about the world for any length of time are more or less

fatalists. Jimmy was an optimistic fatalist. He had always looked on

Fate, not as a blind dispenser at random of gifts good and bad, but

rather as a benevolent being with a pleasing bias in his own favor.

He had almost a Napoleonic faith in his star. At various periods of

his life (notably at the time when, as he had told Lord Dreever, he

had breakfasted on bird-seed), he had been in uncommonly tight

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