'I say, sir. You aren't going to tell me you are bored?'
'Bored! No! Where the devil have you been all this time?'
'Observing—watching—nosing around. What else? I knew you had company. Have you talked freely, sir?'
'Yes, I have,' muttered Mr. Jones.
'Not downright plain, sir?'
'No. I wished you had been here. You loaf all the morning, and now you come in out of breath. What's the matter?'
'I haven't been wasting my time out there,' said Ricardo. 'Nothing's the matter. I—I—might have hurried a bit.' He was in truth still panting; only it was not with running, but with the tumult of thoughts and sensations long repressed, which had been set free by the adventure of the morning. He was almost distracted by them now. He forgot himself in the maze of possibilities threatening and inspiring. 'And so you had a long talk?' he said, to gain time.
'Confound you! The sun hasn't affected your head, has it? Why are you staring at me like a basilisk?'
'Beg pardon, sir. Wasn't aware I stared,' Ricardo apologized good-humouredly. 'The sun might well affect a thicker skull than mine. It blazes. Phew! What do you think a fellow is, sir—a salamander?'
'You ought to have been here,' observed Mr. Jones.
'Did the beast give any signs of wanting to prance?' asked Ricardo quickly, with absolutely genuine anxiety. 'It wouldn't do, sir. You must play him easy for at least a couple of days, sir. I have a plan. I have a notion that I can find out a lot in a couple of days.'
'You have? In what way?'
'Why, by watching,' Ricardo answered slowly.
Mr Jones grunted.
'Nothing new, that. Watch, eh? Why not pray a little, too?'
'Ha, ha, ha! That's a good one,' burst out the secretary, fixing Mr. Jones with mirthless eyes.
The latter dropped the subject indolently.
'Oh, you may be certain of at least two days,' he said.
Ricardo recovered himself. His eyes gleamed voluptuously.
'We'll pull this off yet—clean—whole—right through, if you will only trust me, sir.'
'I am trusting you right enough,' said Mr. Jones. 'It's your interest, too.'
And, indeed, Ricardo was truthful enough in his statement. He did absolutely believe in success now. But he couldn't tell his governor that he had intelligences in the enemy's camp. It wouldn't do to tell him of the girl. Devil only knew what he would do if he learned there was a woman about. And how could he begin to tell of it? He couldn't confess his sudden escapade.
'We'll pull it off, sir,' he said, with perfectly acted cheerfulness. He experienced gusts of awful joy expanding in his heart and hot like a fanned flame.
'We must,' pronounced Mr. Jones. 'This thing, Martin, is not like our other tries. I have a peculiar feeling about this. It's a different thing. It's a sort of test.'
Ricardo was impressed by the governor's manner; for the first time a hint of passion could be detected in him. But also a word he used, the word 'test,' had struck him as particularly significant somehow. It was the last word uttered during that morning's conversation. Immediately afterwards Ricardo went out of the room. It was impossible for him to keep still. An elation in which an extraordinary softness mingled with savage triumph would not allow it. It prevented his thinking, also. He walked up and down the veranda far into the afternoon, eyeing the other bungalow at every turn. It gave no sign of being inhabited. Once or twice he stopped dead short and looked down at his left slipper. Each time he chuckled audibly. His restlessness kept on increasing till at last it frightened him. He caught hold of the balustrade of the veranda and stood still, smiling not at his thought but at the strong sense of life within him. He abandoned himself to it carelessly, even recklessly. He cared for no one, friend or enemy. At that moment Mr. Jones called him by name from within. A shadow fell on the secretary's face.
'Here, sir,' he answered; but it was a moment before he could make up his mind to go in.
He found the governor on his feet. Mr. Jones was tired of lying down when there was no necessity for it. His slender form, gliding about the room, came to a standstill.
'I've been thinking, Martin, of something you suggested. At the time it did not strike me as practical; but on reflection it seems to me that to propose a game is as good a way as any to let him understand that the time has come to disgorge. It's less—how should I say?—vulgar. He will know what it means. It's not a bad form to give to the business—which in itself is crude, Martin, crude.'
'Want to spare his feelings?' jeered the secretary in such a bitter tone that Mr. Jones was really surprised.
'Why, it was your own notion, confound you!'
'Who says it wasn't?' retorted Ricardo sulkily. 'But I am fairly sick of this crawling. No! No! Get the exact bearings of his swag and then a rip up. That's plenty good enough for him.'
His passions being thoroughly aroused, a thirst for blood was allied in him with a thirst for tenderness—yes, tenderness. A sort of anxious, melting sensation pervaded and softened his heart when he thought of that girl—one of his own sort. And at the same time jealousy started gnawing at his breast as the image of Heyst intruded itself on his fierce anticipation of bliss.
'The crudeness of your ferocity is positively gross, Martin,' Mr. Jones said disdainfully. 'You don't even understand my purpose. I mean to have some sport out of him. Just try to imagine the atmosphere of the game— the fellow handling the cards—the agonizing mockery of it! Oh, I shall appreciate this greatly. Yes, let him lose his money instead of being forced to hand it over. You, of course, would shoot him at once, but I shall enjoy the