Mr. Herbert Parstone was not playing golf, because he had a bad cold; and he was in his office when the Saint called. The name on the card that was sent in to him was unfamiliar, but Mr. Parstone never refused to see anyone who was kind enough to walk into his parlour.

He was a short ginger-haired man with the kind of stom­ach without which no morning coat and gold watch-chain can be seen to their best advantage; and the redness of his nose was not entirely due to his temporary affliction.

'Mr. Teblar?' he said, with great but obstructed geniality. 'Please sit dowd. I dode thig I've had the pleasure to beetig you before, have I?'

'I don't think so,' said the Saint pleasantly. 'But any real pleasure is worth waiting for.' He took the precious volume which he was carrying from under his arm, and held it up. 'Did you publish this?'

Mr. Parstone looked at it.

'Yes,' he said, 'that is one of our publicashuds. A bost excelledd ad ibportad book, if I bay perbid byself to say so. A book, I bight say, which answers problebs which are dear to every wud of us today.'

'It will certainly have some problems to answer,' said the Saint; 'and I expect they'll be dear enough. Do you know the name of the principal character in this book? Do you know who this biography is alleged to be about?'

'Biography?' stammered Mr. Parstone, blinking at the cover. 'The book is a dovel. A work of fickshud. It is clearly explaid——'

'The book is supposed to be a biography,' said the Saint 'And do you know the name of the principal character?'

Mr. Parstone's brow creased with thought.

'Pridcipal character?' he repeated. 'Led be see, led be see. I ought to dough, oughtud I?' He blew his nose several times, sniffed, sighed, and spread out his hand uncertainly. 'Iddn it abazing?' he said. 'The dabe was od the tip of by tug, but dow I card rebember id.'

'The name is Simon Templar,' said the Saint grimly; and Mr. Parstone sat up.

'What?' he ejaculated.

Simon opened the book and showed him the name in plain print. Then he took it away to a chair and lighted a cigarette.

'Rather rude of you, wasn't it?' he murmured.

'Well,  by  dear Bister Teblar,'  said  Parstone winningly. 'I trust you are dot thinkig that any uncomblibendary referedds was intended. Far frob id. These rebarkable coidcidedces will happud. Ad yet it is dot every yug bad of your age who fides his dabe preserved for posterity id such a work as that.

The hero of that book, as I rebember him, was a fellow of outstaddig charb——'

'He was a low criminal,' said the Saint virtuously. 'Your memory is failing you, Herbert. Let me read you some of the best passages.'

He turned to a page he had marked.

'Listen to this, Herbert,' he said. ' 'Simon Templar was never particular about how he made money, so long as he made it. The drug traffic was only one of his many sources of income, and his conscience was never touched by the thought of the hundreds of lives he ruined by his insatiable avarice. Once, in a night club, he pointed out to me a fine and beautiful girl on whose lovely face the ravages of dope were already beginning to make their mark. 'I've had two thousand pounds from her since I started her on the stuff,' he said gloatingly, 'and I'll have five thousand more before it kills her.' 1 could

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