Tembarom did not look as though he
had slept particularly well, Miss Alicia thought,
when they met the next morning; but when she asked
him whether he had been disappointed in his last
night’s experiment, he answered that he had
not. The experiment had come out all right, but
Strangeways had been a good deal worked up, and had
not been able to sleep until daylight. Sir Ormsby
Galloway was to arrive in the afternoon, and he’d
probably give him some- thing quieting. Had the
coming downstairs seemed to help him to recall anything?
Miss Alicia naturally inquired. Tembarom thought
it had. He drove to Stone Hover and spent the
morning with the duke; he even lunched with him.
He returned in time to receive Sir Ormsby Galloway,
however, and until that great personage left, they
were together in Mr. Strangeways’ rooms.
“I guess I shall get him up
to London to the place where Sir Ormsby wants him,”
he said rather nervously, after dinner. “I’m
not going to miss any chances. If he’ll
go, I can get him away quietly some time when I can
fix it so there’s no one about to worry him.”
She felt that he had no inclination
to go much into detail. He had never had the
habit of entering into the details connected with his
strange charge. She believed it was because
he felt the subject too abnormal not to seem a little
awesome to her sympathetic timidity. She did
not ask questions because she was afraid she could
not ask them intelligently. In fact, the knowledge
that this unknown man was living through his struggle
with his lost past in the remote rooms of the west
wing, almost as though he were a secret prisoner, did
seem a little awesome when one awoke in the middle
of the dark night and thought of it.
During the passage of the next few
weeks, Tembarom went up to London several times.
Once he seemed called there suddenly, as it was only
during dinner that he told her he was going to take
a late train, and should leave the house after she
had gone to bed. She felt as though something
important must have happened, and hoped it was nothing
disturbing.
When he had said that Captain Palliser
would return to visit them, her private impression,
despite his laugh, had been that it must surely be
some time before this would occur. But a little
more than three weeks later he appeared, preceded
only half an hour by a telegram asking whether he
might not spend a night with them on his way farther
north. He could not at all understand why the
telegram, which he said he had sent the day before,
had been delayed.
A certain fatigued haggardness in
his countenance caused Miss Alicia to ask whether
he had been ill, and he admitted that he had at least
not been well, as a result of long and too hurried
journeys, and the strenuousness of extended and profoundly
serious interviews with his capitalist and magnates.
“No man can engineer gigantic
schemes to success without feeling the reaction when
his load drops from his shoulders,” he remarked.
“You’ve carried it quite through?”
inquired Tembarom.
“We have set on foot one of
the largest, most substantially capitalized companies
in the European business world,” Palliser replied,
with the composure which is almost indifference.
“Good!” said Tembarom cheerfully.
He watched his guest a good deal during
the day. He was a bad color for a man who had
just steered clear of all shoals and reached the
highest point of success. He had a haggard eye
as well as a haggard face. It was a terrified
eye when its desperate determination to hide its
terrors dropped from it for an instant, as a veil might
drop. A certain restlessness was manifest in
him, and he talked more than usual. He was going
to make a visit in Northumberland to an elderly lady
of great possessions. It was to be vaguely gathered
that she was somewhat interested in the great company—the
Cedric. She was a remarkable old person who
found a certain agreeable excitement in dabbling
in stocks. She was rich enough to be in a position
to regard it as a sort of game, and he had been able
on several occasions to afford her entertainment.
He would remain a few days, and spend his time chiefly
in telling her the details of the great scheme and
the manner in which they were to be developed.
“If she can play with things
that way, she’ll be sure to want stock in it,”
Tembarom remarked.
“If she does, she must make
up her mind quickly,” Palliser smiled, “or
she will not be able to get it. It is not easy
to lay one’s hands on even now.”
Tembarom thought of certain speculators
of entirely insignificant standing of whom he had
chanced to see and hear anecdotes in New York.
Most of them were youths of obscure origin who sold
newspapers or blacked boots, or “swapped”
articles the value of which lay in the desire they
could excite in other persons to possess them.
A popular method known as “bluff” was
their most trusted weapon, and even at twelve and
fifteen years of age Tembarom had always regarded it
as singularly obvious. He always detested “bluff,”
whatsoever its disguise, and was rather mystified
by its ingenious faith in itself.
“He’s got badly stung,”
was his internal comment as he sucked at his pipe
and smiled urbanely at Palliser across the room as
they sat together. “He’s come here
with some sort of deal on that he knows he couldn’t
work with any one but just such a fool as he thinks
I am. I guess,” he added in composed reflectiveness,
“I don’t really know how big a fool I
do look.”
Whatsoever the deal was, he would
be likely to let it be known in time.
“He’ll get it off his
chest if he’s going away to-morrow,” decided
Tembarom. “If there’s anything he’s
found out, he’ll use it. If it doesn’t
pan out as he thinks it will he’ll just float
away to his old lady.”
He gave Palliser every chance, talking
to him and encouraging him to talk, even asking him
to let him look over the prospectus of the new company
and explain details to him, as he was going to explain
them to the old lady in Northumberland. He opened
up avenues; but for a time Palliser made no attempt
to stroll down them. His walk would be a stroll,
Tembarom knew, being familiar with his methods.
His aspect would be that of a man but little concerned.
He would be capable of a slightly rude coldness if
he felt that concern on his part was in any degree
counted as a factor. Tembarom was aware, among
other things, that innocent persons would feel that
it was incumbent upon them to be very careful in
their treatment of him. He seemed to be thinking
things over before he decided upon the psychological
moment at which he would begin, if he began.
When a man had a good deal to lose or to win, Tembarom
realized that he would be likely to hold back until
he felt something like solid ground under him.
After Miss Alicia had left them for
the night, perhaps he felt, as a result of thinking
the matter over, that he had reached a foothold of
a firmness at least somewhat to be depended upon.
“What a change you have made
in that poor woman’s life!” he said,
walking to the side-table and helping himself to a
brandy and soda. “What a change!”
“It struck me that a change
was needed just about the time I dropped in,”
answered his host.
“All the same,” suggested
Palliser, tolerantly, “you were immensely generous.
She wasn’t entitled to expect it, you know.”
“She didn’t expect anything,
not a darned thing,” said Tembarom. “That
was what hit me.”
Palliser smiled a cold, amiable smile.
His slim, neatly fitted person looked a little shrunken
and less straight than was its habit, and its slackness
suggested itself as being part of the harry and fatigue
which made his face and eyes haggard under his pale,
smooth hair.
“Do you purpose to provide for
the future of all your indigent relatives even to
the third and fourth generation, my dear chap?”
he inquired.
“I won’t refuse till I’m asked,
anyhow,” was the answer.
“Asked!” Palliser repeated.
“I’m one of them, you know, and Lady
Mallowe is another. There are lots of us, when
we come out of our holes. If it’s only
a matter of asking, we might all descend on you.”
Tembarom, smiling, wondered whether
they hadn’t descended already, and whether
the descent had so far been all that they had anticipated.
Palliser strolled down his opened
avenue with an incidental air which was entirely
creditable to his training of himself. T. Tembarom
acknowledged that much.
“You are too generous,”
said Palliser. “You are the sort of fellow
who will always need all he has, and more. The
way you go among the villagers! You think you
merely slouch about and keep it quiet, but you don’t.
You’ve set an example no other landowner can
expect to live up to, or intends to. It’s
too lavish. It’s pernicious, dear chap.
I have heard all about the cottage you are doing
over for Pearson and his bride. You had better
invest in the Cedric.”
Tembarom wanted him to go on, if there
was anything in it. He made his face look as
he knew Palliser hoped it would look when the psychological
moment came. Its expression was not a deterrent;
in fact, it had a character not unlikely to lead
an eager man, or one who was not as wholly experienced
as he believed he was, to rush down a steep hill
into the sea, after the manner of the swine in the
parable.
Heaven knew Palliser did not mean
to rush, and was not aware when the rush began; but
he had reason to be so much more eager than he professed
to be that momentarily he swerved, despite himself,
and ceased to be casual.
“It is an enormous opportunity,”
he said—“timber lands in Mexico, you
know. If you had spent your life in England,
you would realize that timber has become a desperate
necessity, and that the difficulties which exist
in the way of supplying the demand are almost insuperable.
These forests are virtually boundless, and the company
which controls them—”
“That’s a good spiel!” broke in
Tembarom.
It sounded like the crudely artless
interruption of a person whose perceptions left much
to be desired. T. Tembarom knew what it sounded
like. If Palliser lost his temper, he would
get over the ground faster, and he wanted him to
get over the ground.
“I’m afraid I don’t
understand,” he replied rather stiffly.
“There was a fellow I knew in
New York who used to sell type-writers, and he had
a thing to say he used to reel off when any one looked
like a customer. He used to call it his ‘spiel.’”
Palliser’s quick glance at him
asked questions, and his stiffness did not relax
itself.
“Is this New York chaff?” he inquired
coldly.
“No,” Tembarom said. “You’re
not doing it for ten per. He was”
“No, not exactly,” said
Palliser. “Neither would you be doing it
for ten per if you went into it.” His
voice changed. He became slightly haughty.
“Perhaps it was a mistake on my part to think
you might care to connect yourself with it.
You have not, of course, been in the position to
comprehend such matters.”
“If I was what I look like,
that’d stir me up and make me feel bad,”
thought T. Tembarom, with cheerful comprehension
of this, at least. “I’d have to
rush in and try to prove to him that I was as accustomed
to big business as he is, and that it didn’t
rattle me. The way to do it that would come
most natural would be to show I was ready to buy as
big a block of stock as any other fellow.”
But the expression of his face did
not change. He only gave a half-awkward sort
of laugh.
“I guess I can learn,” he said.
Palliser felt the foothold become
firmer. The bounder was interested, but, after
a bounder’s fashion, was either nervous or imagined
that a show of hesitation looked shrewd. The
slight hit made at his inexperience in investment
had irritated him and made him feel less cock-sure
of himself. A slightly offended manner might be
the best weapon to rely upon.
“I thought you might care to
have the thing made clear to you,” he continued
indifferently. “I meant to explain.
You may take the chance or leave it, as you like,
of course. That is nothing to me at this stage
of the game. But, after all, we are as I said,
relatives of a sort, and it is a gigantic opportunity.
Suppose we change the subject. Is that the Sunday
Earth I see by you on the table?” He leaned forward
to take the paper, as though the subject really were
dropped; but, after a seemingly nervous suck or two
at his pipe, Tembarom came to his assistance.
It wouldn’t do to let him quiet down too much.
“I’m no Van Morganbilt,”
he said hesitatingly, “but I can see that it’s
a big opportunity—for some one else.
Let’s have a look over the prospectus again.”
Palliser paused in his unconcerned
opening of the copy of the Sunday Earth. His
manner somewhat disgustedly implied indecision as to
whether it was worth while to allow oneself to be
dropped and taken up by turns.
“Do you really mean that?”
he asked with a certain chill of voice.
“Yes. I don’t mind
trying to catch on to what’s doing in any big
scheme.”
Palliser did not lay aside his suggestion
of cold semi-reluctance more readily than any man
who knew his business would have laid it aside.
His manner at the outset was quite perfect.
His sole ineptitude lay in his feeling a too great
confidence in the exact quality of his companion’s
type, as he summed it up. He did not calculate
on the variations from all type sometimes provided
by circumstances.
He produced his papers without too
obvious eagerness. He spread them upon the table,
and coolly examined them himself before beginning his
explanation. There was more to explain to a
foreigner and one unused to investment than there
would be to a man who was an Englishman and familiar
with the methods of large companies, he said.
He went into technicalities, so to speak, and used
rapidly and lightly some imposing words and phrases,
to which T. Tembarom listened attentively, but without
any special air of illumination. He dealt with
statistics and the resulting probabilities.
He made apparent the existing condition of England’s
inability to supply an enormous and unceasing demand
for timber. He had acquired divers excellent methods
of stating his case to the party of the second part.
“He made me feel as if a fellow
had better hold on to a box of matches like grim
death, and that the time wasn’t out of sight
when you’d have to give fifty-seven dollars
and a half for a toothpick,” Tembarom afterwards
said to the duke.
What Tembarom was thinking as he listened
to him was that he was not getting over the ground
with much rapidity, and that it was time something
was doing. He had not watched him for weeks without
learning divers of his idiosyncrasies.
“If he thought I wanted to know
what he thinks I’d a heap rather not know,
he’d never tell me,” he speculated.
“If he gets a bit hot in the collar, he may
let it out. Thing is to stir him up. He’s
lost his nerve a bit, and he’ll get mad pretty
easy.”
He went on smoking and listening,
and asking an unenlightened question now and then,
in a manner which was as far from being a deterrent
as the largely unilluminated expression of his face
was.
“Of course money is wanted,”
Palliser said at length. “Money is always
wanted, and as much when a scheme is a success as
when it isn’t. Good names, with a certain
character, are wanted. The fact of your inheritance
is known everywhere; and the fact that you are an American
is a sort of guaranty of shrewdness.”
“Is it?” said T. Tembarom.
“Well,” he added slowly, “I guess
Americans are pretty good business men.”
Palliser thought that this was evolving
upon perfectly natural lines, as he had anticipated
it would. The fellow was flattered and pleased.
You could always reach an American by implying that
he was one of those who specially illustrate enviable
national characteristics.
He went on in smooth, casual laudation:
“No American takes hold of a
scheme of this sort until he knows jolly well what
he’s going to get out of it. You were shrewd
enough,” he added significantly, “about
Hutchinson’s affair. You `got in on the
ground floor’ there. That was New York
forethought, by Jove!”
Tembarom shuffled a little in his
chair, and grinned a faint, pleased grin.
“I’m a man of the world,
my boy—the business world,” Palliser
commented, hoping that he concealed his extreme satisfaction.
“I know New York, though I haven’t lived
there. I’m only hoping to. Your air
of ingenuous ignorance is the cleverest thing about
you,” which agreeable implication of the fact
that he had been privately observant and impressed
ought to have fetched the bounder if anything would.
T. Tembarom’s grin was no longer
faint, but spread itself. Palliser’s first
impression was that he had “fetched” him.
But when he answered, though the very crudeness of
his words seemed merely the result of his betrayal
into utter tactlessness by soothed vanity, there was
something—a shade of something—
not entirely satisfactory in his face and nasal twang.
“Well, I guess,” he said,
“New York did teach a fellow not to buy
a gold brick off every con man that came along.”
Palliser was guilty of a mere ghost
of a start. Was there something in it, or was
he only the gross, blundering fool he had trusted to
his being? He stared at him a moment, and saw
that there was something under the words and
behind his professedly flattered grin—something
which must be treated with a high hand.
“What do you mean?” he
exclaimed haughtily. “I don’t like
your tone. Do you take me for what you
call a `con man’?”
“Good Lord, no!” answered
Tembarom; and he looked straight at Palliser and
spoke slowly. “You’re a gentleman,
and you’re paying me a visit. You could
no more try on a game to do me in my own house than—well,
than I could tell you if I’d got on to
you if I saw you doing it. You’re a gentleman.”
Palliser glared back into his infuriatingly
candid eyes. He was a far cry from being a dullard
himself; he was sharp enough to “catch on”
to the revelation that the situation was not what
he had thought it, the type was more complex than
he had dreamed. The chap had been playing a
part; he had absolutely been “jollying him along,”
after the New York fashion. He became pale with
humiliated rage, though he knew his only defense
was to control himself and profess not to see through
the trick. Until he could use his big lever,
he added to himself.
“Oh, I see,” he commented
acridly. “I suppose you don’t realize
that your figures of speech are unfortunate.”
“That comes of New York streets,
too,” Tembarom answered with deliberation.
“But you can’t live as I’ve lived
and be dead easy—not dead easy.”
Palliser had left his chair, and stood
in contemptuous silence.
“You know how a fellow hates
to be thought dead easy”— Tembarom
actually went to the insolent length of saying the
words with a touch of cheerful confidingness—“when
he’s not. And I’m not. Have
another drink.”
There was a pause. Palliser began
to see, or thought he began to see, where he stood.
He had come to Temple Barholm because he had been
driven into a corner and had a dangerous fight before
him. In anticipation of it he had been following
a clue for some time, though at the outset it had
been one of incredible slightness. Only his
absolute faith in his theory that every man had something
to gain or lose, which he concealed discreetly, had
led him to it. He held a card too valuable to
be used at the beginning of a game. Its power
might have lasted a long time, and proved an influence
without limit. He forbore any mental reference
to blackmail; the word was absurd. One used
what fell into one’s hands. If Tembarom
had followed his lead with any degree of docility,
he would have felt it wiser to save his ammunition
until further pressure was necessary. But behind
his ridiculous rawness, his foolish jocularity, and
his professedly candid good humor, had been hidden
the Yankee trickster who was fool enough to think
he could play his game through. Well, he could
not.
During the few moments’ pause
he saw the situation as by a photographic flashlight.
He leaned over the table and supplied himself with
a fresh brandy and soda from the tray of siphons and
decanters. He gave himself time to take the
glass up in his hand.
“No,” he answered, “you
are not `dead easy.’ That’s why I
am going to broach another subject to you.”
Tembarom was refilling his pipe.
“Go ahead,” he said.
“Who, by the way, is Mr. Strangeways?”
He was deliberate and entirely unemotional.
So was T. Tembarom when, with match applied to his
tobacco, he replied between puffs as he lighted it:
“You can search me. You
can search him, too, for that matter. He doesn’t
know who he is himself.”
“Bad luck for him!” remarked
Palliser, and allowed a slight pause again.
After it he added, “Did it ever strike you it
might be good luck for somebody else?”
“Somebody else?” Tembarom
puffed more slowly, perhaps because his pipe was
lighted.
Palliser took some brandy in his soda.
“There are men, you know,”
he suggested, “who can be spared by their relatives.
I have some myself, by Jove!” he added with a
laugh. “You keep him rather dark, don’t
you?”
“He doesn’t like to see people.”
“Does he object to people seeing him? I
saw him once myself.”
“When you threw the gravel at his window?”
Palliser stared contemptuously.
“What are you talking about?
I did not throw stones at his window,” he lied.
“I’m not a school-boy.”
“That’s so,” Tembarom admitted.
“I saw him, nevertheless.
And I can tell you he gave me rather a start.”
“Why?”
Palliser half laughed again.
He did not mean to go too quickly; he would let the
thing get on Tembarom’s nerves gradually.
“Well, I’m hanged if I didn’t take
him for a man who is dead.”
“Enough to give any fellow a jolt,” Tembarom
admitted again.
“It gave me a `jolt.’
Good word, that. But it would give you a bigger
one, my dear fellow, if he was the man he looked
like.”
“Why?” Tembarom asked laconically.
“He looked like Jem Temple Barholm.”
He saw Tembarom start. There could be no denying
it.
“You thought that? Honest?”
he said sharply, as if for a moment he had lost his
head. “You thought that?”
“Don’t be nervous.
Perhaps I couldn’t have sworn to it. I did
not see him very close.”
T. Tembarom puffed rapidly at his pipe, and only,
ejaculated:
“Oh!”
“Of course he’s dead.
If he wasn’t,”—with a shrug
of his shoulders,— “Lady Joan Fayre
would be Lady Joan Temple Barholm, and the pair would
be bringing up an interesting family here.”
He looked about the room, and then, as if suddenly
recalling the fact, added, “By George! you’d
be selling newspapers, or making them—which
was it?—in New York!”
It was by no means unpleasing to see
that he had made his hit there. T. Tembarom
swung about and walked across the room with a suddenly
perturbed expression.
“Say,” he put it to him,
coming back, “are you in earnest, or are you
just saying it to give me a jolt?”
Palliser studied him. The American
sharpness was not always so keen as it sometimes
seemed. His face would have betrayed his uneasiness
to the dullest onlooker.
“Have you any objection to my
seeing him in his own room?” Palliser inquired.
“It does him harm to see people,”
Tembarom said, with nervous brusqueness. “It
worries him.”
Palliser smiled a quiet but far from
agreeable smile. He enjoyed what he put into
it.
“Quite so; best to keep him
quiet,” he returned. “Do you know
what my advice would be? Put him in a comfortable
sanatorium. A lot of stupid investigations would
end in nothing, of course, but they’d be a
frightful bore.”
He thought it extraordinarily stupid
in T. Tembarom to come nearer to him with an anxious
eagerness entirely unconcealed, if he really knew
what he was doing.
“Are you sure that if you saw
him close you’d know, so that you could
swear to him?” he demanded.
“You’re extremely nervous,
aren’t you?” Palliser watched him with
smiling coolness. “Of course Jem Temple
Barholm is dead; but I’ve no doubt that if
I saw this man of yours, I could swear he had remained
dead—if I were asked.”
“If you knew him well, you could
make me sure. You could swear one way or another.
I want to be sure,” said Tembarom.
“So should I in your place;
couldn’t be too sure. Well, since you ask
me, I could swear. I knew him well enough.
He was one of my most intimate enemies. What
do you say to letting me see him?”
“I would if I could,”
Tembarom replied, as if thinking it over. “I
would if I could.”
Palliser treated him to the far from
pleasing smile again.
“But it’s quite impossible
at present?” he suggested. “Excitement
is not good for him, and all that sort of thing.
You want time to think it over.”
Tembarom’s slowly uttered answer,
spoken as if he were still considering the matter,
was far from being the one he had expected.
“I want time; but that’s
not the reason you can’t see him right now.
You can’t see him because he’s not here.
He’s gone.”
Then it was Palliser who started,
taken totally unaware in a manner which disgusted
him altogether. He had to pull himself up.
“He’s gone!” he
repeated. “You are quicker than I thought.
You’ve got him safely away, have you?
Well, I told you a comfortable sanatorium would be
a good idea.”
“Yes, you did.” T.
Tembarom hesitated, seeming to be thinking it over
again. “That’s so.” He
laid his pipe aside because it had gone out.
He suddenly sat down at the table,
putting his elbows on it and his face in his hands,
with a harried effect of wanting to think it over
in a sort of withdrawal from his immediate surroundings.
This was as it should be. His Yankee readiness
had deserted him altogether.
“By Jove! you are nervous!”
Palliser commented. “It’s not surprising,
though. I can sympathize with you.”
With a markedly casual air he himself sat down and
drew his documents toward him. “Let us talk
of something else,” he said. He preferred
to be casual and incidental, if he were allowed.
It was always better to suggest things and let them
sink in until people saw the advantage of considering
them and you. To manage a business matter without
open argument or too frank a display of weapons was
at once more comfortable and in better taste.
“You are making a great mistake
in not going into this,” he suggested amiably.
“You could go in now as you went into Hutchinson’s
affair, `on the ground floor.’ That’s
a good enough phrase, too. Twenty thousand pounds
would make you a million. You Americans understand
nothing less than millions.”
But T. Tembarom did not take him up.
He muttered in a worried way from behind his shading
hands, “We’ll talk about that later.”
“Why not talk about it now,
before anything can interfere?” Palliser persisted
politely, almost gently.
Tembarom sprang up, restless and excited.
He had plainly been planning fast in his temporary
seclusion.
“I’m thinking of what
you said about Lady Joan,” he burst forth.
“Say, she’s gone through all this Jem
Temple Barholm thing once; it about half killed her.
If any one raised false hopes for her, she’d
go through it all again. Once is enough for
any woman.”
His effect at professing heat and
strong feeling made a spark of amusement show itself
in Palliser’s eye. It struck him as being
peculiarly American in its affectation of sentiment
and chivalry.
“I see,” he said.
“It’s Lady Joan you’re disturbed
about. You want to spare her another shock,
I see. You are a considerate fellow, as well
as a man of business.”
“I don’t want her to begin to hope if—”
“Very good taste on your part.”
Palliser’s polite approval was admirable, but
he tapped lightly on the paper after expressing it.
“I don’t want to seem to press you about
this, but don’t you feel inclined to consider
it? I can assure you that an investment of this
sort would be a good thing to depend on if the unexpected
happened. If you gave me your check now, it
would be Cedric stock to-morrow, and quite safe.
Suppose you—”
“I—I don’t
believe you were right—about what you thought.”
The sharp- featured face was changing from pale to
red. “You’d have to be able to swear
to it, anyhow, and I don’t believe you can.”
He looked at Palliser in eager and anxious uncertainty.
“If you could,” he dragged out , “I
shouldn’t have a check-book. Where would
you be then?”
“I should be in comfortable
circumstances, dear chap, and so would you if you
gave me the money to-night, while you possess a check-book.
It would be only a sort of temporary loan in any
case, whatever turned up. The investment would
quadruple itself. But there is no time to be
lost. Understand that.”
T. Tembarom broke out into a sort of boyish resentment.
“I don’t believe he did
look like him, anyhow,” he cried. “I
believe it’s all a bluff.” His crude-sounding
young swagger had a touch of final desperation in
it as he turned on Palliser. “I’m
dead sure it’s a bluff. What a fool I
was not to think of that! You want to bluff me
into going into this Cedric thing. You could
no more swear he was like him than —than
I could.”
The outright, presumptuous, bold stripping
bare of his phrases infuriated Palliser too suddenly
and too much. He stepped up to him and looked
into his eyes.
“Bluff you, you young bounder!”
he flung out at him. “You’re losing
your head. You’re not in New York streets
here. You are talking to a gentleman. No,”
he said furiously, “I couldn’t swear that
he was like him, but what I can swear in any court
of justice is that the man I saw at the window was
Jem Temple Barholm, and no other man on earth.”
When he had said it, he saw the astonishing
dolt change his expression utterly again, as if in
a flash. He stood up, putting his hands in his
pockets. His face changed, his voice changed.
“Fine!” he said.
“First-rate! That’s what I wanted
to get on to.”