now in the offing, is ânicking the minute with a happy tact.ââ
And we had a delightful lunch which whetted my appetite for more of this odd tale that somehowâI could not make out how, but Mr. M. already seemed to suspectâled to us all being here in this place and in the spot where either a suicide or a murder had so lately been the latest incident.
âI think,â resumed Millum, âthat our Alsatian big-scale assassin thought we were soft, so that when he rose he said, âI expect you find my kind of trade a bit humdrum and really almost aboveboard. I own it is; profit and patriotism are really my only interests. But youâre more of the jeunesse dorée , so youâd really like the oddities of a luxury trade more than my straightforward hard-as-steel stuff.â
âHe said it with sufficient mockery so that Sankey, who was, I think, the cleverest and toughest of us, replied, âWell, you are really always in danger of being recognized,â and, as the other got ready to seize the opportunity to enlarge his sneer at our expense, Sankey ended rather neatly, âand of being made the hero of the new nation, whatever it is, and of appearing with your bosom covered with its brand-new orders, and no doubt of acting as its chief ambassador!â
âOur guest saw that the laugh might be turned on him, so he shot out, âIf you are so keen on trying to put your noses right up on what the world still rates as the worst smell, ask your own countryman Crofts, here! I mix with all if thereâs profit in it. And, as I see it, itâs just the tough unders getting at the tough overs. Thatâs life, itâs a struggle. But beside us who do the tiger business, there are hyenas. As you want to seeâas in the fairy taleâwhether you can shudder, maybe you would like to see what I think to be a human hyena.â
âPerhaps he thought weâd back down. Even if weâd wished to, we couldnât. We couldnât have him leave with all the trumps. We had to get back our initiative. Sankey again spoke for us.
ââWe like our zoo to have all the contents of the Ark. With our dear vulgarian, Kipling, we call ânothing common or uncleanâ until it bores us.â
ââAll right,â our guest shot out as he turned to the door, âif you have the guts, ask Croftsâhereâs his address. Heâs always wanting to use my lines for his filthy freight, but Iâm not hard enough up yet to let him in on my tracks. In my world we have got to let live in order to be able to get the profits which belong to us unrecognized patriots, called by the mincing liberals âmerchants of death.â But I still have a nose, and I donât like Crofts near me.â
âWe tittered at our guestâs sudden adoption of high moral tone, and he, now quite angry, threw a card at us and left, remarking, âWell, I hope heâll get you into a mess, as he certainly can.â
âWhen he was gone we snatched up the billet-doux. It was a simple carte de visite on which was written Mr. William Crofts and a quietly good address in Mayfair. I couldnât think why the name seemed somehow to be familiar, but we decided, on the strong recommendation we had received, to ask him to be our next guest.
âHis appearance was not unpromising. His clothes were good and quietâSaville Row without a doubt. But the face and hands that emerged from the quiet cloth were delightfully unassuring. He was heavy and no doubt brutal, but the eyes, which were large, were very vigilantâdead and at the same time extremely wary. The mouth, too, though coarse, had round it a pleasant disconcerting tension of humor. Yes, he was undoubtedly a very callous man who, under the appearance of being a simple brute, was peculiarly cunning. He was just our dish, and he seemed quite ready to amuse us.
âHe began with the usual coarse stories,
K. M. Shea
Mary-Ann Tirone Smith
Selden Edwards
Sheri S. Tepper
Philippa Pearce
Bill O'Reilly
Kirsten Weiss
Grace Burrowes
Krystell Lake
Iain Rob Wright