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<h2> III. THE SOUL OF THE SCHOOLBOY </h2>
<p>A large map of London would be needed to display the wild and zigzag
course of one day’s journey undertaken by an uncle and his nephew;
or, to speak more truly, of a nephew and his uncle. For the nephew, a
schoolboy on a holiday, was in theory the god in the car, or in the cab,
tram, tube, and so on, while his uncle was at most a priest dancing before
him and offering sacrifices. To put it more soberly, the schoolboy had
something of the stolid air of a young duke doing the grand tour, while
his elderly relative was reduced to the position of a courier, who
nevertheless had to pay for everything like a patron. The schoolboy was
officially known as Summers Minor, and in a more social manner as Stinks,
the only public tribute to his career as an amateur photographer and
electrician. The uncle was the Rev. Thomas Twyford, a lean and lively old
gentleman with a red, eager face and white hair. He was in the ordinary
way a country clergyman, but he was one of those who achieve the paradox
of being famous in an obscure way, because they are famous in an obscure
world. In a small circle of ecclesiastical archaeologists, who were the
only people who could even understand one another’s discoveries, he
occupied a recognized and respectable place. And a critic might have found
even in that day’s journey at least as much of the uncle’s
hobby as of the nephew’s holiday.</p>
<p>His original purpose had been wholly paternal and festive. But, like many
other intelligent people, he was not above the weakness of playing with a
toy to amuse himself, on the theory that it would amuse a child. His toys
were crowns and miters and croziers and swords of state; and he had
lingered over them, telling himself that the boy ought to see all the
sights of London. And at the end of the day, after a tremendous tea, he
rather gave the game away by winding up with a visit in which hardly any
human boy could be conceived as taking an interest—an underground
chamber supposed to have been a chapel, recently excavated on the north
bank of the Thames, and containing literally nothing whatever but one old
silver coin. But the coin, to those who knew, was more solitary and
splendid than the Koh-i-noor. It was Roman, and was said to bear the head
of St. Paul; and round it raged the most vital controversies about the
ancient British Church. It could hardly be denied, however, that the
controversies left Summers Minor comparatively cold.</p>
<p>Indeed, the things that interested Summers Minor, and the things that did
not interest him, had mystified and amused his uncle for several hours. He
exhibited the English schoolboy’s startling ignorance and startling
knowledge—knowledge of some special classification in which he can
generally correct and confound his elders. He considered himself entitled,
at Hampton Court on a holiday, to forget the very names of Cardinal Wolsey
or William of Orange; but he could hardly be dragged from some details
about the arrangement of the electric bells in the neighboring hotel. He
was solidly dazed by Westminster Abbey, which is not so unnatural since
that church became the lumber room of the larger and less successful
statuary of the eighteenth century. But he had a magic and minute
knowledge of the Westminster omnibuses, and indeed of the whole omnibus
system of London, the colors and numbers of which he knew as a herald
knows heraldry. He would cry out against a momentary confusion between a
light-green Paddington and a dark-green Bayswater vehicle, as his uncle
would at the identification of a Greek ikon and a Roman image.</p>
<p>“Do you collect omnibuses like stamps?” asked his uncle.
“They must need a rather large album. Or do you keep them in your
locker?”</p>
<p>“I keep them in my head,” replied the nephew, with legitimate
firmness.</p>
<p>“It does you credit, I admit,” replied the clergyman. “I
suppose it were vain to ask for what purpose you have learned that out of
a thousand things. There hardly seems to be a career in it, unless you
could be permanently on the pavement to prevent old ladies getting into
the wrong bus. Well, we must get out of this one, for this is our place. I
want to show you what they call St. Paul’s Penny.”</p>
<p>“Is it like St. Paul’s Cathedral?” asked the youth with
resignation, as they alighted.</p>
<p>At the entrance their eyes were arrested by a singular figure evidently
hovering there with a similar anxiety to enter. It was that of a dark,
thin man in a long black robe rather like a cassock; but the black cap on
his head was of too strange a shape to be a biretta. It suggested, rather,
some archaic headdress of Persia or Babylon. He had a curious black beard
appearing only at the corners of his chin, and his large eyes were oddly
set in his face like the flat decorative eyes painted in old Egyptian
profiles. Before they had gathered more than a general impression of him,
he had dived into the doorway that was their own destination.</p>
<p>Nothing could be seen above ground of the sunken sanctuary except a strong
wooden hut, of the sort recently run up for many military and official
purposes, the wooden floor of which was indeed a mere platform over the
excavated cavity below. A soldier stood as a sentry outside, and a
superior soldier, an Anglo-Indian officer of distinction, sat writing at
the desk inside. Indeed, the sightseers soon found that this particular
sight was surrounded with the most extraordinary precautions. I have
compared the silver coin to the Koh-i-noor, and in one sense it was even
conventionally comparable, since by a historical accident it was at one
time almost counted among the Crown jewels, or at least the Crown relics,
until one of the royal princes publicly restored it to the shrine to which
it was supposed to belong. Other causes combined to concentrate official
vigilance upon it; there had been a scare about spies carrying explosives
in small objects, and one of those experimental orders which pass like
waves over bureaucracy had decreed first that all visitors should change
their clothes for a sort of official sackcloth, and then (when this method
caused some murmurs) that they should at least turn out their pockets.
Colonel Morris, the officer in charge, was a short, active man with a grim
and leathery face, but a lively and humorous eye—a contradiction
borne out by his conduct, for he at once derided the safeguards and yet
insisted on them.</p>
<p>“I don’t care a button myself for Paul’s Penny, or such
things,” he admitted in answer to some antiquarian openings from the
clergyman who was slightly acquainted with him, “but I wear the King’s
coat, you know, and it’s a serious thing when the King’s uncle
leaves a thing here with his own hands under my charge. But as for saints
and relics and things, I fear I’m a bit of a Voltairian; what you
would call a skeptic.”</p>
<p>“I’m not sure it’s even skeptical to believe in the
royal family and not in the ‘Holy’ Family,” replied Mr.
Twyford. “But, of course, I can easily empty my pockets, to show I
don’t carry a bomb.”</p>
<p>The little heap of the parson’s possessions which he left on the
table consisted chiefly of papers, over and above a pipe and a tobacco
pouch and some Roman and Saxon coins. The rest were catalogues of old
books, and pamphlets, like one entitled “The Use of Sarum,”
one glance at which was sufficient both for the colonel and the schoolboy.
They could not see the use of Sarum at all. The contents of the boy’s
pockets naturally made a larger heap, and included marbles, a ball of
string, an electric torch, a magnet, a small catapult, and, of course, a
large pocketknife, almost to be described as a small tool box, a complex
apparatus on which he seemed disposed to linger, pointing out that it
included a pair of nippers, a tool for punching holes in wood, and, above
all, an instrument for taking stones out of a horse’s hoof. The
comparative absence of any horse he appeared to regard as irrelevant, as
if it were a mere appendage easily supplied. But when the turn came of the
gentleman in the black gown, he did not turn out his pockets, but merely
spread out his hands.</p>
<p>“I have no possessions,” he said.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I must ask you to empty your pockets and make
sure,” observed the colonel, gruffly.</p>
<p>“I have no pockets,” said the stranger.</p>
<p>Mr. Twyford was looking at the long black gown with a learned eye.</p>
<p>“Are you a monk?” he asked, in a puzzled fashion.</p>
<p>“I am a magus,” replied the stranger. “You have heard of
the magi, perhaps? I am a magician.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I say!” exclaimed Summers Minor, with prominent eyes.</p>
<p>“But I was once a monk,” went on the other. “I am what
you would call an escaped monk. Yes, I have escaped into eternity. But the
monks held one truth at least, that the highest life should be without
possessions. I have no pocket money and no pockets, and all the stars are
my trinkets.”</p>
<p>“They are out of reach, anyhow,” observed Colonel Morris, in a
tone which suggested that it was well for them. “I’ve known a
good many magicians myself in India—mango plant and all. But the
Indian ones are all frauds, I’ll swear. In fact, I had a good deal
of fun showing them up. More fun than I have over this dreary job, anyhow.
But here comes Mr. Symon, who will show you over the old cellar
downstairs.”</p>
<p>Mr. Symon, the official guardian and guide, was a young man, prematurely
gray, with a grave mouth which contrasted curiously with a very small,
dark mustache with waxed points, that seemed somehow, separate from it, as
if a black fly had settled on his face. He spoke with the accent of Oxford
and the permanent official, but in as dead a fashion as the most
indifferent hired guide. They descended a dark stone staircase, at the
floor of which Symon pressed a button and a door opened on a dark room,
or, rather, a room which had an instant before been dark. For almost as
the heavy iron door swung open an almost blinding blaze of electric lights
filled the whole interior. The fitful enthusiasm of Stinks at once caught
fire, and he eagerly asked if the lights and the door worked together.</p>
<p>“Yes, it’s all one system,” replied Symon. “It was
all fitted up for the day His Royal Highness deposited the thing here. You
see, it’s locked up behind a glass case exactly as he left it.”</p>
<p>A glance showed that the arrangements for guarding the treasure were
indeed as strong as they were simple. A single pane of glass cut off one
corner of the room, in an iron framework let into the rock walls and the
wooden roof above; there was now no possibility of reopening the case
without elaborate labor, except by breaking the glass, which would
probably arouse the night watchman who was always within a few feet of it,
even if he had fallen asleep. A close examination would have showed many
more ingenious safeguards; but the eye of the Rev. Thomas Twyford, at
least, was already riveted on what interested him much more—the dull
silver disk which shone in the white light against a plain background of
black velvet.</p>
<p>“St. Paul’s Penny, said to commemorate the visit of St. Paul
to Britain, was probably preserved in this chapel until the eighth
century,” Symon was saying in his clear but colorless voice. “In
the ninth century it is supposed to have been carried away by the
barbarians, and it reappears, after the conversion of the northern Goths,
in the possession of the royal family of Gothland. His Royal Highness, the
Duke of Gothland, retained it always in his own private custody, and when
he decided to exhibit it to the public, placed it here with his own hand.
It was immediately sealed up in such a manner—”</p>
<p>Unluckily at this point Summers Minor, whose attention had somewhat
strayed from the religious wars of the ninth century, caught sight of a
short length of wire appearing in a broken patch in the wall. He
precipitated himself at it, calling out, “I say, does that connect?”</p>
<p>It was evident that it did connect, for no sooner had the boy given it a
twitch than the whole room went black, as if they had all been struck
blind, and an instant afterward they heard the dull crash of the closing
door.</p>
<p>“Well, you’ve done it now,” said Symon, in his tranquil
fashion. Then after a pause he added, “I suppose they’ll miss
us sooner or later, and no doubt they can get it open; but it may take
some little time.”</p>
<p>There was a silence, and then the unconquerable Stinks observed:</p>
<p>“Rotten that I had to leave my electric torch.”</p>
<p>“I think,” said his uncle, with restraint, “that we are
sufficiently convinced of your interest in electricity.”</p>
<p>Then after a pause he remarked, more amiably: “I suppose if I
regretted any of my own impedimenta, it would be the pipe. Though, as a
matter of fact, it’s not much fun smoking in the dark. Everything
seems different in the dark.”</p>
<p>“Everything is different in the dark,” said a third voice,
that of the man who called himself a magician. It was a very musical
voice, and rather in contrast with his sinister and swarthy visage, which
was now invisible. “Perhaps you don’t know how terrible a
truth that is. All you see are pictures made by the sun, faces and
furniture and flowers and trees. The things themselves may be quite
strange to you. Something else may be standing now where you saw a table
or a chair. The face of your friend may be quite different in the dark.”</p>
<p>A short, indescribable noise broke the stillness. Twyford started for a
second, and then said, sharply:</p>
<p>“Really, I don’t think it’s a suitable occasion for
trying to frighten a child.”</p>
<p>“Who’s a child?” cried the indignant Summers, with a
voice that had a crow, but also something of a crack in it. “And who’s
a funk, either? Not me.”</p>
<p>“I will be silent, then,” said the other voice out of the
darkness. “But silence also makes and unmakes.”</p>
<p>The required silence remained unbroken for a long time until at last the
clergyman said to Symon in a low voice:</p>
<p>“I suppose it’s all right about air?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” replied the other aloud; “there’s a
fireplace and a chimney in the office just by the door.”</p>
<p>A bound and the noise of a falling chair told them that the irrepressible
rising generation had once more thrown itself across the room. They heard
the ejaculation: “A chimney! Why, I’ll be—” and
the rest was lost in muffled, but exultant, cries.</p>
<p>The uncle called repeatedly and vainly, groped his way at last to the
opening, and, peering up it, caught a glimpse of a disk of daylight, which
seemed to suggest that the fugitive had vanished in safety. Making his way
back to the group by the glass case, he fell over the fallen chair and
took a moment to collect himself again. He had opened his mouth to speak
to Symon, when he stopped, and suddenly found himself blinking in the full
shock of the white light, and looking over the other man’s shoulder,
he saw that the door was standing open.</p>
<p>“So they’ve got at us at last,” he observed to Symon.</p>
<p>The man in the black robe was leaning against the wall some yards away,
with a smile carved on his face.</p>
<p>“Here comes Colonel Morris,” went on Twyford, still speaking
to Symon. “One of us will have to tell him how the light went out.
Will you?”</p>
<p>But Symon still said nothing. He was standing as still as a statue, and
looking steadily at the black velvet behind the glass screen. He was
looking at the black velvet because there was nothing else to look at. St.
Paul’s Penny was gone.</p>
<p>Colonel Morris entered the room with two new visitors; presumably two new
sightseers delayed by the accident. The foremost was a tall, fair, rather
languid-looking man with a bald brow and a high-bridged nose; his
companion was a younger man with light, curly hair and frank, and even
innocent, eyes. Symon scarcely seemed to hear the newcomers; it seemed
almost as if he had not realized that the return of the light revealed his
brooding attitude. Then he started in a guilty fashion, and when he saw
the elder of the two strangers, his pale face seemed to turn a shade
paler.</p>
<p>“Why it’s Horne Fisher!” and then after a pause he said
in a low voice, “I’m in the devil of a hole, Fisher.”</p>
<p>“There does seem a bit of a mystery to be cleared up,”
observed the gentleman so addressed.</p>
<p>“It will never be cleared up,” said the pale Symon. “If
anybody could clear it up, you could. But nobody could.”</p>
<p>“I rather think I could,” said another voice from outside the
group, and they turned in surprise to realize that the man in the black
robe had spoken again.</p>
<p>“You!” said the colonel, sharply. “And how do you
propose to play the detective?”</p>
<p>“I do not propose to play the detective,” answered the other,
in a clear voice like a bell. “I propose to play the magician. One
of the magicians you show up in India, Colonel.”</p>
<p>No one spoke for a moment, and then Horne Fisher surprised everybody by
saying, “Well, let’s go upstairs, and this gentleman can have
a try.”</p>
<p>He stopped Symon, who had an automatic finger on the button, saying:
“No, leave all the lights on. It’s a sort of safeguard.”</p>
<p>“The thing can’t be taken away now,” said Symon,
bitterly.</p>
<p>“It can be put back,” replied Fisher.</p>
<p>Twyford had already run upstairs for news of his vanishing nephew, and he
received news of him in a way that at once puzzled and reassured him. On
the floor above lay one of those large paper darts which boys throw at
each other when the schoolmaster is out of the room. It had evidently been
thrown in at the window, and on being unfolded displayed a scrawl of bad
handwriting which ran: “Dear Uncle; I am all right. Meet you at the
hotel later on,” and then the signature.</p>
<p>Insensibly comforted by this, the clergyman found his thoughts reverting
voluntarily to his favorite relic, which came a good second in his
sympathies to his favorite nephew, and before he knew where he was he
found himself encircled by the group discussing its loss, and more or less
carried away on the current of their excitement. But an undercurrent of
query continued to run in his mind, as to what had really happened to the
boy, and what was the boy’s exact definition of being all right.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Horne Fisher had considerably puzzled everybody with his new
tone and attitude. He had talked to the colonel about the military and
mechanical arrangements, and displayed a remarkable knowledge both of the
details of discipline and the technicalities of electricity. He had talked
to the clergyman, and shown an equally surprising knowledge of the
religious and historical interests involved in the relic. He had talked to
the man who called himself a magician, and not only surprised but
scandalized the company by an equally sympathetic familiarity with the
most fantastic forms of Oriental occultism and psychic experiment. And in
this last and least respectable line of inquiry he was evidently prepared
to go farthest; he openly encouraged the magician, and was plainly
prepared to follow the wildest ways of investigation in which that magus
might lead him.</p>
<p>“How would you begin now?” he inquired, with an anxious
politeness that reduced the colonel to a congestion of rage.</p>
<p>“It is all a question of a force; of establishing communications for
a force,” replied that adept, affably, ignoring some military
mutterings about the police force. “It is what you in the West used
to call animal magnetism, but it is much more than that. I had better not
say how much more. As to setting about it, the usual method is to throw
some susceptible person into a trance, which serves as a sort of bridge or
cord of communication, by which the force beyond can give him, as it were,
an electric shock, and awaken his higher senses. It opens the sleeping eye
of the mind.”</p>
<p>“I’m suspectible,” said Fisher, either with simplicity
or with a baffling irony. “Why not open my mind’s eye for me?
My friend Harold March here will tell you I sometimes see things, even in
the dark.”</p>
<p>“Nobody sees anything except in the dark,” said the magician.</p>
<p>Heavy clouds of sunset were closing round the wooden hut, enormous clouds,
of which only the corners could be seen in the little window, like purple
horns and tails, almost as if some huge monsters were prowling round the
place. But the purple was already deepening to dark gray; it would soon be
night.</p>
<p>“Do not light the lamp,” said the magus with quiet authority,
arresting a movement in that direction. “I told you before that
things happen only in the dark.”</p>
<p>How such a topsy-turvy scene ever came to be tolerated in the colonel’s
office, of all places, was afterward a puzzle in the memory of many,
including the colonel. They recalled it like a sort of nightmare, like
something they could not control. Perhaps there was really a magnetism
about the mesmerist; perhaps there was even more magnetism about the man
mesmerized. Anyhow, the man was being mesmerized, for Horne Fisher had
collapsed into a chair with his long limbs loose and sprawling and his
eyes staring at vacancy; and the other man was mesmerizing him, making
sweeping movements with his darkly draped arms as if with black wings. The
colonel had passed the point of explosion, and he dimly realized that
eccentric aristocrats are allowed their fling. He comforted himself with
the knowledge that he had already sent for the police, who would break up
any such masquerade, and with lighting a cigar, the red end of which, in
the gathering darkness, glowed with protest.</p>
<p>“Yes, I see pockets,” the man in the trance was saying.
“I see many pockets, but they are all empty. No; I see one pocket
that is not empty.”</p>
<p>There was a faint stir in the stillness, and the magician said, “Can
you see what is in the pocket?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered the other; “there are two bright things.
I think they are two bits of steel. One of the pieces of steel is bent or
crooked.”</p>
<p>“Have they been used in the removal of the relic from downstairs?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>There was another pause and the inquirer added, “Do you see anything
of the relic itself?”</p>
<p>“I see something shining on the floor, like the shadow or the ghost
of it. It is over there in the corner beyond the desk.”</p>
<p>There was a movement of men turning and then a sudden stillness, as of
their stiffening, for over in the corner on the wooden floor there was
really a round spot of pale light. It was the only spot of light in the
room. The cigar had gone out.</p>
<p>“It points the way,” came the voice of the oracle. “The
spirits are pointing the way to penitence, and urging the thief to
restitution. I can see nothing more.” His voice trailed off into a
silence that lasted solidly for many minutes, like the long silence below
when the theft had been committed. Then it was broken by the ring of metal
on the floor, and the sound of something spinning and falling like a
tossed halfpenny.</p>
<p>“Light the lamp!” cried Fisher in a loud and even jovial
voice, leaping to his feet with far less languor than usual. “I must
be going now, but I should like to see it before I go. Why, I came on
purpose to see it.”</p>
<p>The lamp was lit, and he did see it, for St. Paul’s Penny was lying
on the floor at his feet.</p>
<p>“Oh, as for that,” explained Fisher, when he was entertaining
March and Twyford at lunch about a month later, “I merely wanted to
play with the magician at his own game.”</p>
<p>“I thought you meant to catch him in his own trap,” said
Twyford. “I can’t make head or tail of anything yet, but to my
mind he was always the suspect. I don’t think he was necessarily a
thief in the vulgar sense. The police always seem to think that silver is
stolen for the sake of silver, but a thing like that might well be stolen
out of some religious mania. A runaway monk turned mystic might well want
it for some mystical purpose.”</p>
<p>“No,” replied Fisher, “the runaway monk is not a thief.
At any rate he is not the thief. And he’s not altogether a liar,
either. He said one true thing at least that night.”</p>
<p>“And what was that?” inquired March.</p>
<p>“He said it was all magnetism. As a matter of fact, it was done by
means of a magnet.” Then, seeing they still looked puzzled, he
added, “It was that toy magnet belonging to your nephew, Mr.
Twyford.”</p>
<p>“But I don’t understand,” objected March. “If it
was done with the schoolboy’s magnet, I suppose it was done by the
schoolboy.”</p>
<p>“Well,” replied Fisher, reflectively, “it rather depends
which schoolboy.”</p>
<p>“What on earth do you mean?”</p>
<p>“The soul of a schoolboy is a curious thing,” Fisher
continued, in a meditative manner. “It can survive a great many
things besides climbing out of a chimney. A man can grow gray in great
campaigns, and still have the soul of a schoolboy. A man can return with a
great reputation from India and be put in charge of a great public
treasure, and still have the soul of a schoolboy, waiting to be awakened
by an accident. And it is ten times more so when to the schoolboy you add
the skeptic, who is generally a sort of stunted schoolboy. You said just
now that things might be done by religious mania. Have you ever heard of
irreligious mania? I assure you it exists very violently, especially in
men who like showing up magicians in India. But here the skeptic had the
temptation of showing up a much more tremendous sham nearer home.”</p>
<p>A light came into Harold March’s eyes as he suddenly saw, as if afar
off, the wider implication of the suggestion. But Twyford was still
wrestling with one problem at a time.</p>
<p>“Do you really mean,” he said, “that Colonel Morris took
the relic?”</p>
<p>“He was the only person who could use the magnet,” replied
Fisher. “In fact, your obliging nephew left him a number of things
he could use. He had a ball of string, and an instrument for making a hole
in the wooden floor—I made a little play with that hole in the floor
in my trance, by the way; with the lights left on below, it shone like a
new shilling.” Twyford suddenly bounded on his chair. “But in
that case,” he cried, in a new and altered voice, “why then of
course— You said a piece of steel—?”</p>
<p>“I said there were two pieces of steel,” said Fisher. “The
bent piece of steel was the boy’s magnet. The other was the relic in
the glass case.”</p>
<p>“But that is silver,” answered the archaeologist, in a voice
now almost unrecognizable.</p>
<p>“Oh,” replied Fisher, soothingly, “I dare say it was
painted with silver a little.”</p>
<p>There was a heavy silence, and at last Harold March said, “But where
is the real relic?”</p>
<p>“Where it has been for five years,” replied Horne Fisher,
“in the possession of a mad millionaire named Vandam, in Nebraska.
There was a playful little photograph about him in a society paper the
other day, mentioning his delusion, and saying he was always being taken
in about relics.”</p>
<p>Harold March frowned at the tablecloth; then, after an interval, he said:
“I think I understand your notion of how the thing was actually
done; according to that, Morris just made a hole and fished it up with a
magnet at the end of a string. Such a monkey trick looks like mere
madness, but I suppose he was mad, partly with the boredom of watching
over what he felt was a fraud, though he couldn’t prove it. Then
came a chance to prove it, to himself at least, and he had what he called
‘fun’ with it. Yes, I think I see a lot of details now. But it’s
just the whole thing that knocks me. How did it all come to be like that?”</p>
<p>Fisher was looking at him with level lids and an immovable manner.</p>
<p>“Every precaution was taken,” he said. “The Duke carried
the relic on his own person, and locked it up in the case with his own
hands.”</p>
<p>March was silent; but Twyford stammered. “I don’t understand
you. You give me the creeps. Why don’t you speak plainer?”</p>
<p>“If I spoke plainer you would understand me less,” said Horne
Fisher.</p>
<p>“All the same I should try,” said March, still without lifting
his head.</p>
<p>“Oh, very well,” replied Fisher, with a sigh; “the plain
truth is, of course, that it’s a bad business. Everybody knows it’s
a bad business who knows anything about it. But it’s always
happening, and in one way one can hardly blame them. They get stuck on to
a foreign princess that’s as stiff as a Dutch doll, and they have
their fling. In this case it was a pretty big fling.”</p>
<p>The face of the Rev. Thomas Twyford certainly suggested that he was a
little out of his depth in the seas of truth, but as the other went on
speaking vaguely the old gentleman’s features sharpened and set.</p>
<p>“If it were some decent morganatic affair I wouldn’t say; but
he must have been a fool to throw away thousands on a woman like that. At
the end it was sheer blackmail; but it’s something that the old ass
didn’t get it out of the taxpayers. He could only get it out of the
Yank, and there you are.”</p>
<p>The Rev. Thomas Twyford had risen to his feet.</p>
<p>“Well, I’m glad my nephew had nothing to do with it,” he
said. “And if that’s what the world is like, I hope he will
never have anything to do with it.”</p>
<p>“I hope not,” answered Horne Fisher. “No one knows so
well as I do that one can have far too much to do with it.”</p>
<p>For Summers Minor had indeed nothing to do with it; and it is part of his
higher significance that he has really nothing to do with the story, or
with any such stories. The boy went like a bullet through the tangle of
this tale of crooked politics and crazy mockery and came out on the other
side, pursuing his own unspoiled purposes. From the top of the chimney he
climbed he had caught sight of a new omnibus, whose color and name he had
never known, as a naturalist might see a new bird or a botanist a new
flower. And he had been sufficiently enraptured in rushing after it, and
riding away upon that fairy ship.</p>
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