< Page:Hornung - Rogues March.djvu
This page needs to be proofread.

8

THE ROGUE'S MARCH

8

he got as far as that garden-gate. So the reasons in the letter held very good indeed; and how weak to be himself the first to fly in their face! But then weakness was his present portion, whereas the temptation grew stronger and stronger: only to see her face once more; only to hear her voice, although it lashed him with the reproaches he so richly deserved! Yet he did not give in without a kind of struggle. He had become a gambler, and a gambler’s compromise occurred to him now.

This was when the yellow London sun was setting, a little after seven o’clock; about twenty minutes past, several of the better-favoured pedestrians in Pall Mall were accosted by a timid ragamuffin with a ghastly face, who begged the loan of a penny, and was rightly treated to deaf ears. But at length a dapper young man, in a long bottle-green coat, wheeled round with an oath and a twinkling eye.

“Lend you one!” cried he. “I like that! What d’ye mean by it, eh?”

“What I say. I ask the loan of the smallest coin you’ve got—and your pardon for the liberty.”

“Pray when shall I see it again?”

“In half a minute.”

“Half a what? Well, you’re a rum ’un, you are; here’s your brown.”

“Thank you,” said Erichsen, and balanced it on his right thumbnail. “Now you stand by and see fair play. Heads I go and tails I don’t; sudden death; let it fall clear!”

His beggar’s manners (such as these were) had been forgotten on the instant. The coin rang upon the paving-stone with his words.

“Heads it is!” cried the owner, on his haunches, with his fine long coat in the dust.

This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.