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    VII. The Episode of the Arrest of the Colonel

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    How much precisely Charles dropped over the slump in Cloetedorps I never quite knew. But the incident left him dejected, limp, and dispirited.

    "Hang it all, Sey," he said to me in the smoking-room, a few evenings later. "This Colonel Clay is enough to vex the patience of Job--and Job had large losses, too, if I recollect aright, from the Chaldeans and other big operators of the period."

    "Three thousand camels," I murmured, recalling my dear mother's lessons; "all at one fell swoop; not to mention five hundred yoke of oxen, carried off by the Sabeans, then a leading firm of speculative cattle-dealers!"

    "Ah, well," Charles meditated aloud, shaking the ash from his cheroot into a Japanese tray--fine antique bronze-work. "There were big transactions in live-stock even then! Still, Job or no Job, the man is too much for me."

    "The difficulty is," I assented, "you never know where to have him."

    "Yes," Charles mused; "if he were always the same, like Horniman's tea or a good brand of whisky, it would be easier, of course; you'd stand some chance of spotting him. But when a man turns up smiling every time in a different disguise, which fits him like a skin, and always apparently with the best credentials, why, hang it all, Sey, there's no wrestling with him anyhow."

    "Who could have come to us, for example, better vouched," I acquiesced, "than the Honourable David?"

    "Exactly so," Charles murmured. "I invited him myself, for my own advantage. And he arrived with all the prestige of the Glen-Ellachie connection."

    "Or the Professor?" I went on. "Introduced to us by the leading mineralogist of England."

    I had touched a sore point. Charles winced and remained silent.

    "Then, women again," he resumed, after a painful pause. "I must meet in society many charming women. I can't everywhere and always be on my guard against every dear soul of them. Yet the moment I relax my attention for one day--or even when I don't relax it--I am bamboozled and led a dance by that arch Mme. Picardet, or that transparently simple little minx, Mrs. Granton. She's the cleverest girl I ever met in my life, that hussy, whatever we're to call her. She's a different person each time; and each time, hang it all, I lose my heart afresh to that different person."

    I glanced round to make sure Amelia was well out of earshot.

    "No, Sey," my respected connection went on, after another long pause, sipping his coffee pensively, "I feel I must be aided in this superhuman task by a professional unraveller of cunning disguises. I shall go to Marvillier's to-morrow--fortunate man, Marvillier--and ask him to supply me with a really good 'tec, who will stop in the house and keep an
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