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    X. On the Brink - Page 2

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    expect? Because he had the appearance of a gentleman, was it that her sense of gratitude for what she owed him had made her, deep down in her soul, actually cherish the belief that he really was one - made her hope it, and nourish that hope into belief? Tighter her hand clenched. Her lips parted, and her breath came in short, hard inhalations. Was it true? Was it all only an added misery, where it had seemed there could be none to add to her life in these last few days? Was it true that there was no price she would not have paid to have found him in any role but this abased one that he was playing now?

    The Adventurer broke the silence.

    "Quite so, my dear Mr. Viner!" he agreed smoothly. "It would appear, then, from what you say that I have been mistaken - even stupidly so, I am afraid. And in that case, I can only apologize for my intrusion, and, as you so delicately put it, get out." He slipped the papers, with a philosophic shrug of his shoulders, into his inside coat pocket, and took a backward step toward the door. "I bid you good-night, then, Mr. Viner. The papers, as you state, are doubtless of no value to you, so you can, of course, have no objection to my handing them over to the police, who -"

    "No, no! Wait! Wait!" the other whispered wildly. "Wait!"

    "Ah!" murmured the Adventurer.

    "I - I'll" - the bent old figure was clawing at his beard - "I'll -"

    "Buy them?" suggested the Adventurer pleasantly.

    "Yes, I'll - I'll buy them. I - I've got a little money, only a little, all I've been able to save in years, a - a hundred dollars.

    "How much did you say?" inquired the Adventurer coldly.

    "Two hundred." The voice was a maudlin whine.

    The Adventurer took another backward step toward the door.

    "Three hundred!"

    Another step.

    "Five - a thousand!"

    The Adventurer laughed suddenly.

    "That's better!" he said. "Where you keep a thousand, you keep the rest. Where is the thousand, Mr. Viner?"

    The bent figure hesitated a moment; and then, with what sounded like a despairing cry, pointed to the table.

    "It's there," he whimpered. "God's curses on you, for the thief you are."

    Rhoda Gray found her eyes fixed in sudden, strained fascination on the table - as, she imagined, the Adventurer's were too. It was bare of any covering, nor were there any articles on its surface, nor, as far as she could see, was there any drawer. And now the Adventurer, his right hand still in his coat pocket, and bulging there where she knew quite well it grasped his revolver, stepped abruptly to the table, facing the other with the table between them.

    The bent old figure still hesitated, and then, with the
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