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Mrs. Sin, who had been watching the three intently, did not fail to perceive this glance. Mollie Gretna characteristically said a silly thing.

β€œOh!” she cried. β€œI wonder whatever is the matter with him! He looks as though he had gone mad!”

β€œIt is perhaps his heart,” said Mrs. Sin harshly, and she raised her bold dark eyes to Sir Lucien's face.

β€œOh, please don't talk about hearts,” cried Rita, willfully misunderstanding. β€œMonte has a weak heart, and it frightens me.”

β€œSo?” murmured Mrs. Sin. β€œPoor fellow.”

β€œI think a weak heart is most romantic,” declared Mollie Gretna.

But Gray's behavior had cast a shadow upon the party which even Mollie's empty light-hearted chatter was powerless to dispel, and when, shortly after midnight, Sir Lucien drove Rita home to Prince's Gate, they were very silent throughout the journey. Just before the car reached the house:

β€œWhere does Mrs. Sin live?” asked Rita, although it was not of Mrs. Sin that she had been thinking.

β€œIn Limehouse, I believe,” replied Sir Lucien; β€œat The House. But I fancy she has rooms somewhere in town also.”

He stayed only a few minutes at Prince's Gate, and as the car returned along Piccadilly, Sir Lucien, glancing upward towards the windows of a tall block of chambers facing the Green Park, observed a light in one of them. Acting upon a sudden impulse, he raised the speaking-tube.

β€œPull up, Fraser,” he directed.

The chauffeur stopped the car and Sir Lucien alighted, glancing at the clock inside as he did so, and smiling at his own quixotic behavior. He entered an imposing doorway and rang one of the bells. There was an interval of two minutes or so, when the door opened and a man looked out.

β€œIs that you, Willis?” asked Pyne.

β€œOh, I beg pardon, Sir Lucien. I didn't know you in the dark.”

β€œHas Mr. Gray retired yet?”

β€œNot yet. Will you please follow me, Sir Lucien. The stairway lights are off.”

A few moments later Sir Lucien was shown into the apartment of Gray's which oddly combined the atmosphere of a gymnasium with that of a study. Gray, wearing a dressing-gown and having a pipe in his mouth, was standing up to receive his visitor, his face rather pale and the expression of his lips at variance with that in his eyes. But:

β€œHello, Pyne,” he said quietly. β€œAnything wrongβ€”or have you just looked in for a smoke?”

Sir Lucien smiled a trifle sadly.

β€œI wanted a chat, Gray,” he replied. β€œI'm leaving town tomorrow, or I should not have intruded at such an unearthly hour.”

β€œNo intrusion,” muttered Gray; β€œtry the armchair, no, the big one. It's more comfortable.” He raised his voice: β€œWillis, bring some fluid!”

Sir Lucien sat down, and from the pocket of his dinner jacket took out a plain brown packet of cigarettes and selected one.

β€œHere,” said Gray, β€œhave a cigar!”

β€œNo, thanks,” replied Pyne. β€œI rarely smoke anything but these.”

β€œNever seen that kind of packet before,” declared Gray. β€œWhat brand are they?”

β€œNo particular brand. They are imported from Buenos Ayres, I believe.”

Willis having brought in a tray of refreshments and departed again, Sir Lucien came at once to the point.

β€œI really called, Gray,” he said, β€œto clear up any misunderstanding there may be in regard to Rita Irvin.”

Quentin Gray looked up suddenly when he heard Rita's name, and:

β€œWhat misunderstanding?” he asked.

β€œRegarding the nature of my friendship with her,” answered Sir Lucien coolly. β€œNow, I am going to speak quite bluntly, Gray, because I like Rita and I respect her. I also like and respect Monte Irvin; and I don't want you, or anybody else, to think that Rita and I are, or ever have been, anything more than pals. I have known her long enough to have learned that she sails straight, and has always sailed straight. Nowβ€”listen, Gray, please. You embarrassed me tonight, old chap, and you embarrassed Rita. It was unnecessary.” He paused, and then added slowly: β€œShe is as sacred to me, Gray, as she is to youβ€”and we are both friends of Monte Irvin.”

For a moment Quentin Gray's fiery temper flickered up, as his heightened color showed, but the coolness of the older and cleverer man prevailed. Gray laughed, stood up, and held out his hand.

β€œYou're right, Pyne!” he said. β€œBut she's damn pretty!” He uttered a loud sigh. β€œIf only she were not married!”

Sir Lucien gripped the outstretched hand, but his answering smile had much pathos in it.

β€œIf only she were not, Gray,” he echoed.

He took his departure shortly afterwards, absently leaving a brown packet of cigarettes upon the table. It was an accident. Yet there were few, when the truth respecting Sir Lucien Pyne became known, who did not believe it to have been a deliberate act, designed to lure Quentin Gray into the path of the poppy.





CHAPTER XXII. THE STRANGLE-HOLD

Less than a month later Rita was in a state of desperation again. Kazmah's prices had soared above anything that he had hitherto extorted. Her bank account, as usual, was greatly overdrawn, and creditors of all kinds were beginning to press for payment. Then, crowning catastrophe, Monte Irvin, for the first time during their married life, began to take an interest in Rita's reckless expenditure. By a combination of adverse circumstances, she, the wife of one of the wealthiest aldermen of the City of London, awakened to the fact that literally she had no money.

She pawned as much of her jewellery as she could safely dispose of, and temporarily silenced the more threatening tradespeople; but Kazmah declined to give credit, and cheques had never been acceptable at the establishment in old Bond Street.

Rita feverishly renewed her old quest, seeking in all directions for some less extortionate purveyor. But none was to be found. The selfishness and secretiveness of the drug slave made it difficult for her to learn on what terms others obtained Kazmah's precious goods; but although his prices undoubtedly varied, she was convinced that no one of all his clients was so cruelly victimized as she.

Mollie Gretna endeavored to obtain an extra supply to help Rita, but Kazmah evidently saw through the device, and the endeavor proved a failure.

She demanded to see Kazmah, but Rashid, the Egyptian, blandly assured her that β€œthe Sheikh-el-Kazmah” was away. She cast discretion to the winds and wrote to him, protesting that it was utterly impossible

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