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e attended, drank champagne. Why should he refuse it to this woman? A long-nosed, mediaeval-looking waiter was hovering about, one of those bizarre, battered creatures who have long exhausted the surprises of life, presiding over this amazing situation with all the sang froid of a family butler. Hodder told him to bring champagne. "What kind, sir?" he asked, holding out a card. "The best you have." The woman stared at him in wonder. "You're what an English Johnny I know would call a little bit of all right!" she declared with enthusiastic approval. "Since you are hungry," he went on, "suppose you have something more substantial than sandwiches. What would you like?" She did not answer at once. Amazement grew in her eyes, amazement and a kind of fear. "Quit joshing!" she implored him, and he found it difficult to cope with her style of conversation. For a while she gazed helplessly at the bill of fare. "I guess you'll think it's funny," she said hesitatingly, "but I feel just like a good beefsteak and potatoes. Bring a thick one, Walter." The waiter sauntered off. "Why should I think it strange?" Hodder asked. "Well, if you knew how many evenings I've sat up there in my room and thought what I'd order if I ever again got hold of some rich guy who'd loosen up. There ain't any use trying to put up a bluff with you. Nothing was too good for me once, caviar, pate de foie gras" (her pronunciation is not to be imitated), "chicken casserole, peach Melba, filet of beef with mushrooms,--I've had 'em all, and I used to sit up and say I'd hand out an order like that. You never do what you think you're going to do in this life." The truth of this remark struck him with a force she did not suspect; stung him, as it were, into a sense of reality. "And now," she added pathetically, "all t want is a beefsteak! Don't that beat you?" She appeared so genuinely surprised at this somewhat contemptible trick fate had played her that Hodder smiled in spite of himself. "I didn't recognize you at first in that get-up," she observed, looking at his blue serge suit. "So you've dropped the preacher business, have you? You're wise, all right." "Why do you say that?" he asked. "Didn't I tell you when you came 'round that time that you weren't like the rest of 'em? You're too human." Once more the word, and on her lips, startled him. "Some of the best men I have ever known, the broadest and most understandin
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