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d! You're--you're Captain Mayo! I'll be cursed if I knew you till you spoke!" "I managed to hold myself in the last time you saw me, Fogg. I was waiting. Now, damn you, I've got you!" He was making reference merely to the physical grip in which he held the man. But Fogg seemed to find deeper significance in the words. "I know it, Mayo," he whined. "That's why I'm down here. I have been wondering about the best way to get to you--to meet you right!" "You got to me all right, you infernal renegade!" "But, see here, Mayo, we can't talk this matter here on the street." "There isn't going to be any talking!" The meeting-up had been so unexpected and Mayo's ire was so hasty that the young man had not taken thought of what he intended to do. His impulse was to beat that fat face into pulp. He had long before given up all hope that any appeal to Fogg as a man would help. He expected no consideration, no restitution. "But there must be some talk. I'm here to make it. You have me foul! I admit it. But listen to reason," he pleaded. "It isn't going to do you any good to rave." "I'm going to mash your face for you! I'll take the consequences." "But after you do that, you still have got to talk turkey with me about those papers." In spite of his fury, Mayo realized from Fogg's demeanor and his words that mere fear of a whipping was not producing this humility; there was a policeman on the corner. "Don't talk so loud," urged Fogg. "Come up to my room where we can be private." Mayo hesitated, puzzled by his enemy's attitude. "It's a word from the Old Man himself. He ordered me down here. It's from Marston!" whispered the promoter. "I'm in a devil of a hole all around, Mayo." "Very well! I'll come. I can beat you up in your room more comfortably!" "I'm not afraid of the beating! I wish that was all there was to it," muttered Fogg. He led the way into the hotel and Mayo followed, getting a new grip on himself, conscious that there was some new crisis in his affairs, scenting surrender of some sort in Fogg's astonishing humility. "Will you smoke?" asked Fogg, obsequiously, when they were in the hotel room. "No!" He refused with venom. He saw himself in one of the long mirrors and had not realized until then how unkempt and uncouth he was. He was ill at ease when he sat down in a cushioned chair. For weeks he had been accustomed to the rude makeshifts of shipboard. In temper and looks he felt like a c
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