st natural
thing in the world for you to admire her."
"Admire her!" repeated Brian, in an enigmatic tone.
"Let the word stand for something stronger if you don't like it. Perhaps
you do not know that your friend, Dino Vasari, the man who claimed to be
Brian Luttrell, betrayed your secrets to me. It was he who told me your
name, and your love for Miss Murray. She had mentioned that to me, too;
or rather I made her tell me."
"Dino confessed that he had been to you," said Brian, who was sitting
with his hand arched over his eyes. "He had some wild idea of making a
sort of compromise about the property, to which I was to be a party."
"Did he tell you the terms of the compromise?"
"No."
"Then I won't--just now. I'll tell you what I did, Luttrell, and you may
call me a cad for it, if you like: I refused to do anything towards
bringing about this compromise, and, although I knew when you were to
sail, I did not try to detain you! You should have heard the blowing-up
I had afterwards from old Colquhoun for not dropping a word to him!"
"I am very glad you did not. He could not have hindered me."
"Yes, he could. Or I could. Some of us would have hindered you, you may
depend on it. And, if I had said that word, don't you see, you would
never have set foot in the _Falcon_ nor I in the _Arizona_, and we
should both have been safe at home, instead of disporting ourselves,
like Robinson Crusoe and his man Friday, on a desert island."
"It's too late to think of that now," said Brian, rather sadly.
"Too late! that's the worst of it. You've the right to reproach me. Of
course, I know I was to blame."
"No, I don't see that. I don't reproach you in the least. You knew so
little, that it must have seemed unnecessary to make a fuss about what
you had heard."
"I heard quite enough," said Percival, with a short laugh. "I knew what
I ought to do--and I didn't do it. That's the long and the short of it.
If I had spoken, you would not be here. That makes the sting of it to me
now."
"Don't think of that. I don't mind. You made up for all by coming after
me."
"I think," said Percival, emphatically, "that if a word could have
killed you when I first knew who you were, you wouldn't have had much
chance of life, Luttrell. I was worse than that afterwards. If ever I
had the temptation to take a man's life----"
"Keep all that to yourself," said Brian, in a quick, resolute tone.
"There is no use in telling it to me. You
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