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, and lied successfully. This was why, even while telling himself that he had at last found a way in which to convey the truth to Pargeter, he felt a deep repugnance from the methods which he saw he would be compelled to employ. More than once the American diplomatist had had occasion to take part in delicate negotiations with one of those nameless, countryless individuals, whose ideal it is to be in the pay of a foreign Embassy, and who always set on their ignoble services a far higher value than those services generally deserve. But Vanderlyn belonged to the type of man who finds it far easier to fight for others, and especially for his country, than for himself. Still, in this case, was he not fighting for Margaret Pargeter? For what he knew she valued far more than life itself--her honour. What he was about to do was hateful to him--he was aware how severely he would have judged such conduct in another--but it seemed the only way, a way made miraculously possible by the superstitious folly of Tom Pargeter. The offer Vanderlyn was about to convey to Madame d'Elphis was quite simple; in exchange for saying a very few words to Tom Pargeter,--words which would add greatly to the belief the millionaire already possessed in what he took to be her extraordinary gifts of divination,--the soothsayer would receive ten thousand francs. There need be no difficulty even as to the words she should use to reveal the truth; Vanderlyn had cut out from the _Petit Journal_ the paragraph which told of the strange discovery made three nights before at Orange. He would inform her that Mr. Pargeter's friends, having assured themselves that the unknown woman in question was Mrs. Pargeter, desired to break the sad news through her, instead of in a more commonplace fashion. Vanderlyn knew enough of that curious underworld of Paris which preys on wealthy foreigners, to feel sure that this would not be the first time that Madame d'Elphis had been persuaded, in her own interest, to add the agreeable ingredient of certainty to one of her predictions. The diplomatist also believed he could carry through the negotiation without either revealing his identity, or giving the soothsayer any clue to his reason for making her so strange a proposal. Having made his plan, Vanderlyn found it remarkably easy to carry out. In London, such a man as himself would have found it difficult to have ascertained at a moment's notice the address of even a
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