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cashier----" "No! Be a real diplomat, Sengoun!" "I'm sorry you feel that way, Neeland, because she's unusually pretty. And we might establish a triple entente until you find some Argive Helen to quadruple it. Aha! Here is our German champagne! Positively the only thing German a Russian can----" "Listen! This won't do. People are looking at us----" "Right, old fellow--always right! You know, Neeland, this friendship of ours is the most precious, most delightful, and most inspiring experience of my life. Here's a full goblet to our friendship! Hurrah! As for Enver Pasha, may Erlik seize him!" After they had honoured the toast, Sengoun looked about him pleasantly, receptive, ready for any eventuality. And observing no symptoms of any eventuality whatever, he suggested creating one. "Dear comrade," he said, "I think I shall arise and make an incendiary address----" "No!" "Very well, if you feel that way about it. But there is another way to render the evening agreeable. You see that sideboard?" he continued, pointing to a huge carved buffet piled to the ceiling with porcelain and crystal. "What will you wager that I can not push it over with one hand?" But Neeland declined the wager with an impatient gesture, and kept his eyes riveted on a man who had just entered the cafe. He could see only the stranger's well-groomed back, but when, a moment later, the man turned to seat himself, Neeland was not surprised to find himself looking at Doc Curfoot. "Sengoun," he said under his breath, "that _type_ who just came in is an American gambler named Doc Curfoot; and he is here with other gamblers for the purpose of obtaining political information for some government other than my own." Sengoun regarded the new arrival with amiable curiosity: "That worm? Oh, well, every city in Europe swarms with such maggots, you know. It would be quite funny if he tries any blandishments on us, wouldn't it?" "He may. He's a capper. He's looking at us now. I believe he remembers having seen me in the train." "As for an hour or two at chemin-de-fer, baccarat, or roulette," remarked Sengoun, "I am not averse to a----" "Watch him! The waiter who is taking his order may know who you are--may be telling that gambler.... I believe he _did_! Now, let us see what happens...." Sengoun, delighted at the prospect of an eventuality, blandly emptied his goblet and smiled generally upon everybody. "I hope he will make our
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