nsieur, of
course, will pay all expenses."
"Of course, of course."
It was no time to draw back.
"How long will it take?"
"To see all the shocking--?"
"Precisely."
"There is a good deal. A fortnight, three weeks. It depends on monsieur.
If he is strong, and can do without sleep----"
"We shall have to be up at night?"
"Naturally."
"I shall go to bed during the day, and get through it in a fortnight."
"Perfectly."
"Be at the Grand Hotel to-night at ten o'clock precisely."
"At ten o'clock I will be there. Monsieur will pay a little in advance?"
"Here are twenty pounds," cried Mr. Greyne recklessly.
The audacious-looking young man took the notes with decision, made a
graceful salute, and disappeared in the direction of the quay, while Mr.
Greyne walked to his hotel, flushed with excitement, and feeling like
the most desperate criminal in Africa. If the militia could see him now!
At dinner he drank a bottle of champagne, and afterwards smoked a strong
cigar over his coffee and liqueur. As he was finishing these frantic
enjoyments the head waiter--a personage bearing a strong resemblance
to an enlarged edition of Napoleon the First--approached him rather
furtively, and, bending down, whispered in his ear:
"A gentleman has called to take monsieur to the Kasbah."
Mr. Greyne started, and flushed a guilty red.
"I will come in a moment," he answered, trying to assume a nonchalant
voice, such as that in which a hardened major of dragoons announces that
in his time he was a devil of a fellow.
The head waiter retired, looking painfully intelligent, and Mr. Greyne
sprang upstairs, seized a Merrin's exercise-book and a lead pencil, put
on a dark overcoat, popped one of the Springfield revolvers into the
pocket of it, and hastened down into the hall of the hotel, where the
audacious-looking young man was standing, surrounded by saucy
chasseurs in gay liveries and peaked caps, by Algerian waiters, and by
German-Swiss porters, all of whom were smiling and looking choke-full of
sympathetic comprehension.
"Ha!" said Mr. Greyne, still in the major's, voice. "There you are!"
"Behold me, monsieur."
"That's good."
"Wicked, monsieur."
"Well, let's be off to the mosque."
One of the chasseurs--a child of eight who was thankful that he knew no
better--burst into a piping laugh. The waiters turned hastily away, and
the German-Swiss porters retreated to the bureau with some activity.
"To the
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