“I’ve had that said before to me,” Kettle rejoined grimly, “by better men than you—white men—and they changed their minds when I got to handling them. You’ll see later. But for now you’ve got to stay here; and if you get out, and I find you rambling, you’ll be shot like crows. You quite understand?”

He shut the mess-room door and locked it, and once more went to the main cabin. The tall man lay exactly as he had fallen, and from underneath his neck five tricklets of red spread out across the slopped table-cloth, like the fingers of a monstrous hand. The lamplight fell also upon other smearings of red, where Nutt had groped his way round the panelling. Kettle leaned up against the rail of the sideboard and wiped his face with a napkin. Perspiration had loosened the coal dust, and the skin came out white, with only here and there a smudge of the old grime.

“Supposing,” he said to himself, “we were nabbed now, and there was a trial, who’s to prove I didn’t put the pork-knife in that man? Oh dear Lord, what a hat it’s getting.”

CHAPTER XIX.
SUBJECTS FOR MATRIMONY.

Miss Kildare gave a shrug to her shoulders. “Yes,” she said, “I suppose it is a different me. I’ve got my hair done up, and longer skirts, and all the rest of it. In fact, like the young person in the book, I’ve growed. But I don’t see that you have altered much, except that you’re just a tiny-iny bit crows-footy about the eyes. You haven’t even grown a mustache, as I always wanted you to do.”

“Didn’t know I was going to meet you, or I might have spared my razor.”

“I wish you’d known, then. But fancy your turning up here of all places. It is an extremely small world—there’s no doubt about that. Well, Pat, as we’ve each said at least twenty times apiece how surprised we are to see one another, suppose you come out on to the piazza and tell me things. We shall have a crowd round us if we stay here in the hall much longer.”

“My dear child, what things?” asked Onslow, laughing. “I’ve been chattering history to you ever since I turned up at the hotel.”