“He's going to America,” said T. X., “and before he goes he wants to give a little lecture.”
“A lecture?”
“It sounds rum, doesn't it, but that's just what he wants to do.”
“Why is he doing it!” she asked.
T. X. made a gesture of despair.
“That is one of the mysteries which may never be revealed to me, except—” he pursed his lips and looked thoughtfully at the girl. “There are times,” he said, “when there is a great struggle going on inside a man between all the human and better part of him and the baser professional part of him. One side of me wants to hear this lecture of John Lexman's very much, the other shrinks from the ordeal.”
“Let us talk it over at lunch,” she said practically, and carried him off.
CHAPTER XIX
One would not readily associate the party of top-booted sewermen who descend nightly to the subterranean passages of London with the stout viceconsul at Durazzo. Yet it was one unimaginative man who lived in Lambeth and had no knowledge that there was such a place as Durazzo who was responsible for bringing this comfortable official out of his bed in the early hours of the morning causing him—albeit reluctantly and with violent and insubordinate language—to conduct certain investigations in the crowded bazaars.