“‘Ere, keep your bloomin’ pity. I wuz one. An’ if your pity’s ‘urtin’ yer, think of ‘im as ‘adn’t no wife nor kid to say when ‘e’s dead, ‘Poor Peter Macnamara, ‘e is gone.”’

“A good job too, aw’m thinkin’.”

“An’ a bloornin’ ‘ard ‘eart y’ ‘ave. Wantin’ of a man to die without leavin’ ‘is mark—‘is bleedin’ ‘all mark on the world. I ‘ave two—two kids I ‘ave; an’ so ‘elp me Gawd, things bein’ as they are, I wouldn’t say nothin’ if one of ‘em was Macnamara’s—wich it ain’t—no fear!”

“Was Macnamara here you wouldn’t say thaat to his faace, aw’m thinkin’.”

“I’d break ‘is ‘ulkin’ neck first. I ain’t puttin’ these things on the ‘oardins, an’ I ain’t thinkin’ ‘em, if ‘ee’s alive in the clutches of the ‘eathen Kalifer at Homdurman. There’s them as says ‘e is, an’ there’s them as says ‘e was cut down after Gordon. But it’s only Gawd-forsaken Arabs as says it, an’ they’ll lie wichever way you want ‘em.”

“Aye, laad, but what be great foolks doin’ at Cairo? They be sendin’ goold for Slatin an’ Ohrwalder by sooch-like heathen as lie to you. If Macnamara be alive, what be Macnamara doin’? An’ what be Wingate an’ Kitchener an’ great foolks at Cairo doin’?”

“They’re sayin’, ‘Macnamara, ‘oos ‘e? ‘E ain’t no class. ‘Oo wants Macnamara!’”

Holgate raised himself on his elbow, a look of interest in his face, which he tried to disguise. “See, laad,” he said, “why does tha not send messenger thaself—a troosty messenger?”

“‘Ere, do you think I’m a bloomin’ Crosus? I’ve done the trick twice-ten pounds o’ loot once, an’ ten golden shillin’s another. Bloomin’ thieves both of ‘em—said they wuz goin’ to Homdurman, and didn’t not much! But one of ‘em went to ‘eaven with cholery, an’ one is livin’ yet with a crooked leg, with is less than I wuz workin’ for.”

Holgate was sitting bolt upright now. “Didst tha save them ten sooverins to get news o’ Macnamara, laad?”