Eglington was very quiet. His intellect more than his passions were now at work.

“I am not sure. You never can tell. This might not mean much to him. He has got his work cut out; he wasn’t brought up to this. What he has done is in line with the life he has lived as a pious Quaker. What good would it do to bring him back? I have been brought up to it; I am used to it; I have worked things out ‘according to the state of life to which I was called.’ Take what I’ve always had away from me, and I am crippled; give him what he never had, and it doesn’t work into his scheme. It would do him no good and me harm—Where’s the use? Besides, I am still my father’s son. Don’t you see how unreasonable you are? Luke Claridge was right. He knew that he and his belonged to a different sphere. He didn’t speak. Why do you speak now after all these years when we are all set in our grooves? It’s silly to disturb us, Soolsby.”

The voice was low, persuasive, and searching; the mind was working as it had never worked before, to achieve an end by peaceful means, when war seemed against him. And all the time he was fascinated by the fact that Soolsby’s hand was within a few inches of a live electric wire, which, if he touched, would probably complete “the experiment” he had come to make; and what had been the silence of a generation would continue indefinitely. It was as though Fate had deliberately tempted him and arranged the necessary conditions, for Soolsby’s feet were in a little pool of liquid which had been spilled on the floor—the experiment was exact and real.

For minutes he had watched Soolsby’s hand near the wire-had watched as he talked, and his talk was his argument for non-interference against warning the man who had come to destroy him and his career. Why had Fate placed that hand so near the wire there, and provided the other perfect conditions for tragedy? Why should he intervene? It would never have crossed his mind to do Soolsby harm, yet here, as the man’s arm was stretched out to strike him, Fate offered an escape. Luke Claridge was stricken with paralysis, no doubt would die; Soolsby alone stood in his way.

“You see, Soolsby, it has gone on too long,” he added, in a low, penetrating tone. “It would be a crime to alter things now. Give him the earldom and the estates, and his work in Egypt goes to pieces; he will be spoiled for all he wants to do. I’ve got my faults, but, on the whole, I’m useful, and I play my part here, as I was born to it, as well as most. Anyhow, it’s no robbery for me to have what has been mine by every right except the accident of being born after him. I think you’ll see that you will do a good thing to let it all be. Luke Claridge, if he was up and well, wouldn’t thank you for it—have you got any right to give him trouble, too? Besides, I’ve saved his life to-night, and... and perhaps I might save yours, Soolsby, if it was in danger.”

Soolsby’s hand had moved slightly. It was only an inch from the wire. For an instant the room was terribly still.

An instant, and it might be too late. An instant, and Soolsby would be gone. Eglington watched the hand which had been resting on the table turn slowly over to the wire. Why should he intervene? Was it his business? This thing was not his doing. Destiny had laid the train of circumstance and accident, and who was stronger than Destiny? In spite of himself his eyes fixed themselves on Soolsby’s hand. It was but a hair’s breadth from the wire. The end would come now. Suddenly a voice was heard outside the door. “Eglington!” it called.

Soolsby started, his hand drew spasmodically away from the wire, and he stepped back quickly.

The door opened, and Hylda entered.

“Mr. Claridge is dead, Eglington,” she said. Destiny had decided.