“I am accustomed to being left,” she answered gravely.

“I don't quite like it, you know.”

“YOU?”

She looked at him with a steady surprise which made him feel a trifle uncomfortable.

“Well, you know,” he was forced to explain, shuffling the while uneasily in his chair and dropping his whip, “one naturally takes an interest in one's friends' welfare. You and Maurice are the best friends I have in Loango. I often speak to Maurice about it. It isn't as if there was an English garrison, or anything like that. I don't trust these niggers a bit.”

“Perhaps you do not understand them?” suggested she gently.

She moved away from him as far as she could get. Every moment increased her repugnance for his presence.

“I don't think Maurice would endorse that,” he said, with a conceited laugh.

She winced at the familiar mention of her brother's name, which was probably intentional, and her old fear of this man came back with renewed force.

“I don't think,” he went on, “that Maurice's estimation of my humble self is quite so low as yours.”