“After the week what will you do?” asked the other looking out of the window. “You’ll show yourself to your people directly you are presentable, I suppose?”
“Give interviews to reporters probably,” he returned shortly.
Brydon furtively watched the gaunt shattered man, old before his time, who not so very long before had looked as if he could move the world.
“Oh, that woman!” he thought savagely.
Almost in spite of himself he had become the keeper of all the elder man’s secrets, and the office weighed frightfully on him.
By some extraordinary mischance, neither the letters sent at that time, nor the cablegram, ever reached Strange; they came some time after the expedition had gone, and in transmission were lost, and the negligent messengers thought best to entirely deny the existence of any.
When Strange enquired at the office at Cairo, there was no account of any cable for him, the clerk who had received it had been exchanged, and Strange made no very pressing enquiry, for he hardly expected one, and as a P. and O. boat was starting the next hour, he took passage on her and went on board—even giving the reporters the slip.
As a matter of fact, he was so desperately ill at the time that he was hardly responsible for his actions, or he must have recovered the record of the cable, and both Brydon and Tolly were too much occupied in the attempt to get him home alive to think of anything else. They succeeded as it turned out, but only by the skin of his teeth.
On the whole, despite certain eccentricities, both Tolly and Brydon had done better than any other men possibly could have done, their sentimental devotion to Strange put starch into their rather limp souls, and their uncomplaining heroism under the most shocking sufferings was almost pathetic, and then by some special providence, they had both escaped the second fever that nearly put an end to Strange.
“What’s that, do you see, in the field there? My eyes are beastly dim yet,” said Strange, peering out at some object a few fields off.