“So I’ve heard,” Patsy dryly allowed.
“What do you want here?”
“Anything I could get worth lifting.”
“You mean that you came here to steal something?”
“Don’t I look it? How else would you size it up?”
“I asked for information.”
“Well, I’m handing you straight goods,” said Patsy. “I’m in hard sledding and in need of a lift, so I tried to get it without a formal request. I’m not good at begging. Lemme go this time, will you? I’ll never butt in here again.”
“I’ll make sure of that,” retorted Draper, with ominous significance.
Then he took a chair some six feet in front of Patsy, coolly sitting down with the revolver still poised in his hand and ready for instant use, if necessary.
Patsy realized that he was up against a man of nerve, as well as a man who would not shrink from bloodshed under the circumstances. That he was confronted by one of the gang that had abducted Clayton, moreover, and one of the gang that had stolen the jewel cases that morning, he now had not a doubt.