“Then old Sam won’t be ’ere to have ’is share,” ses Peter.

Sam was just going to answer ’em back, when he stopped and began to smile instead. Straight in front of ’im was the gentleman he ’ad met in the coffee-shop, coming along with another man, and he just ’ad time to see that it was the docker who ’ad sold him the locket, when they both saw ’im. They turned like a flash, and, afore Sam could get ’is breath, bolted up a little alley and disappeared.

“Wot’s the row?” ses Ginger, staring.

Sam didn’t answer ’im. He stood there struck all of a heap.

“Do you know ’em?” ses Peter.

Sam couldn’t answer ’im for a time. He was doing a bit of ’ard thinking.

“Chap I ’ad a row with the other night,” he ses, at last.

He walked on very thoughtful, and the more ’e thought, the less ’e liked it. He was so pale that Ginger thought ’e was ill and advised ’im to ’ave a drop o’ brandy. Peter recommended rum, so to please ’em he ’ad both. It brought ’is colour back, but not ’is cheerfulness.

He gave ’em both the slip next morning; which was easy, as Ginger was wearing the locket, and, arter fust ’aving a long ride for nothing owing to getting in the wrong train, he got to Barnet.

It was a big place; big enough to ’ave a dozen Orange Villas, but pore Sam couldn’t find one. It wasn’t for want of trying neither.