The Regent
Turk's Head-a room with which he had no previous acquaintance, though, like most industrious me
ent mantles (on the ground floor), it had not yet conquered a natural distaste for electricity-and Edward Henry saw a smart
his room before,"
bucket. "It's my private sitting-room. Whenever I am on my travels I always take a private sitting-room. It pays,
nry agree
ppose
ometimes felt the desire, but he had not had the "face"-as they say down there-to do it. To take a private sitting-ro
private sitting-rooms in thi
fronted him, shovel in hand, with a remar
ou want, if you insist on hav
d, but they do not extend the privilege to strangers. And in justice to the Turk's Head it is to be clearly stated that it did no more to cow and dis
Mr. B
the place f
expect
to Chi
I hav
s overcoat, could be seen politel
ou've been t
o New York. But by some inexplicable negligence he had hitherto omitted to go to New York, a
I hav
discovery that there existed in England a man of the world who had contrived to s
any-in what coin he knew not yet-for the aspersions which at the music-hall he had cast upon England in general and upon the Five Towns in particular, and also to get revenge for having been tricked into believing, even for a moment, that there was reall
that Nellie's suggestion of blood-poisoning might not be as entirely foolish as [47] feminine suggestions in such circumstances too often are. But now he put these thoughts away, reassur
n a new tone,
hat about this litt
ds something towards the man in possession of what he needs. And studying the fellow's countenance, he
n opposite Edward Henry at the centre table, and reac
W.C.B.," first a cut-glass flask of whisky with a p
lden liquid up to the light. "It's safer and it saves any trouble
s, there being a siphon and glasses, and th
!" he said, wit
n conformity with the changel
loo
hey s
rew from the dispatch-box a
this plan of Piccadilly Ci
Pall Mall and a Chancery Lane. The adjective
when we were chatting over there." With his elbow he ind
" said M
rd Henry
ng with London for? What u
Bryany proceeded. "Well, that's the
d Henry inquired, examining the plan. Lines ra
ines of vision,"
Bryany's finger approached Edward Henry's on the plan, and the clouds from their cigarettes fraternally mingled. "Now you see by those lines that the electric sign of the proposed the
enry ask
ou boug
gize. "I haven't exactly bought
n Edward Henry. And the mere act of looking at the plan endo
ion to
End of London," said Mr. Bryany,
se!" Edward He
gs to Lord Woldo, n
murmured E
ith sixty-four years to run, on the condition I put up a the
frowned and
re the
rected himself, smiling courteou
got the o
d's got the
the most renowned star-actresses in E
-?" he e
d proudly, blowi
dentially, leaning forward, "where d
"Her father kept a tobacconist's shop in Cheapside. The sign w
hrilled by these [50] extraordinary revelations
ryany
nd I let her have the money." He threw away his cigarette half-smoked, with a free gestur
utting into the query all the innuendo of a man accust
ith the late Lord Woldo, you know." Edward Henry nodded. "Why, she and the Countess of C
was the wife of the
answered ca
th, when he had driven the Countess to a public meetin
remember that he was the founder, chairman and proprietor of the Five Towns Unive
Bryany, passing across t
rents are always going up ... When I tell you that a theatre costing £25,000 to build can be let for £11,000 a year, and often £300 a week on a short term ...!" And he could hear the gas singing over his head ... And also, unhappily, he could
tell y
n the Five Towns is regarded as mere directness, "I wonder why the devil you want
Bryany, as if up to that moment he
hy
pparently he had quickly abandoned the strictness of veracity.) "All depends on
Henry l
cou
, laughing too. Then, with extreme and convincing seriousness,
not displeased
w m
I paid. I made no concealment of that, did I
of the opt
oduced a copy
ents. "It's right off my line, right bang off it ...! But what a lark!" But even to his soul he did not utter the remainder of t
apped within him and
m o
rds and
any exclaimed, mis
Henry
" said Mr. Bryany, taking a fr
ard Henry, quite inaccurately; for it was not
, with a rather
en can
day or two." And Edward Henry i
utely must have the money to-morrow morning in London. I c
ust ha
us
at Mr. Bryany, with his private sitting-room and his investments in Seattle and Calgary, was at his wits' end for a bag of English sovereigns, and had t
shouted. "Don't light your
ing the document which he had creased into a s
nd you a
in his pockets. Having discovered therein a piece o
meet me at the station in the morning
n't," said E
then,
othed his host and, blowing out the spill which he had
ha
s, m
y of the spill, seized it and unroll
tamm
n to say it
nry. He was [54] growing fond of this reply, and of t
ut
Henry. "But we're apt to be careless about hundred-pound not
it's
ank in England refuses it, return it to me and I'll
nd then subsided back into his chair. "I am simply
ry felt all the sweetness of a
comman
me a transfer.
e jump
e in a
me a match." Edward Henry waved the unlit cigarette