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"Veil, veil, sir," cries he, "here ve are again! I hears as you're off to Canterbury - yell, you'll give 'em better sport than that, I'll be bound!" And he nodded towards the scaffold. "Did you ever see poorer stuff, Mr Flashman? Not vorth the vatchin', sir, not vorth the vatchin'. Not a word out o' him - no speech, no repentance, not even a struggle, blow me! That's not vot ve'd 'ave called a 'angin', in my young day. You'd think," says he, sticking his thumbs in his vest, "that a young cribsman like that there, vot 'adn't no upbringin' to speak of, nor never amounted to nothin' - till today - you'd think, sir, that on the great hocassion of 'is life, 'e'd show appreciation, 'stead o' lettin' them drug 'im vith daffy. Vere vas his ambition, sir, allowin' 'imself to be crapped like that there, ven 'e might 'ave reckernized the interest, sir, of all these people 'ere, an' responded to same?" He beamed at me, head on one side. "No bottom, Mr Flashman; no game. Now, you, sir - you'd do your werry best if you vas misfortinit enough to be in his shoes - vhich Gawd forbid - an' so should I, eh? Ve'd give the people vot they came for, like good game Henglishmen.

"Speakin' of game," he went on, "I trust you're in prime condition for Canterbury. I'm countin' on you, sir, countin' on you, I am."

Something in his tone raised a tiny prickle on my neck. I'd been giving him a cool stare, but now I made it a hard one.

"I don't know what you mean, my man," says I, "and I don't care. You may take yourself—"

"No, no, no, my dear young sir," says he, beaming redder than ever. "You've mistook me quite. Vot I'm indicatin', sir, is that I'm interested - werry much interested, in the success of Mr Mynn's Casual XI, vot I hexpec' to carry all before 'em, for your satisfaction an' my profit." He closed an eye roguishly. "You'll remember, sir, as 'ow I expressed my appreciation o' your notable feat at Lord's last year, by forwardin' a token, a small gift of admiration, reelly

"I never had a damned thing from you," says I, perhaps just a shade too quickly.

"You don't say, sir? Veil, blow me, but you astonish me, sir - you reelly do. An' me takin' werry partikler care to send it to yore direction - an' you never received same! Veil, veil," and the little black eyes were hard as pebbles. "I yonder now, if that willain o' mine, Wincent, slipped it in 'is cly*(* Pocket.), 'stead o' deliverin' same to you? Hooman vickedness, Mr Flashman, sir, there ain't no end to it. Still, sir, ve needn't repine," and he laughed heartily, "there's more vere that come from, sir. An' I can tell you, sir, that if you carries yore bat against the Irreg'lars this arternoon - veil, you can count to three hundred, I'll be bound, eh?"

I stared at him, speechless, opened my mouth- and shut it. He regarded me benignly, winked again, and glanced about him.

"Terrible press, sir; shockin'. Vhy the peelers don't chivvy these damned magsmen an' cly-fakers - vhy, a gent like you ain't safe; they'll 'ave the teeth out yore 'ead, 'less you looks sharp. Scandalous, sir; vot you need's a cab; that's vot you need."

He gave a nod, a burly brute close by gave a piercing whistle, and before you could wink there was a hack pushing through the crowd, its driver belabouring all who didn't clear out fast enough. The burly henchman leaped to the horse's head, another held the door, and Mr Tighe, hat in hand, was ushering me in, beaming wider than ever.

"An' the werry best o' luck this arternoon, sir," cries he. "You'll bowl them Irreg'lars aht in no time, I'll wager, an' "— he winked again —"I do 'ope as you carries your bat, Mr Flashman. London Bridge, cabby!" And away went the cab, carrying a very thoughtful gentleman, you may be sure.

I considered the remarkable Mr Tighe all the way to Canterbury, too, and concluded that if he was fool enough to throw money away, that was his business-what kind of odds could he hope to get on my losing my wicket, for after all, I batted well down the list, and might easily carry my bat through the hand?10 Who'd wager above three hundred on that? Well, that was his concern, not mine - but I'd have to keep a close eye on him, and not become entangled with his sort; at least he wasn't expecting me to throw the game, but quite the reverse; he was trying to bribe me to do well, in fact.

The upshot of it was, I bowled pretty well for Mynn's eleven, and when I went to the wicket to bat, I stuck to my blockhole like glue, to the disappointment of the spectators, who expected me to slog. I was third last man in, so I didn't have to endure long, and as Mynn himself was at t'other end, knocking off the runs, my behaviour was perfectly proper. We won by two wickets, Flashy not out, nil - and next morning, after breakfast, there was a plain packet addressed to me, with three hundred in bills inside.

I near as a toucher sealed it up again and told the footman to give it back to whoever had brought it - but I didn't. Warm work - but three hundred is three hundred - and it was a gift, wasn't it? I could always deny I'd ever seen it - God, I was an innocent then, for all my campaign experience.

This, of course, took place at the house which Haslam had taken just outside Canterbury, very splendid, gravel walks, fine lawns, shrubbery and trees, gaslight through-out, beautifully-appointed rooms, best of food and drink, flunkeys everywhere, and go-as-you-please. There were about a dozen house guests, for it was a great rambling place, and Haslam had seen to every comfort. He gave a sumptuous party on that first Monday night, at which Mynn and Felix were present, and the talk was all cricket, of course, but there were any number of ladies, too, including Mrs Leo Lade, smouldering at me across the table from under a heap of sausage curls, and in a dress so décolleté that her udders were almost in her soup. That's one over we'll bowl this week that won't be a maiden, thinks I, and flashed my most loving smile to Elspeth, who was sparkling radiantly beside Don Solomon at the top of the table.

Presently, however, her sparkle was wiped clean away, for Don Solomon was understood to say that this week would be his last fling in England; he was leaving at the end of the month to visit his estates in the East, and had no notion when he would return; it might be years, he said, at which there were genuine expressions of sorrow round the table, for those assembled knew a dripping roast when they saw one. Without the lavish Don Solomon, there would be one luxurious establishment less for the Society hyenas to guzzle at. Elspeth was quite put out.

"But dear Don Solomon, what shall we do? Oh, you're teasing - why, your tiresome estates will do admirably without you, for I'm sure you employ only the cleverest people to look after them." She pouted prettily. "You would not be so cruel to your friends, surely - Mrs Lade, we shan't let him, shall we?"

Solomon laughed and patted her hand. "My dear Diana," says he - Diana had been his nickname for her ever since he'd tried to teach her archery —"you may be sure nothing but harsh necessity would take me from such delightful company as your own - and Harry's yonder, and all of you. But - a man must work, and my work is overseas. So—" and he shook his head, his smooth, handsome face smiling ruefully. "It will be a sore wrench - sorest of all in that I shall miss both of you"— and he looked from Elspeth to me and back again —"above all the rest, for you have been to me like a brother and sister." And, damme, the fellow's great dark eyes were positively glistening; the rest of the table murmured sympathetically, all but old Morrison, who was champing away at his blancmange and finding bones in it, by the sound of him.

At this Elspeth was so overcome that she began piping her eye, and her tits shook so violently that the old Duke, on Solomon's other side, coughed his false teeth into his wine glass and had to be put to rights by the butler. Solomon, for once, was looking a little embarrassed; he shrugged and gave me a look that was almost appealing. "I'm sorry, old boy," says he, "but I mean it." I couldn't fathom this - he might be sorry to miss Elspeth; what man wouldn't? But had I been so friendly? - well, I'd been civil enough, and I was her husband; perhaps that charming manner of mine which Tom Hughes mentioned had had its effect on this emotional dago. Anyway, something seemed called for.