The Sorcery Club eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 358 pages of information about The Sorcery Club.

The Sorcery Club eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 358 pages of information about The Sorcery Club.

“Ed!” Hamar said to Curtis one day.  “Matt’s been getting into mischief.  I know the symptoms well.  He can’t look me in the face, and every now and then, when he fancies my attention is attracted elsewhere, I catch him peeping furtively at me as if he were frightened out of his life I should ferret out some secret.  It would be deplorable if now that we have got so near the end of the Compact, we should be held up by some idiotic blunder—­some nonsensical love affair of his.  I wonder whether it’s Rosenberg or some other girl.  Will you find out?”

“How can I?” Curtis growled.  “I’m not his keeper.”

“I know that!” Hamar said.  “Come be reasonable.  You want to be a Croesus—­so that you can eat and drink your head off—­don’t you!  Well!  You will!  You will be one of the three wealthiest men in the world—­you will have the world at your feet, if only you stick to me for the next seven months:  till we have passed the seventh stage.  If you don’t—­if either you or Matt deliberately quarrel with me, or marry—­then, as I’ve dinned into your ears a thousand times, the Compact will be broken, and—­not only that, but some frightful catastrophe will wipe us off.  Now will you do what I ask?  Come—­a dinner with me every night this week, at the Piccadilly—­champagne—­and no vegetables!”

“All right,” Curtis said sulkily, “for the good of the cause I suppose I must, but I hate spying.”

Two nights later in a private room at the Piccadilly, after dinner, when the champagne and liqueurs had got into Curtis’s head and he was leaning back in his chair, smiling and silly, Hamar suddenly said, “Ed! you remember what I told you—­about watching Kelson.  Have you discovered anything?”

“Shupposing I have,” Curtis replied, “shupposing I haven’t—­whatch then?”

“Ah, but I know you have,” Hamar said, striving to hide his eagerness.  “Come, tell me, another liqueur—­I’ll square it with the Unknown—­it won’t hurt you!”

“Won’t it!” Curtis gurgled.  “Wont’ch it!  I’ll tell you everything.  No—­nothingsh, I mean.”

But Hamar when once he had smelt a rat, was not easily put off.  He coaxed, and coaxed, and eventually succeeded.

“Leonsh!” Curtis said, with a sudden burst of drunken confidence.  “Leonsh! it’s worse than either you or I shuspected.  I caught them alone this morning—­in my offish.”

“Them!  Rosenberg and Matt!”

“Yesh, of course, shilly!  I told Matt I was going out.  He thought I had—­so into the room I came—­quite unshuspected, unobsherved.  She was sitting on hish knees, cuddling—­and he was putting a ring on her finger.  ‘Four more days, darling,’ shays he, ’and we are married!  Jerushalem!  Damn the Compact and damnsh Hamar!’ ’Hamar doesn’t shuspect, does he?’ Rosenberg shays.  ’Not a bit—­not in the slightest,’ old Matt replieshes, ‘why it is I who amsh brave now.’  Then he kisshes her, and fearing they would detect my presence, I slipsh quietly out.”

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The Sorcery Club from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.