An Unpardonable Liar eBook

Gilbert Parker
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 96 pages of information about An Unpardonable Liar.

An Unpardonable Liar eBook

Gilbert Parker
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 96 pages of information about An Unpardonable Liar.
affecting the person looked at like a flash of light to the eye.  It is easy to write such things, not so easy to verify them, but any one that has seen the sleuthlike eyes of men accustomed to dealing with danger in the shape of wild beasts or treacherous tribes or still more treacherous companions, and whose lives depend upon their feeling for peril and their unerring vigilance can see what George Hagar saw in Mark Telford’s looks.

Telford’s glance went round the crowd, appearing to rest for an instant on every person, and for a longer time on Hagar.  The eyes of the two men met.  Both were immediately puzzled, for each had a sensation of some subterranean origin.  Telford immediately afterward passed out of the gate and went toward the St. Cloud gardens, where the band was playing.  For a time Hagar did not stir, but idled with his pencil and notebook.  Suddenly he started, and hurried out in the direction Telford had gone.

“I was an ass,” he said to himself, “not to think of that at first.”

He entered the St. Cloud gardens and walked round the promenade a few times, but without finding him.  Presently, however, Alpheus Richmond, whose beautiful and brilliant waistcoat and brass buttons with monogram adorned showed advantageously in the morning sunshine, said to him:  “I say, Hagar, who’s that chap up there filling the door of the summer house?  Lord, rather!”

It was Telford.  Hagar wished for the slightest pretext to go up the unfrequented side path and speak to him, but his mind was too excited to do the thing naturally without a stout pretext.  Besides, though he admired the man’s proportions and his uses from an artistic standpoint, he did not like him personally, and he said that he never could.  He had instinctive likes and dislikes.  What had startled him at the pump-room and had made him come to the gardens was the conviction that this was the man to play the part in the scene which, described by Mrs. Detlor, had been arranging itself in a hundred ways in his brain during the night—­the central figures always the same, the details, light, tone, coloring, expression, fusing, resolving.  Then came another and still more significant thought.  On this he had acted.

When he had got rid of Richmond, who begged that he would teach him how to arrange a tie as he did—­for which an hour was appointed—­he determined, at all hazards, to speak.  He had a cigar in his pocket, and though to smoke in the morning was pain and grief to him, he determined to ask for a match, and started.  He was stopped by Baron, whose thoughts being much with the little vices of man, anticipated his wishes and offered him a light.  In despair Hagar took it, and asked if he chanced to know who the stranger was.  Baron did know, assuring Hagar that he sat on the gentleman’s right at the same table in his hotel, and was qualified to introduce him.  Before they started he told the artist of the occurrence of the evening before, and further assured him of the graces of Miss Mildred Margrave.  “A pearl,” he said, “not to be reckoned by loads of ivory, nor jolly bricks of gold, nor caravans of Arab steeds, nor—­come and have dinner with me to-night, and you shall see.  There, what do you say?”

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An Unpardonable Liar from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.