"Mrs. Hyphen-Bonds will never forgive me," said Hamilton dismally, "if

she hears that I've been the cause, indirectly and innocently, of

turning you away."

"Mrs. Hyphen-Bonds need never know," replied the girl, smiling

inscrutably. "In fact, it would be perfectly satisfactory and

agreeable to me if she never heard at all."

"I will call a conveyance for you," said the defeated M. F. H. "I

shall never forgive you, Dicky."

"Yes, you will, Teddy. A loving-cup, the next time we meet at the

club, will mellow everything."

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Quarter of an hour later Miss Hawthorne and I, wrapped in

buffalo-robes, our feet snugly stowed away in straw, slid away, to the

jangle and quarrel of sleighbells, toward Moriarty's Hollywood Inn.

The moon shone; not a cloud darkened her serene and lovely countenance.

The pearly whiteness of the world would have aroused the poetry in the

most sordid soul; and far, far away to the east the black, tossing line

of the sea was visible.

"What a beautiful night!" I volunteered.

"The beginning of the end."

"The beginning of the end? What does that mean?"

"Why, when you first spoke to me, it was about the weather."

"Oh, but this isn't going to be the end; this is the true beginning of

all things."

"I wish I could see it in that light; but we can not see beauty in

anything when hunger lies back of the eyes. I haven't had anything to

eat, save that single apple, for hours and hours. I was so excited at

Mouquin's that I ate almost nothing."

"You are hungry? Well, we'll fix that when we get to Moriarty's. I'll

find a way of waking him up, in case he's asleep, which I doubt. There

will be cold chicken and ham and hot coffee."

"Lovely!"

"And we shall dine with the gods. And now it is all over and done, it

was funny, wasn't it?"

"Terribly funny!"--with a shade of irony. "It would have been funnier

still if the real Haggerty hadn't turned up. The patrol had arrived."

"But it didn't happen. I shall never forget this night,"--romantically.

"I should be inordinately glad to forget it completely,"--decidedly.

"Where's your romance?" I asked.

"I'd rather have it served to me between book-covers. As I grow older

my love of repose increases."

"Do you know," I began boldly, "it seems that I have known you all my

life."




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