"You've guessed it right the very first time," he said, with an attempt

at a laugh; but the sweat had gathered on his forehead and he wiped it

away with a shaking hand. "It's Skylark. He was a dead certainty; I got

the tip straight from the stable; they must have pulled him; they must

have sold me. But I've got to pay up; I've got to. Do you hear? If I

can't find the money by Monday week, I shall be posted. I suppose you

know what that means?"

"You'll be ruined," she said in a low voice.

"Cut by everybody; chucked out of every club, marked for life. Yes;

sounds pretty black, doesn't it?"

"Is there no other way of getting the money?" she asked, wearily.

He shook his head. "If you knew anything at all, you'd know there

isn't," he said, sullenly. "The old man has just paid some biggish debts

for me. That was what the row was about the other night. He warned me

that it was the last I'd have from him for some time, and he'll keep his

word. Curse him!"

Miriam, accustomed as she was to his bad language, shrank.

"Percy! Your own father!" she whispered, with a shudder.

"Oh, don't go into heroics!" he said. "You'd curse everything and

everybody, if you were in the plight I am. And look here, you've got to

help me. You and the old man have been getting on better than I

expected; if he hasn't taken a downright fancy to you, he's got used to

you and treats you civilly. Can't you give him a hint about the

diamonds? See here!" He leant forward, his hand gripping the table, the

sweat gathering on his face again, his weak eyes bulging in his terrible

eagerness. "I could raise money enough on the things to tide me over

this bit of bad luck until I struck a winner. Directly he'd given them

to you, we'd go up to town; he wouldn't know whether you were wearing

them or not. But there! if it comes to that, we could easily get them

copied in paste; they imitate them so closely you can't tell the real

from the sham. Fact. Why, half the women in London are wearing shams,

and nobody's any the wiser."

She rose, her hand clutching at the lace on her bosom.

"I--I can't do it, Percy! Besides, it wouldn't be any use. It's strange

how little you know of the Marquess; you, his own son! Why, even I, who

have known him so short a time, know that to ask for them, to hint for

them, would be of no use. They are the family diamonds; they're

something more than jewels in his eyes--don't you understand that?--he

will have to grow to like me a good deal better than he does before he

gives them to me. It's no use, Percy. You must think of something else."




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