Mr. Wilfer did not object to this addition to his income, though he

still worked occasionally for the picture gang; and it was on one of

their jobs that he came within reach of Jasper Vermont.

One day he had been sent to play the usual proceedings to Mr. George

Harker, presuming, naturally enough, that being a moneylender he was

rich, and hearing that he had a liking for "old masters."

Johann Wilfer saw Mr. Harker, and notwithstanding the changes which time

brings to us all, and the entire transformation of name and

surroundings, recognised him as the father of the girl whom he had once

so cruelly deceived.

The old man never having heard the name of Lucy's betrayer--for she had

purposely kept it from him--knew nothing of his visitor, and eventually

purchased the picture, after consulting with Jasper, who discovered the

imposition at a glance, but saw in the impostor a possible new tool.

He instructed Harker to obtain a written guarantee of the genuineness of

the picture, and Wilfer, being half intoxicated at the time, for once

forgot his usual caution, and gave the required pledge. With that in his

possession, Jasper Vermont had Wilfer in his power, and only left him

undisturbed because he saw no present opportunity of using him.

But when he wanted him he knew that he had only to exert the authority

which the warrant gave him, and Johann Wilfer would be his obedient

servant, as many better men were already.

The picture he intended--through Mr. Harker--to compel one of the firm's

wealthy clients to take as part of a loan, a well-known trick of the

worst class of moneylenders.

Quite unconscious of the sword that hung over him, Mr. Wilfer, after a

bout of hard drinking, went home, and it was in his drunken frenzy that

he had struck Jessica. She, bruised and frightened, fled into the

streets, where Adrien Leroy found her.

Left to himself--for his wife was away for a day or two--Mr. Wilfer fell

into a deep slumber, in which he remained for the rest of the evening.

Early for him, on the following morning he was roused by a loud knocking

at his front door. Now thoroughly sobered, he hurriedly dressed,

stumbled down the rickety staircase, and opened the door, to himself

confronted by Miss Ada Lester. Her face was flushed, and the angry light

Jasper Vermont had called up by his sneers at her vulgarity the previous

evening still shone in her dark eyes.

"Where is the gal?" she asked abruptly.

"The gal!" he repeated, staring at her in stolid amazement.




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