"Confound you, you ruffian! How dare you talk to me in that fashion!"

burst out Tony, forgetting his position, and taking an impulsive step

forward--only to be seized roughly by his guards, one of whom jabbed

the point of a knife against his breast. Tony flinched, then he

shrugged his shoulders and faced the hooded figure disdainfully.

"Easy to take the high hand and to fling insults at a man when you have

a lot of armed ruffians to protect you!" he said sarcastically.

"What's the idea, anyhow? Why not get down to business instead of

spouting a lot of balderdash?"

"I can dispense with the protection of the guards," Don Carlos

remarked. "Garcilaso and Riafio, you will withdraw and leave me to

deal with the señor. Wait outside," he added in Spanish.

He resumed his seat as the guards left the room, and Myra could see his

eyes gleaming like black diamonds through the slits in his mask.

"Well, how much will you take to set Miss Rostrevor at liberty?"

inquired Tony impatiently, after a pause. "I am sick of all this bluff

and nonsense, being brought here blind-folded, and all that sort of

thing, by another fellow dressed like you. The whole thing seems to me

a fake, and it seems to me you must be in league with the authorities,

else how could you have a place like this--electric light and all the

rest of it--without being spotted?"

"Strange, is it not, Señor Standish?" responded Don Carlos, and his

muffled voice had laughter in it. "Yet I assure you I am not in league

with the authorities, and even Don Carlos, who prides himself on

knowing practically every foot of the mountain range, failed to find my

stronghold. Even a Division of your wonderful British Army and all

your Scotland Yard would not discover the nest of El Diablo Cojuelo.

You and Miss Rostrevor are as completely lost to the world here, and as

helpless as you would be if the earth had swallowed you up."

"Oh, I quite realise you are in a position to dictate terms at present,

if that's what you are getting at?" Tony exclaimed. "Why not get down

to business without all this palaver? Look here, I'll pay you 10,000

pesetas to set Miss Rostrevor at liberty and give her safe conduct back

to the Castle de Ruiz."

"Ten thousand pesetas," repeated Don Carlos. "Dios! Ten thousand

pesetas! Miss Rostrevor, I congratulate you! Ten thousand pesetas are

the Spanish equivalent of about sixty pounds, in English money. You

see what a fabulous value your lover places on you. Sixty pounds! You

must indeed feel flattered!"




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