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about the Longworth, but not about the John.'

      'Oh, old John Longworth in the City! Certainly; I know all about him. I never saw him before, but I think we are quite safe in telling him anything he wants to know, if he asks.'

      'Breakfast, gentlemen,' said the steward, putting his head in at the door.

      After breakfast Edith Longworth and her cousin walked the deck together. Young Longworth, although in better humour than he had been the night before, was still rather short in his replies, and irritating in his questions.

      'Aren't you tired of this eternal parade up and down?' he asked his cousin. 'It seems to me like a treadmill—as if a person had to work for his board and lodging.'

      'Let us sit down then,' she replied; 'although I think a walk before lunch or dinner increases the attractiveness of those meals wonderfully.'

      'I never feel the need of working up an appetite,' he answered pettishly.

      'Well, as I said before, let us sit down;' and the girl, having found her chair, lifted the rug that lay upon it, and took her place.

      The young man, after standing for a moment looking at her through his glistening monocle, finally sat down beside her.

      'The beastly nuisance of living on board ship,' he said, 'is that you can't play billiards.'

      'I am sure you play enough at cards to satisfy you during the few days we are at sea,' she answered.

      'Oh, cards! I soon tire of them.'

      'You tire very quickly of everything.'

      'I certainly get tired of lounging about the deck, either walking or sitting.'

      'Then, pray don't let me keep you.'

      'You want me to go so you may walk with your newly-found friend, that miner fellow?'

      'That miner fellow is talking with my father just now. Still, if you would like to know, I have no hesitation in telling you I would much prefer his company to yours if you continue in your present mood.'

      'Yes, or in any mood.'

      'I did not say that; but if it will comfort you to have me say it, I shall be glad to oblige you.'

      'Perhaps, then, I should go and talk with your father, and let the miner fellow come here and talk with you.'

      'Please do not call him the miner fellow. His name is Mr. Kenyon. It is not difficult to remember.'

      'I know his name well enough. Shall I send him to you?'

      'No. I want to talk with you in spite of your disagreeableness. And what is more, I want to talk with you about Mr. Kenyon. So I wish you to assume your very best behaviour. It may be for your benefit.'

      The young man indulged in a sarcastic laugh.

      'Oh, if you are going to do that, I have nothing more to say,' remarked Edith quietly, rising from her chair.

      'I meant no harm. Sit down and go on with your talk.'

      'Listen, then. Mr. Kenyon has the option of a mine in Canada, which he believes to be a good property. He intends to form a company when he reaches London. Now, why shouldn't you make friends with him, and, if you found the property is as good as he thinks it is, help him to form the company, and so make some money for both of you?'

      'You are saying one word for me and two for Kenyon.'

      'No, it would be as much for your benefit as for his, so it is a word for each of you.'

      'You are very much interested in him.'

      'My dear cousin, I am very much interested in the mine, and I am very much interested in you. Mr. Kenyon can speak of nothing but the mine, and I am sure my father would be pleased to see you take an interest in something of the sort. I mean, you know that if you would do something of your own accord—something that was not suggested to you by him—he would like it.'

      'Well, it is suggested to me by you, and that's almost the same thing.'

      'No, it is not the same thing at all. Father would indeed be glad if he saw you take up anything on your own account and make a success of it. Why can you not spend some of your time talking with Mr. Kenyon discussing arrangements, so that when you return to London you might be prepared to put the mine on the market and bring out the company?'

      'If I thought you were talking to me for my own sake, I would do what you suggest; but I believe you are speaking only because you are interested in Kenyon.'

      'Nonsense! How can you be so absurd? I have known Mr. Kenyon but for a few hours—a day or two at most.'

      The young man pulled his moustache for a moment, adjusted his eyeglass, and then said:

      'Very good. I will speak to Kenyon on the subject if you wish it, but I don't say that I can help him.'

      'I don't ask you to help him. I ask you to help yourself. Here is Mr. Kenyon. Let me introduce you, and then you can talk over the project at your leisure.'

      'I don't suppose an introduction is necessary,' growled the young man; but as Kenyon approached them, Edith Longworth said:

      'We are a board of directors, Mr. Kenyon, on the great mica-mine. Will you join the Board now, or after allotment?' Then, before he could reply, she said: 'Mr. Kenyon, this is my cousin, Mr. William Longworth.'

      Longworth, without rising from his chair, shook hands in rather a surly fashion.

      'I am going to speak to my father,' said the girl, 'and will leave you to talk over the mica-mine.'

      When she had gone, young Longworth asked Kenyon:

      'Where is the mine my cousin speaks of?'

      'It is near the Ottawa River, in Canada,' was the answer.

      'And what do you expect to sell it for?'

      'Fifty thousand pounds.'

      'Fifty thousand pounds! That will leave nothing to divide up among—by the way, how many are there in this thing—yourself alone?'

      'No; my friend Wentworth shares with me.'

      'Share and share alike?'

      'Yes.'

      'Of course, you think this mine is worth the money you ask for it—there is no swindle about it, is there?'

      Kenyon drew himself up sharply as this remark was made. Then he answered coldly:

      'If there was any swindle about it, I should have nothing to do with it.'

      'Well, you see, I didn't know; mining swindles are not such rarities as you may imagine. If the mine is so valuable, why are the proprietors anxious to sell?'

      'The owners are in Austria, and the mine in Canada, and so it is rather at arm's-length, as it were. They are mining for mica, but the mine is more valuable in other respects than it is as a mica property. They have placed a figure on the mine which is more than it has cost them so far.'

      'You know its value in those other respects?'

      'I do.'

      'Does anyone know this except yourself?'

      'I think not—no one but my friend Wentworth.'

      'How did you come to learn its value?'

      'By visiting the mine. Wentworth and I went together to see it.'

      'Oh, is Wentworth also a mining expert?'

      'No; he is an accountant in London.'

      'Both of you were sent out by the London Syndicate, I understand, to look after their mines, or the mines they thought of purchasing, were you not?'

      'We were.'

      'And you spent your time in looking up other properties for yourselves, did you?'

      Kenyon reddened at this question.

      'My dear sir,' he said, 'if you are going to talk in this strain, you will have to excuse me. We were sent by the London Syndicate to do a certain thing. We did it, and did it thoroughly. After it was done the time was our own, as much as it is at the present moment.

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