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voice.

      "But in this land it would seem that truth is a thing that wise men shun. It is for telling the truth that I am here."

      "We don't want any of your insolence, my man! Answer the governor's question if you don't want to be severely punished. Do you know who has been playing hanky-panky with the cells?"

      "Spirits of the air."

      As he said this Mankell inclined his head and looked at the Major with laughter in his eyes.

      "Spirits of the air! What the devil do you mean by spirits of the air?"

      "Ah! what do I mean? To tell you that," laying a stress upon the pronoun, "would take a year."

      "The fellow's an insolent scoundrel," spluttered the Major.

      "Come, Mankell, that won't do," struck in Mr. Paley. "Do I understand you to say that you do know something about the matter?"

      "Know!" The man drew himself up, laying the index finger of his right hand upon the table with a curiously impressive air. "What is there that I do not know?"

      "I see. You still pretend, then, to the possession of magic powers?"

      "Pretend!" Mankell laughed. He stretched out his hands in front of him with what seemed to be his favourite gesture, and laughed-in the face of the authorities.

      "Suppose you give us an example of your powers?"

      The suggestion came from the doctor. The Major exploded.

      "Don't talk stuff and nonsense! Give the man three days' bread and water. That is what he wants."

      "You do not believe in magic, then?" Mankell turned to the Major with his laughing eyes.

      "What's it matter to you what I believe? You may take my word for it that I don't believe in impudent mountebanks like you."

      The only reply Mankell gave was to raise his hand-if that might be called a reply-in the way we sometimes do when we call for silence, and there was silence in the room. All eyes were fixed upon the prisoner. He looked each in turn steadily in the face. Then, still serenely smiling, he gently murmured, "If you please."

      There still was silence, but only for a moment. It was broken by Warder Slater. That usually decorous officer tilted his cap to the back of his head, and thrust his hands into his breeches pockets-hardly the regulation attitude in the presence of superiors.

      "I should blooming well like to know what this means! 'Ere have I been in this 'ere jail eleven years, and I've never been accused before of letting men out of their night-cells, let alone their beds and bedding, and I don't like it, so I tell you straight."

      The chief warder turned with automatic suddenness towards the unexpectedly and unusually plain-spoken officer.

      "Slater, you're a fool!"

      "I'm not the only one in the place! There's more fools here besides me, and some of them bigger ones as well!"

      While these compliments were being exchanged, the higher officials sat mutely looking on. When the chief warder seemed at a loss for an answer, the chaplain volunteered a remark. He addressed himself to Warder Slater.

      "It's my opinion that the governor's a bigger fool than you are, and that the inspector's a still bigger fool than he is."

      "And it's my belief, Mr. Hewett," observed the doctor, "that you're the biggest fool of all."

      "It would serve him right," remarked the governor, quietly, "if somebody were to knock him down."

      "Knock him down! I should think it would-and kick him too!"

      As he said this the Major glared at the chaplain with threatening eyes.

      There was silence again, broken by Warder Slater taking off his cap and then his tunic, which he folded up carefully and placed upon the floor, and turning his shirt-sleeves up above his elbows, revealing as he did so a pair of really gigantic arms.

      "If any man says I let them men out of the cells, I'm ready to fight that man, either for a gallon of beer or nothing. I don't care if it's the inspector, or who it is."

      "I suspect," declared the chaplain, "that the inspector's too great a coward to take you on, but if he does I'm willing to back Slater for half-a-crown. I am even prepared to second him."

      Putting his hands under his coat-tails, the chaplain looked up at the ceiling with a resolute air.

      "If you do fight Slater, Hardinge, I should certainly commence by giving the chaplain a punch in the eye."

      So saying, the governor leaned back in his chair, and began drumming on the table with the tips of his fingers. The doctor rose from his seat. He gave the inspector a hearty slap on the back.

      "Give him beans!" he cried. "You ought to be able to knock an over-fed animal like Slater into the middle of next week before he's counted five."

      "I've no quarrel with Slater," the inspector growled, "and I've no intention of fighting him; but as the chaplain seems to be so anxious for a row, I'll fight him with the greatest pleasure."

      "If there's goin' to be any fighting," interposed the chief warder, "don't you think I'd better get a couple of sponges and a pail of water?"

      "I don't know about the sponges," said the governor; "I don't fancy you will find any just at hand. But you might get a pail of water, I think."

      The chief warder left the room.

      "I'm not a fighting man," the chaplain announced; "and in any case, I should decline to soil my hands by touching such an ill-mannered ruffian as Major Hardinge."

      "I say," exclaimed the doctor, "Hardinge, you're not going to stand that?"

      The Major sprang from his seat, tore off his coat, and flung it on to the ground with considerably less care than Warder Slater had done. He strode up to the chaplain.

      "Beg my pardon, or take a licking!"

      The Major clenched his fists. He assumed an attitude which, if not exactly reminiscent of the pets of the fancy, was at least intended to be pugilistic. The chaplain did not flinch.

      "You dare to lay a finger on me, you bullying blackguard."

      The Major did dare. He struck out, if not with considerable science, at any rate with considerable execution. The chaplain went down like a log. At that moment the chief warder entered the room. He had a pail of water in his hand. For some reason, which was not altogether plain, he threw its contents upon the chaplain as he lay upon the floor.

      While these-considering the persons engaged-somewhat irregular proceedings had been taking place, Mankell remained motionless, his hand upraised-still with that smile upon his face. Now he lowered his hand.

      "Thank you very much," he said.

      There was silence again-a tolerably prolonged silence. While it lasted, a change seemed to be passing over the chief actors in the scene. They seemed to be awaking, with more or less rapidity, to the fact that a certain incongruity characterised their actions and their language. There stood Warder Slater, apparently surprised and overwhelmed at the discovery that his hat and coat were off, and his shirtsleeves tucked up above his elbows. The chief warder, with the empty pail in his hand, presented a really ludicrous picture of amazement. He seemed quite unable to realise the fact that he had thrown the contents over the chaplain. The inspector's surprise appeared to be no less on finding that, in his pugilistic ardour, he had torn off his coat and knocked the chaplain down. The doctor, supporting him in the rear, seemed to be taken a little aback. The governor, smoothing his hair with his hand, seemed to be in a hopeless mist. It was the chaplain, who rose from the floor with his handkerchief to his nose, who brought it home to them that the scene which had just transpired had not been the grotesque imaginings of some waking dream.

      "I call you to witness that Major Hardinge has struck me to the ground, and the chief warder has thrown on me a pail of water. What conduct may be expected from ignorant criminals when such is the behaviour of those who are in charge of them, must be left for others to judge."

      They looked at one another. Their feelings were momentarily too deep for words.

      "I

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