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First Lord's private room, Sir Lyster was re-reading the astonishing note that had been sent in to him, which ran:

      "DEAR SIR, —

      "I am John Dene of Toronto, I have come three thousand miles to tell you how to stop the German U-boats. If I do not succeed, you can give the enclosed £50,000 to the Red Cross.

      "Yours faithfully,

      "JOHN DENE."

      Sir Lyster Grayne was a man for whom tradition had its uses; but he never allowed it to dictate to him. The letter that had just been brought in was, he decided, written by a man of strong individuality, and the amazing offer it contained, to forfeit fifty thousand pounds, impressed him. These were strange and strenuous days, when every suggestion or invention must be examined and deliberated upon. Sir Lyster Grayne prided himself upon his open-mindedness; incidentally he had a wholesome fear of questions being asked in the House.

      As the door opened he rose and held out his hand. Sir Lyster always assumed a democratic air as a matter of political expediency.

      "Mr. Dene," he murmured, as he motioned his visitor to a seat.

      "Pleased to meet you," said John Dene as he shook hands, and then took the seat indicated. "Sorry to blow in on you like this," he continued, "but my business is important, and I've come three thousand miles about it."

      "So I understand," said Sir Lyster quietly.

      John Dene looked at him, and in that look summed him up as he had previously summed up his secretary. "You wouldn't do for T'ronto," was his unuttered verdict. John Dene "placed" a man irrevocably by determining whether or no he would do for Toronto.

      "First of all," said Sir Lyster, "I think I will return this," handing to John Dene the envelope containing the cheque for fifty thousand pounds.

      "I thought it would tickle you some," he remarked grimly as he replaced the cheque in his pocket-book; "but I'll cash in if I don't make good," he added. "You know anything about submarines?" he demanded; directness was John Dene's outstanding characteristic.

      "Er – " began the First Lord.

      "You don't," announced John Dene with conviction.

      "I'm afraid – " began Sir Lyster.

      "Then you'd better send for someone who does," was the uncompromising rejoinder.

      Sir Lyster looked at his visitor in surprise, hesitated a moment, then pressing a button said, as Mr. Blair appeared:

      "Will you ask Admiral Heyworth to come here immediately?" Mr. Blair retired. "Admiral Heyworth," explained Sir Lyster, "is the Admiralty authority on submarines."

      John Dene nodded. There was a pause.

      "Wouldn't you like to ring up the Agent-General for Can'da and find out who I am?" suggested John Dene.

      "I don't think that is necessary, Mr. Dene," was the reply. "We will hear what you have to say first. Ha, Heyworth!" as the Admiral entered, "this is Mr. John Dene of Toronto, who has come to tell us something about a discovery of his."

      Admiral Heyworth, a little bald-headed man with beetling brows and a humorous mouth, took the hand held out to him.

      "Pleased to meet you," said John Dene, then without a pause he continued: "I want your promise that this is all between us three, that you won't go and breeze it about." He looked from Sir Lyster to Admiral Heyworth. Sir Lyster bowed, Admiral Heyworth said, "Certainly."

      "Now," said John Dene, turning to the Admiral, "what's the greatest difficulty you're up against in submarine warfare?"

      "Well," began Admiral Heyworth, "there are several. For instance – "

      "There's only one that matters," broke in John Dene; "your boats are blind when submerged beyond the depth of their periscopes. That so?"

      The Admiral nodded.

      "Well," continued John Dene, "I want you to understand I'm not asking a red cent from anybody, and I won't accept one. What I'm going to tell you about has already cost me well over a million dollars, and if you look at me you'll see I'm not the man to put a million dollars into patent fly-catchers, or boots guaranteed to button themselves."

      Sir Lyster and the Admiral exchanged puzzled glances, but said nothing.

      "Suppose the Germans were able to sink a ship without even showing their periscopes?" John Dene looked directly at the Admiral.

      "It would place us in a very precarious position," was the grave reply.

      "Oh, shucks!" cried John Dene in disgust. "It would queer the whole outfit. You soldiers and sailors can never see beyond your own particular backyards. It would mighty soon finish the war." He almost shouted the words in the emphasis he gave them. "It would mean that troops couldn't be brought from America; it would mean that supplies couldn't be brought over here. It would mean good-bye to the whole sunflower-patch. Do you get me?" He looked from Sir Lyster to the Admiral.

      "I think," said Sir Lyster, "that perhaps you exaggerate a lit – "

      "I don't," said John Dene. "I know what I'm talking about. Now, why is the submarine blind? Because," he answered his own question, "no one has ever overcome the difficulty of the density of water. I have."

      Admiral Heyworth started visibly, and Sir Lyster bent forward eagerly.

      "You have!" cried Admiral Heyworth.

      "Sure," was the self-complacent reply. "I've got a boat fitted with an apparatus that'll sink any ship that comes along, and she needn't show her periscope to do it either. What's more, she can see under water. If I don't deliver the goods" – John Dene rummaged in his pocket once more and produced the envelope containing the cheque – "here's fifty thousand pounds you can give to the Red Cross."

      Sir Lyster and Admiral Heyworth gazed at each other wordless. John Dene sat back in his chair and chewed the end of his cigar. Sir Lyster fumbled for his eye-glass, and when he had found it, stuck it in his eye and gazed at John Dene as if he had been some marvellous being from another world. The Admiral said nothing and did nothing. He was visualising the possibilities arising out of such a discovery.

      It was John Dene who broke in upon their thoughts.

      "The Huns have got it coming," he remarked grimly.

      "But – " began Admiral Heyworth.

      "Listen," said John Dene. "I'm an electrical engineer. I'm worth more millions than you've got toes. I saw that under water the submarine is only a blind fish with a sting in its tail. Give it eyes and it becomes a real factor —under water." He paused, revolving his cigar in his mouth. His listeners nodded eagerly.

      "Well," he continued, "I set to work to give her eyes. On the St. Lawrence River, just below Quebec, I've got a submarine that can see. Her search-lights – "

      "But how have you done it?" broke in the Admiral.

      "That," remarked John Dene drily, "is my funeral."

      "We must put this before the Inventions Board," said Sir Lyster. "Let me see, this is Friday. Can you be here on Tuesday, Mr. Dene?"

      "No!"

      Sir Lyster started at the decision in John Dene's tone.

      "Would Wednesday – "

      "Look here," broke in John Dene, "I come from T'ronto, and in Can'da when we've got a good thing we freeze on to it. You've got to decide this thing within twenty-four hours, yes or no. Unless I cable to my agent in Washin'ton by noon to-morrow, he'll make the same offer I've made you to the States, and they'll be that eager to say 'Yep,' that they'll swallow their gum."

      "But, Mr. Dene – " began Sir Lyster.

      "I've been in this country fourteen hours," proceeded John Dene calmly, "and I can see that you all want gingering-up. Why the hell can't you decide on a thing at once, when you've got everything before you? If a man offers you a pedigree-pup for nothing, and you want a pedigree-pup, wouldn't you just hold out your hand?"

      John Dene looked from one to the other.

      "But this is not exactly a matter of a pedigree-pup," suggested

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