The Green Eyes of Bâst by Sax Rohmer
page 14 of 313 (04%)
page 14 of 313 (04%)
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"Not since a little before midnight, sir." "Ah!" said I, "and have you been in the garden this morning, Coates?" "Yes, sir," he replied, "for raspberries for breakfast, sir." "But not on this side of the cottage?" "Not on this side." "Then will you step out, Coates, keeping carefully to the paths, and proceed as far as the tool-shed? Particularly note if the beds have been disturbed between the hedge and the path, but don't make any marks yourself. You are looking for _spoor_, you understand?" "Spoor? Very good, sir. Of big game?" "Of big game, yes, Coates." Unmoved by the strangeness of his instructions, Coates, an object-lesson for those who decry the excellence of British Army disciplinary methods, departed. It was with not a little curiosity and interest that I awaited his report. As I sat sipping my tea I could hear his regular tread as he passed along the garden path outside the window. Then it ceased and was followed by a vague muttering. He had found something. All traces of the storm had disappeared and there was every indication of a renewal of the heat-wave; but I knew that the wet soil would have |
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