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The Ne'er-Do-Well by Rex Ellingwood Beach
page 37 of 526 (07%)
For some moments he talked earnestly to the man behind the bar;
but his back was to Higgins, Anthony was occupied, and Ringold
still slumbered; hence no one observed the transfer of another of
those yellow bills of which he seemed to have an unlimited store.

Strangely enough, Mr. Jefferson Locke's plan worked without a
hitch. Within ten minutes after Kirk Anthony had taken the drink
handed him he declared himself sleepy, and rose from the piano,
only to seek a chair, into which he flung himself heavily.

"It's all right," Locke told his drunken companion. "I've got a
taxi waiting. We'll leave Ringold where he is."

Twenty-four hours later Adelbert Higgins undertook to recall what
had happened to him after he left Muller's place on East
Fourteenth Street, but his memory was tricky. He recollected a
vaguely humorous discussion of some sort with a stranger, the
details of which were almost entirely missing. He remembered that
dawn had broken when he came out of the saloon, but beyond that he
could not go with any degree of certainty. There was a hazy memory
of an interminable ride in a closed vehicle of some sort, a dizzy
panorama of moving buildings, bleak, wind-swept trees, frosty
meadows, and land-locked lakes backed by what were either distant
mountain ranges or apartment houses. This last, however, was all
very blurred and indistinct.

As to who was with him on the ride, or what took place thereafter,
he had no memory and no opportunity of learning, owing to certain
unexpected and alarming occurrences which made it imperative for
him to terminate his connection with his college, as big Marty
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