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Enoch Soames: a memory of the eighteen-nineties by Sir Max Beerbohm
page 37 of 42 (88%)
that "inevitable ending" filled the doorway.

I managed to turn in my chair and to say, not without a semblance
of lightness, "Aha, come in!" Dread was indeed rather blunted in me by
his looking so absurdly like a villain in a melodrama. The sheen of his
tilted hat and of his shirt-front, the repeated twists he was giving to his
mustache, and most of all the magnificence of his sneer, gave token that
he was there only to be foiled.

He was at our table in a stride. "I am sorry," he sneered
witheringly, "to break up your pleasant party, but--"

"You don't; you complete it," I assured him. "Mr. Soames and I
want to have a little talk with you. Won't you sit? Mr. Soames got
nothing, frankly nothing, by his journey this afternoon. We don't wish to
say that the whole thing was a swindle, a common swindle. On the
contrary, we believe you meant well. But of course the bargain, such as
it was, is off."

The devil gave no verbal answer. He merely looked at Soames and
pointed with rigid forefinger to the door. Soames was wretchedly rising
from his chair when, with a desperate, quick gesture, I swept together
two dinner-knives that were on the table, and laid their blades across
each other. The devil stepped sharp back against the table behind him,
averting his face and shuddering.

"You are not superstitious!" he hissed.

"Not at all," I smiled.

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