The False Faces - Further Adventures from the History of the Lone Wolf by Louis Joseph Vance
page 74 of 346 (21%)
page 74 of 346 (21%)
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it subsequently? If so, with what end in view?
Why had this Miss Cecelia Brooke, surprising the thug at his work, joined battle with him so bravely and so madly without calling for help? What hidden motive excused this singular hesitation to summon the surgeon, this reluctance to inform the officers of the ship? What duplicity was that which the girl had paraded concerning her procrastination when Lanyard had surprised her on her knees out there on the landing? If this were what Lanyard had first inclined to think it, Secret Service intrigue, surely it was weirdly intricate when an English girl hesitated to safeguard an Englishman by taking into her confidence the officers of a British ship, British manned! Nevertheless, and however much he might wonder and doubt, Lanyard would never question her. Never of his own volition would he probe more deeply into this mystery, take one farther step into the intricacies of its maze. So, in silence, he waited, passively courteous, at her further service if she had need of him, content if she had not, tolerant of her tacit prayer for time in which to think a way out of her difficulties. After some few moments he grew uncomfortably aware that he had become the object of a speculative regard not at all unfavourable. He indulged in a mental gesture of resignation. |
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