[My Strangest Case by Guy Boothby]@TWC D-Link bookMy Strangest Case CHAPTER III 18/36
Inside you will find a hundred-pound note, which should be sufficient to cover any preliminary expenses.
If you need more, perhaps you will be kind enough to communicate with me at once, and it shall be sent you.
A receipt can be forwarded to me at your leisure." I thanked him and placed the envelope upon the table.
In my own mind I felt that it would be an easy matter to guess whence the sum had come, and for a reason that I could not then analyze, and therefore am unable to describe, the thought irritated me. Having assured them that the amount would be quiet sufficient, in the event of nothing unforeseen happening, to last for some considerable time to come, I conducted them to the door, again repeating the promise that I would communicate with them so soon as I had anything to report. If I had only known then, that, at the very moment when they stepped in to the street, the man they wanted me to find for them, and whom they hated so desperately, was standing in a shop on the other side of the road, keeping an eye on my door, and evidently watching for their departure, how much trouble and vexation of spirit we should all have been saved.
But I did not know this until long afterwards, and then of course the information came too late to be of any service to us. Next morning I was early at the office, being desirous of winding up another little matter before I turned my attention to the new affair. One of my subordinates had just returned from the Continent whither I had sent him to keep an eye on a certain pseudo-French Marquis with whom I expected to have dealings at no distant date.
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