[Cleek: the Man of the Forty Faces by Thomas W. Hanshew]@TWC D-Link book
Cleek: the Man of the Forty Faces

CHAPTER III
10/33

Well, we'll have a half-hour's talk and then I'll find a temporary bed for you for the night, and to-morrow we'll take a pull on the river at Richmond and see what we shall see." The half-hour, however, developed into a full one; for it was after two o'clock when the talk was finished and a bed improvised for the boy; but Cleek, saying good night to him at last and going to his own bedroom, felt that it was a long, long way from being time wasted.
What Dollops thought is, perhaps, best told by the fact that he burst out crying when Cleek came in in the morning to ask how he had slept.
"Slept, Gov'nor!" he said.

"Why, bless your 'eart, sir, I couldn't a slept better on a bed of roses, nor 'ad 'arf such comfort.

Feel like I needed someone to lend me a biff on the coco, sir, to make sure as I aren't a dreamin'-- it's so wot a cove fancies 'Eaven to be like, sir." And afterward, when the day was older, and they had gone to Richmond, and Cleek--in his boating flannels--was pulling him up the shining river and talking to him again as he had talked last night, he felt that it was even more like Heaven than ever.
It was after four--long after--when they finally separated and Cleek, leaving the boy in charge of the boat, stepped ashore in the neighbourhood of the inn of the Three Jolly Fishermen and went to keep his appointment with Narkom.
He found him enjoying tea at a little round table in the niche of a big bay window in the small private parlour which lay immediately behind the bar-room.
"My dear chap, do forgive me for not waiting," said the superintendent contritely, as Cleek came in, looking like a college-bred athlete in his boating-flannels and his brim-tilted panama.

"But the fact is you are a little later than I anticipated; and I was simply famishing." "Share the blame of my lateness with me, Mr.Narkom," said Cleek as he tossed aside his hat and threw the fag-end of his cigarette through the open window.

"You merely said 'tea-time,' not any particular hour; and I improved the opportunity to take another spin up the river and to talk like a Dutch uncle to a certain young man whom I shall introduce to your notice in due time.


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