[The Treasure of Heaven by Marie Corelli]@TWC D-Link bookThe Treasure of Heaven CHAPTER VII 5/37
"Mind Feathery's toes!--if you tread on his corns there'll be the devil to pay! Hullo, Matt Peke! How are you ?" Matt rose and shook hands. "All the better for seein' ye again, Tom," he answered, "Wheer d'ye hail from this very present minit ?" "From the caves of Cornwall!" laughed the man.
"From picking up drift on the shore and tracking seals to their lair in the hollows of the rocks!" He laughed again, and his great eyes flashed wildly.
"All sport, Matt! I live like a gentleman born, keeping or killing at my pleasure!" Here "Feathery" Joltram looked up and dumbly pointed with the stem of his pipe to a chair left vacant near the middle of the table.
Tom o' the Gleam, by which name he seemed to be known to every one present, sat down, and in response to the calls of the company, a wiry pot-boy in shirt-sleeves made his appearance with several fresh tankards of ale, it now being past the hour for the attendance of that coy handmaiden of the "Trusty Man," Miss Prue. "Any fresh tales to tell, Tom ?" inquired Matt Peke then--"Any more harum-scarum pranks o' yours on the road ?" Tom drank off a mug of ale before replying, and took a comprehensive glance around the room. "You have a stranger here," he said suddenly, in his deep, thrilling voice, "One who is not of our breed,--one who is unfamiliar with our ways.
Friend or foe ?" "Friend!" declared Peke emphatically, while Bill Bush and one or two of the men exchanged significant looks and nudged each other.
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