[The Ivory Child by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link book
The Ivory Child

CHAPTER VIII
10/18

For please understand that I have not paid off any shares still standing in his name or in those of his friends." Here I may add that nothing ever came of this action, for the lawyers found themselves unable to serve any writ upon that elusive person, Mr.Jacob, who by then had probably adopted the name of some other patriarch.
"Please put it all down as a rich man's whim," he concluded.
"I can't call that a whim which has returned L1,500 odd to my pocket that I had lost upon a gamble, Lord Ragnall." "Do you remember, Quatermain, how you won L250 upon a gamble at my place and what you did with it, which sum probably represented to you twenty or fifty times what it would to me?
Also if that argument does not appeal to you, may I remark that I do not expect you to give me your services as a professional hunter and guide for nothing." "Ah!" I answered, fixing on this point and ignoring the rest, "now we come to business.

If I may look upon this amount as salary, a very handsome salary by the way, paid in advance, you taking the risks of my dying or becoming incapacitated before it is earned, I will say no more of the matter.

If not I must refuse to accept what is an unearned gift." "I confess, Quatermain, that I did not regard it in that light, though I might have been willing to call it a retaining fee.

However, do not let us wrangle about money any more.

We can always settle our accounts when the bill is added up, if ever we reach so far.


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