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"Thank you, sir--it's a great relief," he sighed.
"Eh?"
"I mean, sir, I'm glad I ain't the only one who thought he saw that other. It's _some_ comfort."
Jenkins spoke gloomily.
"_Thought_ you saw?" I repeated.
But Jenkins only shook his head as he gathered up the remains of the spider and consigned them to a cuspidor.
"You mean--say, what the devil _do_ you mean?" I asked sharply.
Jenkins straightened with air respectful but solemn.
"Mr. Lightnut, sir," he began gravely, "there's a party lectures on the street corner every night at nine on the fearful consequences of the drink habit, and pa.s.ses around blank pledges to be signed. I'm going to get one first chance; and if you will accept it, sir--meaning no offense--I would be proud to get you one, too."
I stared at him aghast.
"Oh, I say, now," I murmured faintly, "you don't think it was that, do you?"
Jenkins' face was eloquent enough.
"I'm through, sir," he said sadly. "When it comes to seeing things like that--" He lifted his eyes. "No more for me, sir; my belief is, it's a warning--yes, sir, that's what, a warning."
I collapsed into a chair.
"By Jove!" I gasped uneasily.
I was awfully put out--annoyed, you know. It was the first time anything of the kind had ever happened to me. If I started in with tarantulas, what would I be seeing next?
Jenkins gulped nervously. "Why, sir," he whispered, leaning toward me, "these pajamas--you see for yourself how red they are--they actually seemed to lose color when that bug was in 'em."
"Oh, pshaw!" I said contemptuously. "I saw that, too." And I explained to him about the shadow of the table. He nodded.
"But that only makes it worse, sir," he commented dubiously. "It shows the 'mental condition,' as they say. You know, we were talking about the black art--remember, sir?"
I did remember; and also I remembered then we saw the spider. I recalled that spiders and tarantulas belonged to the same family. Of course Jenkins' suspicions. .h.i.t the nail--it must be that--there was no getting around it--but still--
"By Jove, Jenkins!" I said, trying to go a feeble smile. "I never felt so fit for a corking stiff highball in my life--never!"
I took a screw on my gla.s.s and studied him curiously.
"And I say, you know--better take one yourself!" I added.
CHAPTER III
I DON THE PAJAMAS
"By Jove, Jenkins, they fit like a dream!"
I twisted before the gla.s.s and surveyed the pajamas with much satisfaction. They looked jolly right from every point. Moreover, with all their easy looseness, there was not an inch too much. They had a comfortable, personal feel.
"Lucky thing they weren't made originally for some whale like Jack Billings--eh, Jenkins?" I commented musingly.
Behind his hand Jenkins indulged in what is vulgarly known as a snicker.
"Mr. Billings, sir, he couldn't get one shoulder in 'em, much less a--h'm--leg," he chuckled. "They'd be in ribbons, sir!"
I yawned sleepily, and Jenkins instantly sobered to attention. He held his finger over the light switch as I punched a pillow and rolled over on the mattress.
"All right," I said; "push the jolly thing out." And with a click darkness fell about me.
"Good night, sir," came Jenkins' voice softly.
"Night," I murmured faintly, and I was off.
Sometime, hours later, I awoke, and with a devilish yearning for a smoke. It often takes me that way in the night.
I climbed out in the blackness and found my way into the other room. I remembered exactly where I had dropped my cigarette case when we were fooling with the pajamas by the table, and I found it without difficulty.
In the act of stooping for it, my hand clutched the edge of the table and I felt a spot yield under the pressure of my thumb. It was the b.u.t.ton controlling the bell to Jenkins' room.
"Lucky thing he sleeps like a jolly porpoise," I reflected.
I pushed a wicker arm-chair into the moonlight and breeze by a window, and pulling a flame to a cigarette, leaned back, feeling jolly comfy.
For the breeze was ripping and delicious, and the delicate silk of the pajamas flowed in little wavelets all the way from my heels to my neck.
And, thinking of the pajamas, I tried to fix my mind on it that I must tell Jenkins to have me write that chap, Mastermann, and send him another lot of those devilish good cigars he liked. I tried to recall what Jenkins had said was the name of the brand--something deuced clever, I remembered that much.
I was just about dropping off, when I heard some one hurrying along the private hall leading from the back. Jenkins himself popped into the room.
"Did you ring, sir?" he inquired, and advanced quickly.
And then, before I could think about it to reply, he halted suddenly, almost pitching forward. Then, with a kind of wheezy howl, he sprang to the wall. Next instant, I was blinking under the dazzling electrolier.
"Here, I say! Shut off that light!" I remonstrated, half blinded.
I heard a swift rush across the rugs, and the next thing I knew I was roughly jerked from out my chair; strong fingers clutched my throat, and I found myself glaring into a frightened but resolute face.
"Jen-Jenkins!" I tried to gasp, but only a gurgle came.
I was so taken unawares, I knew it must be some dashed dream. Perhaps another minute, and I would wake up. But he gripped me tighter and shook me like a rag.