right hand burned where male skin had touched it an instant before.
“Mr. Kirk?” inquired the stranger mildly.
“Mr. Kirk is out,” said Osborne with some difficulty. “What can I—”
“I believe I’ll go now,” said Miss Diversey in a rather cracked tone.
“Oh, please!” said the visitor. “I assure you I can wait. Please don’t let me interrupt—” He eyed her uniform brightly.
“I was going anyway,” murmured Miss Diversey; whereupon she fled, holding her cheek. The door banged shut.
Osborne sighed and lowered his head. “Well … What can I do for you?”
“To tell you the truth,” said the stranger, removing his hat and revealing a pinkish skull fringed with gray hair, “I was really looking for a Mr. Kirk, Mr. Donald Kirk. I want to see him very badly.”
“I’m Mr. Kirk’s assistant, James Osborne. What did you want to see Mr. Kirk about?”
The stranger hesitated.
“Does your business relate to publishing?”
He puckered his lips a little stubbornly. “My business is confidential, you see, Mr. Osborne.”
Osborne’s eyes grew steely. “I assure you I’m intrusted with all of Mr. Kirk’s confidential business. It won’t be violating any confidence—”
The stout man’s colorless eyes fixed themselves upon the album of postage stamps on Osborne’s desk. He said suddenly: “What’s that, stamps?”
“Yes. Won’t you please—”
The stout man shook his head. “No, I’ll wait. Do you expect Mr. Kirk soon?”
“I can’t say exactly. He should be back in a short time.”
“Thank you, thank you. If I may—” He started toward one of the armchairs.
“If you’ll wait in here, please,” said Osborne. He went to the second of the two doors, opening into the office, and thrust it open, disclosing a room now dark in the closing dusk. He switched on a light above a bookcase just inside to the right, revealing the room from which Miss Diversey had filched the tangerine.
“Make yourself comfortable,” said Osborne to the stout little man. “There are cigarettes and cigars in that humidor on the table; candy, magazines, fruit. I’ll let you know the moment Mr. Kirk comes in.”
“Thank you,” murmured the stranger. “Very kind of you, I’m sure. This is pleasant,” and he sat down, still bundled up to the neck, in a chair near the table. “Quite like a club,” he said, nodding in a pleased way. “ Very nice. And all those books, too.” Three walls of the room were covered with open bookshelves, interrupted only by the doors on opposite walls and an artificial fireplace on the third, above which hung two crossed African spears behind a battered Impi war-shield. The fourth wall, broken up by two windows, held the reading table. Deep chairs stood before the bookcases like sentinels.
“Yes, isn’t it,” said Osborne in a dry voice, and he went back to the office, shutting the door behind him just as the stout little man sighed comfortably and reached for a magazine.
Osborne picked up the telephone on his employer’s desk and called the Kirk suite. “Hello! Hubbell.” He spoke irritably. “Mr. Kirk in?”
Hubbell’s whining English voice said: “No, sir.”
“When do you expect him back? There’s some one waiting for him here.”
“Well, sir, Mr. Kirk just ’phoned saying that he’d be late for the dinner-party and to have his clothes laid out.” Hubbell’s voice grew shrill. “That’s Mr. Kirk all over! Always doing the unexpected, if I may say so, sir. Now here he tells me he’ll be in at a quarter to seven and to set a place for ‘an unexpected guest,’ a Mr. King or Queen or somebody, and—”
“Well, set it, for heaven’s sake,” said Osborne, and hung up. He sat down, his eyes far away.
At twenty-five minutes past six the office-door opened and Glenn Macgowan hurried in. He was in dinner clothes, and he carried a hat and topcoat. He was smoking a slender cigar rather furiously and his crystal eyes were troubled.
“Still