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Hichens, Robert Smythe, 1864-1950

"The Prophet of Berkeley Square"

"
"No, no! I mean about the two promises?"
"What about 'em?"
"Which would his sense of honour compel him to keep?"
"I shouldn't think such a damned fool'd got a sense of honour."
The Prophet winced, but he stuck with feverish obstinacy to his point.
"Yes, Bob, he had."
"I don't believe it, Hen, 'pon my word I don't. You'll always find that
damned f--"
"Bob, I must beg you to take it from me. He had. Now which promise
should he keep?"
"Who'd he made 'em to?"
"Who?" said the Prophet, wavering.
"Yes."
"One to--to a very near and dear relative, the other to--well, Bob to
two comparative strangers."
"What sort of strangers."
"The sort of strangers who--who live beside a river, and who--who mix
principally with--well, in fact, with architects and their wives."
"Rum sort of strangers?"
"They are decidedly."
"Oh, then, you know 'em?"
"That's not the point," exclaimed the Prophet, hastily. "The point is
which promise is to be kept."
"I should say the one made to the relative. Wait a bit, though! Yes, I
should say that."
The Prophet breathed a sigh of relief. But some dreadful sense of
honesty within him compelled him to add,--
"I forgot to say that he'd pledged his honour to the architects--that
is, to the strangers who lived beside a river.


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