Bones in London - Page 37/130

"Did I?" said Bones. "Well, my impression was that I advised you to

get into it as quickly as you possibly could. Have you my letter, dear

old thing?"

"I haven't," said Hamilton.

"Ah," said Bones triumphantly, "there you are! You jolly old rascal,

you are accusing me of putting you off----"

"Will you wait, you talkative devil?" said Hamilton. "I pointed out to

you that the prospects were very alluring. The Company was floated

with a small capital----"

Again Bones interrupted, and this time by rising and walking solemnly

round the table to shake hands with him.

"Hamilton, dear old skipper," he pleaded. "I was a very busy man at

that time. I admit I made a mistake, and possibly diddled you out of a

fortune. But my intention was to write to you and tell you to get into

it, and how I ever came to tell you not to get into it--well, my poor

old speculator, I haven't the slightest idea!"

"The Company----" began Hamilton.

"I know, I know," said Bones, shaking his head sadly and fixing his

monocle--a proceeding rendered all the more difficult by the fact that

his hand never quite overtook his face. "It was an error on my part,

dear old thing. I know the Company well. Makes a huge profit! You

can see the car all over the town. I think the jolly old Partridge----"

"Plover," said Hamilton.

"Plover, I mean. They've got another kind of car called the

Partridge," explained Bones. "Why, it's one of the best in the market.

I thought of buying one myself. And to think that I put you off that

Company! Tut, tut! Anyway, dear old man," he said, brightening up,

"most of the good fish is in the sea, and it only goes bad when it

comes out of the sea. Have you ever noticed that, my dear old

naturalist?"

"Wait a moment. Will you be quiet?" said the weary Hamilton. "I'm

trying to tell you my experiences. I put the money--four thousand

pounds--into this infernal Company.

"Eh?"

"I put the money into the Company, I tell you, against your advice.

The Company is more or less a swindle."

Bones sat down slowly in his chair and assumed his most solemn and

business-like face.

"Of course, it keeps within the law, but it's a swindle, none the less.

They've got a wretched broken-down factory somewhere in the North, and

the only Plover car that's ever been built was made by a Scottish

contractor at a cost of about twice the amount which the Company people

said that they would charge for it."

"What did I say?" said Bones quietly. "Poor old soul, I do not give

advice without considering matters, especially to my dearest friend. A

company like this is obviously a swindle. You can tell by the

appearance of the cars----"