LINDBERG
“Something is burning,” Hammersley heard him mutter.
“My pipe,” he explained carefully. “It is a vile tobacco. But it will go out of the crack at the window.”
“Will you not try mine, Herr Hammersley? Perhaps it is better.”
“No, thanks. Nothing much matters to a dead man.”
His guardian settled back in his chair, and Hammersley repeated his maneuver more daringly, his own pipe seething like a furnace.
“You are a furious smoker, Herr Hammersley,” said Senf again.
“It is the way one smokes, mein Junger, when one smokes for the last time,” he replied.
But the fellow got up, sniffing and walking around the room.
“It is a most curious tobacco,” he muttered.
Hammersley’s wrists pained him where his bonds had cut, but he kept his gaze upon the page of the book, and Senf sat in his chair again. A strong pull of his arms and Hammersley felt the tension relax. His bonds came looser and after a few more efforts his wrists were free. His heart was jumping and he feared a stray glance of the watcher might see the throbbing of the blood at his temples, but he clasped his hands behind him and waited, slipping the sundered rope beneath a fold of the blanket.
Two—three minutes passed and Senf did not move. The untying of his feet might prove a difficult matter, but he made the venture, working slowly and patiently, his gaze on Senf’s head. Then, as the knot yielded a little to his prying fingers, his gaze quickly concen-
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