Page:Yellow Claw 1920.djvu/337

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LOGIC VS. INTUITION
329

“I am sincerely glad that you did,” answered the novelist, with one of his kindly, weary smiles.

“My dear,” said Denise Ryland, turning again to Helen Cumberly, “you say you met that…cross-eyed…being…Gianapolis, again?”

“Good Heavens!” cried Helen; “I thought I should never get rid of him; a most loathsome man!”

“My dear…child”—Denise squeezed her tightly by the arm, and peered into her face, intently—“cul-tivate…deliberately cul-tivate that man’s acquaintance!”

Helen stared at her friend as though she suspected the latter’s sanity.

“I am afraid I do not understand at all,” she said, breathlessly.

“I am positive that I do not,” declared Leroux, who was as much surprised as Helen. “In the first place I am not acquainted with this cross-eyed being.”

“You are…out of this!” cried Denise Ryland with a sweeping movement of the left hand; “entirely…out of it! This is no man’s…business.”…

“But my dear Denise!” exclaimed Helen.…

“I beseech you; I entreat you;…I order…you to cul-tivate…that…execrable…being.”

“Perhaps,” said Helen, with eyes widely opened,