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Chapter 22 - Page 2 of 11

A Wedding

"She has acted badly, I admit," said the young man. "All the same, I
think she is a better woman than you may think, Professor."

"Think! think! think!" shouted the fiery little man, getting up once
more to trot up and down like an infuriated poodle. "I think she is a
bad woman, a wicked woman. To deceive me into thinking her rich and--"

"But surely, Professor, you wished to marry her also for love?"

"Nothing of the sort, sir: nothing of the sort. I leave love and
such-like trash to those like yourself and Hope, who have nothing else
to think about."

"But a marriage without love--"

"Pooh! pooh! pooh! Don't argue with me, Random. Love is all moonshine.
I did not love my first wife--Lucy's mother--and yet we were very happy.
Had I made Mrs. Jasher my second, we should have got on excellently,
provided the money was forthcoming for my Egyptian expedition. What am
I to do now, I ask you, Random? Even the thousand pounds you pay for the
mummy goes back to that infernal Hope because of Lucy's silly ideas.
I have nothing--absolutely nothing, and that tomb is amongst those
Ethiopian hills, I swear, waiting to be opened. Oh, what a chance I have
missed!--what a chance! But I shall see Mrs. Jasher myself. She knows
about this murder."

"She declares that she does not."

"Don't tell me! don't tell me!" vociferated the Professor. "She would
not have written that letter had she known nothing."

Chapter 22 - Page 2 of 11