"
"Damn him," said Banneker quietly. "General paralysis?"
"Eck-xactly. Twelve, maybe fifteen years ago, a little recklessness. A
little overheating of the blood. Perhaps after a dinner like this. The
poison lies dormant; a snake asleep. Harms no one. Not himself; not
another. Until--something here"--he tapped the thick black curls over
the base of his brain. "All that ruddy strength, that lusty good-humor
passing on courageously--for he is a brave man, Eyre--to slow torture
and--and the end. Grim, eh?"
Banneker reached for a drink. "How long?" he asked.
"As for that, he is very strong. It might be slow. One prays not."
"At any rate, that little reptile, Ives, shan't have his profit of it."
Banneker rose and, disdaining even the diplomacy of an excuse, drew Ely
Ives aside.
"That bet of yours was a joke, Ives," he prescribed.
Ives studied him in silence, wishing that he had watched, through the
dinner, how much drink he took.
"A joke?" he asked coolly. "I don't understand you."
"Try," advised Banneker with earnestness. "I happen to have read that
luetic diagnosis, myself. A joke, Ives, so far as the two hundred goes."
"What do you expect me to do?" asked the other.
"Tear up the check, when it comes. Make what explanation your ingenuity
can devise.
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