...
The hand whose grasp he had broken shifted to his shoulder, closing
fingers like steel hooks upon it.
"If you need a row," the man advised him quietly, "try that again. If
you've got good sense--come along quiet'."
"Where? What for? What right have you--?" P. Sybarite demanded in one
raging breath.
"I'm the house detective here," the other answered, holding his eyes
with an inexorable glare. And the muscles of his heavy jaw tightened
even as he tightened his grasp upon the little man's shoulder. "And if
it's all the same to you, we're going to have a quiet little talk in
the office," he added with a jerk of his head.
A sidelong glance discovered the fact that Marian's car had
disappeared. Doubtless she had gone in ignorance of this outrage,
perhaps thinking him accosted by a chance acquaintance. At all events,
she was gone, and there was now nothing to be gained from an attempt
to bluster the detective down, but deeper shame and the scorn of all
beholders.
"What do you want?" the little man asked in a more pacific tone.
"We can talk better inside, unless"--the detective grinned
sardonically--"you want to get out hand-bills about this matter."
"Let me go, then," said P. Sybarite. "I'll follow you."
"You've got a better guess than that: you'll go ahead of me," retorted
the other. "And while you're doing it, remember that there's a cop at
the Fifth Avenue door, and I've got a handy little emergency ration in
my pocket--with my hand on the butt of it.
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