Page:Roy Norton--The unknown Mr Kent.djvu/259

 Provarsk got up and began to move abont the room, much to Kent's disturbance.

"Sit down," he said. "I don't like to talk business to a man who is running a race with himself." Provarsk sat down and came straight to the point.

"I can get your transfer of that mining concession whether you give it or not," he said, meaningly.

"In the same way you got my signatures to letters I never wrote, eh?"

"Exactly," admitted Provarsk, with a grin. "But it might save some further trouble with your employer, John Rhodes, if I actually got the transfer from you."

"I believe you are right about that," Kent agreed. "But you haven't yet explained where I come in. I'm not fool enough to believe you are doing this for the good of the state, you know."

"Of course I'm not!" Provarsk declared, contemptuously. "I'm doing it for my own good and no one's else."

"How do you propose to handle the king?" demanded Kent.

"He'll have to do what I want him to, for the simplest of reasons, that I shall have the people behind me. He'll get nothing! He can be king. That's enough for him."

"Yes?" said Kent, invitingly. "Now about me, [255]