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 in my room. Herr Dettzolter and his 'cello—a little Brahms—if the fog is not too much for you.”

Peter accepted. He loved the low-roofed attic, the clouds of tobacco, the dark corner where he sat and listened to Herr Gottfried's friends (German exiles like Herr Gottfried playing their beloved music). It was his only luxury.

Once two men whom Peter knew very well by sight came into the shop. They were, he believed, Russians—one of them was called Oblotzky—a tall, bearded fierce-looking creature who could speak no English.

Then suddenly, just as Peter was thinking of finding his way home to the boarding-house, Mr. Zanti appeared. He had been away for the last two months, but there he was, his huge body filling the shop, the fog circling his beard like a halo, beaming, calm, and unflustered as though he had just come from the next street.

“Damned fog,” he said, and then he went and put his hand on Peter's shoulder and looked down at him smiling.

“Well, 'ow goes the shop?” he said.

“Oh, well enough,” said Peter.

“What 'ave you been doing, boy? Finished the book?”

“Yes.”

“Ah, good. You'll be ze great man, Peter.” He looked down at him proudly as a father might look upon his son.

“Ze damnedest fog—” he began, then suddenly he stopped and Peter felt his hand on his shoulder tighten. “Ze damnedest—” Mr. Zanti said slowly.

Peter looked up into his face. He was listening. Herr Gottfried, standing in the middle of the shop, was also listening.

For a moment there was an intense breathless silence. The noise from the street seemed also, for the instant, to be hushed.

Very slowly, very quietly, Mr. Zanti went to the street door and opened it. A cloud of yellow fog blew into the shop.

“Ze damnedest fog ” repeated Mr, Zanti, still very slowly, as though he were thinking.

“Any one been?” he said at last to Herr Gottfried.