Page:Hornung - Raffles the Further Adventures (Scribner, 1906).djvu/212

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Raffles

mistaken for a hundred other young fellows at large in London. Incredible as it may appear to the moralists, I had sustained no external hall-mark by my term of imprisonment, and I am vain enough to believe that the evil which I did had not a separate existence in my face. This afternoon, indeed, I was struck by the purity of my fresh complexion, and rather depressed by the general innocence of the visage which peered into mine from the little mirror. My straw-colored moustache, grown in the flat after a protracted holiday, again preserved the most disappointing dimensions, and was still invisible in certain lights without wax. So far from discerning the desperate criminal who has "done time" once, and deserved it over and over again, the superior but superficial observer might have imagined that he detected a certain element of folly in my face.

At all events it was not the face to shut the doors of a first-class hotel against me, without accidental evidence of a more explicit kind, and it was with no little satisfaction that I directed the man to drive to the Star and Garter. I also told him to go through Richmond Park, though he warned me that It would add considerably to the distance and his fare. It was autumn, and it struck me that the tints would be fine. And I had learnt from

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