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<h1>THE MAN WHO LOST HIMSELF</h1>
<p style="font-size:1em; margin-top:0em; margin-bottom:1em;">BY</p>
<p style="font-size:1.2em; margin-top:0em; margin-bottom:0em;">H. DE VERE STACPOOLE</p>
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<h2>THE MAN WHO LOST HIMSELF</h2>
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<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
<h3>JONES</h3></div>
<p>It was the first of June, and Victor Jones of Philadelphia was seated in
the lounge of the Savoy Hotel, London, defeated in his first really
great battle with the thing we call life.</p>
<p>Though of Philadelphia, Jones was not an American, nor had he anything
of the American accent. Australian born, he had started life in a bank
at Melbourne, gone to India for a trading house, started for himself,
failed, and become a rolling stone. Philadelphia was his last halt.</p>
<p>With no financial foundation, Victor and a Philadelphia gentleman had
competed for a contract to supply the British Government with Harveyised
steel struts, bolts, and girders; he had come over to London to press
the business; he had interviewed men in brass hats, slow moving men who
had turned him over to slower moving men. The Stringer Company, for so
he dubbed himself and Aaron Stringer, who had financed him for the
journey, had wasted three weeks on the business, and this morning their
tender had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="pg_10" id="pg_10">10</SPAN></span> been rejected. Hardmans’, the Pittsburg people, had got the
order.</p>
<p>It was a nasty blow. If he and Stringer could have secured the contract,
they could have carried it through all right, Stringer would have put
the thing in the hands of Laurenson of Philadelphia, and their
commission would have been enormous, a stroke of the British
Government’s pen would have filled their pockets; failing that they were
bankrupt. At least Jones was.</p>
<p>And justifiably you will say, considering that the whole business was a
gigantic piece of bluff—well, maybe, yet on behalf of this bluffer I
would put it forward that he had risked everything on one deal, and that
this was no little failure of his, but a disaster, naked and complete.</p>
<p>He had less than ten pounds in his pocket and he owed money at the
Savoy. You see he had reckoned on doing all his business in a week, and
if it failed—an idea which he scarcely entertained—on getting back
third class to the States. He had not reckoned on the terrible expenses
of London, or the three weeks delay.</p>
<p>Yesterday he had sent a cable to Stringer for funds, and had got as a
reply: “Am waiting news of contract.”</p>
<p>Stringer was that sort of man.</p>
<p>He was thinking about Stringer now, as he sat watching the guests of the
Savoy, Americans and English, well to do people with no money worries,
so he fancied. He was thinking about Stringer and his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="pg_11" id="pg_11">11</SPAN></span> own position,
with less than ten pounds in his pocket, an hotel bill unreceipted, and
three thousand miles of deep water between himself and Philadelphia.</p>
<p>Jones was twenty-four years of age. He looked thirty. A serious faced,
cadaverous individual, whom, given three guesses you would have judged
to be a Scotch free kirk minister in mufti; an actor in the melodramatic
line; a food crank. These being the three most serious occupations in
the world.</p>
<p>In reality, he had started life, as before said, in a bank, educated
himself in mathematics and higher commercial methods, by correspondence,
and, aiming to be a millionaire, had left the bank and struck out for
himself in the great tumbling ocean of business.</p>
<p>He had glimpsed the truth. Seen the fact that the art of life is not so
much to work oneself as to make other people work for one, to convert by
one’s own mental energy, the bodily energy of others into products or
actions. Had this Government contract come off, he would have, and to
his own profit, set a thousand hammers swinging, a dozen steel mills
rolling, twenty ships lading, hammers, mills and ships he had never
seen, never would see.</p>
<p>That is the magic of business, and when you behold roaring towns and
humming wharves, when you read of raging battles, you see and read of
the work of a comparatively small number of men, gentlemen who wear
frock coats, who have never handled a bale, or carried a gun, or steered
a ship with their own hands. Magicians!</p>
<p>He ordered a whisky and soda from a passing attendant,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="pg_12" id="pg_12">12</SPAN></span> to help him
think some more about Stringer and his own awful position, and was
taking the glass from the salver when a very well dressed man of his own
age and build who had entered by the passage leading up from the
American bar drew his attention.</p>
<p>This man’s face seemed quite familiar to him, so much so that he started
in his chair as though about to rise and greet him. The stranger, also,
seemed for a second under the same obsession, but only for a second; he
made a half pause and then passed on, becoming lost to sight beyond the
palm trees at the entrance. Jones leaned back in his chair.</p>
<p>“Now, <i>where</i> did I see that guy before?” asked he of himself. “Where on
earth have I met him? and he recognised me—where in the—where in
the—where in the—?”</p>
<p>His memory vaguely and vainly searching for the name to go with that
face was at fault. He finished his whisky and soda and rose, and then
strolled off not heeding much in what direction, till he reached the
book and newspaper stand where he paused to inspect the wares, turning
over the pages of the latest best seller without imbibing a word of the
text.</p>
<p>Then he found himself downstairs in the American bar, with a champagne
cocktail before him.</p>
<p>Jones was an abstemious man, as a rule, but he had a highly strung
nervous system and it had been worked up. The unaccustomed whiskey and
soda had taken him in its charge, comforting him and conducting his
steps, and now the bar keeper, a cheery person, combined with the
champagne cocktail, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="pg_13" id="pg_13">13</SPAN></span> cheeriest of drinks, so raised his spirits and
warmed his optimism, that, having finished his glass he pushed it across
the counter and said, “Give me another.”</p>
<p>At this moment a gentleman who had just entered the bar came up to the
counter, placed half a crown upon it and was served by the assistant bar
keeper with a glass of sherry.</p>
<p>Jones, turning, found himself face to face with the stranger whom he had
seen in the lounge, the stranger whose face he knew but whose name he
could not remember in the least.</p>
<p>Jones was a direct person, used to travel and the forming of chance
acquaintanceships. He did not hang back.</p>
<p>“’Scuse me,” said he. “I saw you in the lounge and I’m sure I’ve met you
somewhere or another, but I can’t place you.”</p>
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