Page:The Ball and the Cross.djvu/320
sneering arrogance with which it was staring at all the stones, all the flowers, but especially at the solitary man.
“What do you want?” shouted Turnbull.
“I want you, Jimmy,” said the eccentric man on the wall, and with the very word he had let himself down with a leap on to the centre of the lawn, where he bounded once literally like an India-rubber ball and then stood grinning with his legs astride. The only three facts that Turnbull could now add to his inventory were that the man had an ugly-looking knife swinging at his trousers belt, that his brown feet were as bare as his bronzed trunk and arms, and that his eyes had a singular bleak brilliancy which was of no particular colour.
“Excuse my not being in evening dress,” said the new-comer with an urbane smile. “We scientific men, you know— I have to work my own engines— Electrical engineer—very hot work.”
“Look here,” said Turnbull, sturdily clenching his fists in his trousers pockets, “I am bound to expect lunatics inside these four walls; but I do bar their coming from outside, bang out of the sunset clouds.”