He
    Publisher.

   Mere slip of the pen. Meant a Cow Moose. Literary gent no sportsman.—

    Ed.

   All right.—

    Publisher.

   The hall-porter presently entered, bearing a huge parcel, which had just arrived by post. I opened it with all the excitement that an unexpected parcel can cause, and murmured, like Thackeray's sailor-man, 'Claret, perhaps, Mumm, I hope——'

   It was a Mummy Case, by Jingo!

   This was no common, or museum mummy case. The lid, with the gilded mask, was absent, and the under half or lower segment, painted all over with hieroglyphics of an unusual type, and

    green

   in colour—had obviously been used as a cradle for unconscious infancy. A baby had slept in the last sleeping-place of the dead! What an opportunity for the moralist! But I am not a collector of cradles.

   Who had sent it, and why?

   The question was settled by an envelope in a feminine hand, which, with a cylindrical packet, fell out of the Mummy Case, and contained a letter running as follows:—

    'Lady Betty's, Oxford.

    'My dear Sir,—You have not forgotten me and my friend Leonora O'Dolite?

    'The Mummy Case which encloses this document is the Cradle of her ancient Race.

    'We are, for reasons you will discover in the accompanying manuscript, about to start for Treasure Island, where, if anywhere in this earth, ready money is to be found on easy terms of personal insecurity.'

   'Oh, confound it,' I cried, 'here's another fiend of a woman sending me another manuscript! They are always at it! Wants to get it into a high-class magazine, as usual.' And my guess was correct.

   The letter went on:—


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