“I have to keep a look-out,” said the man with the motionless face. He was a quiet, well-featured fellow, rather sallow; his dark clothes had nothing distinctive about them, except that his black necktie was worn rather high, like a stock, and secured by a gold pin with some grotesque head to it. Nor was there anything notable in the face, except something that was probably a mere nervous trick—a habit of opening one eye more narrowly than the other, giving the impression that the other was larger, or was, perhaps, artificial. The silence that ensued was broken by their host saying quietly: “Whereabouts did you meet the one man on your march?” “Curiously enough,” answered the priest, “close by here—just by that bandstand.” Flambeau, who had sat on the long iron seat to finish his sherry