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He paused at a tent, putting down his bags and wiping the sweat from his forehead. Inside the open flaps a man was sitting disconsolately on the ground, putting his belongings into a small steamer trunk. His bedroll was already strapped shut and was leaning against the main tent pole. Barney cleared his throat; the man looked up.

“I already sold everything I’m goin’ to sell,” the man said. “All except the tent.” He saw Barney’s bags and brightened. “You want to buy a tent?”

“I don’t want to buy nothin’. I’m lookin’ for me brother, Harry Isaacs.” He remembered the suggestion at the bar. “The juggler, y’know. The comic that sings down at the Paris Hotel.”

“Oh, him? Three tents down. Almost the last one. Got a tear in one side, he almost lost it in the last sandstorm. Never got around to fixin’ it.” The man started to pack the trunk again, and then paused. “Say, like I said, I ain’t sold the tent, yet. Maybe he’d be interested; his ain’t no good. You could ask him.”

“I’ll do that,” Barney said, and backed away. It had to be somebody else, some other bloke who sang comic songs. But it sure sounded like Harry! He refused to even consider the thought that had come to him, but hurried down the line, almost dragging his bags. The third tent down had a tear in it; the flap was closed but Barney pushed his way inside. A man was sleeping on the animal skin that served both as rug and bed; a dirty pillow had been pulled over his head to keep out the light. Barney put his bags down, squatted down, and pulled the pillow away. The sleeping man grunted a few times and merely snored a bit louder. Barney shook the man.

“Harry!” He shook harder, looking around the filthy tent as he did so. What a mess! Their mother would have had a fit if she could have seen how her son Harry was living! They lived in poverty back in Petticoat Lane, but the house was always clean, and so were their clothes, even if they were bought as rags and fixed over. “Harry! Wake up!”

His brother rolled over, wondering at the unexpected disturbance, yawning, and then reluctantly opened his eyes. The face beneath the wide-brimmed leather hat was in shadow; Harry frowned and then suddenly smiled, a happy grin, as he came awake and recognized his brother. “Barney! When did you get here? Pa wrote you’d raised the fare to Cape Town, but I figured you’d changed your mind or you would have been here weeks ago!”

“Walked alongside an ox wagon,” Barney said succinctly, and studied his brother. Harry looked as if he hadn’t shaved in days if not in weeks; he looked a mess and smelled it. Barney shook his head. “You look a proper disaster, you do! Ma would die to see you. I thought you’d hit it big up here. That’s what your letter said.”

“My letter. That was—” Harry calculated. “That must have been four months ago I wrote.”

“And you went stony in four months?”

Harry rubbed his chin, looking sheepish. “Well, I was almost positive I was about to hit it big, but — well, the diamonds are an awful business right now.” He reached out and pushed Barney’s hat away, ruffling his brother’s hair as he had done when they were younger. “Here! Let me have a look at you! You look a proper trekker, you do!”

“At least I kept clean on the trail. You look a shame.” A thought came. “When did you eat last?”

“I eat every day,” Harry said, and shrugged. “No banquets; some mealies — that’s what they call maize here, people eat it same as cattle — and down at the Paris they give me a sandwich every night—” He smiled, always the optimist. “I’ve been doing part of our old act down there. The diggers love it!”

Barney looked at him skeptically. “What’s it pay?”

Harry looked a little shamefaced. “Well, you know, Barney, times are very difficult right now. The diggers don’t hardly have enough to feed themselves. Or their families, those poor devils that are unlucky enough to have their families with them. And they have to pay their labor, their Kaffirs. Doesn’t leave much for jugglers or comics in bars.” He looked at his brother, changing the subject. “How’d you find me?”

“Asked at the bar where you do your act.”

“They told you, eh? I tell you, everybody in town knows Harry Isaacs! Say, have you seen the mine yet?”

“Which one?”

“Kimberley, of course. The New Rush. It’s the richest, no matter what anybody says.” He sounds as if he owned a piece of the bloody thing, Barney thought; that’s me brother Harry! Harry came to his feet. “Let me show you the town.”

“What about me bags?”

“What about them?”

“Will they be safe here?”

Harry laughed. “Safer than they would be behind locked doors back in Cobb’s Court, I’ll wager you that! Nobody touches anything in anyone’s tent or shack; if that was to start there’s no telling where it would end. But it would end with somebody hanging, and we’ve done without that ever since this camp was started. No, you needn’t worry on that score. So let me put on a clean shirt and off we’ll go.”

“Only if you give yourself a good wash first,” Barney said, and wrinkled his nose. “You smell, you know.”

“I do?” Harry sounded honestly surprised. “Everything smells so bad here,” he said apologetically, “it gets to a point where you can’t smell anything anymore. Even yourself.”

They walked back toward the town through the tents in the early-afternoon heat, with Harry talking without pause. Barney had a feeling that his brother had had a lonely time of it. He felt no resentment at all that Harry hadn’t made it as big as he had written home; Harry had always been the complete optimist, and Barney had no doubt at all that Harry had honestly felt he was about to strike it rich when he had written. Whatever else the Isaacs boys were, they were not liars; if Harry had a tendency at times to exaggerate, that was something else.

Actually, Barney felt a bit better about everything. Now there would be no need to compete, although in truth there had never been a great deal of competition between the two brothers. Each had his own talents and was aware of it. Harry was the better juggler, the better acrobat, the better tumbler. Harry was also taller, more handsome, and happier. The girls that came into the King of Prussia from the sewing lofts for an ale with their lunch would rumple Barney’s hair and pat his cheek, but they were far bolder where Harry was concerned. Barney sometimes wished he were more like Harry, at least as far as the happiness or the optimism was concerned. But Harry was also willing to concede defeat more readily, possibly because defeat didn’t mean all that much to him. Lose today, gain tomorrow; or if not tomorrow, then the next day or the next week, or maybe never. What difference did it really make? But this was not Barney. Lose today and the loss lived with him a long time, and gaining tomorrow would not make up for it. He hated to be defeated and was smart enough to recognize this as a fault, but it was a fault he did not mind acknowledging.

Harry was explaining the state of the industry.

“The diamonds run out?” he said, and laughed. They were in the town proper and passing the bar where Barney had first stopped, but Harry made no move to turn in. He had a goal in mind, and besides, he was discussing a subject he felt he knew well. “No!” he said firmly. “There are diamonds on top of diamonds in Kimberley, and the same — though less, of course — at Bultfontein, Dutoitspan, and the Old De Beers. Four diamond mines within a few miles of each other, and together they probably contain most of the gemstones in the world! Think of it!”