But despite naive ignorance of the world outside the shabby London suburb where they lived, Keith and his wife knew that he must go and try to reclaim the child's inheritance. Keith's means were less than meagre his ill-paid magazine job was at stake his wife- and the child they now knew was virtually their own-had nothing to fall back on if Keith, too, perished. But when his sister and her husband were wrecked off Tahiti, only Keith had a clue as to what had happened to that estate- converted as it had been into 27 thousand pounds in diamonds. Keith had been appointed sole trustee for his brother-in-law's presumably large estate and only child. And when it came to the challenge that pulled him up by the roots and sent him off to a coral reef in the far Pacific, Keith proved as intrepid and determined as Mr. Keith Stewart, a toolroom fitter who had given up his factory job to devote himself to his hobby of miniature machines and to writing about them in a magazine that made friends for him around the world, recalls somewhat the colorless little Mr.
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