Part 31 (1/2)
McQuade hurried home. He had another appointment, vastly more important than the one he had just kept. Bolles had returned from New York. It was easy enough to buy a labor union, but it was a different matter to ruin a man of Warrington's note. Bolles had telegraphed that he would be in Herculaneum that night. That meant that he had found something worth while. Each time the car stopped to let pa.s.sengers on or off, McQuade stirred restlessly. He jumped from the car when it reached his corner, and walked hurriedly down the street to his house, a big pile of red granite and an architectural nightmare. He rushed up the steps impatiently, applied his latch-key and pushed in the door.
He slammed it and went directly to his study. Bolles was asleep in a chair. McQuade shook him roughly. Bolles opened his eyes.
”You've been on a drunk,” said McQuade, quickly noting the puffed eyes and haggard cheeks.
”But I've got what I went after, all the same,” replied Bolles truculently.
”What have you got? If you've done any faking, I'll break every bone in your body.”
”Now, look here, Mr. McQuade; don't talk to me like that.”
”What have you got, then?”
”Well, I've got something that's worth five hundred; that's what. I worked like a n.i.g.g.e.r for a month; pumped everybody that ever knew him.
Not a blame thing, till night before last I ran into the janitor of the apartments where Warrington lived.”
”Go on.”
”He'd been fired, and I got him drunk. I asked him if any women had ever gone up to Warrington's rooms. One. He was sitting in the bas.e.m.e.nt. It was a hot night, and he was sitting up because he could not sleep. At midnight a coupe drove up, and Warrington and a woman alighted. From the looks of things she was drunk, but he found out afterward that she was very sick. The woman remained in Warrington's apartments till the following morning.”
”When was all this?”
”About four years ago. She left very early.”
”h.e.l.l!” roared McQuade, doubling his fists. ”And I've been sending you money every week for such news as this! I want something big, you fool! What earthly use is this information to me? I couldn't frighten Warrington with it.”
”I haven't told you the woman's name yet,” said Bolles, leering.
”The woman's name? What's that got to do with it?”
”A whole lot. It was Katherine Challoner, the actress, Bennington's wife; that's who it was!”
McQuade sat very still. So still, that he could hear the clock ticking in the parlor. Bennington's wife!
Chapter XII
The death of his aunt gave Warrington a longing for action--swift mental and physical action. To sit in that dark, empty house, to read or to write, was utterly impossible; nor had he any desire to take long rides into the country. His mind was never clearer than when he rode alone, and what he wanted was confusion, noise, excitement, struggle. So he made an appointment with Senator Henderson the next morning. He left the Benningtons with the promise that he would return that evening and dine with them. Warrington had become the senator's hobby; he was going to do great things with this young man's future.
He would some day make an amba.s.sador of him; it would be a pleasant souvenir of his old age. Warrington was brilliant, a fine linguist, was a born diplomat, had a good voice, and a fund of wit and repartee; nothing more was required. He would give the name Warrington a high place in the diplomatic history of the United States. Some of the most capable diplomats this country had produced had been poets.
Warrington's being a playwright would add l.u.s.ter to the office. The senator was going over these things, when a clerk announced that Mr.
Warrington was waiting to see him.
”Send him right in.”
Immediately Warrington entered. He was simply dressed in a business suit of dark blue. He wore a straw hat and a black tie. There was no broad band of c.r.a.pe on his hat or his sleeve. He had the poet's horror of parading grief, simply because it was considered fas.h.i.+onable to do so. He sincerely believed that outward mourning was obsolete, a custom of the Middle Ages.
”Ha!” e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the senator.