Part 37 (1/2)

CHAPTER XXI

VANE YIELDS A POINT

The short afternoon was drawing toward its close when Vane came out of a large building in the city. Glancing at his watch, he stopped on the steps.

”The meeting went pretty satisfactorily, taking it all round,” he remarked to Carroll.

”I think so,” agreed his companion. ”But I'm far from sure that Horsfield was pleased with the stockholders' decision.”

Vane smiled in a thoughtful manner. After returning from the mine, he had gone inland to examine a new irrigation property in which he had been asked to take an interest, and had got back only in time for a meeting of the Clermont shareholders, which Nairn had arranged in his absence. The meeting, of the kind that is sometimes correctly described as extraordinary, was just over, and though Vane had been forced to yield to a majority on some points, he had secured the abandonment of a proposition he considered dangerous.

”Though I don't see what the man could have gained by it, I'm inclined to believe that if Nairn and I had been absent he'd have carried his total reconstruction scheme. That wouldn't have pleased me.”

”I thought it injudicious.”

”It was only because we must raise more money that I agreed to the issue of the new block of shares,” Vane went on. ”We ought to pay a fair dividend on the moderate sum in question.”

”You think you'll get it?”

”I've not much doubt.”

Carroll made no reply to this. Vane was capable and forceful; but his abilities were of a practical rather than a diplomatic order, and he was occasionally addicted to somewhat headstrong action. Knowing that he had a very cunning antagonist intriguing against him, his companion had misgivings.

”Shall we walk back to the hotel?” he suggested.

”No,” answered Vane; ”I'll go across and see how Celia Hartley's getting on. I'm afraid I've been forgetting her.”

”Then I'll come too. You may need me; there are matters which you're not to be trusted to deal with alone.”

Just then Nairn came down the steps and waved his hand to them.

”Ye will no forget that Mrs. Nairn is expecting both of ye this evening.”

He pa.s.sed on, and they set off together across the city toward the district where Celia lived. Though the quarter in question may have been improved out of existence since, a few years ago rows of low-rented shacks stood upon mounds of sweating sawdust which had been dumped into a swampy hollow. Leaky, frail and fissured, they were not the kind of places anyone who could help it would choose to live in; but Vane found the sick girl still installed in one of the worst of them. She looked pale and haggard; but she was busily at work upon some millinery; and the light of a tin lamp showed Drayton and Kitty Blake sitting near her.

There were cracks in the thin, boarded walls, from which a faint resinous odor exuded, but it failed to hide the sour smell of the wet sawdust upon which the shack was built. The room, which was almost bare of furniture, felt damp and unwholesome.

”You oughtn't to be at work; you don't look fit,” Vane said to Celia. He paused a moment, hesitating, before he added: ”I'm sorry we couldn't find that spruce; but, as I told Drayton, we're going back to try again.”

The girl smiled bravely.

”Then you'll find it the next time. I'm glad I'm able to do a little; it brings in a few dollars.”

”But what are you doing?”

”Making hats. I did one for Miss Horsfield, and afterward some friends of hers sent me two or three more to trim. She said she'd try to get me work from one of the big stores.”

”But you're not a milliner, are you?” asked Vane, feeling grateful to Jessy for the practical way in which she had kept her promise to a.s.sist.