Part 34 (1/2)
”h.e.l.lo, Wheaton,” said Margrave cheerfully. ”I've had the devil's own time finding you.”
He advanced upon Wheaton and shook him warmly by the hand. Then, this having been for the benefit of the watchman, he said, in a low tone:
”Let's go into the directors' room, Jim, I want to see you.”
The main bank room was only dimly lighted, but a cl.u.s.ter of electric lights burned brilliantly above the directors' mahogany table, around which were chairs of the Bank of England pattern.
”Have a seat, Mr. Margrave,” said Wheaton formally. He had left the door open, but Margrave closed it carefully. Porter's bundle of papers in its manila wrapper lay on the table, and Wheaton sat down close to it.
”What you got there, greenbacks?” asked Margrave. ”If you were just leaving for Canada, don't miss the train on my account.”
”That isn't funny,” said Wheaton, severely.
”Oh, I wouldn't be so d.a.m.ned sensitive,” said Margrave, throwing open his overcoat and placing his hat on the table in front of him. ”I guess you ain't any better than some of the rest of 'em.”
”I suppose you didn't come to say that,” said Wheaton. He ran his fingers over the wax seal on the packet. He wished that it were back in Porter's box.
”We were having a little talk this afternoon, Jim,” began Margrave in a friendly and familiar tone, ”about Traction matters. As I remember it, in our last talk, it was understood that if I needed your little bunch of Traction shares you'd let me have 'em when the time came. Now our friend Porter's sick,” continued Margrave, watching Wheaton sharply with his small, keen eyes.
”Yes; he's sick,” repeated Wheaton.
”He's pretty d.a.m.ned sick.”
”I suppose you mean he is very sick; I don't know that it's so serious.
I was at the house this evening.”
”Comforting the daughter, no doubt,” with a sneer. ”Now, Jim, I'm going to say something to you and I don't want you to give back any prayer meeting talk. The chances are that Porter's going to die.” He waited a moment to let the remark sink into Wheaton's consciousness, and then he went on: ”I guess he won't be able to vote his stock to-morrow. I suppose you've got it or know where it is.” He eyed the bundle on which Wheaton's hand at that moment rested nervously, and Wheaton sat back in his chair and thrust his hand into his trousers' pockets, looking unconcernedly at Margrave.
”I want that stock, Jim,” said the railroader, quietly, ”and I want you to give it to me to-night.”
”Margrave,” said Wheaton, and it was the first time he had so addressed him, ”you must be crazy, or a fool.”
”Things are going pretty well with you, Jim,” Margrave continued, as if in friendly canva.s.s of Wheaton's future. ”You have a good position here; when the old man's out of the way, you can marry the girl and be president of the bank. It's dead easy for a smart fellow like you. It would be too bad for you to spoil such prospects right now, when the game is all in your own hands, by failing to help a friend in trouble.”
Wheaton said nothing and Margrave resumed:
”You're trying to catch on to this d.a.m.ned society business here, and I want you to do it. I haven't got any objections to your sailing as high as you can. I know all about you. I gave you your first job when you came here--”
”I appreciate all that, Mr. Margrave,” Wheaton broke in. ”You said the word that got me into the Clarkson National, and I have never forgotten it.”
”Well, I don't want you to forget it. But see here: as long as I recommended you and stood by you when you were a ratty little train butcher, and without knowing anything about you except that you were always on hand and kept your mouth shut, I think you owe something to me.” He bent forward in his chair, which creaked under him as he s.h.i.+fted his bulk. ”One night last fall, just before the Knights of Midas show, a drunken scamp came into my yard, and made a nasty row. I was about to turn him over to the police when he began whimpering and said he knew you. He wasn't doing any particular harm and I gave him a quarter and told him to get out; but he wanted to talk. He said--” Margrave dropped his voice and fastened his eyes on Wheaton--”he was a long-lost brother of yours. He was pretty drunk, but he seemed clear on your family history, Jim. He said he'd done time once back in Illinois, and got you out of a sc.r.a.pe. He told me his name was William Wheaton, but that he had lost it in the shuffle somewhere and was known as Snyder. I gave him a quarter and started him toward Porter's where I knew you were doing the society act. I heard afterward that he found you.”
Margrave creaked back in his chair and chuckled.
”He was an infernal liar,” said Wheaton hotly. ”And so you sent that scamp over there to make a row. I didn't think you would play me a trick like that.” He was betrayed out of his usual calm control and his mouth twitched.
”Now, Jim,” Margrave continued magnanimously, ”I don't care a d.a.m.n about your family connections. You're all right. You're good enough for me, you understand, and you're good enough for the Porters. My father was a butcher and I began life sweeping out the shop, and I guess everybody knows it; and if they don't like it, they know what they can do.”
Wheaton's hand rested again on the packet before him; he had flushed to the temples, but the color slowly died out of his face. It was very still in the room, and the watchman could be heard walking across the tiled lobby outside. A patrol wagon rattled in the street with a great clang of its gong. Wheaton had moved the brown parcel a little nearer to the edge of the table; Margrave noticed this and for the first time took a serious interest in the packet. He was not built for quick evolutions, but he made what was, for a man of his bulk, a sudden movement around the table toward Wheaton, who was between him and the door.