Part 20 (1/2)

Into this room, all through the afternoon, streamed a curious medley of people. Tall men, small men, rough men, dapper men, and loudly dressed women, who for the most part seemed inclined to corpulence. They talked sometimes; many seemed well acquainted. Others appeared to be strangers, and they glanced about them uneasily, apparently suspicious of their fellows.

This seemed a curious waiting room for a Fifth Avenue ”Mercantile Agency.”

But inside the room to the left, marked ”private,” was the explanation of the mystery; at last there was a partial explanation of the curious throng.

As the occupants chatted, or kept frigid and uneasy silence, in the outer room a fat man, smooth of face and monkish in appearance, occasionally appeared at the private portal and admitted one person at a time.

After disappearing through this door, his visitors were not seen again, for they left by another door, which automatically closed and locked itself as they went directly into the hall corridor where the elevators ran.

In the private office of the ”Mercantile Agency” the fat man would sit at his desk and listen attentively to the words of his visitor.

”Speak up, Joe. You know I'm hard of hearing--don't whisper to me,”

was the tenor of a remark which he seemed to direct to every visitor.

Yet strangely enough he frequently stopped to listen to voices in the outer room, which he appeared to recognize without difficulty.

On this particular afternoon a dapper-dressed youth was an early caller.

”Well, Tom, what luck on the steamer? Now, don't swallow your voice.

Remember, I got kicked in the ear by a horse before I quit bookmaking, and I have to humor my hearing.”

”Oh, it was easy. That Swede, Jensen, came over, you know, and he had picked out a couple of peachy Swede girls who were going to meet their cousin at the Battery. Minnie and I went on board s.h.i.+p as soon as she docked, to meet our relatives, and we had a good look at 'em while they were lined up with the other steerage pa.s.sengers. They were fine, and we got Jensen to take 'em up to the Bronx. They're up at Molloy's house overnight. It's better to keep 'em there, and give 'em some food. You know, the emigrant society is apt to be on the lookout to-day. The cousin was there when the ferry came in from the Island, all right, but we spotted him before the boat got in, and I had Mickey Brown pick a fight with him, just in time to get him pinched. He was four blocks away when the boat landed, and Jensen, who had made friends with the girls coming over, told them he would take 'em to his aunt's house until they heard from their cousin.”

”What do they look like? We've got to have particulars, you know.”

”Well, one girl is tall, and the other rather short. They both have yellow hair and cheeks like apples. One's name is Lena and the other Marda--the rest of their names was too much for me. They're both about eighteen years old, and well dressed, for Swedes.”

The fat man was busy writing down certain data on a pad arranged in a curious metal box, which looked something like those on which grocers'

clerks make out the order lists for customers.

”Say, Henry, what do you use that thing for? Why don't you use a fountain pen and a book?” asked the dapper one.

”That's my affair,” snapped the fat man. ”I want this for records, and I know how to do it. Go on. What did Mrs. Molloy pay you?”

”Well, you know she's a tight one. I had to argue with her, and I have a lot of expense on this, anyway.”

”Go on--don't begin to beef about it. I know all about the expenses.

We paid the preliminaries. Now, out with the money from Molloy. It was to be two hundred dollars, and you know it. Two hundred apiece is the exact figure.”

The visitor stammered, and finally pulled out a roll of yellow-backed bills ”Well, I haven't gotten mine yet,” he whined.

”Yours is just fifty on this, for you've had a steamer a.s.signment every day this week. You can give your friend Minnie a ten-spot. Now, report here to-morrow at ten, for I've a new line for you. Good day.

Shut the door.”

The fat man was accustomed to being obeyed. The other departed with a surly manner, as though he had received the worst of a bargain. The manager jotted down the figures on the revolving strip of paper, for such it was, while the pencil he used was connected by two little metal arms to the side of the mechanism. Some little wheels inside the register clicked, as he turned the paper lever over for a clean record.

He put the money into his wallet.

He went to the door to admit another.

”Ah, Levy, what do you have to say?”