Part 26 (1/2)
”I have just told you that I have an eye-witness. Further, there are the three doctors.”
”Have you seen them?”
Houston thought quickly. It was his only chance.
”I know exactly what their testimony will be.”
”You've made arrangements for your suit then.” Worthington's color had changed. Houston noticed that the hand which held the cigarette trembled slightly.
”No, I haven't. I'm not here to browbeat you, Mr. Worthington, or lie to you. It came to me simply as a ruse to get in to see you. But the more I think of it, the more I know that I could go through with it and possibly win it. I might get my million. I might not. I don't want money gained in that way. The taxpayers would have to foot the bill, not yourself.”
”Oh, I guess I'd pay enough,” Worthington had a.s.sumed an entirely different att.i.tude now. ”It would hurt me worse in business than it would if I were still in office. Whether it's true or not.”
”You know in your heart that there's no doubt of that.”
Worthington did not answer. Houston waited a moment, then went on.
”But personally, I don't want to file the suit. I don't want any money--that way. I don't want any bribes, or exculpations, or statements from you that you know me to be innocent. Some might believe it; others would only ask how much I paid to have that statement given out. The damage has been done and is next to irreparable. You could have cleared me easily enough by dropping the case, or making your investigations before ever an indictment was issued. You didn't, and I remain guilty in the minds of most of Boston, in spite of what the jury said. A man is not guilty until convicted--under the law. He is guilty as soon as accused, with the lay mind. So you can't help me much there; my only chance for freedom lies in finding the man who actually committed that murder. But that's something else. We won't talk about it. You owe me something. And I'm here to-night to ask you for it.”
”I thought you said you didn't want any bribes.”
”I don't. May I ask you what your margin of profit is at your machinery company?”
”My margin of profit? What's that? Well, I suppose it runs around twelve per cent.”
”Then will you please allow me to give you twelve thousand dollars in profits? I'm in the lumber business. I have a contract that runs into the millions; surely that is good enough security to a man”--he couldn't resist the temptation--”who knows my absolute innocence. It isn't good enough for the bankers, who still believe me guilty, so I've come directly to you. I need one hundred thousand dollars' worth of lumber-mill machinery, blade saws, crosscuts, jackers, planers, kickers, chain belting, leather belting, and everything else that goes to make up a first-cla.s.s plant. I can pay for it--in installments. I guarantee to give you every cent above my current running expenses until the bill is disposed of. My contract with the Mountain, Plains and Salt Lake Railroad is my bond. I don't even ask a discount, or for you to lose any of your profits. I don't even ask any public statement by you regarding my innocence. All I want is to have you do what you would do to any reputable business man who came to you with a contract running into the millions of dollars--to give me credit for that machinery. It's a fair proposition. Come in with me on it, and we'll forget the rest. Stay out--and I fight!”
For a long moment, Kilbane Worthington paced the floor, his hands clasped behind him, his rather thin head low upon his chest. Then, at last, he looked up.
”How long are you going to be in town?”
”Until this matter's settled.”
”Where are you staying?”
”The Touraine.”
”Very well. I'll have a machine there to pick you up at ten o'clock to-morrow morning and take you to my office. In the meanwhile--I'll think it over.”
CHAPTER XVIII
It was a grinning Barry Houston who leaped from the train at Tabernacle a week later and ran open-armed through the snow toward the waiting Ba'tiste.
”You got my telegram?” He asked it almost breathlessly.
”Ah, _oui! oui, oui, oui_! _Sacre_, and you are the wizard!”
”Hardly that.” They were climbing into the bobsled. ”I just had enough sense to put two and two together. On the train to Boston I got a tip about my case, something that led me to believe that the district attorney knew all the time that I was innocent. He had conducted experiments at the Bellstrand Hospital of which nothing had been said in the trial. Three famous doctors had been with him. As soon as I saw their names, I instinctively knew that if the experiments had turned out the way the district attorney had wanted them, he would have used them in the trial against me, but that their silence meant the testimony was favorable to me.”
”_Bon_!” Ba'tiste grinned happily. ”And he?”