Part 4 (1/2)
CHAPTER VI
UNTYING SOME TANGLES
On Tuesday I received a request for ”immediate payment” of a demand note for $3,500.00, through some shyster lawyer in New York.
I took it up to Barrington and asked him what to do about it. He gave me a paper to sign, and I put my name to it without bothering to read it.
He then spoke sharply to me, and said:
”For heaven's sake, lad, haven't you learned better than to sign your name to a paper without reading it?”
”B-but,” I said, stammering, ”it's different with you!”
”Different be d.a.m.ned!” he exclaimed petulantly. Then, ”Excuse me, young man, but really, for a man in business you are acting very childishly.
You thought Jim Simpson was your friend and trusted him. Now, even after the mess you got into, you haven't learned your lesson, and you sign anything I ask you to, without looking at it!”
I read it through, and it was something about giving him full power to act for me in the matter of the note.
”Now,” said he, ”this is going to cost you some money”--I winced at this--”but I'll see if I can't save you something.”
He got the New York lawyer on the long distance and offered him a thousand dollars cash in full settlement of the claim, or else threatened to contest the legality of the note. The upshot of it was that Barrington made a trip to New York to see him, and they compromised on $1,250.00.
When Barrington returned from New York he came around to the house to see me.
”Well,” he said, ”I think I've saved you some money this time. I've settled that claim for $1,250.00 cash, which I have paid.”
He gave me also the bill of expenses which he had incurred. I put the figures on a bit of paper and twisted it nervously, wondering how I was going to pay that sum of money; for I remembered I had only $1,500.00 in the bank, and I had those bills to pay that Jim left behind and which I had unknowingly agreed to a.s.sume. Barrington and the accountant between them compromised on those, by the way, at seventy-five cents on the dollar, but there was nearly $400.00 to pay there, and if I paid that $1,250.00 with the expenses it would wipe out my bank account completely.
Barrington looked at me quizzically, and asked:
”What's worrying you now, young man?”
I told him. He laughed, and then remarked:
”That needn't worry you at all. You have your farm clear now and I'll take a mortgage on it for $1,500.00, and that will enable you to pay this bill up right away and still hold your farm. I was just looking for an investment of about that size. You are no worse off than before, and I will simply have a lien on the farm for $1,500.00 instead of Simpson having one for $3,500.00; and really, in this case, I think you will be much safer.”
The next morning we fixed up the mortgage.
I hoped then that I was through with the troubles of getting the business from Simpson. But when I reviewed what it had cost me I wondered why I ever gave up my safe, easy job with Barlow! I think the trouble with me was that I didn't realize that, while I wasn't making much money, I certainly wasn't taking any risk and was learning a good business. I realized then how stupidly I used to fool away a lot of time that I was paid for. When I thought of the hours I often s.h.i.+rked and the jobs I used to leave undone, I wondered that Barlow didn't fire me and the other fellows long ago. I wondered if other bosses had just the same trouble? I wondered if I was just an average store clerk?
What a different view you take of things when you become a boss yourself! Already I felt that the people working for me should consider my interests, and not hesitate to work hard for me; and yet when I was a clerk only two weeks before I used to begrudge doing the least thing more than my bare duties called for, and I had always felt I ought to get an immediate cash return for anything extra I did. For the first time I realized that I used to panhandle along through the week just working for the pay envelope without much thought of Barlow's welfare at all.
Well, I had surely learned a lesson. I was a wiser man than I had been two weeks before. In that brief time more things had happened to me than had ever happened before, I guess. I had inherited $8,000.00 cash and a farm worth $8,500.00; I had bought out Jim Simpson, and then found only $8,100.00 worth of stock when I thought I was getting $9,460.00; I had given him a demand note for $3,500.00 which I thought was for twelve months; I had a.s.sumed over $400.00 worth of bills of which I didn't know anything at all; and, finally, I had found that the business amounted to only $22,000.00 a year instead of $28,000.00.
I was reciting this tale of woe to Betty when she remarked:
”Well, you can't do anything else wrong just yet, can you?”