Part 31 (1/2)
But it was not the ”old man” who looked up from a busy man's desk. It was the son: so far, the one familiar face Warrington had seen since his arrival. There was no hand-shaking; there was nothing in evidence on either side to invite it.
”Ah! Sit down, Paul. Let no one disturb me for an hour,” the young vice-president advised the boy. ”And close the door as you go out.”
Warrington sat down; the bridge-builder whirled his chair around and stared at his visitor, not insolently, but with kindly curiosity.
”You've filled out,” was all he said. After fully satisfying his eyes, he added: ”I dare say you expected to find father. He's been gone six years,” indicating one of the two portraits over his desk.
It was not at the ”old man” Warrington looked longest. ”Who is the other?” he asked.
”What? You worked four years with this company and don't recollect that portrait?”
”Frankly, I never noticed it before.” Warrington placed the certified check on the desk. ”With interest,” he said.
The vice-president crackled it, ran his fingers over his smooth chin, folded the check and extended it toward the astonished wanderer.
”We don't want that, Paul. What we wanted was to get you back. There was no other way. Your brother made up the loss the day after you . . . went away. There was no scandal. Only a few of us in the office knew. Never got to the newspapers.”
It was impossible for Warrington to digest this astounding information at once. His mind could only repeat the phrases: no scandal, only a few of us in the office knew, never got to the newspapers. For ten years he had hidden himself in wildernesses, avoided hotels, read no American newspapers, never called for mail. Oh, monumental fool!
”And I could have come home almost at once!” he said aloud, addressing the crumpled check in his hand rather than the man in the swivel-chair.
”Yes. I have often wondered where you were, what you were doing. You and your brother were upper-cla.s.smen. I never knew Arthur very well; but you and I were chummy, after a fas.h.i.+on. Arthur was a little too bookish for my style. Didn't we use to call you Old Galahad? You were always walloping the bullies and taking the weaker chaps under your wing. To me, you were the last man in the world for this business.
Moreover, I never could understand, nor could father, how you got it, for you were not an office-man. Women and cards, I suppose. Father said that you had the making of a great engineer. Fierce place, this old town,” waving his hand toward the myriad sparkling roofs and towers and spires. ”Have to be strong and hard-headed to survive it. Built anything since you've been away?”
”In Cashmir.” To have thrown away a decade!
”Glad you kept your hand in. I dare say you've seen a lot of life.” To the younger man it was an extremely awkward interview.
”Yes; I've seen life,” dully.
”Orient, mostly, I suppose. Your letter about the strike in oil was mighty interesting. Heap of money over there, if they'd only let us smart chaps in to dig it up. Now, old man, I want you to wipe the slate clear of these ten years. We'll call it a bad dream. What are your plans for the future?”
”Plans?” Warrington looked up blankly. He realized that he had made no plans for the future.
”Yes. What do you intend to do? A man like you wasn't made for idleness. Look here, Paul; I'm not going to beat about the bush.
We've got a whopping big contract from the Chinese government, and we need a man to take charge, a man who knows and understands something of the yellow people. How about a salary of ten thousand a year for two years, to begin in October?”
Warrington twisted the check. Work, rehabilitation.
”Could you trust me?” he asked quietly.
”With anything I have in the world. Understand, Paul, there's no philanthropic string to this offer. You've pulled through a devil of a hole. You're a man. I should not be holding down this chair if I couldn't tell a man at a glance. We were together two months in Peru.
I'm familiar with your work. Do you want to know whose portrait that is up there? Well, it's General Chetwood's, the founder of this concern, the silent partner. The man who knew kings and potentates and told 'em that they needed bridges in their backyards. This building belongs to his daughter. She converted her stock into granite. About a month ago I received a letter from her. It directly concerned you.
It seems she learned through the consul-general at Singapore that you had worked with us. She's like her father, a mighty keen judge of human nature. Frankly, this offer comes through her advices. To satisfy yourself, you can give us a surety-bond for fifty thousand.
It's not obligatory, however.”
Elsa Chetwood. She had her father's eyes, and it was this which had drawn his gaze to the portrait. Chetwood; and Arthur had not known any more than he had. What irony! Ten years wasted . . . for nothing!
Warrington laughed aloud. A weakness seized him, like that of a man long gone hungry.
”Buck up, Paul,” warned the good Samaritan. ”All this kind of knocks the wind out of you. I know. But what I've offered you is in good faith. Will you take it?”
”Yes,” simply.