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"I say, sit down. Have a chair. I want to have a talk with you. You ran a corner in wheat once yourself."
"Oh.... Wheat."
"Yes, your corner. You remember?"
"Yes. Oh, that was long ago. In seventy-eight it was--the September option. And the Board made wheat in the cars 'regular.'"
His voice trailed off into silence, and he looked vaguely about on the floor of the room, sucking in his cheeks, and pa.s.sing the edge of one large, osseous hand across his lips.
"Well, you lost all your money that time, I believe. Scannel, your partner, sold out on you."
"Hey? It was in seventy-eight.... The secretary of the Board announced our suspension at ten in the morning. If the Board had not voted to make wheat in the cars 'regular'--"
He went on and on, in an impa.s.sive monotone, repeating, word for word, the same phrases he had used for so long that they had lost all significance.
"Well," broke in Jadwin, at last, "it was Scannel your partner, did for you. Scannel, I say. You know, Dave Scannel."
The old man looked at him confusedly. Then, as the name forced itself upon the atrophied brain, there flashed, for one instant, into the pale, blurred eye, a light, a glint, a brief, quick spark of an old, long-forgotten fire. It gleamed there an instant, but the next sank again.
Plaintively, querulously he repeated:
"It was in seventy-eight.... I lost three hundred thousand dollars."
"How's your little niece getting on?" at last demanded Jadwin.
"My little niece--you mean Lizzie? ... Well and happy, well and happy.
I--I got"--he drew a thick bundle of dirty papers from his pocket, envelopes, newspapers, circulars, and the like--"I--I--I got, I got her picture here somewheres."
"Yes, yes, I know, I know," cried Jadwin. "I've seen it. You showed it to me yesterday, you remember."
"I--I got it here somewheres ... somewheres," persisted the old man, fumbling and peering, and as he spoke the clerk from the doorway announced:
"Mr. Scannel."
This latter was a large, thick man, red-faced, with white, short whiskers of an almost wiry texture. He had a small, gimlet-like eye, enormous, hairy ears, wore a "sack" suit, a highly polished top hat, and entered the office with a great flourish of manner and a defiant trumpeting "Well, how do, Captain?"
Jadwin nodded, glancing up under his scowl.
"h.e.l.lo!" he said.
The other subsided into a chair, and returned scowl for scowl.
"Oh, well," he muttered, "if that's your style."
He had observed Hargus sitting by the other side of the desk, still fumbling and mumbling in his dirty memoranda, but he gave no sign of recognition. There was a moment's silence, then in a voice from which all the first bluffness was studiously excluded, Scannel said:
"Well, you've rung the bell on me. I'm a sucker. I know it. I'm one of the few hundred other G.o.d-d.a.m.ned fools that you've managed to catch out shooting snipe. Now what I want to know is, how much is it going to cost me to get out of your corner? What's the figure? What do you say?"
"I got a good deal to say," remarked Jadwin, scowling again.
But Hargus had at last thrust a photograph into his hands.
"There it is," he said. "That's it. That's Lizzie."
Jadwin took the picture without looking at it, and as he continued to speak, held it in his fingers, and occasionally tapped it upon the desk.
"I know. I know, Hargus," he answered. "I got a good deal to say, Mr.
David Scannel. Do you see this old man here?"
"Oh-h, cut it out!" growled the other.
"It's Hargus. You know him very well. You used to know him better. You and he together tried to swing a great big deal in September wheat once upon a time. Hargus! I say, Hargus!"
The old man looked up.
"Here's the man we were talking about, Scannel, you remember. Remember Dave Scannel, who was your partner in seventy-eight? Look at him. This is him now. He's a rich man now. Remember Scannel?"
Hargus, his bleared old eyes blinking and watering, looked across the desk at the other.
"Oh, what's the game?" exclaimed Scannel. "I ain't here on exhibition, I guess. I--"
But he was interrupted by a sharp, quick gasp that all at once issued from Hargus's trembling lips. The old man said no word, but he leaned far forward in his chair, his eyes fixed upon Scannel, his breath coming short, his fingers dancing against his chin.
"Yes, that's him, Hargus," said Jadwin. "You and he had a big deal on your hands a long time ago," he continued, turning suddenly upon Scannel, a pulse in his temple beginning to beat. "A big deal, and you sold him out."
"It's a lie!" cried the other.
Jadwin beat his fist upon the arm of his chair. His voice was almost a shout as he answered:
"_You--sold--him--out._ I know you. I know the kind of bug you are. You ruined him to save your own dirty hide, and all his life since poor old Hargus has been living off the charity of the boys down here, pinched and hungry and neglected, and getting on, G.o.d knows how; yes, and supporting his little niece, too, while you, you have been loafing about your clubs, and sprawling on your steam yachts, and dangling round after your kept women--on the money you stole from him."
Scannel squared himself in his chair, his little eyes twinkling.
"Look here," he cried, furiously, "I don't take that kind of talk from the best man that ever wore shoe-leather. Cut it out, understand? Cut it out."
Jadwin's lower jaw set with a menacing click; aggressive, masterful, he leaned forward.
"You interrupt me again," he declared, "and you'll go out of that door a bankrupt. You listen to me and take my orders. That's what you're here to-day for. If you think you can get your wheat somewheres else, suppose you try."
Scannel sullenly settled himself in his place. He did not answer.
Hargus, his eye wandering again, looked distressfully from one to the other. Then Jadwin, after shuffling among the papers of his desk, fixed a certain memorandum with his glance. All at once, whirling about and facing the other, he said quickly:
"You are short to our firm two million bushels at a dollar a bushel."
"Nothing of the sort," cried the other. "It's a million and a half."
Jadwin could not forbear a twinkle of grim humour as he saw how easily Scannel had fallen into the trap.