Paul and the Printing Press - BestLightNovel.com
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Paul did not speak.
"How do you like newspaper work?" inquired Mr. Carter, s.h.i.+fting the subject adroitly.
"Very much--the little I've seen of it."
"If you were to come in here you might work up to a place on the _Echo_."
The boy started.
"You're a bright chap and I like you. I'd see you had a chance if you made good."
"You're very kind, sir, but--"
"Well, out with it! What's the matter?"
"It would knock my college career all--"
"Faugh! College career! Why, here is a career worth ten of it--the chance of a lifetime. I wouldn't offer it to every boy. In fact, I wouldn't offer it to any other boy I know of--not to my own son."
"It's very good of you, Mr. Carter."
"See here, youngster," said Mr. Carter, leaning toward Paul impressively, "when you are as old as I am you will learn that you've got to take opportunities when they come to you. The same one never comes twice. You don't want to turn down a thing of this sort until you've considered it from all sides. Think what it would mean to remodel that paper of yours with plenty of money behind you and put it on a footing with other professional magazines. That would be a feather in your cap! I could buy the _March Hare_ in--"
"I'm not sure you could, Mr. Carter," replied Paul slowly. "The staff might not want to sell it."
"What!"
The tone was incredulous with surprise.
"I don't know that we fellows would feel that we had the moral right to sell out," explained Paul quietly. "You see, although we have built up the paper it belongs to a certain extent to the school."
"Nonsense!" cut in Mr. Carter impatiently. "That's absurd! The publication was your idea, wasn't it?"
"Yes, at the beginning it was; but--"
"They wouldn't have had it but for you, would they?"
"I don't know; perhaps not," confessed the boy reluctantly.
"It was your project," insisted Carter.
"Yes."
"Then n.o.body has any right to claim it."
"Maybe not the right to really claim it. But all of us boys have slaved together to make it a success. It is as much their work as mine."
"What do they intend to do with it?"
"Pa.s.s it on to the school, I suppose. We haven't talked it over, though.
We haven't got that far yet."
"Well, all I can say is that if you handed it over to the school free of charge you would be darn stupid. Why not make some money out of it?
Offer to sell it to the school if you think you must; but don't give it away."
Paul shook his head dubiously.
"The school couldn't buy it. They've nothing to buy it with."
"Then you have a perfect right to sell it to somebody else," put in Mr.
Carter quickly. "In the world of business, people cannot expect to get something for nothing. What you can't pay for you can't have. If the school has no money--" he broke off with a significant gesture. "Now if I offered you fellows a lump sum in June--a sum you could divide amongst you as you saw fit--wouldn't that be a perfectly fair and legitimate business deal?"
"I--I--" faltered Paul.
"Wouldn't it?" Mr. Carter persisted.
"I suppose so," murmured Paul unwillingly. "Only, you see, I still feel that the paper should go to the school. I think the other fellows would feel so too."
Nettled Mr. Carter rose and strode irritably across the room and back.
Then he came to a standstill before Paul's chair and looked down with steely eyes into the lad's troubled face.
"But you admitted just now that you and the staff had made the paper what it is, didn't you?"
"Yes."
"Then it belongs to you, doesn't it?"
"In a certain sense; yes."
"Now see here, Paul," began Mr. Carter. "You are the editor-in-chief of that magazine, and the head of the bunch. What you say would go with them--or it ought to. You could make them think about what you pleased.
Why don't you put it up to your staff to sell the paper to me and pocket the proceeds?"
"Because I don't think--"
"I guess you could manage to think as I wanted you to if it were worth your while, couldn't you?" smiled the great man insinuatingly.
"I don't quite--"
"Turn it over in your mind. It is a straight business proposition. You land your _March Hare_ here in my office as my property at the end of June, and I will make it worth your while. Understand?" The great man eyed the lad keenly.
"Not fully, I'm afraid."
"But you would before I got through with you," chuckled Mr. Carter, rising.
Paul rose too. He was very glad to have the interview finished.
"We'll talk no more about this matter to-day," declared the editor lightly. "You think over carefully what I've said and come and see me again sometime."