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"Where are you staying, Mr. Johnson?"
"The Algonquin. Pretty nifty."
"Good house. And how many days is it by rail to--Bless my soul, Mr.
Johnson--here am I, upsetting my staid life, deserting my business on what may very well prove, after all, but a wild-goose chase! And I do not know to what place in Arizona we are bound, even as a starting-point and base of supplies, much less where your mine is! And I don't suppose there's a map of Arizona in town."
"Oh, I'll make you a map," said Pete. "Cobre--that's Mexican for copper--is where we'll make our headquarters. You give me some paper and I'll make you a map mighty quick."
Pete made a sketchy but fairly accurate map of Southern Arizona, with the main lines of railroad and the branches.
"Here's Silverbell, at the end of this little spur of railroad. Now give me that other sheet of paper and I'll show you where the mine is, and the country round Cobre."
Wetting his pencil, working with slow and painstaking effort, making slight erasures and corrections with loving care, poor, trustful, unsuspecting Pete mapped out, with true creative joy, a district that never was on land or sea, accompanying each stroke of his handiwork with verbal comments, explaining each original mountain chain or newly invented valley with a wealth of descriptive detail that would have amazed Munchausen.
Mitch.e.l.l laughed in his heart to see how readily the simple-minded mountaineer became his dupe and tool, and watched, with a covert sneer, as Pete joyously contrived his own downfall and undoing.
"I have many questions to ask about your mine--I believe I had almost said our mine." The lawyer smiled cordially. "To begin with, how about water and fuel?"
"Lots of it. A cedar brake, checker-boarded all along the mountain.
There's where it gets the name, Ajedrez Mountain--Chess Mountain; kind of laid out in squares that way. Good enough for mine timbers, too.
Big spring--big enough so you might almost call it a creek--right close by. It's almost too good to be true--couldn't be handier if I'd dreamed it! But," he added with regretful conscientiousness, "the water's pretty hard, I'm sorry to say. Most generally is, around copper that way. And it'll have to be pumped uphill to the mine. Too bad the spring couldn't have been above the mine, so it could have been piped down."
Prompted by more questions he plunged into a glowing description of Ajedrez Mountain; the marvelous scope of country to be seen from the summit; the beauty of its steep and precipitous canons; the Indian pottery; the mysterious deposit of oyster sh.e.l.ls, high on the mountain-side, proving conclusively that Ajedrez Mountain had risen from the depths of some prehistoric sea; ending with a vivid description of the obstacles to be surmounted by each of the alternate projects for the wagon road up to the mine, with estimates of comparative cost.
At length it drew on to the hour for Mitch.e.l.l's dinner and Pete's supper, and they parted with many expressions of elation and good-will.
From his window in the Algonquin, Pete Johnson watched Mitch.e.l.l picking his way across to the Iroquois House, and smiled grimly.
"There," he confided to his pipe--"there goes a man hotfoot to dig his own grave with his own tongue! The Selden kid has done told Uncle McClintock about Stan being in jail. She told him Stan hadn't written to Cousin Oscar about no jail, and that I wasn't to tell him either. Now goes Cousin Oscar on a beeline to tell Uncle how dreadful Stanley has went and disgraced the family; and Uncle will want to know how he heard of it. 'Why,' says Oscar, 'an old ignoramus from Arizona, named Johnson--friend of Stanley's--he told me about it. He came up here to get me to help Stanley out; wanted me to go out and be his lawyer!'
"And, right there, down goes Cousin Oscar's meat-house! He'll never touch a penny of Uncle's money. Selden, she says Uncle Mac was all for blowing him up sky-high; but she made him promise not to, so as not to queer my game. If I get Oscar Mitch.e.l.l out to the desert, I'll almost persuade him to be a Christian.... She's got Old McClintock on the run, Mary Selden has!
"Shucks! The minute I heard about the millionaire uncle, I knowed where Stan's trouble began. I wonder what makes Stan such a fool! He might 'a' knowed!... This Oscar person is pretty soft.... Mighty nice kid, little Selden is! Smart too. She's some schemer!... Too smart for Oscar!... Different complected, and all that; but her ways--she sort of puts me in mind of Miss Sally."
CHAPTER XII
Mr. Oscar Mitch.e.l.l was a bachelor, though not precisely lorn. He maintained an elm-shaded residence on Front Street, presided over by an ancient housekeeper, of certain and gusty disposition, who had guided his first toddling steps and grieved with him for childhood's insupportable wrongs, and whose vinegarish disapprovals were still feared by Mitch.e.l.l; it was for her praise or blame that his overt walk and conversation were austere and G.o.dly, his less laudable activities so mole-like.
After dinner Mr. Mitch.e.l.l slipped into a smoking jacket with a violent velvet lining and sat in his den--a den bedecorated after the manner known to the muddle-minded as artistic, but more aptly described by Sir Anthony Gloster as "beastly." To this den came now the sprightly clerk, summoned by telephone.
"Sit down, Pelman. I sent for you because I desire your opinion and cooperation upon a matter of the first importance," said the lawyer, using his most gracious manner.
Mr. Joseph Pelman, p.r.i.c.king up his ears at the smooth conciliation of eye and voice, warily circled the room, holding Mitch.e.l.l's eyes as he went, selected a corner chair for obvious strategic reasons, pushed it against the wall, tapped that wall apprehensively with a backward-reaching hand, seated himself stiffly upon the extreme edge of the chair, and faced his princ.i.p.al, bolt upright and bristling with deliberate insolence.
"If it is murder I want a third," he remarked.
The lawyer gloomed upon this frowardness.
"That is a poor way to greet an opportunity to make your fortune once and for all," he said. "I have something on hand now, which, if we can swing it--"
"One-third," said the clerk inflexibly.
Mitch.e.l.l controlled himself with a visible effort. He swallowed hard and began again:
"If we can carry out my plan successfully--and it seems to be safe, and certain, and almost free from risk--there will be no necessity hereafter for any of us to engage in any crooked dealings whatever. Indeed, to take up cleanly ways would be the part of wisdom. Or, young as you are, you will be able to retire, if you prefer, sure of every gratification that money can buy."
"Necessity doesn't make me a crook. I'm crooked by nature. I like crookedness," said Pelman. "That's why I'm with you."
"Now, Joey, don't talk--"
"Don't you 'Joey' me!" exploded the demon clerk. "It was 'fool' this afternoon. I'm Pelman when there's any nerve needed for your schemes; but when you smile at me and call me Joey, what I say is--one-third!"
"You devil! I ought to wring your neck!"
"Try it! I'll stab your black heart with a corkscrew! I've studied it all out, and I've carried a corkscrew on purpose ever since I've known you.
Thirty-three and one-third per cent. Three-ninths. Proceed!"
Mitch.e.l.l paced the floor for a few furious seconds before he began again.
"You remember Mayer Zurich, whom we helped through that fake bankruptcy at Syracuse?"
"Three-ninths?"
"Yes, d.a.m.n you!"
Joey settled back in his chair, crossed his knees comfortably, screwed his face to round-eyed innocence, and gave a dainty caress to the thin silky line of black on his upper lip.
"You may go on, Oscar," he drawled patronizingly.
After another angry turn, Mitch.e.l.l resumed with forced composure:
"Zurich is now a fixture in Cobre, Arizona, where my Cousin Stanley lives. I had a letter from him a week ago and he tells me--this is in strict confidence, mind you--that poor Stanley is in jail."
Joey interrupted him by a gentle waving of a deprecatory hand.
"Save your breath, Oscar dear, and pa.s.s on to the main proposition. Now that we are partners, in manner of speaking, since your generous concession of a few minutes past--about the thirds--I must be very considerate of you."
As if to mark the new dignity, the junior partner dropped the crude and boisterous phrases that had hitherto marked his converse. Mitch.e.l.l recognized the subtle significance of this change by an angry gesture.
"Since our interests are now one," continued the new member suavely, "propriety seems to demand that I should tell you the Mitch.e.l.l-Zurich affair has no secrets from me. If young Stanley is in prison, it is because you put him there!"
"What!"
"Yes," said Joey with a complacent stroke at his upper lip. "I have duplicate keys to all your dispatch boxes and filing cabinets."