It was well on toward midnight when Emerson reached his hotel, and being
too full of his visit with Mildred to sleep, he strolled through the lobby
and into the Pompeian Room. The theatre crowds had not dispersed, and the
place was a-glitter; for it was the grand-opera season. The room was so
well filled that he had difficulty in finding a seat, and he made his way
slowly, meditating gloomily upon the fact that out of all this concourse
in which he had once figured not a single familiar face greeted him.
Finding no unoccupied table, he was about to retreat when he heard his
name spoken and felt a vigorous slap upon the back.
"Boyd Emerson! By Jove, I'm glad to see you!" He turned to face an anaemic
youth whose colorless, gas-bleached face was wrinkled into an expansive
grin.
"Hello, Alton!"
They shook hands like old friends, while Alton Clyde continued to express
his delight.
"So you've been roughing it out in Nebraska, eh?"
"Alaska."
"So it was. I always get those places mixed. Come over and have a drink. I
want to talk to you. Funny thing, I just met a Klondiker myself this
evening. Great chap, too! I want you to know him: he's immense. Only watch
out he don't get you full. He's an awful spender. I'm half kippered
myself. His name is Froelich, but he isn't a Dutchman. Ever meet him up
there?"
"I think not."
"Come on, you'll like him."
Clyde led his companion toward a table, chattering as they went. "Y' know,
I'm democratic myself, and I'm fond of these rough fellows. I'd like to go
out to Nebraska--"
"Alaska."
"--and punch cows and shoot a pistol and yell. I'm really tremendously
rough. Here he is! Mr. Froelich, my old friend Mr. Emerson. We played
football together--or, at least, he played; I was too light."
Mr. Froelich shoved back his chair and turned, exposing the face of
"Fingerless" Fraser, quite expressionless save for the left eyelid, which
drooped meaningly.
"'Froelich'!" said Boyd, angrily; "good heavens, Fraser, have you picked
another? I thought you were going to stick to 'Frobisher.'" Turning to
Clyde, he observed: "This man's name is Fraser. One of his peculiarities
is a dislike of proper names. He has never found one that suited him."
"I like 'Froelich' pretty well," observed the imperturbable Fraser. "It
sounds distanguay, and--"
"Don't believe anything he tells you," Boyd broke in, seating himself. "He
is the most circumstantial liar in the Northwest, and if you don't watch
him every minute he will sell you a hydraulic mine, or a rubber
plantation, or a sponge fishery. Underneath his eccentricities, however,
he is really a pretty decent fellow, and I am indebted to him for my
presence here to-night."
Alton Clyde made his astonishment evident by inquiring incredulously of
Fraser, "Then that scheme of yours to establish a gas plant at Nome was
all--"
"Certainly!" Emerson laughed. "The incandescent lamp travels about as fast
as the prospector. Nome is lighted by electricity, and has been for
years."
"Is it?" demanded Fraser, with an assumption of the supremest
surprise.
"You know as well as I do."
"H'm! I'd forgotten. Just the same, my plan was a good one. Gas is
cheaper." He reached for his glass, at which Clyde's eye fell upon his
missing fingers, and the young clubman exploded:
"Well! If that's the kind of pill you are, maybe you didn't lose your mit
in the Boer War either."
Emerson answered for the adventurer: "Hardly! He got blood-poisoning from
a hangnail."
Clyde began to laugh uncontrollably. "Really! That's great! Oh, that's
lovely! Here I've been gobbling fairy tales like a black bass at sunset.
He! he! he! I must introduce Mr. Froel--Mr. Fra--Mr. What's-his-name to
the boys. He! he! he!"
It was evident that Fraser was not accustomed to this sort of treatment;
his injured pride took refuge in a haughty silence, which further stirred
the risibilities of Clyde until that young man's thin shoulders shook, and
he doubled up, his hollow chest touching his knees. He pounded the tiles
with his cane, stamped his patent-leather boots, and wept tears of joy.
"What's the joke?" demanded the rogue. "Anybody would think I was
the sucker."
"Where is George?" questioned Boyd, to change the subject.
"In his trundle-bed, I suppose," said Fraser, stiffly.
"Along about nine o'clock he begins to yawn like a trained seal. That's
how I came to fall in with--this." He indicated the giggling Clyde. "I
didn't have anything better to do."
"Did you show George around, as I asked?"
"Sure! After that fairy--farrier, I should say--finished his front
feet, I took him out and let him look at the elevated railroad. Then he
came back and hunted up the janitor of the building. He spent the evening
in the basement with the engineer. Oh, he's had a splendid day!"
"I say, Boyd, have you got another one like--like this?" Clyde asked,
nodding at Fraser, who snorted indignantly.
"Not exactly. Balt is quite the antithesis of Mr. Fraser. He is a
fisherman, and he has never been East before."
"He's learning the manicure business," sniffed the adventurer. "He has his
nails curried every day. Says it tickles."
"Oh, glory be!" ejaculated the clubman. "I must meet him, too. Let me show
him the town, will you? I'll foot the bills; I'll make it something
historic. Please do! I'm bored to death."
"We can't spare the time; we are here on business," said Emerson.
"Business!" Clyde remarked. "That sounds interesting. I haven't seen
anybody for years who was really busy at anything that was worth being
busy at. It must be a great sensation to really do something."
"Don't you do anything?"
"Oh yes; I'm as busy as a one-legged sword-dancer, but I don't do
anything. It's the same old thing: leases to sign, rents to collect, and
that sort of rot. My agent does most of it, however. I wish I were like
you, Boyd; you always were a lucky chap." Emerson smiled rather grimly at
thought of the earlier part of the evening and of his present fortune.
"Oh, I mean it!" said Clyde. "Look how lucky you were at the university.
Everything came your way. Even M--" He checked himself and jerked his head
in the direction of the North Side. "You know! She's never been able to
see any of us fellows with a spy-glass since you left, and I have proposed
regularly every full moon." He wagged his curly head solemnly and sighed.
"Well, there is only one man I'd rather see get her than you, and that's
me--or I--whichever is proper."
"I'm not sure it's proper for either of us to get her," smiled Boyd.
"Well, I'm glad you've returned anyhow; for there's an added starter."
"Who is he?"
"He's some primitive Western fellow like yourself! I don't know his name--
never met him, in fact. But while we Chicago fellows were cantering along
in a bunch, watching each other, he got the rail."
"From the way her father spoke and acted I judged he had somebody in
sight." Boyd's eyes were keenly alight, and Clyde continued.
"We've just got to keep her in Chicago, and you're the one to do
it. I tell you, old man, she has missed you. Yes, sir, she has missed you
a blamed sight more than the rest of us have. Oh, you don't know how lucky
you are."
"I lucky! H'm! You fellows are rich--"
"Bah! I'm not. I've gone through most of what I had. All that is
left are the rents; they keep me going, after a fashion. Now that it is
too late, I'm beginning to wake up; I'm getting tired of loafing. I'd like
to get out and do something, but I can't; I'm too well known in Chicago,
and besides, as a business man I'm certainly a nickel-plated rotter."
"I'll give you a chance to recoup," said Boyd. "I am here to raise some
money on a good proposition."
The younger man leaned forward eagerly. "If you say it's good, that's all
I want to know. I'll take a chance. I'm in for anything from pitch-and-
toss to manslaughter."
"I'll tell you what it is, and you can use your own judgment."
"I haven't a particle," Clyde confessed. "If I had, I wouldn't need to
invest. Go ahead, however; I'm all ears." He pulled his chair closer and
listened intently while the other outlined the plan, his weak gray eyes
reflecting the old hero-worship of his college days. To him, Boyd Emerson
had ever represented the ultimate type of all that was most desirable, and
time had not lessened his admiration.
"It looks as if there might be a jolly rumpus, doesn't it?" he questioned,
when the speaker had finished.
"It does."
"Then I've got to see it. I'll put in my share if you'll let me go along."
"You go! Why, you wouldn't like that sort of thing," said Emerson,
considerably nonplussed.
"Oh, wouldn't I? I'd eat it! It's just what I need. I'd revel in
that out-door life." He threw back his narrow shoulders. "I'm a regular
scout when it comes to roughing it. Why, I camped in the Thousand Islands
all one summer, and I've been deer-hunting in the Adirondacks. We didn't
get any--they were too far from the hotel; but I know all about mountain
life."
"This is totally different," Boyd objected; but Clyde ran on, his
enthusiasm growing as he tinted the mental picture to suit himself.
"I'm a splendid fisherman, too, and I've plenty of tackle."
"We shall use nets."
"Don't do it! It isn't sportsmanlike. I'll take a book of flies and whip
that stream to a froth." Emerson interrupted him to explain briefly the
process of salmon-catching, but the young man was not to be discouraged.
"You give me something to do--something where I don't have to lift heavy
weights or carry boxes--and watch me work! I tell you, it's what I've been
looking for, and I didn't know it; I'll get as husky as you are and all
sunburnt. Tell me the sort of furs and the kind of pistols to buy, and
I'll put ten thousand dollars in the scheme. That's all I can spare."
"You won't need either furs or firearms," laughed Boyd. "When we get back
to Kalvik the days will be long and hot, and the whole country will be a
blaze of wild flowers."
"That's fine! I love flowers. If I can't catch fish for the cannery, I'll
make up for it in some other way."
"Can you keep books?"
"No; but I can play a mandolin," Clyde offered, optimistically. "I guess a
little music would sound pretty good up there in the wilderness."
"Can you play a mandolin?" inquired "Fingerless" Fraser, observing the
young fellow with grave curiosity.
"Sure; I'm out of practice, but--"
"Take him!" said Fraser, turning upon Emerson.
"He can set on the front porch of the cannery with wild flowers in his
hair and play La Paloma. It will make those other fish-houses mad
with jealousy. Get a window-box and a hammock, and maybe Willis Marsh will
run in and spend his evenings with you."
"Don't josh!" insisted Clyde, seriously. "I want to go--"
"Me josh?" Fraser's face was like wood.
"I'll think it over," Emerson said, guardedly.
Without warning, the adventurer burst into shrill laughter.
"Are you laughing at me?" angrily demanded the city youth.
Fraser composed his features, which seemed to have suddenly disrupted.
"Certainly not! I just thought of something that happened to my father
when I was a little child." Again he began to shake, at which Clyde
regarded him narrowly; but his merriment was so impersonal as to allay
suspicion, and the young fellow went on with undiminished enthusiasm:
"You think it over, and in the mean time I'll get a bunch of the fellows
together. We'll all have lunch at the University Club to-morrow, and you
can tell them about the affair."
Fraser abruptly ended his laughter as Boyd's heel came heavily in contact
with his instep under the table. Clyde was again lost in an exposition of
his fitness as a fisherman when Fraser burst out:
"Hello! There's George. He's walking in his sleep, and thinks this is a
manicure stable."
Emerson turned to behold Balt's huge figure all but blocking the distant
door. It was evident that he had been vainly trying to attract their
attention for some time, but lacked the courage to enter the crowded room,
for, upon catching Boyd's eye, he beckoned vigorously.
"Call him in," said Clyde, quickly. "I want to meet him. He looks just my
sort." And accordingly Emerson motioned to the fisherman. Seeing there was
no help for it, Big George composed himself and ventured timidly across
the portal, steering a tortuous course toward his friends; but in these
unaccustomed waters his bulk became unmanageable and his way beset with
perils. Deeming himself in danger of being run down by a waiter, he
sheered to starboard, and collided with a table at which there was a
theatre party. Endeavoring to apologize, he backed into a great pottery
vase, which rocked at the impact and threatened to topple from its
foundation.
"I'd rather take an ox-team through this room than him," said Fraser.
"He'll wreck something, sure."
Conscious of the attention he was attracting on all sides, Big George
became seized with an excess of awkwardness; his face blazed, and the
perspiration started from his forehead.
"I hope the head waiter doesn't speak to him," Boyd observed. "He is mad
enough to rend him limb from limb." But the words were barely spoken when
they saw a steward hasten toward George and address him, following which
the big fellow's voice rumbled angrily:
"No, I ain't made any mistake! I'm a boarder here, and you get out of my
way or I'll step on you." He strode forward threateningly, at which the
waiter hopped over the train of an evening dress and bowed obsequiously.
The noise of laughter and many voices ceased. In the silence George
pursued his way regardless of personal injury or property damage, breaking
trail, as it were, to his destination, where he sank limply into a chair
which creaked beneath his weight.
"Gimme a lemonade, quick; I'm all het up," he ordered. "I can't get no
footholt on these fancy floors, they're so dang slick."
After a half-dazed acknowledgment of his introduction to Alton Clyde, he
continued: "I've been trying to flag you for ten minutes." He mopped his
brow feebly.
"What is wrong?"
"Everything! It's too noisy for me in this hotel. I've been trying to
sleep for three hours, but this band keeps playing, and that elevated
railroad breaks down every few minutes right under my window. There's
whistles blowing, bells ringing, and--can't we find some quiet road-house
where I can get an hour's rest? Put me in a boiler-shop or a round-house,
where I can go to sleep."
"The hotels are all alike," Boyd answered. "You will soon get used to it."
"Who, me? Never! I want to get back to God's country."
"Hurrah for you!" ejaculated Clyde. "Same here. And I'm going with you."
"How's that?" questioned George.
"Mr. Clyde offers to put ten thousand dollars into the deal if he can go
to Kalvik with us and help run the cannery," explained Emerson.
George looked over the clubman carefully from his curly crown to his
slender, high-heeled shoes, then smiled broadly.
"It's up to Mr. Emerson. I'm willing if he is." Whereupon, vastly
encouraged, Clyde proceeded to expatiate upon his own surpassing
qualifications. While he was speaking, a party of three men approached,
and seated themselves at an adjoining table. As they pulled out their
chairs, Big George chanced to glance in their direction; then he put down
his lemonade glass carefully.
"What's the matter?" Boyd demanded, in a low tone, for the big fellow's
face had suddenly gone livid, while his eyes had widened like those of an
enraged animal.
"That's him!" George growled, "That's the dirty hound!"
"Sit still!" commanded Fraser; for the fisherman had shoved back from the
table and was rising, his hands working hungrily, the cords in his neck
standing out rigidly. Seeing the murder-light in his companion's eyes, the
speaker leaned forward and thrust the big fellow back into the chair from
which he had half lifted himself.
"Don't make a fool of yourself," he cautioned.
Clyde, who had likewise witnessed the giant's remarkable metamorphosis,
now inquired its meaning.
"That's him!" repeated George, his eyes glaring redly. "That's Willis
Marsh."
"Where?" Emerson whirled curiously; but there was no need for George to
point out his enemy, for one of the strangers stood as if frozen, with his
hand upon the back of his chair, an expression of the utmost astonishment
upon his face. A smile was dying from his lips.
Boyd beheld a plump, thick-set man of thirty-eight in evening dress. There
was nothing distinctive about him except, perhaps, his hair, which was of
a decided reddish hue. He was light of complexion; his mouth was small and
of a rather womanish appearance, due to the full red lips. He was well
groomed, well fed, in all ways he was a typical city-bred man. He might
have been a broker, though he did not carry the air of any particular
profession.
That he was, at all events, master of his emotions he soon gave evidence.
Raising his brows in recognition, he nodded pleasantly to Balt; then, as
if on second thought, excused himself to his companions and stepped toward
the other group. The legs of George's chair scraped noisily on the tiles
as he rose; the sound covered Fraser's quick admonition:
"Take it easy, pal; let him talk."
"How do you do, George? What in the name of goodness are you doing here? I
hardly recognized you." Marsh's voice was round and musical, his accent
Eastern. With an assumption of heartiness, he extended a white-gloved
hand, which the big, uncouth man who faced him refused to take. The other
three had risen. George seemed to be groping for a retort. Finally he
blurted out, hoarsely:
"Don't offer me your hand. It's dirty! It's got blood on it!"
"Nonsense!" Marsh smiled. "Let's be friends again, George. Bygones are
bygones. I came over to make up with you and ask about affairs at Kalvik.
If you are here on business and I can help--"
"You dirty rat!" breathed the fisherman.
"Very well; if you wish to be obstinate--" Willis Marsh shrugged his
shoulders carelessly, although in his voice there was a metallic note. "I
have nothing to say." He turned a very bright and very curious pair of
eyes upon George's companions, as if seeking from them some hint as to his
victim's presence there. It was but a momentary flash of inquiry, however,
and then his gaze, passing quickly over Clyde and Fraser, settled upon
Emerson.
"Mr. Balt and I had a business misunderstanding," he said, smoothly,
"which I hoped was forgotten. It didn't amount to much--"
At this Balt uttered a choking snarl and stepped forward, only to meet
Boyd, who intercepted him.
"Behave yourself!" he ordered. "Don't make a scene," and before the big
fellow could prevent it he had linked arms with him, and swung him around.
The movement was executed so naturally that none of the patrons of the
cafe noticed it, except, perhaps, as a preparation for departure. Marsh
bowed civilly and returned to his seat, while Boyd sauntered toward the
exit, his arm which controlled George tense as iron beneath his sleeve. He
felt the fisherman's great frame quivering against him and heard the
excited breath halting in his lungs; but possessed with the sole idea of
getting him away without disorder, he smiled back at Clyde and Fraser, who
were following, and chatted agreeably with his prisoner until they had
reached the foyer. Then he released his hold and said, quietly:
"You'd better go up to your room and cool off. You came near spoiling
everything."
"He tried to shake hands," George mumbled, "with me! That thieving
whelp tried to shake--" He trailed off into an unintelligible jargon of
curses and threats which did not end until he had reached the elevator.
Here Alton Clyde clamored for enlightenment as to the reason for this
eruption.
"That is the fellow we will have to fight, "Boyd explained. "He is the
head of the cannery combination at Kalvik, and a bitter enemy of George's.
If he suspects our motives or gets wind of our plans, we're done for."
Clyde spoke more earnestly than at any time during the evening. "Well,
that absolutely settles it as far as I am concerned. This is bound to end
in a row."
"You mean you don't want to join us?"
"Don't want to! Why, I've just got to, that's all. The ten
thousand is yours, but if you don't take me along I'll stow away."