WILLIS FORD’S NEW FRIENDS
When Harry Decker left the office
at the end of two weeks, Grant was fully able to take
his place, having, with Harry’s friendly assistance,
completely mastered the usual routine of a broker’s
office. He had also learned the names and offices
of prominent operators, and was, in all respects,
qualified to be of service to his employer.
Mr. Reynolds always treated him with
friendly consideration, and appeared to have perfect
confidence in him. For some reason which he could
not understand, however, Willis Ford was far from cordial,
often addressing him in a fault-finding tone, which
at first disturbed Grant. When he found that
it arose from Ford’s dislike, he ceased to trouble
himself about it, though it annoyed him. He had
discovered Ford’s relationship to Mrs. Estabrook,
who treated him in the same cool manner.
“As it appears I can’t
please them,” Grant said to himself, “I
won’t make any special effort to do so.”
He contented himself with doing his work faithfully,
and so satisfying his own conscience.
One evening some weeks later, Grant
was returning from a concert, to which the broker
had given him a ticket, when, to his great surprise,
he met Willis Ford walking with Tom Calder and Jim
Morrison. The three were apparently on intimate
terms.
“Good-evenin’, Grant,” said Tom.
“Good-evening, Tom.”
Grant looked at Willis Ford, but the
latter’s lip curled and he did not speak.
Grant, however, bowed and passed on. He was surprised
at the intimacy which had grown up between Ford and
those two, knowing Ford’s spirit of exclusiveness.
He would have been less surprised had he known that
Morrison had first ingratiated himself with Ford by
offering to lend him money, and afterward had lured
him into a gambling house, where Ford, not knowing
that he was a dupe, had been induced to play, and
was now a loser to the extent of several hundred dollars,
for which Morrison held his notes.
“I don’t know when I can
pay you,” said Ford, gloomily, when he came
to realize his situation.
“Oh, something will turn up.”
said Jim Morrison, lightly. “I shan’t
trouble you.”
Two weeks later, however, he lay in
wait for Ford when he left Wall Street.
“I want to speak to you a moment, Mr. Ford,”
he said.
“Well, what is it?” asked Ford, uncomfortably.
“I am hard up.”
“So am I,” responded Willis Ford.
“But you owe me a matter of six hundred dollars.”
“I know it, but you said you wouldn’t
trouble me.”
“I didn’t expect I should
be obliged to,” said Morrison, smoothly.
“But ‘Circumstances alter cases,’
you know. I shall have to ask you for it.”
“That’s all the good it
will do,” said Willis, irritably. “I
haven’t a cent to my name.”
“When do you expect to have?”
“Heaven knows; I don’t.”
Ford was about to leave his companion
and walk away, but Morrison had no intention of allowing
the matter to end so. He laid his hand on Ford’s
shoulder and said, firmly: “Mr. Ford, this
won’t do. Yours is a debt of honor, and
must be paid.”
“Will you be kind enough to
let me know how it is to be paid?” demanded
Ford, with an ugly sneer.
“That is your business, not mine, Mr. Ford.”
“Then, if it is my business,
I’ll give you notice when I can pay you.
And now, good-afternoon.”
He made another attempt to walk away,
but again there was a hand placed upon his shoulder.
“Understand, Mr. Ford, that
I am in earnest,” said Morrison. “I
can’t undertake to tell you how you are to find
the money, but it must be found.”
“Suppose it isn’t?”
said Ford, with a look of defiance.
“Then I shall seek an interview
with your respected employer, tell him of the debt,
and how it was incurred, and I think he would look
for another clerk.”
“You wouldn’t do that!”
said Ford, his face betraying consternation.
“I would, and I will, unless you pay what you
owe me.”
“But, man, how am I to do it? You will
drive me to desperation.”
“Take three days to think of
it. If you can’t raise it, I may suggest
a way.”
The two parted, and Willis Ford was
left to many uncomfortable reflections. He knew
of no way to raise the money; yet, if he did not do
it, he was menaced with exposure and ruin. Would
his stepmother come to his assistance? He knew
that Mrs. Estabrook had a thousand dollars in government
bonds. If he could only induce her to give him
the custody of them on any pretext, he could meet the
demand upon him, and he would never again incur a debt
of honor. He cursed his folly for ever yielding
to the temptation. Once let him get out of this
scrape, and he would never get into another like it.
The next evening he made a call upon
Mrs. Estabrook, and made himself unusually agreeable.
The cold-hearted woman, whose heart warmed to him
alone, smiled upon him with affection.
“I am glad to see you in such
good spirits, Willis,” she said.
“If she only knew how I really
felt,” thought her stepson. But it was
for his interest to wear a mask.
“The fact is, mother,”
he said, “I feel very cheerful. I’ve
made a little turn in stocks, and realized three hundred
dollars.”
“Have you, indeed, Willis?
I congratulate you, my son. No doubt you will
find the money useful.”
“No doubt of that. If I
had the capital, I could make a good deal more.”
“But there would be the danger
of losing,” suggested Mrs. Estabrook.
“That danger is very small,
mother. I am in a situation to know all about
the course of stocks. I wouldn’t advise
another to speculate, unless he has some friend in
the Stock Exchange; but for me it is perfectly safe.”
“Pray be careful, Willis.”
“Oh, yes. I am sure to
be. By the way, mother, haven’t you got
some money in government bonds?”
“A little,” answered Mrs. Estabrook, cautiously.
“How much, now?”
“About a thousand dollars.”
“Let me manage it for you, and
I will make it two thousand inside of a month.”
Mrs. Estabrook had a large share of
acquisitiveness, but she had also a large measure
of caution, which she had inherited from her Scotch
ancestry.
“No, Willis,” she said,
shaking her head, “I can’t take any risk.
This money it has taken me years to save. It is
the sole dependence I have for my old age, and I can’t
run the risk of losing it.”
“But two thousand dollars will
be better than one, mother. Just let me tell
you what happened to a customer of ours: He had
above five hundred dollars in the savings bank, drawing
four per cent interest—only twenty dollars
a year. He had a friend in the Stock Exchange
who took charge of it, bought stocks judiciously on
a margin, then reinvested, and now, after three months,
how much do you think it amounts to?”
“How much?” asked the housekeeper, with
interest.
“Six thousand five hundred dollars—just
thirteen times as much!” answered Willis, glibly.
This story, by the way, was all a
fabrication, intended to influence his stepmother.
Mrs. Estabrook never doubted Ford’s statement,
but her instinctive caution saved her from falling
into the trap.
“It looks tempting, Willis,”
she said, “but I don’t dare to take the
risk.” Ford was deeply disappointed, but
did not betray it.
“It is for you to decide,”
said he, carelessly, then drifted to other subjects.
Ten minutes later he pressed his hand
upon his breast, while his features worked convulsively.
“I believe I am sick,” he said.
“What can I do for you, my dear
son?” asked the housekeeper, in alarm.
“If you have a glass of brandy!” gasped
Willis.
“I will go downstairs and get some,” she
said, hurriedly.
No sooner had she left the room than
Willis sprang to his feet, locked the door, then went
to the bureau, unlocked the upper drawer—he
had a key in his pocket which fitted the lock and,
thrusting in his hand, drew out a long envelope containing
one five-hundred-dollar government bond and five bonds
of one hundred dollars each, which he thrust into
his side pocket. Then, closing the drawer, he
unlocked the door of the room, and when his step-mother
returned he threw himself back in his chair, groaning.
He took the glass of brandy the housekeeper brought
him, and, after a few minutes, professing himself
much better, left the house.
“Saved!” he exclaimed,
triumphantly. “Now I shall be all right
again.”