MR. J. MADISON COLEMAN
Luke didn’t shrink from the
long trip before him. He enjoyed the prospect
of it, having always longed to travel and see distant
places. He felt flattered by Mr. Armstrong’s
confidence in him, and stoutly resolved to deserve
it. He would have been glad if he could have
had the company of his friend Linton, but he knew that
this was impossible. He must travel alone.
“You have a difficult and perplexing
task, Luke,” said the capitalist. “You
may not succeed.”
“I will do my best, Mr. Armstrong.”
“That is all I have a right
to expect. If you succeed, you will do me a great
service, of which I shall show proper appreciation.”
He gave Luke some instructions, and
it was arranged that our hero should write twice a
week, and, if occasion required, oftener, so that
his employer might be kept apprised of his movements.
Luke was not to stop short of Chicago.
There his search was to begin; and there, if possible,
he was to obtain information that might guide his
subsequent steps.
It is a long ride to Chicago, as Luke
found. He spent a part of the time in reading,
and a part in looking out of the window at the scenery,
but still, at times, he felt lonely.
“I wish Linton Tomkins were
with me,” he reflected. “What a jolly
time we would have!”
But Linton didn’t even know
what had become of his friend. Luke’s absence
was an occasion for wonder at Groveton, and many questions
were asked of his mother.
“He was sent for by Mr. Reed,”
answered the widow. “He is at work for
him.”
“Mr. Reed is in New York, isn’t he?”
“Yes.”
It was concluded, therefore, that
Luke was in New York, and one or two persons proposed
to call upon him there, but his mother professed ignorance
of his exact residence. She knew that he was
traveling, but even she was kept in the dark as to
where he was, nor did she know that Mr. Armstrong,
and not Mr. Reed, was his employer.
Some half dozen hours before reaching
Chicago, a young man of twenty-five, or thereabouts,
sauntered along the aisle, and sat down in the vacant
seat beside Luke.
“Nice day,” he said, affably.
“Very nice,” responded Luke.
“I suppose you are bound to Chicago?”
“Yes, I expect to stay there awhile.”
“Going farther?”
“I can’t tell yet.”
“Going to school out there?”
“No.”
“Perhaps you are traveling for
some business firm, though you look pretty young for
that.”
“No, I’m not a drummer,
if that’s what you mean. Still, I have
a commisison from a New York business man.”
“A commission—of what kind?”
drawled the newcomer.
“It is of a confidential character,” said
Luke.
“Ha! close-mouthed,” thought
the young man. “Well, I’ll get it
out of him after awhile.”
He didn’t press the question,
not wishing to arouse suspicion or mistrust.
“Just so,” he replied.
“You are right to keep it to yourself, though
you wouldn’t mind trusting me if you knew me
better. Is this your first visit to Chicago?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Suppose we exchange cards. This is mine.”
He handed Luke a card, bearing this name.
J. MADISON COLEMAN
At the bottom of the card he wrote
in pencil, “representing H. B. Claflin & Co.”
“Of course you’ve heard of our firm,”
he said.
“Certainly.”
“I don’t have the firm
name printed on my card, for Claflin won’t allow
it. You will notice that I am called for old President
Madison. He was an old friend of my grandfather.
In fact, grandfather held a prominent office under
his administration— collector of the port
of New York.”
“I have no card with me,”
responded Luke. “But my name is Luke Larkin.”
“Good name. Do you live in New York?”
“No; a few miles in the country.”
“And whom do you represent?”
“Myself for the most part,” answered Luke,
with a smile.
“Good! No one has a better
right to. I see there’s something in you,
Luke.”
“You’ve found it out pretty quick,”
thought Luke.
“And I hope we will get better
acquainted. If you’re not permanently employed
by this party, whose name you don’t give, I will
get you into the employ of Claflin & Co., if you would
like it.”
“Thank you,” answered
Luke, who thought it quite possible that he might
like to obtain a position with so eminent a firm.
“How long have you been with them?”
“Ten years—ever since
I was of your age,” promptly answered Mr. Coleman.
“Is promotion rapid?” Luke asked, with
interest.
“Well, that depends on a man’s
capacity. I have been pushed right along.
I went there as a boy, on four dollars a week; now
I’m a traveling salesman—drummer
as it is called—and I make about four thousand
a year.”
“That’s a fine salary,”
said Luke, feeling that his new acquaintance must
be possessed of extra ability to occupy so desirable
a position.
“Yes, but I expect next year
to get five thousand—Claflin knows I am
worth it, and as he is a liberal man, I guess he will
give it sooner than let me go.”
“I suppose many do not get on so well, Mr. Coleman.”
“I should say so! Now,
there is a young fellow went there the same time that
I did—his name is Frank Bolton. We
were schoolfellows together, and just the same age,
that is, nearly—he was born in April, and
I in May. Well, we began at the same time on the
same salary. Now I get sixty dollars a week and
he only twelve—and he is glad to get that,
too.”
“I suppose he hasn’t much business capacity.”
“That’s where you’ve
struck it, Luke. He knows about enough to be
clerk in a country store—and I suppose he’ll
fetch up there some day. You know what that means—selling
sugar, and tea, and dried apples to old ladies, and
occasionally measuring off a yard of calico, or selling
a spool of cotton. If I couldn’t do better
than that I’d hire out as a farm laborer.”
Luke smiled at the enumeration of
the duties of a country salesman. It was clear
that Mr. Coleman, though he looked city-bred, must
at some time in the past have lived in the country.
“Perhaps that is the way I should
turn out,” he said. “I might not
rise any higher than your friend Mr. Bolton.”
“Oh, yes, you would. You’re
smart enough, I’ll guarantee. You might
not get on so fast as I have, for it isn’t every
young man of twenty-six that can command four thousand
dollars a year, but you would rise to a handsome income,
I am sure.”
“I should be satisfied with
two thousand a year at your age.”
“I would be willing to guarantee
you that,” asserted Mr. Coleman, confidently.
“By the way, where do you propose to put up in
Chicago?”
“I have not decided yet.”
“You’d better go with me to the Ottawa
House.”
“Is it a good house?”
“They’ll feed you well there, and only
charge two dollars a day”
“Is it centrally located?”
“It isn’t as central as
the Palmer, or Sherman, or Tremont, but it is convenient
to everything.”
I ought to say here that I have chosen
to give a fictitious name to the hotel designated
by Mr. Coleman.
“Come, what do you say?”
“I have no objection,”
answered Luke, after a slight pause for reflection.
Indeed, it was rather pleasant to
him to think that he would have a companion on his
first visit to Chicago who was well acquainted with
the city, and could serve as his guide. Though
he should not feel justified in imparting to Mr. Coleman
his special business, he meant to see something of
the city, and would find his new friend a pleasant
companion.
“That’s good,” said
Coleman, well pleased. “I shall be glad
to have your company. I expected to meet a friend
on the train, but something must have delayed him,
and so I should have been left alone.”
“I suppose a part of your time
will be given to business?” suggested Luke.
“Yes, but I take things easy;
when I work, I work. I can accomplish as much
in a couple of hours as many would do in a whole day.
You see, I understand my customers. When soft
sawder is wanted, I am soft sawder. When I am
dealing with a plain, businesslike man, I talk in
a plain, businesslike way. I study my man, and
generally I succeed in striking him for an order,
even if times are hard and he is already well stocked.”
“He certainly knows how to talk,”
thought Luke. In fact, he was rather disposed
to accept Mr. Coleman at his own valuation, though
that was a very high one.
“Do you smoke?”
“Not at all.”
“Not even a cigarette?”
“Not even a cigarette.”
“I was intending to ask you
to go with me into the smoking-car for a short time.
I smoke a good deal; it is my only vice. You know
we must all have some vices.”
Luke didn’t see the necessity,
but he assented, because it seemed to be expected.
“I won’t be gone long.
You’d better come along, too, and smoke a cigarette.
It is time you began to smoke. Most boys begin
much earlier.”
Luke shook his head.
“I don’t care to learn,” he said.
“Oh, you’re a good boy—one
of the Sunday-school kind,” said Coleman, with
a slight sneer. “You’ll get over that
after a while. You’ll be here when I come
back?”
Luke promised that he would, and for
the next half hour he was left alone. As his
friend Mr. Coleman left the car, he followed him with
his glance, and surveyed him more attentively than
he had hitherto done. The commercial traveler
was attired in a suit of fashionable plaid, wore a
showy necktie, from the center of which blazed a diamond
scarfpin. A showy chain crossed his vest, and
to it was appended a large and showy watch, which
looked valuable, though appearances are sometimes
deceitful.
“He must spend a good deal of
money,” thought Luke. “I wonder that
he should be willing to go to a two-dollar-a-day hotel.”
Luke, for his own part, was quite
willing to go to the Ottawa House. He had never
fared luxuriously, and he had no doubt that even at
the Ottawa House he should live better than at home.
It was nearer an hour than half an
hour before Coleman came back.
“I stayed away longer than I
intended,” he said. “I smoked three
cigars, instead of one, seeing you wasn’t with
me to keep me company. I found some social fellows,
and we had a chat.”
Mr. Coleman absented himself once
or twice more. Finally, the train ran into the
depot, and the conductor called out, “Chicago!”
“Come along, Luke!” said Coleman.
The two left the car in company.
Coleman hailed a cab—gave the order, Ottawa
House—and in less than five minutes they
were rattling over the pavements toward their hotel.