The lizard.
That night Jimmy attended a show,
and treated himself to a lonely dinner afterward.
He should have liked very much to have looked up some
of his friends. A telephone call would have brought
invitations to dinner and a pleasant evening with
convivial companions, but he had mapped his course
and he was determined to stick to it to the end.
“There will be plenty of time,”
he thought, “for amusement after I have gotten
a good grasp of my new duties.” Jimmy elected
to walk from the theater to his hotel, and as he was
turning the corner from Randolph into La Salle a young
man jostled him. An instant later the stranger
was upon his knees, his wrist doubled suddenly backward
and very close to the breaking-point.
“Wot t’ hell yuh doin’?” he
screamed.
“Pardon me,” replied Jimmy:
“you got your hand in the wrong pocket.
I suppose you meant to put it in your own, but you
didn’t.”
“Aw, g’wan; lemme go,”
pleaded the stranger. “I didn’t get
nuthin’— you ain’t got the
goods on me.”
Now, such a tableau as Jimmy and his
new acquaintance formed cannot be staged at the corner
of Randolph and La Salle beneath an arc light, even
at midnight, without attracting attention. And
so it was that before Jimmy realized it a dozen curious
pedestrians were approaching them from different directions,
and a burly blue-coated figure was shouldering his
way forward.
Jimmy had permitted his captive to
rise, but he still held tightly to his wrist as the
officer confronted them. He took one look at Jimmy’s
companion, and then grabbed him roughly by the arm.
“So, it’s you again, is it?” he
growled.
“I ain’t done nuthin’,” muttered
the man.
The officer looked inquiringly at Jimmy.
“What’s all the excitement
about?” asked the latter. “My friend
and I have done nothing.”
“Your fri’nd and you?”
replied the policeman. “He ain’t
no fri’nd o’ yours, or yez wouldn’t
be sayin’ so.”
“Well, I’ll admit,”
replied Jimmy, “that possibly I haven’t
known him long enough to presume to claim any close
friendship, but there’s no telling what time
may develop.”
“You don’t want him pinched?” asked
the policeman.
“Of course not,” replied Jimmy.
“Why should he be pinched?”
The officer turned roughly upon the
stranger, shook him viciously a few times, and then
gave him a mighty shove which all but sent him sprawling
into the gutter.
“G’wan wid yez,”
he yelled after him, “and if I see ye on this
beat again I’ll run yez in. An’ you”—he
turned upon Jimmy—“ye’d betther
be on your way—and not be afther makin’
up with ivery dip ye meet.”
“Thanks,” said Jimmy. “Have
a cigar.”
After the officer had helped himself
and condescended to relax his stern features into
the semblance of a smile the young man bid him good
night and resumed his way toward the hotel.
“Pretty early to go to bed,”
he thought as he reached for his watch to note the
time, running his fingers into an empty pocket.
Gingerly he felt in another pocket, where he knew
his watch couldn’t possibly be, nor was.
Carefully Jimmy examined each pocket of his coat and
trousers, a slow and broad grin illumining his face.
“What do you know about that?”
he mused. “And I thought I was a wise
guy.”
A few minutes after Jimmy reached
his room the office called him on the telephone to
tell him that a man had called to see him.
“Send him up,” said Jimmy,
wondering who it might be, since he was sure that
no one knew of his presence in the city. He tried
to connect the call in some way with his advertisement,
but inasmuch as that had been inserted blind he felt
that there could be no possible connection between
that and his caller.
A few minutes later there was a knock
on his door, and in response to his summons to enter
the door opened, and there stood before him the young
man of his recent encounter upon the street. The
latter entered softly, closing the door behind him.
His feet made no sound upon the carpet, and no sound
came from the door as he closed it, nor any slightest
click from the latch. His utter silence and the
stealth of his movements were so pronounced as to
attract immediate attention. He did not speak
until he had reached the center of the room and halted
on the opposite side of the table at which Jimmy was
standing; and then a very slow smile moved his lips,
though the expression of his eyes remained unchanged.
“Miss anything?” he asked.
“Yes,” said Jimmy.
“Here it is,” said the visitor, laying
the other’s watch upon the table.
“Why this spasm of virtue?” asked Jimmy.
“Oh, I don’t know,”
replied the other. “I guess it’s
because you’re a white guy. O’Donnell
has been trying to get something on me for the last
year. He’s got it in for me—I
wouldn’t cough every time the big stiff seen
me.”
“Sit down,” said Jimmy.
“Naw,” said the other; “I gotta
be goin’.”
“Come,” insisted the host;
“sit down for a few minutes at least. I
was just wishing that I had someone to talk to.”
The other sank noiselessly into a chair. “All
right, bo,” he said.
Jimmy proffered him his cigar-case.
“No, thanks,” declined
the visitor. “I’d rather have a coffin-nail,”
which Jimmy forthwith furnished.
“I should think,” said
Jimmy, “that your particular line of endeavor
would prove rather hazardous in a place where you are
known by the police.”
The other smiled and, as before, with his lips alone.
“Naw,” he said; “this
is the safest place to work. If ten per cent
of the bulls know me I got that much on them, and
then some, because any boob can spot any one o’
de harness bunch, and I know nearly every fly on the
department. They’re the guys yuh gotta know,
and usually I know something besides their names,
too,” and again his lips smiled.
“How much of your time do you
have to put in at your occupation to make a living?”
asked Jimmy.
“Sometimes I put in six or eight
hours a day,” replied the visitor. “De
rush hours on de surface line are usually good for
two or t’ree hours a day, but I been layin’
off dat stuff lately and goin’ in fer de t’ater
crowd. Dere’s more money and shorter hours.”
“You confine yourself,”
asked Jimmy, “to—er—ah—pocket-picking
solely?”
Again the lip smile. “I’ll
tell youse sumpin’, bo, dat dey don’t none
o’ dem big stiffs on de department know.
De dip game is a stall. I learned it when I was
a kid, an’ dese yaps t’ink dat’s
all I know, and I keep dem t’inkin’ it
by pullin’ stuff under der noses often enough
to give ‘em de hunch dat I’m still at
de same ol’ business.” He leaned
confidentially across the table. “If you
ever want a box cracked, look up the Lizard.”
“Meaning?” asked Jimmy.
“Me, bo, I’m the Lizard.”
“Box cracked?” repeated Jimmy. “An
ice-box or a hot box?”
His visitor grinned. “Safe,” he
explained.
“Oh,” said Jimmy, “if
I ever want any one to break into a safe, come to
you, huh?”
“You get me,” replied the other.
“All right,” said Jimmy,
laughing, “I’ll call on you. That
the only name you got, Mr. Lizard?”
“That’s all—just the Lizard.
Now I gotta he beatin’ it.”
“Goin’ to crack a box?” asked Jimmy.
The other smiled his lip smile and turned toward the
door.
“Wait a second,” said
Jimmy. “What would you have gotten on this
watch of mine?”
“It would have stood me about twenty bucks.”
Jimmy reached into his pocket and
drew forth a roll of bills. “Here,”
he said, handing the other two tens.
“Naw,” said the Lizard,
shoving the proffered money away. “I’m
no cheap skate.”
“Come on—take it,”
said Jimmy. “I may want a box cracked some
day.”
“All right,” said the
Lizard, “if you put it that way, bo.”
“I should think,” said
Jimmy, “that a man of your ability could earn
a living by less precarious methods.” “You
would think so,” replied the Lizard. “I’ve
tried two or three times to go straight. Wore
out my shoes looking for a job. Never landed
anything that paid me more than ten bucks per, and
worked nine or ten hours a day, and half the time I
couldn’t get that.”
“I suppose the police hounded
you all the time, too,” suggested Jimmy.
“Naw,” said the Lizard;
“dat’s all bunk. De fellows that
couldn’t even float down a sewer straight pull
dat. Once in a while dey get it in for some guy,
but dey’re glad enough to leave us alone if we
leave dem alone. I worked four hours to-day,
maybe six before I get through, and I’ll stand
a chance of makin’ all the way from fifty dollars
to five thousand. Suppose I was drivin’
a milk-wagon, gettin’ up at t’ree o’clock
in the mornin’ and workin’ like hell—how
much would I get out of dat? Expectin’
every minute some one was goin’ tuh fire me.
Nuthin’ doin’—dey can’t
nobody fire me now. I’m my own boss.”
“Well,” said Jimmy, “your
logic sounds all right, but it all depends upon the
viewpoint. But I’ll tell you: you’ve
offered me your services; I’ll offer you mine.
Whenever you want a job, look me up. I’m
going to be general manager of a big concern here,
and you’ll find me in the next issue of the
telephone directory.” He handed the Lizard
his card.
“Tanks,” said the latter.
“If you don’t want a box cracked any sooner
than I want a job, the chances are we will never meet
again. So-long,” and he was gone as noiselessly
as he had come.
Jimmy breakfasted at nine the next
morning, and as he waited for his bacon and eggs he
searched the Situations Wanted columns of the morning
paper until his eye finally alighted upon that for
which he sought—the ad that was to infuse
into the business life of the great city a new and
potent force. Before his breakfast was served
Jimmy had read the few lines over a dozen times, and
with each succeeding reading he was more and more
pleased with the result of his advertising ability
as it appeared in print.
Wanted—By College
Graduate—Position as General Manager
of Large Business where ability, energy and
experience will be appreciated. Address
263-S, Tribune Office.
He had decided to wait until after
lunch before calling at the newspaper office for replies
to his advertisement, but during breakfast it occurred
to him there probably would be several alert prospective
employers who would despatch their replies by special
messengers, and realizing that promptness was one
of the cardinal virtues in the business world, Jimmy
reasoned that it would make a favorable impression
were he to present himself as soon as possible after
the receipt of replies.
By a simple system of reasoning he
deduced that ten o’clock would be none too early
to expect some returns from his ad, and therefore at
ten promptly he presented himself at the Want Ad Department
in the Tribune office.
Comparing the number of the receipt
which Jimmy handed him with the numbers upon a file
of little pigeonholes, the clerk presently turned
back toward the counter with a handful of letters.
“Whew!” thought Jimmy.
“I never would have guessed that I would receive
a bunch like that so early in the morning.”
But then, as he saw the clerk running through them
one by one, he realized that they were not all for
him, and as the young man ran through them Jimmy’s
spirits dropped a notch with each letter that was
passed over without being thrown out to him, until,
when the last letter had passed beneath the scrutiny
of the clerk, and the advertiser realized that he had
received no replies, he was quite sure that there
was some error.
“Nothing,” said the clerk, shaking his
head negatively.
“Are you sure you looked in the right compartment?”
asked Jimmy.
“Sure,” replied the clerk. “There
is nothing for you.”
Jimmy pocketed his slip and walked
from the office. “This town is slower
than I thought it was,” he mused. “’I
guess they do need some live wires here to manage
their business.”
At noon he returned, only to be again
disappointed, and then at two o’clock, and when
he came in at four the same clerk looked up wearily
and shook his head.
“Nothing for you,” he
said. “I distributed all the stuff myself
since you were in last.”
As Jimmy stood there almost dazed
by surprise that during an entire day his ad had appeared
in Chicago’s largest newspaper, and he had not
received one reply, a man approached the counter, passed
a slip similar to Jimmy’s to the clerk, and
received fully a hundred letters in return. Jimmy
was positive now that something was wrong.
“Are you sure,” he asked
the clerk, “that my replies haven’t been
sidetracked somewhere? I have seen people taking
letters away from here all day, and that bird there
just walked off with a fistful.”
The clerk grinned. “What you advertising
for?” he asked.
“A position,” replied Jimmy.
“That’s the answer,”
explained the clerk. “That fellow there
was advertising for help.”