Harold PLAYS the RAVEN.
Mason Compton, president and general
manager, sat in his private office in the works of
the International Machine Company, chewing upon an
unlighted cigar and occasionally running his fingers
through his iron-gray hair as he compared and recompared
two statements which lay upon the desk before him.
“Damn strange,” he muttered
as he touched a button beneath the edge of his desk.
A boy entered the room. “Ask Mr. Bince if
he will be good enough to step in here a moment, please,”
said Compton; and a moment later, when Harold Bince
entered, the older man leaned back in his chair and
motioned the other to be seated.
“I can’t understand these
statements, Harold,” said Compton. “Here
is one for August of last year and this is this August’s
statement of costs. We never had a better month
in the history of this organization than last month,
and yet our profits are not commensurate with the
volume of business that we did. That’s the
reason I sent for these cost statements and have compared
them, and I find that our costs have increased out
of all proportions to what is warranted. How do
you account for it?”
“Principally the increased cost
of labor,” replied Bince. “The same
holds true of everybody else. Every manufacturer
in the country is in the same plight we are.”
“I know,” agreed Compton,
“that that is true to some measure. Both
labor and raw materials have advanced, but we have
advanced our prices correspondingly. In some
instances it seems to me that our advance in prices,
particularly on our specialties, should have given
us even a handsomer profit over the increased cost
of production than we formerly received.
“In the last six months since
I appointed you assistant manager I am afraid that
I have sort of let things get out of my grasp.
I have a lot of confidence in you, Harold, and now
that you and Elizabeth are engaged I feel even more
inclined to let you shoulder the responsibilities that
I have carried alone from the inception of this organization.
But I’ve got to be mighty sure that you are
going to do at least as well as I did. You have
shown a great deal of ability, but you are young and
haven’t had the advantage of the years of experience
that made it possible for me to finally develop a
business second to none in this line in the West.
“I never had a son, and after
Elizabeth’s mother died I have lived in the
hope somehow that she would marry the sort of chap
who would really take the place of such a son as every
man dreams of—some one who will take his
place and carry on his work when he is ready to lay
aside his tools. I liked your father, Harold.
He was one of the best friends that I ever had, and
I can tell you now what I couldn’t have you a
month ago: that when I employed you and put you
in this position it was with the hope that eventually
you would fill the place in my business and in my
home of the son I never had.”
“Do you think Elizabeth guessed
what was in your mind?” asked Bince.
“I don’t know,”
replied the older man. “I have tried never
to say anything to influence her. Years ago when
she was younger we used to talk about it half jokingly
and shortly after you told me of your engagement she
remarked to me one day that she was happy, for she
knew you were going to be the sort of son I had wanted.
“I haven’t anybody on
earth but her, Harold, and when I die she gets the
business. I have arranged it in my will so you
two will share and share alike in profits after I
go, but that will be some time. I am far from
being an old man, and I am a mighty healthy one.
However, I should like to be relieved of the active
management. There are lot of things that I have
always wanted to do that I couldn’t do because
I couldn’t spare the time from my business.
“And so I want you to get thoroughly
into the harness as soon as possible, that I may turn
over the entire management you. But I can’t
do it, Harold, while the profits are diminishing.”
As the older man’s gaze fell
again to statements before him the eyes of younger
man narrowed just a trifle as they rested upon Mason
Compton, and then as the older man looked up Bince’s
expression changed.
“I’ll do my best, sir,”
he said, smiling. “Of course I realize,
as you must, that I have tried to learn a great deal
in a short time. I think I have reached a point
now where I pretty thoroughly grasp the possibilities
and requirements of my work, and I am sure that from
now on you will note a decided change for the better
on the right side of the ledger.”
“I am sure of it, my boy,”
said Compton heartily. “Don’t think
that I have been finding fault with anything you have
done. I just wanted to call your attention to
these figures. They mean something, and it’s
up to you to find out just what they do mean.”
And then there came a light tap on
the door, which opened immediately before any summons
to enter had been given, and Elizabeth Compton entered,
followed by another young woman.
“Hello, there!” exclaimed
Compton. “What gets us out so early?
And Harriet too! There is only one thing that
would bring you girls in here so early.”
“And what’s that?” asked Elizabeth.
“You are going shopping, and Elizabeth wants
some money.”
They all laughed. “You’re
a regular Sherlock Holmes!” exclaimed Harriet
Holden.
“How much?” asked Compton of his daughter,
still smiling.
“How much have you?” asked Elizabeth.
“I am utterly broke.”
Compton turned to Bince. “Get her what
she needs, Harold,” he said.
The young man started to the door.
“Come with me, Elizabeth,”
he said; “we will go out to the cashier’s
cage and get you fixed up.”
They entered Bince’s office, which adjoined
Compton’s.
“Wait here a minute, Elizabeth,”
said Bince. “How much do you want?
I’ll get it for you and bring it back. I
want to see you a moment alone before you go.”
She told him how much she wanted,
and he was back shortly with the currency.
“Elizabeth,” he said,
“I don’t know whether you have noticed
it or not, because your father isn’t a man to
carry his troubles home, but I believe that he is
failing rapidly, largely from overwork. He worries
about conditions here which really do not exist.
I have been trying to take the load off his shoulders
so that he could ease up a bit, but he has got into
a rut from which be cannot be guided.
“He will simply have to be lifted
completely out of it, or be will stay here and die
in the harness. Everything is running splendidly,
and now that I have a good grasp of the business I
can handle it. Don’t you suppose you could
persuade him to take a trip? I know that he wants
to travel. He has told me so several times, and
if he could get away from here this fall and stay
away for a year, if possible, it would make a new
man of him. I am really very much worried about
him, and while I hate to worry you I feel that you
are the only person who can influence him and that
something ought to be done and done at once.”
“Why, Harold,” exclaimed
the girl, “there is nothing the matter with
father! He was never better in his life nor more
cheerful.”
“That’s the side of him
that he lets you see,” replied the man.
“His gaiety is all forced. If you could
see him after you leave you would realize that he
is on the verge of a nervous breakdown. Your father
is not an old man in years, but he has placed a constant
surtax on his nervous system for the last twenty-five
years without a let-up, and it doesn’t make
any difference how good a machine may be it is going
to wear out some day, and the better the machine the
more complete will be the wreck when the final break
occurs.”
As he spoke he watched the girl’s
face, the changing expression of it, which marked
her growing mental perturbation.
“You really believe it is as
bad as that, Harold?” she asked.
“It may be worse than I think,”
he said. “It is surely fully as bad.”
The girl rose slowly from the chair.
“I will try and persuade him to see Dr. Earle.”
The man took a step toward her.
“I don’t believe a doctor is what he
needs,” he said quickly. “His condition
is one that even a nerve specialist might not diagnose
correctly. It is only some one in a position
like mine, who has an opportunity to observe him almost
hourly, day by day, who would realize his condition.
I doubt if he has any organic trouble whatever.
What he needs is a long rest, entirely free from any
thought whatever of business. At least, Elizabeth,
it will do him no harm, and it may prolong his life
for years. I wouldn’t go messing around
with any of these medical chaps.”
“Well,” she said at last,
with a sigh, “I will talk to him and see if I
can’t persuade him to take a trip. He has
always wanted to visit Japan and China.”
“Just the thing!” exclaimed
Bince; “just the thing for him. The long
sea voyage will do him a world of good. And now,”
he said, stepping to her side and putting an arm around
her.
She pushed him gently away.
“No,” she said; “I
do not feel like kissing now,” and turning she
entered her father’s office, followed by Bince.