PLOTTING.
The following Monday Miss Edith Hudson
went to work for the International Machine Company
as Mr. Compton’s stenographer. Nor could
the most fastidious have discovered aught to criticize
in the appearance or deportment of Little Eva.
The same day the certified public
accountants came. Mr. Harold Bince appeared
nervous and irritable, and he would have been more
nervous and more irritable had he known that Jimmy
had just learned the amount of the pay-check from
Everett and that he had discovered that, although
five men had been laid off and no new ones employed
since the previous week, the payroll check was practically
the same as before— approximately one thousand
dollars more than his note-book indicated it should
be.
“Phew!” whistled Jimmy.
“These C.P.A.s are going to find this a more
interesting job than they anticipated. Poor old
Compton! I feel mighty sorry for him, but he
had better find it out now than after that grafter
has wrecked his business entirely.”
That afternoon Mr. Compton left the
office earlier than usual, complaining of a headache,
and the next morning his daughter telephoned that
he was ill and would not come to the office that day.
During the morning as Bince was walking through the
shop he stopped to talk with Krovac.
Pete Krovac was a rat-faced little
foreigner, looked upon among the men as a trouble-maker.
He nursed a perpetual grievance against his employer
and his job, and whenever the opportunity presented,
and sometimes when it did not present itself, he endeavored
to inoculate others with his dissatisfaction.
Bince had hired the man, and during the several months
that Krovac had been with the company, the assistant
general manager had learned enough from other workers
to realize that the man was an agitator and a troublemaker.
Several times he had been upon the point of discharging
him, but now he was glad that he had not, for he thought
he saw in him a type that in the light of present
conditions might be of use to him.
In fact, for the past couple of weeks
he had been using the man in an endeavor to get some
information concerning Torrance and his methods that
would permit him to go to Compton with a valid argument
for Jimmy’s discharge.
“Well, Krovac,” he said
as be came upon the man, “is Torrance interfering
with you any now?”
“He hasn’t got my job
yet,” growled the other, “but he’s
letting out hard-working men with families without
any reason. The first thing you know you’ll
have a strike on your hands.”
“I haven’t heard any one
else complaining,” said Bince. “You
will, though,” replied Krovac. “They
don’t any of us know when we are going to be
canned to give Compton more profit, and men are not
going to stand for that long.”
“Then,” said Bince, “I
take it that he really hasn’t interfered with
you much?”
“Oh, he’s always around
asking a lot of fool questions,” said Krovac.
“Last week he asked every man in the place what
his name was and what wages he was getting. Wrote
it all down in a little book. I suppose he is
planning on cutting pay.”
Bince’s eyes narrowed.
“He got that information from every man in the
shop?” he asked.
“Yes,” replied Krovac.
Bince was very pale. He stood
in silence for some minutes, apparently studying the
man before him. At last he spoke.
“Krovac,” he said, “you
don’t like this man Torrance, do you?”
“No,” said the other, “I don’t.”
“Neither do I,” said Bince.
“I know his plans even better than you.
This shop has short hours and good pay, but if we don’t
get rid of him it will have the longest hours and
lowest pay of any shop in the city.”
“Well?” questioned Krovac.
“I think,” said Bince,
“that there ought to be some way to prevent this
man doing any further harm here.”
He looked straight into Krovac’s eyes.
“There is,” muttered the latter.
“It would be worth something
of course,” suggested Bince. “How
much?” asked Krovac.
“Oh, I should think it ought
to be worth a hundred dollars,” replied Bince.
Krovac thought for a moment.
“I think I can arrange it,”
he said, “but I would have to have fifty now.”
“I cannot give it to you here,”
said Bince, “but if I should happen to pass
through the shop this afternoon you might find an envelope
on the floor beside your machine after I have gone.”
The following evening as Jimmy alighted
from the Indiana Avenue car at Eighteenth Street,
two men left the car behind him. He did not notice
them, although, as he made his way toward his boarding-house,
he heard footsteps directly in his rear, and suddenly
noting that they were approaching him rapidly, he
involuntarily cast a glance behind him just as one
of the men raised an arm to strike at him with what
appeared to be a short piece of pipe.
Jimmy dodged the blow and then both
men sprang for him. The first one Jimmy caught
on the point of the chin with a blow that put its recipient
out of the fight before he got into it, and then his
companion, who was the larger, succeeded in closing
with the efficiency expert. Inadvertently, however,
he caught Jimmy about the neck, leaving both his intended
victim’s arms free with the result that the latter
was able to seize his antagonist low down about the
body, and then pressing him close to him and hurling
himself suddenly forward, he threw the fellow backward
upon the cement sidewalk with his own body on top.
With a resounding whack the attacker’s head
came in contact with the concrete, his arms relaxed
their hold upon Jimmy’s neck, and as the latter
arose he saw both his assailants, temporarily at least,
out of the fighting.
Jimmy glanced hastily in both directions.
There was no one in sight. His boardinghouse
was but a few steps away, and two minutes later he
was safe in his room.
“A year ago,” he thought
to himself, smiling, “my first thought would
have been to have called in the police, but the Lizard
has evidently given me a new view-point in regard
to them,” for the latter had impressed upon
Jimmy the fact that whatever knowledge a policeman
might have regarding one was always acquired with
the idea that eventually it might be used against
the person to whom it pertained.
“What a policeman don’t
know about you will never hurt you,” was one
way that the Lizard put it.
When Jimmy appeared in the shop the
next morning he noted casually that Krovac had a cut
upon his chin, but he did not give the matter a second
thought. Bince had arrived late. His first
question, as he entered the small outer office where
Mr. Compton’s stenographer and his worked, was
addressed to Miss Edith Hudson.
“Is Mr. Torrance down yet?” he asked.
“Yes,” replied the girl,
“he has been here some time. Do you wish
to see him?”
Edith thought that the “No”
which he snapped at her was a trifle more emphatic
than the circumstances seemed to warrant, nor could
she help but notice after he had entered his office
the vehement manner in which he slammed the door.
“I wonder what’s eating
him,” thought Miss Hudson to herself. “Of
course he doesn’t like Jimmy, but why is he so
peeved because Jimmy came to work this morning—I
don’t quite get it.”
Almost immediately Bince sent for
Krovac, and when the latter came and stood before
his desk the assistant general manager looked up at
him questioningly.
“Well?” he asked.
“Look at my chin,” was
Krovac’s reply, “and he damn near killed
the other guy.”
“Maybe you’ll have better
luck the next time,” growled Bince.
“There ain’t goin’
to be no next time,” asserted Krovac. “I
don’t tackle that guy again.”
Bince held out his hand.
“All right,” he said, “you might
return the fifty then.”
“Return nothin’,”
growled Krovac. “I sure done fifty dollars’
worth last night.”
“Come on,” said Bince, “hand over
the fifty.”
“Nothin’ doin’,”
said Krovac with an angry snarl. “It might
be worth another fifty to you to know that I wasn’t
going to tell old man Compton.”
“You damn scoundrel!” exclaimed Bince.
“Don’t go callin’
me names,” admonished Krovac. “A
fellow that hires another to croak a man for him for
one hundred bucks ain’t got no license to call
nobody names.”
Bince realized only too well that
he was absolutely in the power of the fellow and immediately
his manner changed.
“Come,” he said, “Krovac,
there is no use in our quarreling. You can help
me and I can help you. There must be some other
way to get around this.”
“What are you trying to do?”
asked Krovac. “I got enough on you now
to send you up, and I don’t mind tellin’
yuh,” he added, “that I had a guy hid
down there in the shop where he could watch you drop
the envelope behind my machine. I got a witness,
yuh understand!”
Mr. Bince did understand, but still
he managed to control his temper.
“What of it?” he said.
“Nobody would believe your story, but let’s
forget that. What we want to do is get rid of
Torrance.”
“That isn’t all you want
to do,” said Krovac. “There is something
else.”
Bince realized that he was compromised
as hopelessly already as he could be if the man had
even more information.
“Yes,” he said, “there
is something beside Torrance’s interference in
the shop. He’s interfering with our accounting
system and I don’t want it interfered with just
now.”
“You mean the pay-roll?” asked Krovac.
“It might be,” said Bince.
“You want them two new guys
that are working in the office croaked, too?”
asked Krovac.
“I don’t want anybody
‘croaked’, “replied Bince. “I
didn’t tell you to kill Torrance in the first
place. I just said I didn’t want him to
come back here to work.”
“Ah, hell, what you givin’
us?” growled the other. “I knew what
you meant and you knew what you meant, too. Come
across straight. What do you want?”
“I want all the records of the
certified public accountants who are working here,”
said Bince after a moment’s pause. “I
want them destroyed, together with the pay-roll records.”
“Where are they?”
“They will all be in the safe in Mr. Compton’s
office.”
Krovac knitted his brows in thought
for several moments. “Say,” he said,
“we can do the whole thing with one job.”
“What do you mean?” asked Bince,
“We can get rid of this Torrance guy and get
the records, too.”
“How?” asked Bince. “Do you
know where Feinheimer’s is?”
“Yes.”
“Well, you be over there to-night
about ten thirty and I’ll introduce you to a
guy who can pull off this whole thing, and you and
I won’t have to be mixed up in it at all.”
“To-night at ten thirty,” said Bince.
“At Feinheimer’s,” said Krovac.