LAID up.
Harriet Holden was sitting in Elizabeth’s
boudoir. “And he had the effrontery,”
the latter was saying, “to tell me what I must
do and must not do! The idea! A miserable
little milk-wagon driver dictating to me!”
Miss Holden smiled.
“I should not call him very little,” she
remarked.
“I didn’t mean physically,”
retorted Elizabeth. “It is absolutely
insufferable. I am going to demand that father
discharge the man.”
“And suppose he asks you why?”
asked Harriet. “You will tell him, of
course, that you want this person discharged because
he protected you from the insults and attacks of a
ruffian while you were dining in Feinheimer’s
at night—is that it?”
“You are utterly impossible,
Harriet!” cried Elizabeth, stamping her foot.
“You are as bad as that efficiency person.
But, then, I might have expected it! You have
always, it seems to me, shown a great deal more interest
in the fellow than necessary, and probably the fact
that Harold doesn’t like him is enough to make
you partial toward him, for you have never tried to
hide the fact that you don’t like Harold.”
“If you’re going to be
cross,” said Harriet, “I think I shall
go home.”
At about the same time the Lizard
entered Feinheimer’s. In the far corner
of the room Murray was seated at a table. The
Lizard approached and sat down opposite him.
“Here I am,” he said. “What
do you want, and how did you know I was in town?”
“I didn’t know,”
said Murray. “I got a swell job for you,
and so I sent out word to get you.”
“You’re in luck then,”
said the Lizard. “I just blew in this morning.
What kind of a job you got?”
Murray explained at length.
“They got a watchman,”
he concluded, “but I’ve got a guy on de
inside that’ll fix him.”
“When do I pull this off?” asked the Lizard.
“In about a week. I’ll
let you know the night later. Dey ordinarily
draw the payroll money Monday, the same day dey pay,
but dis week they’ll draw it Saturday and leave
it in the safe. It’II be layin’ on
top of a hunch of books and papers. Dey’re
de t’ings you’re to destroy. As I
told you, it will all be fixed from de inside.
Dere’s no danger of a pinch. All you gotta
do is crack de safe, put about a four or five t’ousand
dollar roll in your pocket, and as you cross de river
drop a handful of books and papers in. Nothin’
to it—it’s the easiest graft you
ever had.”
“You’re sure dat’s all?” asked
the Lizard.
“Sure thing!” replied Murray.
“Where’s de place?”
“Dat I can’t tell you until the day we’re
ready to pull off de job.”
At four o’clock that afternoon
Jimmy Torrance collapsed at his desk. The flu
had struck him as suddenly and as unexpectedly as it
had attacked many of its victims. Edith Hudson
found him, and immediately notified Mr. Compton, with
the result that half an hour later Jimmy Torrance
was in a small private hospital in Park Avenue.
That night Bince got Murray over the
phone. He told him of Jimmy’s sickness.
“He’s balled up the whole
plan,” he complained. “We’ve
either got to wait until he croaks or is out again
before we can go ahead, unless something else arises
to make it necessary to act before. I think I
can hold things off, though, at this end, all right.”
For four or five days Jimmy was a
pretty sick man. He was allowed to see no one,
but even if Jimmy had been in condition to give the
matter any thought he would not have expected to see
any one, for who was there to visit him in the hospital,
who was there who knew of his illness, to care whether
he was sick or well, alive or dead? It was on
the fifth day that Jimmy commenced to take notice
of anything. At Compton’s orders he had
been placed in a private room and given a special nurse,
and to-day for the first time he learned of Mr. Compton’s
kindness and the fact that the nurse was instructed
to call Jimmy’s employer twice a day and report
the patient’s condition.
“Mighty nice of him,”
thought Jimmy, and then to the nurse: “And
the flowers, too? Does he send those?”
The young woman shook her head negatively.
“No,” she said; “a
young lady comes every evening about six and leaves
the flowers. She always asks about your condition
and when she may see you.”
Jimmy was silent for some time.
“She comes every evening?” he asked.
“Yes,” replied the nurse.
“May I see her this evening?” asked Jimmy.
“We’ll ask the doctor,”
she replied; and the doctor must have given consent,
for at six o’clock that evening the nurse brought
Edith Hudson to his bedside.
The girl came every evening thereafter
and sat with Jimmy as long as the nurse would permit
her to remain. Jimmy discovered during those periods
a new side to her character, a mothering tenderness
that filled him with a feeling of content and happiness
the moment that she entered the room, and which doubtless
aided materially in his rapid convalescence, for until
she had been permitted to see him Jimmy had suffered
as much from mental depression as from any other of
the symptoms of his disease.
He had felt utterly alone and uncared
for, and in this mental state he had brooded over
his failures to such an extent that he had reached
a point where he felt that death would be something
of a relief. Militating against his recovery
had been the parting words of Elizabeth Compton the
evening that he had dined at her father’s home,
but now all that was very nearly forgotten—at
least crowded into the dim vistas of recollection
by the unselfish friendship of this girl of the streets.
Jimmy’s nurse quite fell in love with Edith.
“She is such a sweet girl,”
she said, “and always so cheerful. She
is going to make some one a mighty good wife.”
and she smiled knowingly at Jimmy.
The suggestion which her words implied
came to Jimmy as a distinct shock. He had never
thought of Edith Hudson in the light of this suggestion,
and now he wondered if there could be any such sentiment
as it implied in Edith’s heart, but finally
he put the idea away with a shrug.
“Impossible,” he thought.
“She thinks of me as I think of her, only as
a good friend.”