One day when the youth Sam McPherson
was new in the city he went on a Sunday afternoon
to a down-town theatre to hear a sermon. The sermon
was delivered by a small dark-skinned Boston man,
and seemed to the young McPherson scholarly and well
thought out.
“The greatest man is he whose
deeds affect the greatest number of lives,”
the speaker had said, and the thought had stuck in
Sam’s mind. Now walking along the street
carrying his travelling bag, he remembered the sermon
and the thought and shook his head in doubt.
“What I have done here in this
city must have affected thousands of lives,”
he mused, and felt a quickening of his blood at just
letting go of his thoughts as he had not dared do
since that day when, by breaking his word to Sue,
he had started on his career as a business giant.
He began to think of the quest on
which he had started and had keen satisfaction in
the thought of what he should do.
“I will begin all over and come
up to Truth through work,” he told himself.
“I will leave the money hunger behind me, and
if it returns I will come back here to Chicago and
see my fortune piled up and the men rushing about
the banks and the stock exchange and the court they
pay to such fools and brutes as I have been, and that
will cure me.”
Into the Illinois Central Station
he went, a strange spectacle. A smile came to
his lips as he sat on a bench along the wall between
an immigrant from Russia and a small plump farmer’s
wife who held a banana in her hand and gave bites
of it to a rosy-cheeked babe lying in her arms.
He, an American multimillionaire, a man in the midst
of his money-making, one who had realised the American
dream, to have sickened at the feast and to have wandered
out of a fashionable club with a bag in his hand and
a roll of bills in his pocket and to have come on
this strange quest—to seek Truth, to seek
God. A few years of the fast greedy living in
the city, that had seemed so splendid to the Iowa
boy and to the men and women who had lived in his
town, and then a woman had died lonely and in want
in that Iowa town, and half across the continent a
fat blustering old man had shot himself in a New York
hotel, and here he sat.
Leaving his bag in the care of the
farmer’s wife, he walked across the room to
the ticket window and standing there watched the people
with definite destinations in mind come up, lay down
money, and taking their tickets go briskly away.
He had no fear of being known. Although his name
and his picture had been upon the front pages of Chicago
newspapers for years, he felt so great a change within
himself from just the resolution he had taken that
he had no doubt of passing unnoticed.
A thought struck him. Looking
up and down the long room filled with its strangely
assorted clusters of men and women a sense of the great
toiling masses of people, the labourers, the small
merchants, the skilled mechanics, came over him.
“These are the Americans,”
he began telling himself, “these people with
children beside them and with hard daily work to be
done, and many of them with stunted or imperfectly
developed bodies, not Crofts, not Morrison and I,
but these others who toil without hope of luxury and
wealth, who make up the armies in times of war and
raise up boys and girls to do the work of the world
in their turn.”
He fell into the line moving toward
the ticket window behind a sturdy-looking old man
who carried a box of carpenter tools in one hand and
a bag in the other, and bought a ticket to the same
Illinois town to which the old man was bound.
In the train he sat beside the old
man and the two fell into quiet talk— the
old man talking of his family. He had a son, married
and living in the Illinois town to which he was going,
of whom he began boasting. The son, he said,
had gone to that town and had prospered there, owning
a hotel which his wife managed while he worked as
a builder.
“Ed,” he said, “keeps
fifty or sixty men going all summer. He has sent
for me to come and take charge of a gang. He
knows well enough I will get the work out of them.”
From Ed the old man drifted into talk
of himself and his life, telling bare facts with directness
and simplicity and making no effort to disguise a
slight turn of vanity in his success.
“I have raised seven sons and
made them all good workmen and they are all doing
well,” he said.
He told of each in detail. One,
who had taken to books, was a mechanical engineer
in a manufacturing town in New England. The mother
of his children had died the year before and of his
three daughters two had married mechanics. The
third, Sam gathered, had not done well and from something
the old man said he thought she had perhaps gone the
wrong way there in Chicago.
To the old man Sam talked of God and
of a man’s effort to get truth out of life.
“I have thought of it a lot,” he said.
The old man was interested. He
looked at Sam and then out at the car window and began
talking of his own beliefs, the substance of which
Sam could not get.
“God is a spirit and lives in
the growing corn,” said the old man, pointing
out the window at the passing fields.
He began talking of churches and of
ministers, against whom he was filled with bitterness.
“They are dodgers. They
do not get at things. They are damned dodgers,
pretending to be good,” he declared.
Sam talked of himself, saying that
he was alone in the world and had money. He said
that he wanted work in the open air, not for the money
it would bring him, but because his paunch was large
and his hand trembled in the morning.
“I’ve been drinking,”
he said, “and I want to work hard day after day
so that my muscles may become firm and sleep come
to me at night.”
The old man thought that his son could find Sam a
place.
“He’s a driver—Ed
is,” he said, laughing, “and he won’t
pay you much. Ed don’t let go of money.
He’s a tight one.”
Night had come when they reached the
town where Ed lived, and the three men walked over
a bridge, beneath which roared a waterfall, toward
the long poorly-lighted main street of the town and
Ed’s hotel. Ed, a young, broad-shouldered
man, with a dry cigar stuck in the corner of his mouth,
led the way. He had engaged Sam standing in the
darkness on the station platform, accepting his story
without comment.
“I’ll let you carry timbers
and drive nails,” he said, “that will harden
you up.”
On the way over the bridge he talked of the town.
“It’s a live place,” he said, “we
are getting people in here.”
“Look at that!” he exclaimed,
chewing at the cigar and pointing to the waterfall
that foamed and roared almost under the bridge.
“There’s a lot of power there and where
there’s power there will be a city.”
At Ed’s hotel some twenty men
sat about a long low office. They were, for the
most part, middle-aged working men and sat in silence
reading and smoking pipes. At a table pushed
against the wall a bald-headed young man with a scar
on his cheek played solitaire with a greasy pack of
cards, and in front of him and sitting in a chair
tilted against the wall a sullen-faced boy idly watched
the game. When the three men came into the office
the boy dropped his chair to the floor and stared at
Ed who stared back at him. It was as though a
contest of some sort went on between them. A tall
neatly-dressed woman, with a brisk manner and pale,
inexpressive, hard blue eyes, stood back of a little
combined desk and cigar case at the end of the room,
and as the three walked toward her she looked from
Ed to the sullen-faced boy and then again at Ed. Sam
concluded she was a woman bent on having her own way.
She had that air.
“This is my wife,” said
Ed, introducing Sam with a wave of his hand and passing
around the end of the desk to stand by her side.
Ed’s wife twirled the hotel
register about facing Sam, nodded her head, and then,
leaning over the desk, bestowed a quick kiss upon the
leathery cheek of the old carpenter.
Sam and the old man found a place
in chairs along the wall and sat down among the silent
men. The old man pointed to the boy in the chair
beside the card players.
“Their son,” he whispered cautiously.
The boy looked at his mother, who
in turn looked steadily at him, and got up from his
chair. Back of the desk Ed talked in low tones
to his wife. The boy, stopping before Sam and
the old man and still looking toward the woman, put
out his hand which the old man took. Then, without
speaking, he went past the desk and through a doorway,
and began noisily climbing a flight of stairs, followed
by his mother. As they climbed they berated each
other, their voices rising to a high pitch and echoing
through the upper part of the house.
Ed, coming across to them, talked
to Sam about the assignment of a room, and the men
began looking at the stranger; noting his fine clothes,
their eyes filled with curiosity.
“Selling something?” asked
a large red-haired young man, rolling a quid of tobacco
in his mouth.
“No,” replied Sam shortly, “going
to work for Ed.”
The silent men in chairs along the
wall dropped their newspapers and stared, and the
bald-headed young man at the table sat with open mouth,
a card held suspended in the air. Sam had become,
for the moment, a centre of interest and the men stirred
in their chairs and began to whisper and point to
him.
A large, watery-eyed man, with florid
cheeks, clad in a long overcoat with spots down the
front, came in at the door and passed through the room
bowing and smiling to the men. Taking Ed by the
arm he disappeared into a little barroom, where Sam
could hear him talking in low tones.
After a little while the florid-faced
man came and put his head through the barroom door
into the office.
“Come on, boys,” he said,
smiling and nodding right and left, “the drinks
are on me.”
The men got up and filed into the
bar, the old man and Sam remaining seated in their
chairs. They began talking in undertones.
“I’ll start ’em thinking—these
men,” said the old man.
From his pocket he took a pamphlet
and gave it to Sam. It was a crudely written
attack upon rich men and corporations.
“Some brains in the fellow who
wrote that,” said the old carpenter, rubbing
his hands together and smiling.
Sam did not think so. He sat
reading it and listening to the loud, boisterous voices
of the men in the barroom. The florid-faced man
was explaining the details of a proposed town bond
issue. Sam gathered that the water power in the
river was to be developed.
“We want to make this a live
town,” said the voice of Ed, earnestly.
The old man, leaning over and putting
his hand beside his mouth, began whispering to Sam.
“I’ll bet there is a capitalist
deal back of that power scheme,” he said.
He nodded his head up and down and smiled knowingly.
“If there is Ed will be in on
it,” he added. “You can’t lose
Ed. He’s a slick one.”
He took the pamphlet from Sam’s
hand and put it in his pocket.
“I’m a socialist,”
he explained, “but don’t say anything.
Ed’s against ’em.”
The men filed back into the room,
each with a freshly-lighted cigar in his mouth, and
the florid-faced man followed them and went out at
the office door.
“Well, so long, boys,” he shouted heartily.
Ed went silently up the stairs to
join the mother and boy, whose voices could still
be heard raised in outbursts of wrath from above as
the men took their former chairs along the wall.
“Well, Bill’s sure all
right,” said the red-haired young man, evidently
expressing the opinion of the men in regard to the
florid-faced man.
A small bent old man with sunken cheeks
got up and walking across the room leaned against
the cigar case.
“Did you ever hear this one?” he asked,
looking about.
Obviously no answer could be given
and the bent old man launched into a vile pointless
anecdote of a woman, a miner, and a mule, the crowd
giving close attention and laughing uproariously when
he had finished. The socialist rubbed his hands
together and joined in the applause.
“That was a good one, eh?” he commented,
turning to Sam.
Sam, picking up his bag, climbed the
stairway as the red-haired young man launched into
another tale, slightly less vile. In his room
to which Ed, meeting him at the top of the stairs,
led him, still chewing at the unlighted cigar, he
turned out the light and sat on the edge of the bed.
He was as homesick as a boy.
“Truth,” he muttered,
looking through the window to the dimly-lighted street.
“Do these men seek truth?”
The next day he went to work, wearing
a suit of clothes bought from Ed. He worked with Ed’s
father, carrying timbers and driving nails as directed
by him. In the gang with him were four men, boarders
at Ed’s hotel, and four other men who lived
in the town with their families. At the noon hour
he asked the old carpenter how the men from the hotel,
who did not live in the town, could vote on the question
of the power bonds. The old man grinned and rubbed
his hands together.
“I don’t know,”
he said. “I suppose Ed tends to that.
He’s a slick one, Ed is.”
At work, the men who had been so silent
in the office of the hotel were alert and wonderfully
busy, hurrying here and there at a word from the old
man and sawing and nailing furiously. They seemed
bent upon outdoing each other and when one fell behind
they laughed and shouted at him, asking him if he
had decided to quit for the day. But though they
seemed determined to outdo him the old man kept ahead
of them all, his hammer beating a rattling tattoo
upon the boards all day. At the noon hour he had
given each of the men one of the pamphlets from his
pocket and on the way back to his hotel in the evening
he told Sam that the others had tried to show him
up.
“They wanted to see if I had
juice in me,” he explained, strutting beside
Sam with an amusing little swagger of his shoulders.
Sam was sick with fatigue. His
hands were blistered, his legs felt weak, and a terrible
thirst burned in his throat. All day he had gone
grimly ahead, thankful for every physical discomfort,
every throb of his strained, tired muscles. In
his weariness and in his efforts to keep pace with
the others he had forgotten Colonel Tom and Mary Underwood.
All during that month and into the
next Sam stayed with the old man’s gang.
He ceased thinking, and only worked desperately.
An odd feeling of loyalty and devotion to the old
man came over him and he felt that he too must prove
that he had the juice in him. At the hotel he
went to bed immediately after the silent dinner, slept,
awoke aching, and went to work again.
One Sunday one of the men of his gang
came to Sam’s room and invited him to go with
a party of the workers into the country. They
went in boats, carrying with them kegs of beer, to
a deep ravine clothed on both sides by heavy woods.
In the boat with Sam sat the red-haired young man,
who was called Jake and who talked loudly of the time
they would have in the woods, and boasted that he
was the instigator of the trip.
“I thought of it,” he said over and over
again.
Sam wondered why he had been invited.
It was a soft October day and in the ravine he sat
looking at the trees splashed with colour and breathing
deeply of the air, his whole body relaxed, grateful
for the day of rest. Jake came and sat beside
him.
“What are you?” he asked
bluntly. “We know you are no working man.”
Sam told him a half-truth.
“You are right enough about
that; I have money enough not to have to work.
I used to be a business man. I sold guns.
But I have a disease and the doctors have told me
that if I do not work out of doors part of me will
die.”
The man from his own gang who had
invited him on the trip came up to them, bringing
Sam a foaming glass of beer. He shook his head.
“The doctor says it will not
do,” he explained to the two men.
The red-haired man called Jake began talking.
“We are going to have a fight
with Ed,” he said. “That’s what
we came up here to talk about. We want to know
where you stand. We are going to see if we can’t
make him pay as well for the work here as men are paid
for the same work in Chicago.”
Sam lay back upon the grass.
“All right,” he said.
“Go ahead. If I can help I will. I’m
not so fond of Ed.”
The men began talking among themselves.
Jake, standing among them, read aloud a list of names
among which was the name Sam had written on the register
at Ed’s hotel.
“It’s a list of the names
of men we think will stick together and vote together
on the bond issue,” he explained, turning to
Sam. “Ed’s in that and we want to
use our votes to scare him into giving us what we want.
Will you stay with us? You look like a fighter.”
Sam nodded and getting up joined the
men about the beer kegs. They began talking of
Ed and of the money he had made in the town.
“He’s done a lot of town
work here and there’s been graft in all of it,”
explained Jake emphatically. “It’s
time he was being made to do the right thing.”
While they talked Sam sat watching
the men’s faces. They did not seem vile
to him now as they had seemed that first evening in
the hotel office. He began thinking of them silently
and alertly at work all day long, surrounded by such
influences as Ed and Bill, and the thought sweetened
his opinion of them.
“Look here,” he said,
“tell me of this matter. I was a business
man before I came here and I may be able to help you
fellows get what you want.”
Getting up, Jake took Sam’s
arm and they walked down the ravine, Jake explaining
the situation in the town.
“The game,” he said, “is
to make the taxpayers pay for a millrace to be built
for the development of the water power in the river
and then, by a trick, to turn it over to a private
company. Bill and Ed are both in the deal and
they are working for a Chicago man named Crofts.
He’s been up here at the hotel with Bill talking
to Ed. I’ve figured out what they are up to.”
Sam sat down upon a log and laughed heartily.
“Crofts, eh?” he exclaimed.
“Say, we will fight this thing. If Crofts
has been up here you can depend upon it there is some
size to the deal. We will just smash the whole
crooked gang for the good of the town.”
“How would you do that?” asked Jake.
Sam sat down on a log and looked at
the river flowing past the mouth of the ravine.
“Just fight,” he said. “Let
me show you something.”
He took a pencil and slip of paper
from his pocket, and, with the voices of the men about
the beer kegs in his ears and the red-haired man peering
over his shoulder, began writing his first political
pamphlet. He wrote and erased and changed words
and phrases. The pamphlet was a statement of
facts as to the value of water power, and was addressed
to the taxpayers of the community. He warmed
to the subject, saying that a fortune lay sleeping
in the river, and that the town, by the exercise of
a little discretion now, could build with that fortune
a beautiful city belonging to the people.
“This fortune in the river rightly
managed will pay the expenses of government and give
you control of a great source of revenue forever,”
he wrote. “Build your millrace, but look
out for a trick of the politicians. They are
trying to steal it. Reject the offer of the Chicago
banker named Crofts. Demand an investigation.
A capitalist has been found who will take the water
power bonds at four per cent and back the people in
this fight for a free American city.” Across
the head of the pamphlet Sam wrote the caption, “A
River Paved With Gold,” and handed it to Jake,
who read it and whistled softly.
“Good!” he said.
“I will take this and have it printed. It
will make Bill and Ed sit up.”
Sam took a twenty-dollar bill from
his pocket and gave it to the man.
“To pay for the printing,”
he said. “And when we have them licked I
am the man who will take the four per cent bonds.”
Jake scratched his head. “How
much do you suppose the deal is worth to Crofts?”
“A million, or he would not bother,” Sam
answered.
Jake folded the paper and put it in his pocket.
“This would make Bill and Ed squirm, eh?”
he laughed.
Going home down the river the men,
filled with beer, sang and shouted as the boats, guided
by Sam and Jake, floated along. The night fell
warm and still and Sam thought he had never seen the
sky so filled with stars. His brain was busy
with the idea of doing something for the people.
“Perhaps here in this town I
shall make a start toward what I am after,”
he thought, his heart filled with happiness and the
songs of the tipsy workmen ringing in his ears.
All through the next few weeks there
was an air of something astir among the men of Sam’s
gang and about Ed’s hotel. During the evening
Jake went among the men talking in low tones, and
once he took a three days’ vacation, telling
Ed that he did not feel well and spending the time
among the men employed in the plough works up the
river. From time to time he came to Sam for money.
“For the campaign,” he said, winking and
hurrying away.
Suddenly a speaker appeared and began
talking nightly from a box before a drug store on
Main Street, and after dinner the office of Ed’s
hotel was deserted. The man on the box had a
blackboard hung on a pole, on which he drew figures
estimating the value of the power in the river, and
as he talked he grew more and more excited, waving
his arms and inveighing against certain leasing clauses
in the bond proposal. He declared himself a follower
of Karl Marx and delighted the old carpenter who danced
up and down in the road and rubbed his hands.
“It will come to something—this
will—you’ll see,” he declared
to Sam.
One day Ed appeared, riding in a buggy,
at the job where Sam worked, and called the old man
into the road. He sat pounding one hand upon the
other and talking in a low voice. Sam thought
the old man had perhaps been indiscreet in the distribution
of the socialistic pamphlets. He seemed nervous,
dancing up and down beside the buggy and shaking his
head. Then hurrying back to where the men worked
he pointed over his shoulder with his thumb.
“Ed wants you,” he said,
and Sam noticed that his voice trembled and his hand
shook.
In the buggy Ed and Sam rode in silence.
Again Ed chewed at an unlighted cigar.
“I want to talk with you,”
he had said as Sam climbed into the buggy.
At the hotel the two men got out of
the buggy and went into the office. Inside the
door Ed, who came behind, sprang forward and pinioned
Sam’s arms with his own. He was as powerful
as a bear. His wife, the tall woman with the
inexpressive eyes, came running into the room, her
face drawn with hatred. In her hand she carried
a broom and with the handle of this she struck Sam
several swinging blows across the face, accompanying
each blow with a half scream of rage and a volley
of vile names. The sullen-faced boy, alive now
and with eyes burning with zeal, came running down
the stairs and pushed the woman aside. He struck
Sam time after time in the face with his fist, laughing
each time as Sam winced under the blows.
Sam struggled furiously to escape
Ed’s powerful grasp. It was the first time
he had ever been beaten and the first time he had faced
hopeless defeat. The wrath within him was so
intense that the jolting impact of the blows seemed
a secondary matter to the need of escaping Ed’s
vice-like grasp.
Suddenly Ed turned and, pushing Sam
before him, threw him through the office door and
into the street. In falling his head struck against
a hitching post and he lay stunned. When he partially
recovered from the fall Sam got up and walked along
the street. His face was swollen and bruised
and his nose bled. The street was deserted and
the assault upon him had been unnoticed.
He went to a hotel on Main Street—a
more pretentious place than Ed’s, near the bridge
leading to the station—and as he passed
in he saw, through an open door, Jake, the red-haired
man, leaning against the bar and talking to Bill,
the man with the florid face. Sam, paying for
a room, went upstairs and to bed.
In the bed, with cold bandages on
his bruised face, he tried to get the situation in
hand. Hatred for Ed ran through his veins.
His hands clenched, his brain whirled, and the brutal,
passionate faces of the woman and the boy danced before
his eyes.
“I’ll fix them, the brutal bullies,”
he muttered aloud.
And then the thought of his quest
came back to his mind and quieted him. Through
the window came the roar of the waterfall, broken by
noises of the street. As he fell asleep they
mingled with his dreams, sounding soft and quiet like
the low talk of a family about the fire of an evening.
He was awakened by a noise of pounding
on his door. At his call the door opened and
the face of the old carpenter appeared. Sam laughed
and sat up in bed. Already the cold bandages
had soothed the throbbing of his bruised face.
“Go away,” begged the
old man, rubbing his hands together nervously.
“Get out of town.”
He put his hand to his mouth and talked
in a hoarse whisper, looking back over his shoulder
through the open door. Sam, getting out of bed,
began filling his pipe.
“You can’t beat Ed, you
fellows,” added the old man, backing out at the
door. “He’s a slick one, Ed is.
You better get out of town.”
Sam called a boy and gave him a note
to Ed asking for his clothes and for the bag in his
room, and to the boy he gave a large bill, asking him
to pay anything due. When the boy came back bringing
the clothes and the bag he returned the bill unbroken.
“They’re scared about
something up there,” he said, looking at Sam’s
bruised face.
Sam dressed carefully and went down
into the street. He remembered that he had never
seen a printed copy of the political pamphlet written
in the ravine and realised that Jake had used it to
make money for himself.
“Now I shall try something else,” he thought.
It was early evening and crowds of
men coming down the railroad track from the plough
works turned to right and left as they reached Main
Street. Sam walked among them, climbing a little
hilly side street to a number he had got from a clerk
at the drug store before which the socialist had talked.
He stopped at a little frame house and a moment after
knocking was in the presence of the man who had talked
night after night from the box in the street.
Sam had decided to see what could be done through him.
The socialist was a short, fat man, with curly grey
hair, shiny round cheeks, and black broken teeth.
He sat on the edge of his bed and looked as if he
had slept in his clothes. A corncob pipe lay smoking
among the covers of the bed, and during most of the
talk he sat with one shoe held in his hand as though
about to put it on. About the room in orderly
piles lay stack after stack of paper-covered books.
Sam sat down in a chair by the window and told his
mission.
“It is a big thing, this power
steal that is going on here,” he explained.
“I know the man back of it and he would not bother
with a small affair. I know they are going to
make the city build the millrace and then steal it.
It will be a big thing for your party about here if
you take hold and stop them. Let me tell you
how it can be done.”
He explained his plan, and told of
Crofts and of his wealth and dogged, bullying determination.
The socialist seemed beside himself. He pulled
on the shoe and began running hurriedly about the
room.
“The time for the election,”
Sam went on, “is almost here. I have looked
into this thing. We must beat this bond issue
and then put through a square one. There is a
train out of Chicago at seven o’clock, a fast
train. You get fifty speakers out here. I
will pay for a special train if necessary and I will
hire a band and help stir things up. I can give
you facts enough to shake this town to the bottom.
You come with me and ’phone to Chicago.
I will pay everything. I am McPherson, Sam McPherson
of Chicago.”
The socialist ran to a closet and
began pulling on his coat. The name affected
him so that his hand trembled and he could scarcely
get his arm into the coat sleeve. He began to
apologise for the appearance of the room and kept
looking at Sam with the air of one not able to believe
what he had heard. As the two men walked out
of the house he ran ahead holding doors open for Sam’s
passage.
“And you will help us, Mr. McPherson?”
he exclaimed. “You, a man of millions,
will help us in this fight?”
Sam had a feeling that the man was
going to kiss his hand or do something equally ridiculous.
He had the air of a club door man gone off his head.
At the hotel Sam stood in the lobby
while the fat man waited in a telephone booth.
“I will have to ’phone
Chicago, I will simply have to ’phone Chicago.
We socialists don’t do anything like this offhand,
Mr. McPherson,” he had explained as they walked
along the street.
When the socialist came out of the
booth he stood before Sam shaking his head. His
whole attitude had changed, and he looked like a man
caught doing a foolish or absurd thing.
“Nothing doing, nothing doing,
Mr. McPherson,” he said, starting for the hotel
door.
At the door he stopped and shook his finger at Sam.
“It won’t work,” he said, emphatically.
“Chicago is too wise.”
Sam turned and went back to his room.
His name had killed his only chance to beat Crofts,
Jake, Bill and Ed. In his room he sat looking out of
the window into the street.
“Where shall I take hold now?” he asked
himself.
Turning out the lights he sat listening
to the roar of the waterfall and thinking of the events
of the last week.
“I have had a time,” he
thought. “I have tried something and even
though it did not work it has been the best fun I
have had for years.”
The hours slipped away and night came
on. He could hear men shouting and laughing in
the street, and going downstairs he stood in a hallway
at the edge of the crowd that gathered about the socialist.
The orator shouted and waved his hand. He seemed
as proud as a young recruit who has just passed through
his first baptism of fire.
“He tried to make a fool of
me—McPherson of Chicago—the millionaire—one
of the capitalist kings—he tried to bribe
me and my party.”
In the crowd the old carpenter was
dancing in the road and rubbing his hands together.
With the feeling of a man who had finished a piece
of work or turned the last leaf of a book, Sam went
back to his hotel.
“In the morning I shall be on my way,”
he thought.
A knock came at the door and the red-haired
man came in. He closed the door softly and winked
at Sam.
“Ed made a mistake,” he
said, and laughed. “The old man told him
you were a socialist and he thought you were trying
to spoil the graft. He is scared about that beating
you got and mighty sorry. He’s all right—Ed
is —and he and Bill and I have got the
votes. What made you stay under cover so long?
Why didn’t you tell us you were McPherson?”
Sam saw the hopelessness of any attempt
to explain. Jake had evidently sold out the men.
Sam wondered how.
“How do you know you can deliver
the votes?’” he asked, trying to lead
Jake on.
Jake rolled the quid in his mouth and winked again.
“It was easy enough to fix the
men when Ed, Bill and I got together,” he said.
“You know about the other. There’s
a clause in the act authorising the bond issue, a
sleeper, Bill calls it. You know more about that
than I do. Anyway the power will be turned over
to the man we say.”
“But how do I know you can deliver the votes?”
Jake threw out his hand impatiently.
“What do they know?” he
asked sharply. “What they want is more wages.
There’s a million in the power deal and they
can’t any more realise a million than they can
tell what they want to do in Heaven. I promised
Ed’s fellows the city scale. Ed can’t
kick. He’ll make a hundred thousand as it
stands. Then I promised the plough works gang
a ten per cent raise. We’ll get it for
them if we can, but if we can’t, they won’t
know it till the deal is put through.”
Sam walked over and held open the door.
“Good night,” he said.
Jake looked annoyed.
“Ain’t you even going
to make a bid against Crofts?” he asked.
“We ain’t tied to him if you do better
by us. I’m in this thing because you put
me in. That piece you wrote up the river scared
’em stiff. I want to do the right thing
by you. Don’t be sore about Ed. He wouldn’t
a done it if he’d known.”
Sam shook his head and stood with his hand still on
the door.
“Good night,” he said
again. “I am not in it. I have dropped
it. No use trying to explain.”