Phil’s first impulse in hurrying
back to the city had been to deliver President Wade’s
letter to Nathaniel Lawson, and with that introduction
to find out how much Nat Lawson knew about his friend’s
plans. The possibility that the financier might
be able to throw some light upon Ben Wade’s
object in placing McCorquodale on guard at Sparrow
Lake at first seemed sufficient justification for
broaching the matter. But on second thoughts,
Phil hesitated; if his chief had not seen fit to mention
it to his own secretary who was most vitally concerned,
it was unlikely that he had said anything to Lawson.
In that case Wade might consider that his secretary
had been very indiscreet in volunteering the facts.
By the time he was ringing the doorbell at the Lawson
home next evening, he had decided to say nothing about
the matter.
Beneath the gentle courtesy of Old
Nat’s welcome Kendrick sensed a strength of
character that commanded deference. The young
man liked him at once. The ready pucker of the
crowsfeet about those kind eyes put him quickly at
ease, and as they sat on the “back piazza”
that overlooked an old-fashioned flower garden they
were chatting like a pair of old acquaintances.
Horticulture was a hobby with Nat Lawson and Kendrick’s
intelligent interest in the subject placed them at
once on a friendly footing. It was a little
early yet to see the wonderful garden at its best,
his host explained after they had made a tour of it;
he must come and see it in another month or so, or
even in a few weeks, when the pergola would be smothered
in roses.
Among other things contained in Wade’s
letter, which Phil had just delivered, it was evident
that his new chief had asked Lawson to post the bearer
in regard to Loan Company affairs, particularly to
tell all he knew about J. C. Nickleby; for of his
own accord “Old Nat” began to talk freely
of the past. It was soon apparent that he considered
Nickleby an impostor whose motives were not to be computed
by a self-respecting comptometer.
“Nickleby is a scamp and I might
even qualify the statement, sir, by addition of the
word, ‘damnable.’ There you have
my opinion, sum total, and one of these new adding
machines cannot give it to you more quickly or accurately.”
The smile with which he said this faded as he smoked
for a moment in silence and a grim look settled in
its place. He stood up abruptly. “Excuse
me a moment while I get a photograph which will serve
to illustrate a little story I’m going to tell
you.”
When he returned presently he thrust
into Phil’s hand the photo of a young man whose
expression was boyishly ingenuous.
“Nothing dishonest in that face,
is there?” demanded Nat Lawson. “That’s
Jimmy Stiles. He had to quit school to find work
to support his mother when she was taken sick.
He came to me and I gave him his first job.
I found him loyal and trustworthy; but he made one
little slip that I want to tell you about.”
It appeared that the boy had been
inveigled into a get-rich-quick investment which had
gone the usual way of such things and left him in
a desperate plight; so that he had been tempted to
“borrow” a few dollars from the Interprovincial
without permission. This money he began putting
back secretly every week, bit by bit out of his salary.
He had refunded about half of it when Nickleby discovered
the small shortage in the young bookkeeper’s
accounts. Instead of reporting the matter, Nickleby,
at that time secretary and office manager, told the
boy he would let him off if it did not occur again
and made a great show of befriending young Stiles.
But Stiles was so systematically reminded
of his obligation to Nickleby that he worried constantly
over what he had done came to such a keen
realization of his fault that one night he could stand
it no longer and went to the Lawson home. With
nerves at the breaking point he confessed his wrong
to both Nathaniel Lawson and his daughter. The
boy’s contrition had been so sincere that they
both forgave him on the spot, “Old Nat”
patting him on the shoulder and assuring him that
nothing more would be said about it. Stiles said
nothing to Nickleby about this secret confession and
for a time he recovered his spirits.
Then came the change in management.
Nickleby’s first move was to dismiss one employee
after another until almost the only member of the
old staff left was this young fellow, James Stiles,
for whom Nickleby seemed to have taken a strange fancy.
The reason was not long in doubt; for though the
indebtedness long since had been wiped off the slate
the new president began to threaten exposure unless
Stiles did exactly as he was told, even when the instructions
were contrary to honest business ethics.
“That’s the kind of man
Mr. Nickleby is,” concluded Lawson. “Cristy
and I my daughter, Cristobel, Kendrick, have
tried to give Mrs. Stiles financial assistance in
the past, she being an honest deserving woman; but
of late we have not been able to do so much.
For his mother’s sake I hope Jimmy turns out
all right. But there are times when I wonder
if it would not have been better for him had he gone
somewhere out of reach of a man who would take advantage
of a mere boy instead of trying to help him to a fresh
start.”
With renewed interest Phil studied
the photo in his hand before returning it. The
case of Jimmy Stiles did indeed throw a sidelight
upon the character of Nickleby. By adroit questioning
he led the founder of the Interprovincial Loan & Savings
Company to continue talking of the institution which
represented his life’s work and in the welfare
of which his whole soul was wrapped. Once started
in these reminiscences of his early struggles and
hopes Nathaniel Lawson proved himself an interesting
talker and the hour was well advanced when Kendrick
finally glanced at his watch and, refusing any suggestion
of refreshments, prepared to go.
“I’ll have the answer
to Wade’s letter ready for you first thing in
the morning,” said Lawson as he shook hands
heartily. “I’ve enjoyed the evening
immensely, Kendrick, and I hope I haven’t bored
you so much that you won’t come again.
You’ll be welcome any time.”
Phil left the house with the feeling
that he had spent not only a very pleasant evening,
but a profitable one. He had acquired a new
appreciation of “Old Nat” Lawson and, as
Wade had predicted, a better understanding of the
situation which would help him in his investigations.
So absorbed was he in reviewing what he had learned
that he had walked several blocks before he became
conscious of somebody following him. What was
at first merely a suspicion became a certainty when
he deliberately turned several successive corners only
to find the figure still in the rear.
The discovery was interesting, though
entirely ridiculous. Who could be interested
in his movements? He resolved to throw the fellow
off the track and have a closer look at him.
It should not be difficult to do this in that district
of tall hedges. He broke abruptly into a run,
dodged around a corner and dropped over behind the
nearest hedge.
The sound of running steps ceased.
But the man evidently was attempting something to
which he was unaccustomed; for on reaching the corner
he stopped, bewildered by the sudden disappearance
of his quarry. He stood there foolishly, staring
about uncertainly and grumbling to himself.
Kendrick peered out from his hiding-place
with some amusement at this discomfiture. The
nearest arc light was too far away for a clear look
at the man; but just as Phil was about to jump the
hedge and boldly demand an explanation the other lighted
a cigarette and with a shrug of the shoulders went
his way, leaving Kendrick sitting back on his heels,
racking his memory.
Revealed in the glow of the match
the face had seemed familiar. The young fellow
was a full block away, however, before he recalled
the features. It was James Stiles, the young
chap Nat Lawson had just been telling him about and
whose photo he had been studying with much interest
an hour or two ago.
Over the hedge went Kendrick just
in time to see Jimmy Stiles disappear around a corner.
He ran rapidly down the street, keeping to the boulevard
turf, and when he reached the corner he waited until
his man was sufficiently in the lead to avoid discovery,
then sauntered along in the same direction just far
enough behind to keep the other in sight. For
Phil’s curiosity was now justifiably awake and
he determined to find out where young Stiles went,
perhaps overhaul him and ask him to explain himself.
With the situation thus reversed they
progressed for several blocks without incident.
Jimmy Stiles was stepping out with the briskness of
one who knows exactly where he is going and is in a
hurry to get there. He did not alter his stride
for perhaps twenty minutes; but as they swung down
towards Allan Gardens his pace became more leisurely,
and opposite the park itself he abruptly halted, looking
this way and that as if expecting to meet somebody
here. In further support of this interpretation
he began to stroll slowly back and forth, occasionally
glancing at his watch.
Kendrick took up a position in the
shadows where he could look on without danger of observation,
and waited patiently. Before long a young woman
approached from a sidestreet. Stiles raised his
hat and the two went into the park and sat down on
a bench, where they soon become lost in earnest conversation.
“‘In the Spring a young
man’s fancy ’”
murmured Phil with a nod of comprehension; but he
did not complete the quotation. There was nothing
lover-like in the actions of the pair on the park bench;
in fact, the young woman appeared to be taking Stiles
to task about something. Did the circumstances
justify a closer approach with the object of overhearing
the conversation?
Kendrick still was debating this delicate
problem when he saw two men slinking cautiously behind
the bench from the concealment of the park shrubbery.
Before he could shout a warning they had closed in
silently and swiftly upon the unsuspecting occupants.
The girl’s cry was smothered by one assailant
and Stiles was struggling desperately with the other.
It happened so unexpectedly that Kendrick
stood for an instant, held by his amazement.
Then without a sound he sped across the street, vaulted
the iron fence and charged into the middle of the excitement
with ready fists. The man who had Stiles down
was nearest and Phil paused long enough to send him
reeling with a well-directed blow on the side of the
head. He leaped the overturned bench, and made
for the girl’s attacker, who promptly took to
his heels.
Phil chased him for several rods through
the shrubbery before he swung back toward the bench.
But in the brief interval both the other fellow and
young Stiles himself had vanished and he found only
the young woman, calmly dusting her skirt. She
stood in a finger of light from the neighboring arc
lamp and Kendrick stopped short, getting back his
breath and staring at her in undisguised astonishment.
It seemed as if she was always to find him staring
at her this cold and haughty and very pretty
stenographer from the office of Blatchford Ferguson!
“Why, Miss Williams!”
he exclaimed, and stepped forward quickly. “Are
you hurt at all?” He righted the bench.
“Perhaps you had better sit down,” he
urged with polite anxiety.
“It’s Mr. Kendrick, aint
it? No, I’m all right.” Nevertheless
she seated herself, patting nervously at a disarranged
strand of hair. “It was so kind of you
“Nonsense!” interrupted
Phil in deprecation. “I was passing along
the street and luckily happened to glance over at
the park just as those fellows attacked you.
How many of them were there? three?”
he asked innocently. “I wasn’t sure
which of those two who were fighting I ought to hit,”
he laughed.
“It was a case of purse-snatchin’,”
she said hastily with a shrug of unconcern.
“They they were fightin’ over
it.” He had hard work to maintain the
proper expression of polite interest under the direct
appraisal of those grave eyes. “The purse
set me back on’y fifty-eight cents at Eaton’s
at a Friday sale and it had in it on’y some street-car
tickets, a handkerchief, about thirty-five cents change
an’ a nickle’s worth of gum.
So, you see, it really aint worth botherin’
about.” She smiled faintly as she stood
up and held out her hand. “Thanks again,
Mr. Kendrick. I must be toddlin’ along.”
But Kendrick was not to be dismissed
in this arbitrary fashion. He insisted upon
seeing her safely home and as it was so logically the
thing to do, she accepted his escort with what grace
she could. Throughout the short walk, however,
her manner toward him was one of cold formality, and
although Phil was by no means an uninteresting conversationalist
on occasion, his best efforts failed to break down
this reserve.
Several times he deliberately directed
the conversation to afford her the opportunity of
referring to the keyhole incidents only to have her
ignore the opening altogether. It was equally
apparent that she had no intention of mentioning Jimmy
Stiles, and he was half inclined to regret the lead
he had given her in this connection. Why had
she been so eager to misrepresent the situation?
Why had Stiles disappeared so suddenly? What
was the meaning of the attack by these two ruffians?
Was robbery really the motive, or was she lying about
that, too? He had seen no sign of a purse.
Why had she and young Stiles met by appointment at
that late hour and in that particular place?
It must be some very secret matter to require a clandestine
meeting. And she had been scolding Jimmy Stiles no
mistake about that.
Thus ran the undercurrent of his thoughts
as he tried to decide whether he had better shatter
that self-contained keep-your-distance attitude of
hers with plain questions. He would have to right-about-face
on the whole situation to do it, and he was not sure
that this was wise just then. One thing was
certain, Miss Margaret Williams was worth studying
very carefully and he could not afford to make any
mistakes in his approach.
She settled his indecision for him
somewhat unexpectedly by stopping abruptly opposite
a row of old brick houses with red sandstone fronts.
“Here’s where I live,”
she said. “‘Night, Mr. Kendrick, an’
thanks awfully.”
Phil raised his hat. Before
he could say a word she had left him and running up
the steps, disappeared inside the nearest vestibule.
For a moment only he hesitated, then
went far enough in the walk to make sure of the house
number, jotting it down on the back of an envelope.
A large white card in one of the front windows announced
“Board and Rooms.” He went away,
determined to return next day and have a chat with
the landlady. Perhaps he might even go so far
as to rent a room from her for a time.
But when Kendrick called next morning in pursuance of this
plan he was surprised to find that no young woman such as he described lived
there. The landlady proved to be an elderly widow who was quite talkative once
she had satisfied herself that the polite, good-looking young man with the
pleasant smile was not an agent seeking to walk away with some of her
hard-earned dollars. Miss Margaret Williams? No, there was nobody living there
by that name. The only stenographer she had among her boarders at present was a
Miss Turner who worked in the office of a candy factory, not a lawyers office
at all. And sometimes of a Saturday she brought home a big box of candy for
Sunday, knowing that Mrs. Parker had such a sweet tooth, and she was such an
obliging girl, was Miss Turner, and getting along so well at the office, she
was. Only the other night she had made the remark
Phil got away at last. He was not interested in the fortunes
of Miss Turner or the gossip of Mrs. Parkers boarding-house. He was too
supremely interested in the strange actions of the mysterious Miss Williams.
Darn the girl anyway! She deliberately had run inside the first boarding-house
they had come to, stopping calmly in the vestibule until he had gone his way,
when she probably had come out again and gone home without an escort. Or perhaps
she had met Stiles again. Or perhaps
“What d’you know about
it?” he muttered as he sat down on a boulevard
railing and mopped his forehead in disgust.
Well, if this girl sought to avoid
him she was going the wrong way about it. You
bet he would make it his business now to find out
exactly what was what; also what her friend, Jimmy
Stiles, was up to. People here in Toronto didn’t
go around following other people and being set upon
in the public parks not ordinarily.
The more he thought it over the more certain he became
that their actions were linked up somehow with his
own investigations. Why not? The girl had
spied upon Podmore, who was in league with Nickleby;
she had dealings with Jimmy Stiles who, according
to Nathaniel Lawson, was very much under Nickleby’s
thumb. There was enough Nickleby mixed up in
it for all sorts of possibilities. He wondered
what Podmore knew about her.
There was the next move for him to
make go and see Podmore and find out.
He got to his feet at once and started for the nearest
street-car line. He ought to be able to catch
Podmore just finishing a late breakfast at the Queen’s.
“Sorry, sir, but Mr. Podmore
checked out last night,” the clerk informed
him when at last he reached the hotel.
“Checked out?” echoed
Phil in surprise. “Last night, you say?
Did he leave any message for me?”
“No, sir.”
“And you don’t know where he went, eh?”
“I’m sorry, sir; but he
didn’t say. I believe the porter took some
baggage for him over to the Union Station; so he’s
evidently gone out of town.”
Kendrick walked off slowly.
It was not hard to guess whither the time-serving
Mr. Podmore was bound. He was running true to
form and Phil grinned as he thought of the surprise
that lay awaiting in the hollow stump beside the tank
at the Thorlakson siding. It would be worth
something to see the expression on Podmore’s
face when he opened that fake envelope of Wade’s
with its bogus bills.
Well, he could eliminate Podmore for
the present. What now? Had he better go
down to Ferguson’s office and boldly demand from
the haughty Miss Williams answers to a few pointed
questions, or had he better locate Stiles first and
choke the truth out of him? He glanced at his
watch. Nat Lawson would be expecting him to call
for that letter to Wade and he decided to go there
first. After that he would be free to follow
his own investigations in his own way.
Nathaniel Lawson was at work in the
garden, but went into the house at once for the letter
and insisted on Phil going inside for a cigar.
“Now you sit down in that big
chair there, Kendrick. I’m the celebrated
inventor of a new phosphate drink that ought to hit
the spot on a morning like this. Trouble nothing,
sir! I was just on the point of mixing one for
myself. Make yourself at home, my boy.
I won’t be long.”
Kendrick lounged gratefully in the
comfortable leather chair. He had not realized
just how hot it was outside until he found himself
thus ensconced in the cool interior of what his host
had called “the den.” A good old
scout, Nat Lawson.
Phil had decided it was best to say
nothing of his previous evening’s experiences,
but he had asked where young Jimmy Stiles was working
now and learned that the bookkeeper was with the Alderson
Construction Company. It was one of Nickleby’s
“mushroom” concerns and apparently Nathaniel
Lawson did not have much respect for any side-line
enterprise in which Mr. Nickleby was interested.
Phil smiled as he jotted down the address.
Nobody who had heard the Lawson side of the situation
could blame him for that attitude.
So Stiles worked for the Alderson
Construction Company, eh? the concern that
was mixed up in that campaign fund contribution that
had been stolen. Question: Had Jimmy Stiles
been forced by Nickleby to?
No, that was not tenable because Nickleby would not
be trying to steal from himself. Well, he’d
soon get the hang of things when he went to see Stiles.
It was going to be an interesting little pow-wow
with that young man.
Kendrick idly watched the smoke from
his cigar sail towards the long box of geraniums on
the sill of the open window. He whistled to the
canary that swung in a brass cage above the foliage.
Then his glance wandered about the room, over the
bookcases, the bric-a-brac on the mantel, the
He sat up in his chair rather suddenly.
He stood up and hastily crossed the room for a closer
look at a large, attractive photo which hung above
the mantel in a silver frame the photo of
a beautiful young woman in a summer dress. The
face was unmistakable. He was gazing at the
photo of the stenographer in Blatch Ferguson’s
office the girl who had listened at the
keyhole, who had met Stiles in the park last night
and had been attacked by the two strangers, who had
taken so much trouble to get rid of her escort by
the ruse of the boarding-house! The elaborate
coiffure was missing; but those beautiful classic
features were the same.
He turned as Lawson entered the room,
stepping slowly and carefully, with a tray and two
goblets which tinkled with ice.
“I was just admiring that photo
in the silver frame, Mr. Lawson. It is a remarkably
fine piece of photography. The tones are wonderful.
Would you consider it rude if I asked who the young
lady is?”
Nat Lawson slowly deposited the tray
and chuckled to himself. Unconsciously he raised
his head proudly.
“That is my daughter, sir, my
daughter, Cristy. I’m sorry that just
now she is not at home.”