Fourth of a Series of Six Stories
[First published in Pictorial Review, August
1916]
It was with a start that Roland Bleke
realized that the girl at the other end of the bench
was crying. For the last few minutes, as far
as his preoccupation allowed him to notice them at
all, he had been attributing the subdued sniffs to
a summer cold, having just recovered from one himself.
He was embarrassed. He blamed
the fate that had led him to this particular bench,
but he wished to give himself up to quiet deliberation
on the question of what on earth he was to do with
two hundred and fifty thousand pounds, to which figure
his fortune had now risen.
The sniffs continued. Roland’s
discomfort increased. Chivalry had always been
his weakness. In the old days, on a hundred and
forty pounds a year, he had had few opportunities
of indulging himself in this direction; but now it
seemed to him sometimes that the whole world was crying
out for assistance.
Should he speak to her? He wanted
to; but only a few days ago his eyes had been caught
by the placard of a weekly paper bearing the title
of ‘Squibs,’ on which in large letters
was the legend “Men Who Speak to Girls,”
and he had gathered that the accompanying article was
a denunciation rather than a eulogy of these individuals.
On the other hand, she was obviously in distress.
Another sniff decided him.
“I say, you know,” he said.
The girl looked at him. She was
small, and at the present moment had that air of the
floweret surprized while shrinking, which adds a good
thirty-three per cent. to a girl’s attractions.
Her nose, he noted, was delicately tip-tilted.
A certain pallor added to her beauty. Roland’s
heart executed the opening steps of a buck-and-wing
dance.
“Pardon me,” he went on,
“but you appear to be in trouble. Is there
anything I can do for you?”
She looked at him again a
keen look which seemed to get into Roland’s
soul and walk about it with a searchlight. Then,
as if satisfied by the inspection, she spoke.
“No, I don’t think there
is,” she said. “Unless you happen
to be the proprietor of a weekly paper with a Woman’s
Page, and need an editress for it.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Well, that’s all any
one could do for me give me back my work
or give me something else of the same sort.”
“Oh, have you lost your job?”
“I have. So would you mind
going away, because I want to go on crying, and I
do it better alone. You won’t mind my turning
you out, I hope, but I was here first, and there are
heaps of other benches.”
“No, but wait a minute.
I want to hear about this. I might be able what
I mean is think of something. Tell
me all about it.”
There is no doubt that the possession
of two hundred and fifty thousand pounds tones down
a diffident man’s diffidence. Roland began
to feel almost masterful.
“Why should I?”
“Why shouldn’t you?”
“There’s something in
that,” said the girl reflectively. “After
all, you might know somebody. Well, as you want
to know, I have just been discharged from a paper
called ‘Squibs.’ I used to edit the
Woman’s Page.”
“By Jove, did you write that article on ’Men
Who Speak ’?”
The hard manner in which she had wrapped
herself as in a garment vanished instantly. Her
eyes softened. She even blushed. Just a becoming
pink, you know!
“You don’t mean to say
you read it? I didn’t think that any one
ever really read ‘Squibs.’”
“Read it!” cried Roland,
recklessly abandoning truth. “I should jolly
well think so. I know it by heart. Do you
mean to say that, after an article like that, they
actually sacked you? Threw you out as a failure?”
“Oh, they didn’t send
me away for incompetence. It was simply because
they couldn’t afford to keep me on. Mr.
Petheram was very nice about it.”
“Who’s Mr. Petheram?”
“Mr. Petheram’s everything.
He calls himself the editor, but he’s really
everything except office-boy, and I expect he’ll
be that next week. When I started with the paper,
there was quite a large staff. But it got whittled
down by degrees till there was only Mr. Petheram and
myself. It was like the crew of the ‘Nancy
Bell.’ They got eaten one by one, till
I was the only one left. And now I’ve gone.
Mr. Petheram is doing the whole paper now.”
“How is it that he can’t
get anything better to do?” Roland said.
“He has done lots of better
things. He used to be at Carmelite House, but
they thought he was too old.”
Roland felt relieved. He conjured
up a picture of a white-haired elder with a fatherly
manner.
“Oh, he’s old, is he?”
“Twenty-four.”
There was a brief silence. Something
in the girl’s expression stung Roland.
She wore a rapt look, as if she were dreaming of the
absent Petheram, confound him. He would show
her that Petheram was not the only man worth looking
rapt about.
He rose.
“Would you mind giving me your address?”
he said.
“Why?”
“In order,” said Roland
carefully, “that I may offer you your former
employment on ‘Squibs.’ I am going
to buy it.”
After all, your man of dash and enterprise,
your Napoleon, does have his moments. Without
looking at her, he perceived that he had bowled her
over completely. Something told him that she was
staring at him, open-mouthed. Meanwhile, a voice
within him was muttering anxiously, “I wonder
how much this is going to cost.”
“You’re going to buy ‘Squibs!’”
Her voice had fallen away to an awestruck whisper.
“I am.”
She gulped.
“Well, I think you’re wonderful.”
So did Roland.
“Where will a letter find you?” he asked.
“My name is March. Bessie
March. I’m living at twenty-seven Guildford
Street.”
“Twenty-seven. Thank you.
Good morning. I will communicate with you in
due course.”
He raised his hat and walked away.
He had only gone a few steps, when there was a patter
of feet behind him. He turned.
“I I just wanted to thank you,”
she said.
“Not at all,” said Roland. “Not
at all.”
He went on his way, tingling with just triumph.
Petheram? Who was
Petheram? Who, in the name of goodness, was Petheram?
He had put
Petheram in his proper place, he rather fancied.
Petheram, forsooth.
Laughable.
A copy of the current number of ‘Squibs,’
purchased at a book-stall, informed him, after a minute
search to find the editorial page, that the offices
of the paper were in Fetter Lane. It was evidence
of his exalted state of mind that he proceeded thither
in a cab.
Fetter Lane is one of those streets
in which rooms that have only just escaped being cupboards
by a few feet achieve the dignity of offices.
There might have been space to swing a cat in the editorial
sanctum of ‘Squibs,’ but it would have
been a near thing. As for the outer office, in
which a vacant-faced lad of fifteen received Roland
and instructed him to wait while he took his card
in to Mr. Petheram, it was a mere box. Roland
was afraid to expand his chest for fear of bruising
it.
The boy returned to say that Mr. Petheram would see
him.
Mr. Petheram was a young man with
a mop of hair, and an air of almost painful restraint.
He was in his shirt-sleeves, and the table before
him was heaped high with papers. Opposite him,
evidently in the act of taking his leave was a comfortable-looking
man of middle age with a red face and a short beard.
He left as Roland entered and Roland was surprized
to see Mr. Petheram spring to his feet, shake his fist
at the closing door, and kick the wall with a vehemence
which brought down several inches of discolored plaster.
“Take a seat,” he said,
when he had finished this performance. “What
can I do for you?”
Roland had always imagined that editors
in their private offices were less easily approached
and, when approached, more brusk. The fact was
that Mr. Petheram, whose optimism nothing could quench,
had mistaken him for a prospective advertiser.
“I want to buy the paper,”
said Roland. He was aware that this was an abrupt
way of approaching the subject, but, after all, he
did want to buy the paper, so why not say so?
Mr. Petheram fizzed in his chair.
He glowed with excitement.
“Do you mean to tell me there’s
a single book-stall in London which has sold out?
Great Scott, perhaps they’ve all sold out!
How many did you try?”
“I mean buy the whole paper.
Become proprietor, you know.”
Roland felt that he was blushing,
and hated himself for it. He ought to be carrying
this thing through with an air. Mr. Petheram looked
at him blankly.
“Why?” he asked.
“Oh, I don’t know,”
said Roland. He felt the interview was going all
wrong. It lacked a stateliness which this kind
of interview should have had.
“Honestly?” said Mr. Petheram.
“You aren’t pulling my leg?”
Roland nodded. Mr. Petheram appeared
to struggle with his conscience, and finally to be
worsted by it, for his next remarks were limpidly
honest.
“Don’t you be an ass,”
he said. “You don’t know what you’re
letting yourself in for. Did you see that blighter
who went out just now? Do you know who he is?
That’s the fellow we’ve got to pay five
pounds a week to for life.”
“Why?”
“We can’t get rid of him.
When the paper started, the proprietors not
the present ones thought it would give the
thing a boom if they had a football competition with
a first prize of a fiver a week for life. Well,
that’s the man who won it. He’s been
handed down as a legacy from proprietor to proprietor,
till now we’ve got him. Ages ago they tried
to get him to compromise for a lump sum down, but he
wouldn’t. Said he would only spend it,
and preferred to get it by the week. Well, by
the time we’ve paid that vampire, there isn’t
much left out of our profits. That’s why
we are at the present moment a little understaffed.”
A frown clouded Mr. Petheram’s
brow. Roland wondered if he was thinking of Bessie
March.
“I know all about that,” he said.
“And you still want to buy the thing?”
“Yes.”
“But what on earth for?
Mind you, I ought not to be crabbing my own paper
like this, but you seem a good chap, and I don’t
want to see you landed. Why are you doing it?”
“Oh, just for fun.”
“Ah, now you’re talking.
If you can afford expensive amusements, go ahead.”
He put his feet on the table, and
lit a short pipe. His gloomy views on the subject
of ‘Squibs’ gave way to a wave of optimism.
“You know,” he said, “there’s
really a lot of life in the old rag yet. If it
were properly run. What has hampered us has been
lack of capital. We haven’t been able to
advertise. I’m bursting with ideas for booming
the paper, only naturally you can’t do it for
nothing. As for editing, what I don’t know
about editing but perhaps you had got somebody
else in your mind?”
“No, no,” said Roland,
who would not have known an editor from an office-boy.
The thought of interviewing prospective editors appalled
him.
“Very well, then,” resumed
Mr. Petheram, reassured, kicking over a heap of papers
to give more room for his feet. “Take it
that I continue as editor. We can discuss terms
later. Under the present regime I have been doing
all the work in exchange for a happy home. I suppose
you won’t want to spoil the ship for a ha’porth
of tar? In other words, you would sooner have
a happy, well-fed editor running about the place than
a broken-down wreck who might swoon from starvation?”
“But one moment,” said
Roland. “Are you sure that the present
proprietors will want to sell?”
“Want to sell,” cried
Mr. Petheram enthusiastically. “Why, if
they know you want to buy, you’ve as much chance
of getting away from them without the paper as as well,
I can’t think of anything that has such a poor
chance of anything. If you aren’t quick
on your feet, they’ll cry on your shoulder.
Come along, and we’ll round them up now.”
He struggled into his coat, and gave
his hair an impatient brush with a note-book.
“There’s just one other
thing,” said Roland. “I have been
a regular reader of ‘Squibs’ for some
time, and I particularly admire the way in which the
Woman’s Page ”
“You mean you want to réengage
the editress? Rather. You couldn’t
do better. I was going to suggest it myself.
Now, come along quick before you change your mind
or wake up.”
Within a very few days of becoming
sole proprietor of ‘Squibs,’ Roland began
to feel much as a man might who, a novice at the art
of steering cars, should find himself at the wheel
of a runaway motor. Young Mr. Petheram had spoken
nothing less than the truth when he had said that
he was full of ideas for booming the paper. The
infusion of capital into the business acted on him
like a powerful stimulant. He exuded ideas at
every pore.
Roland’s first notion had been
to engage a staff of contributors. He was under
the impression that contributors were the life-blood
of a weekly journal. Mr. Petheram corrected this
view. He consented to the purchase of a lurid
serial story, but that was the last concession he made.
Nobody could accuse Mr. Petheram of lack of energy.
He was willing, even anxious, to write the whole paper
himself, with the exception of the Woman’s Page,
now brightly conducted once more by Miss March.
What he wanted Roland to concentrate himself upon
was the supplying of capital for ingenious advertising
schemes.
“How would it be,” he
asked one morning he always began his remarks
with, “How would it be?” “if
we paid a man to walk down Piccadilly in white skin-tights
with the word ‘Squibs’ painted in red letters
across his chest?”
Roland thought it would certainly not be.
“Good sound advertising stunt,”
urged Mr. Petheram. “You don’t like
it? All right. You’re the boss.
Well, how would it be to have a squad of men dressed
as Zulus with white shields bearing the legend ‘Squibs?’
See what I mean? Have them sprinting along the
Strand shouting, ’Wah! Wah! Wah!
Buy it! Buy it!’ It would make people talk.”
Roland emerged from these interviews
with his skin crawling with modest apprehension.
His was a retiring nature, and the thought of Zulus
sprinting down the Strand shouting “Wah!
Wah! Wah! Buy it! Buy it!” with
reference to his personal property appalled him.
He was beginning now heartily to regret
having bought the paper, as he generally regretted
every definite step which he took. The glow of
romance which had sustained him during the preliminary
negotiations had faded entirely. A girl has to
be possessed of unusual charm to continue to captivate
B, when she makes it plain daily that her heart is
the exclusive property of A; and Roland had long since
ceased to cherish any delusion that Bessie March was
ever likely to feel anything but a mild liking for
him. Young Mr. Petheram had obviously staked out
an indisputable claim. Her attitude toward him
was that of an affectionate devotee toward a high
priest. One morning, entering the office unexpectedly,
Roland found her kissing the top of Mr. Petheram’s
head; and from that moment his interest in the fortunes
of ‘Squibs’ sank to zero. It amazed
him that he could ever have been idiot enough to have
allowed himself to be entangled in this insane venture
for the sake of an insignificant-looking bit of a
girl with a snub-nose and a poor complexion.
What particularly galled him was the
fact that he was throwing away good cash for nothing.
It was true that his capital was more than equal to
the, on the whole, modest demands of the paper, but
that did not alter the fact that he was wasting money.
Mr. Petheram always talked buoyantly about turning
the corner, but the corner always seemed just as far
off.
The old idea of flight, to which he
invariably had recourse in any crisis, came upon Roland
with irresistible force. He packed a bag, and
went to Paris. There, in the discomforts of life
in a foreign country, he contrived for a month to
forget his white elephant.
He returned by the evening train which
deposits the traveler in London in time for dinner.
Strangely enough, nothing was farther
from Roland’s mind than his bright weekly paper,
as he sat down to dine in a crowded grill-room near
Piccadilly Circus. Four weeks of acute torment
in a city where nobody seemed to understand the simplest
English sentence had driven ‘Squibs’ completely
from his mind for the time being.
The fact that such a paper existed
was brought home to him with the coffee. A note
was placed upon his table by the attentive waiter.
“What’s this?” he asked.
“The lady, sare,” said the waiter vaguely.
Roland looked round the room excitedly.
The spirit of romance gripped him. There were
many ladies present, for this particular restaurant
was a favorite with artistes who were permitted
to “look in” at their theaters as late
as eight-thirty. None of them looked particularly
self-conscious, yet one of them had sent him this quite
unsolicited tribute. He tore open the envelope.
The message, written in a flowing
feminine hand, was brief, and Mrs. Grundy herself
could have taken no exception to it.
“‘Squibs,’ one penny
weekly, buy it,” it ran. All the mellowing
effects of a good dinner passed away from Roland.
He was feverishly irritated. He paid his bill
and left the place.
A visit to a neighboring music-hall
occurred to him as a suitable sedative. Hardly
had his nerves ceased to quiver sufficiently to allow
him to begin to enjoy the performance, when, in the
interval between two of the turns, a man rose in one
of the side boxes.
“Is there a doctor in the house?”
There was a hush in the audience.
All eyes were directed toward the box. A man
in the stalls rose, blushing, and cleared his throat.
“My wife has fainted,”
continued the speaker. “She has just discovered
that she has lost her copy of ‘Squibs.’”
The audience received the statement
with the bovine stolidity of an English audience in
the presence of the unusual.
Not so Roland. Even as the purposeful-looking
chuckers-out wended their leopard-like steps toward
the box, he was rushing out into the street.
As he stood cooling his indignation
in the pleasant breeze which had sprung up, he was
aware of a dense crowd proceeding toward him.
It was headed by an individual who shone out against
the drab background like a good deed in a naughty
world. Nature hath framed strange fellows in her
time, and this was one of the strangest that Roland’s
bulging eyes had ever rested upon. He was a large,
stout man, comfortably clad in a suit of white linen,
relieved by a scarlet ‘Squibs’ across the
bosom. His top-hat, at least four sizes larger
than any top-hat worn out of a pantomime, flaunted
the same word in letters of flame. His umbrella,
which, tho the weather was fine, he carried open above
his head, bore the device “One penny weekly”.
The arrest of this person by a vigilant
policeman and Roland’s dive into a taxicab occurred
simultaneously. Roland was blushing all over.
His head was in a whirl. He took the evening
paper handed in through the window of the cab quite
mechanically, and it was only the strong exhortations
of the vendor which eventually induced him to pay for
it. This he did with a sovereign, and the cab
drove off.
He was just thinking of going to bed
several hours later, when it occurred to him that
he had not read his paper. He glanced at the
first page. The middle column was devoted to a
really capitally written account of the proceedings
at Bow Street consequent upon the arrest of six men
who, it was alleged, had caused a crowd to collect
to the disturbance of the peace by parading the Strand
in the undress of Zulu warriors, shouting in unison
the words “Wah! Wah! Wah! Buy
‘Squibs.’”
Young Mr. Petheram greeted Roland
with a joyous enthusiasm which the hound Argus, on
the return of Ulysses, might have equalled but could
scarcely have surpassed.
It seemed to be Mr. Petheram’s
considered opinion that God was in His Heaven and
all was right with the world. Roland’s attempts
to correct this belief fell on deaf ears.
“Have I seen the advertisements?”
he cried, echoing his editor’s first question.
“I’ve seen nothing else.”
“There!” said Mr. Petheram proudly.
“It can’t go on.”
“Yes, it can. Don’t
you worry. I know they’re arrested as fast
as we send them out, but, bless you, the supply’s
endless. Ever since the Revue boom started and
actors were expected to do six different parts in
seven minutes, there are platoons of music-hall ‘pros’
hanging about the Strand, ready to take on any sort
of job you offer them. I have a special staff
flushing the Bodegas. These fellows love
it. It’s meat and drink to them to be right
in the public eye like that. Makes them feel
ten years younger. It’s wonderful the talent
knocking about. Those Zulus used to have a steady
job as the Six Brothers Biff, Society Contortionists.
The Revue craze killed them professionally. They
cried like children when we took them on.
“By the way, could you put through
an expenses cheque before you go? The fines mount
up a bit. But don’t you worry about that
either. We’re coining money. I’ll
show you the returns in a minute. I told you we
should turn the corner. Turned it! Blame
me, we’ve whizzed round it on two wheels.
Have you had time to see the paper since you got back?
No? Then you haven’t seen our new Scandal
Page ’We Just Want to Know, You Know.’
It’s a corker, and it’s sent the circulation
up like a rocket. Everybody reads ‘Squibs’
now. I was hoping you would come back soon.
I wanted to ask you about taking new offices.
We’re a bit above this sort of thing now.”
Roland, meanwhile, was reading with
horrified eyes the alleged corking Scandal Page.
It seemed to him without exception the most frightful
production he had ever seen. It appalled him.
“This is awful,” he moaned.
“We shall have a hundred libel actions.”
“Oh, no, that’s all right.
It’s all fake stuff, tho the public doesn’t
know it. If you stuck to real scandals you wouldn’t
get a par. a week. A more moral set of blameless
wasters than the blighters who constitute modern society
you never struck. But it reads all right, doesn’t
it? Of course, every now and then one does hear
something genuine, and then it goes in. For instance,
have you ever heard of Percy Pook, the bookie?
I have got a real ripe thing in about Percy this week,
the absolute limpid truth. It will make him sit
up a bit. There, just under your thumb.”
Roland removed his thumb, and, having
read the paragraph in question, started as if he had
removed it from a snake.
“But this is bound to mean a libel action!”
he cried.
“Not a bit of it,” said
Mr. Petheram comfortably. “You don’t
know Percy. I won’t bore you with his life-history,
but take it from me he doesn’t rush into a court
of law from sheer love of it. You’re safe
enough.”
But it appeared that Mr. Pook, tho
coy in the matter of cleansing his scutcheon before
a judge and jury, was not wholly without weapons of
defense and offense. Arriving at the office next
day, Roland found a scene of desolation, in the middle
of which, like Marius among the ruins of Carthage,
sat Jimmy, the vacant-faced office boy. Jimmy
was reading an illustrated comic paper, and appeared
undisturbed by his surroundings.
“He’s gorn,” he observed, looking
up as Roland entered.
“What do you mean?” Roland
snapped at him. “Who’s gone and where
did he go? And besides that, when you speak to
your superiors you will rise and stop chewing that
infernal gum. It gets on my nerves.”
Jimmy neither rose nor relinquished
his gum. He took his time and answered.
“Mr. Petheram. A couple
of fellers come in and went through, and there was
a uproar inside there, and presently out they come
running, and I went in, and there was Mr. Petheram
on the floor knocked silly and the furniture all broke,
and now ’e’s gorn to ’orspital.
Those fellers ’ad been putting ’im froo
it proper,” concluded Jimmy with moody relish.
Roland sat down weakly. Jimmy,
his tale told, resumed the study of his illustrated
paper. Silence reigned in the offices of ‘Squibs.’
It was broken by the arrival of Miss
March. Her exclamation of astonishment at the
sight of the wrecked room led to a repetition of Jimmy’s
story.
She vanished on hearing the name of
the hospital to which the stricken editor had been
removed, and returned an hour later with flashing eyes
and a set jaw.
“Aubrey,” she said it
was news to Roland that Mr. Petheram’s name was
Aubrey “is very much knocked about,
but he is conscious and sitting up and taking nourishment.”
“That’s good.”
“In a spoon only.”
“Ah!” said Roland.
“The doctor says he will not
be out for a week. Aubrey is certain it was that
horrible book-maker’s men who did it, but of
course he can prove nothing. But his last words
to me were, ’Slip it into Percy again this week.’
He has given me one or two things to mention.
I don’t understand them, but Aubrey says they
will make him wild.”
Roland’s flesh crept. The
idea of making Mr. Pook any wilder than he appeared
to be at present horrified him. Panic gave him
strength, and he addressed Miss March, who was looking
more like a modern Joan of Arc than anything else
on earth, firmly.
“Miss March,” he said,
“I realize that this is a crisis, and that we
must all do all that we can for the paper, and I am
ready to do anything in reason but I will
not slip it into Percy. You have seen the effects
of slipping it into Percy. What he or his minions
will do if we repeat the process I do not care to
think.”
“You are afraid?”
“Yes,” said Roland simply.
Miss March turned on her heel.
It was plain that she regarded him as a worm.
Roland did not like being thought a worm, but it was
infinitely better than being regarded as an interesting
case by the house-surgeon of a hospital. He belonged
to the school of thought which holds that it is better
that people should say of you, “There he goes!”
than that they should say, “How peaceful he
looks”.
Stress of work prevented further conversation.
It was a revelation to Roland, the vigor and energy
with which Miss March threw herself into the breach.
As a matter of fact, so tremendous had been the labors
of the departed Mr. Petheram, that her work was more
apparent than real. Thanks to Mr. Petheram, there
was a sufficient supply of material in hand to enable
‘Squibs’ to run a fortnight on its own
momentum. Roland, however, did not know this,
and with a view to doing what little he could to help,
he informed Miss March that he would write the Scandal
Page. It must be added that the offer was due
quite as much to prudence as to chivalry. Roland
simply did not dare to trust her with the Scandal
Page. In her present mood it was not safe.
To slip it into Percy would, he felt, be with her
the work of a moment.
Literary composition had never been
Roland’s forte. He sat and stared at the
white paper and chewed the pencil which should have
been marring its whiteness with stinging paragraphs.
No sort of idea came to him.
His brow grew damp. What sort
of people except book-makers did
things you could write scandal about? As far
as he could ascertain, nobody.
He picked up the morning paper.
The name Windlebird caught his eye. A kind
of pleasant melancholy came over him as he read the
paragraph. How long ago it seemed since he had
met that genial financier. The paragraph was
not particularly interesting. It gave a brief
account of some large deal which Mr. Windlebird was
negotiating. Roland did not understand a word
of it, but it gave him an idea.
He is a character in the Second
Episode, a fraudulent financier.
Mr. Windlebird’s financial standing,
he knew, was above suspicion. Mr. Windlebird
had made that clear to him during his visit. There
could be no possibility of offending Mr. Windlebird
by a paragraph or two about the manners and customs
of financiers. Phrases which his kindly host had
used during his visit came back to him, and with them
inspiration.
Within five minutes he had compiled the following
We just want
to know, you know
Who is the eminent financier
at present engaged upon one of his
biggest deals?
Whether the public would
not be well-advised to look a little
closer into it before investing
their money?
If it is not a fact that
this gentleman has bought a first-class
ticket to the Argentine in
case of accidents?
Whether he may not have
to use it at any moment?
After that it was easy. Ideas
came with a rush. By the end of an hour he had
completed a Scandal Page of which Mr. Petheram himself
might have been proud, without a suggestion of slipping
it into Percy. He felt that he could go to Mr.
Pook, and say, “Percy, on your honor as a British
book-maker, have I slipped it into you in any way whatsoever?”
And Mr. Pook would be compelled to reply, “You
have not.”
Miss March read the proofs of the
page, and sniffed. But Miss March’s blood
was up, and she would have sniffed at anything not
directly hostile to Mr. Pook.
A week later Roland sat in the office
of ‘Squibs,’ reading a letter. It
had been sent from N-A Bream’s Buildings,
E.C., but, from Roland’s point of view, it might
have come direct from heaven; for its contents, signed
by Harrison, Harrison, Harrison & Harrison, Solicitors,
were to the effect that a client of theirs had instructed
them to approach him with a view to purchasing the
paper. He would not find their client disposed
to haggle over terms, so, hoped Messrs. Harrison, Harrison,
Harrison & Harrison, in the event of Roland being willing
to sell, they could speedily bring matters to a satisfactory
conclusion.
Any conclusion which had left him
free of ‘Squibs’ without actual pecuniary
loss would have been satisfactory to Roland. He
had conceived a loathing for his property which not
even its steadily increasing sales could mitigate.
He was around at Messrs. Harrison’s office as
soon as a swift taxi could take him there. The
lawyers were for spinning the thing out with guarded
remarks and cautious preambles, but Roland’s
methods of doing business were always rapid.
“This chap,” he said,
“this fellow who wants to buy ‘Squibs,’
what’ll he give?”
“That,” began one of the
Harrisons ponderously, “would, of course, largely
depend ”
“I’ll take five thousand.
Lock, stock, and barrel, including the present staff,
an even five thousand. How’s that?”
“Five thousand is a large ”
“Take it or leave it.”
“My dear sir, you hold a pistol
to our heads. However, I think that our client
might consent to the sum you mention.”
“Good. Well, directly I
get his check, the thing’s his. By the way,
who is your client?”
Mr. Harrison coughed.
“His name,” he said, “will
be familiar to you. He is the eminent financier,
Mr. Geoffrey Windlebird.”