The Portygee

Chapter 41

Captain Zelotes handed the card to Albert.

"Better let me talk with him first, Al," he said. "You can have your chance later on."

The card bore the name of Mr. Fletcher Story Fosd.i.c.k.

CHAPTER XI

Albert read the name on the card. He was too astonished to speak. Her father! He was here! He--

His grandfather spoke again, and his tone was brisk and businesslike.

"Go on, Al," he ordered. "Out through this side door and around to the front. Lively, son, lively!"

But the young man"s wits were returning. He scowled at the card.

"No," he said stoutly, "I"m not going to run away. I"m not afraid of him. I haven"t done anything to be ashamed of."

The captain nodded. "If you had, I should ASK you to run away," he said.

"As it is, I just ask you to step out and wait a little while, that"s all."

"But, Grandfather, I WANT to see him."

"All right, I want you to--but not until he and I have talked first.

Come, boy, come! I"ve lived a little longer than you have, and maybe I know about half as much about some things. This is one of "em. You clear out and stand by. I"ll call you when I want you."

Albert went, but reluctantly. After he had gone his grandfather walked to the door of the outer office and opened it.

"Step aboard, Mr. Fosd.i.c.k," he said. "Come in, sir."

Mr. Fletcher Fosd.i.c.k was a large man, portly, and with a head which was rapidly losing its thatch. His smoot-shaven face was ruddy and his blue eye mild. He entered the private office of Z. Snow and Co. and shook the hand which Captain Zelotes proffered.

"How do you do, Captain Snow?" he asked pleasantly. "You and I have had some business dealings, but we have never met before, I believe."

The captain waved toward a chair. "That"s a fact, Mr. Fosd.i.c.k," he said.

"I don"t believe we ever have, but it"s better late than by and by, as the feller said. Sit down, sit down, Mr. Fosd.i.c.k. Throw off your coat, won"t you? It"s sort of warm in here compared to out door."

The visitor admitted the difference in temperature between the interior and exterior of the building, and removed his overcoat. Also he sat down. Captain Zelotes opened a drawer of his desk and produced a box of cigars.

"Have a smoke, won"t you?" he inquired.

Mr. Fosd.i.c.k glanced at the label on the box.

"Why--why, I was rather hoping you would smoke one of mine," he said. "I have a pocket full."

"When I come callin" on you at your place in New York I will smoke yours. Now it kind of looks to me as if you"d ought to smoke mine. Seems reasonable when you think it over, don"t it?"

Fosd.i.c.k smiled. "Perhaps you"re right," he said. He took one of the gaudily banded perfectos from his host"s box and accepted a light from the match the captain held. Both men blew a cloud of smoke and through those clouds each looked at the other. The preliminaries were over, but neither seemed particularly anxious to begin the real conversation. It was the visitor who, at last, began it.

"Captain Snow," he said, "I presume your clerk told you I wished to see you on a matter of business."

"Who? Oh, Labe, you mean? Yes, he told me."

"I told him to tell you that. It may surprise you, however, to learn that the business I wished to see you about--that I came on from New York to see you about--has nothing whatever to do with the house I"m building down here."

Captain Zelotes removed his cigar from his lips and looked meditatively at its burning end. "No-o," he said slowly, "that don"t surprise me very much. I cal"lated "twasn"t about the house you wished to see me."

"Oh, I see! ... Humph!" The Fosd.i.c.k mild blue eye lost, for the moment, just a trifle of its mildness and became almost keen, as its owner flashed a glance at the big figure seated at the desk. "I see,"

said Mr. Fosd.i.c.k. "And have you--er--guessed what I did come to see you about?"

"No-o. I wouldn"t call it guessin", exactly."

"Wouldn"t you? What would you call it?"

"We-ll, I don"t know but I"d risk callin" it knowin". Yes, I think likely I would."

"Oh, I see... . Humph! Have you had a letter--on the subject?"

"Ye-es."

"I see. From Mrs. Fosd.i.c.k, of course. She said she was going to write--I"m not sure she didn"t say she had written; but I had the impression it was to--well, to another member of your family, Captain Snow."

"No, "twas to me. Come this mornin"s mail."

"I see. My mistake. Well, I"m obliged to her in a way. If the news has been broken to you, I shan"t have to break it and we can get down to bra.s.s tacks just so much sooner. The surprise being over--I take it, it WAS a surprise, Captain?"

"You take it right. Just as much of a surprise to me as you."

"Of course. Well, the surprise being over for both of us, we can talk of the affair--calmly and coolly. What do you think about it, Captain?"

"Oh, I don"t know as I know exactly what to think. What do YOU think about it, Mr. Fosd.i.c.k?"

"I think--I imagine I think very much as you do."

"I shouldn"t be surprised. And--er--what"s your notion of what I think?"

Captain Zelotes" gray eye twinkled as he asked the question, and the Fosd.i.c.k blue eye twinkled in return. Both men laughed.

"We aren"t getting very far this way, Captain," observed the visitor.

"There"s no use dodging, I suppose. I, for one, am not very well pleased. Mrs. Fosd.i.c.k, for another, isn"t pleased at all; she is absolutely and entirely opposed to the whole affair. She won"t hear of it, that"s all, and she said so much that I thought perhaps I had better come down here at once, see you, and--and the young fellow with the queer name--"

"My grandson."

"Why yes. He is your grandson, isn"t he? I beg your pardon."

"That"s all right. I shan"t fight with you because you don"t like his name. Go ahead. You decided to come and see him--and me--?"

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