For a minute or so all you could hear in the private office was Piddie"s heart beatin" on his ribs, or maybe it was his knees knockin" together.
He hasn"t the temperament to sit in on deep emotional scenes, Piddie. As for Old Hickory, he clips the end off a six-inch brunette cigar, lights up careful, and then turns slow to Vincent.
"Well, young man," says he, "so you did know about that motion to pa.s.s the dividend, after all, eh!"
Vincent nods, his head still down.
"Took a look at the letter book, did you!" asks Old Hickory.
Another weak nod.
"And "phoned a code message to someone in Broad Street, I suppose?"
suggests Old Hickory.
"No, sir," says Vincent. "He--he was waiting in the Arcade. I slipped out and handed him a copy of the motion--as carried. But not until after the full board had reversed it."
"Oh!" says Old Hickory. "Gave your friend the double cross, as I believe you would state it?"
"He wasn"t a friend," protests Vincent. "It was Izzy Goldheimer, who used to work in the bond room before I came. He"s with a Curb firm now and has been trying for months to work me for tips on Corrugated holdings. Promised me a percentage. But he was a welcher, and I knew it.
So when I did give him a tip it--it was that kind."
"Hm-m-m!" says Old Hickory, wrinklin" his bushy eyebrows. "Still, I fail to see just where you would have time to take advantage of such conditions."
"I had put up my margins on G. L. T. the day before," explains Vincent.
"Taking the short end, sir. If the dividend had gone through at first I would have "phoned in to change my trade to a buying order before Izzy could get down with the news. As it didn"t, I let it stand. Of course, I knew the market would break next morning and I closed out the deal for a 15-point gain."
"Fairly clever manipulation," comments Old Hickory. "Then you cleared about----"
"Fifteen hundred," says Vincent. "I could have made more by pyramiding, but I thought it best to pull out while I was sure."
"What every plunger knows--but forgets," says Old Hickory. "And you still have a capital of three hundred for future operations, eh?"
"I"m through, sir," says Vincent. ""I--I don"t like lying to mother.
Besides after next Monday I don"t think Izzy will bother me for any more tips. I--I suppose I"m fired, sir?"
"Eh?" says Old Hickory, scowlin" at him fierce. "Fired? No. Boys who have a dislike for lying to mother are too scarce. Besides, anyone who can beat a curb broker at his own game ought to be valuable to the Corrugated some day. Mr. Piddie, see that this young man is promoted as soon as there"s an opening. And--er--I believe that is all, gentlemen."
As me and Piddie trickle out into the general offices Piddie whispers awed: "Wonderful man, Mr. Ellins! Wonderful!"
"How clever of you to find it out, Piddie," says I. "Did you get the hunch from Vincent"s mother?"
CHAPTER XIII
THE MANTLE OF SANDY THE GREAT
"Vincent," says I, as I blows in through the bra.s.s gate from lunch, "who"s the poddy old party you got parked on the bench out in the anteroom?"
"He"s waiting to see Mr. Ellins," says Vincent. "This is his third try.
Looks to me like some up-state stockholder who wants to know when Corrugated common will strike 110."
"Well, that wouldn"t be my guess exactly," says I. "What"s the name?"
"Dowd," says Vincent, reachin" for a card. "Matthew K"
"Eh," says I. "Mesaba Matt. Dowd? Say, son, your guesser is way out of gear. You ought to get better posted on the Order of Who-Who"s."
"I"m sorry," says Vincent, pinkin" up in the ears. "Is--is he somebody in particular?"
"Only one of the biggest iron ore men in the game," says I. "That is, he was until he unloaded that Pittsburgh syndicate a few years ago. Also he must be a special crony of Old Hickory"s. Anyway, he was playin" around with him down South last month. And here we let him warm a seat out in the book-agent pen! Social error, Vincent."
"Stupid of me," admits Vincent. "I will--"
"Better let me soothe him down now," says I. "Then I"ll get Old Hickory on the "phone and tell him who"s here."
I will say that I did it in my best private sec. style, too, urgin" him into the private office while I explains how the boy on the gate couldn"t have read the name right and a.s.surin" him I"d get word to Mr.
Ellins at once.
"He"s only having a conference with his attorneys," says I. "I think he"ll be up very, soon. Just a moment while I get him on the wire, Mr.
Dowd."
"Thank you, young man," says Matthew K. "I--I rather would like to see Ellins today, if I could."
"Why, sure!" says I, easin" him into Old Hickory"s swing chair.
But somehow when I"d slipped out to the "phone booth and got in touch with the boss he don"t seem so anxious to rush up and meet his old side kick. No. He"s more or less calm about it.
"Eh?" says he. "Dowd? Oh, yes! Well, you just tell him, Torchy, that I"m tied up here and can"t say when I"ll be through. He"d better not wait."
"Excuse me, Mr. Ellins," says I, "but he"s been here twice before. Seems to have something on his mind that--well, might be important, you know."
"Yes, it might be," says Old Hickory, and I couldn"t tell whether he threw in a snort or a chuckle right there. "And since you think it is, Torchy, perhaps you"d better get him to sketch it out to you."
"All right," says I. "That is, if he"ll loosen up."
"Oh, I rather think he will," says Old Hickory.
It was a good guess. For when I tells Dowd how sorry Mr. Ellins is that he can"t come just then, and suggests that I"ve got power of attorney to take care of anything confidential he might spill into my nigh ear, he opens right up.
Course, what I"m lookin" for is some big business stuff; maybe a straight tip on how this new shift in Europe is going to affect foreign exchange, or a hunch as to what the administration means to put over in regard to the railroad muddle. He"s a solemn-faced, owl-eyed old party, this Mesaba Matt. Looks like he was thinkin" wise and deep about weighty matters. You know. One of these slow-movin", heavy-lidded, double-chinned old pelicans who never mention any sum less than seven figures. So I"m putting up a serious secretarial front myself when he starts clearin" his throat.
"Young man," says he, "I suppose you know something about golf!"
"Eh?" says I. "Golf? Oh, yes. That is. I"ve seen it played some. I was on a trip with Mr. Ellins down at Pinehurst, five or six years back, when he broke into the game, and I read Grant Rice"s dope on it more or less reg"lar."
"But you haven"t played golf yourself, have you?" he goes on.