“A bully idea,” agreed Mr. Magee. “I’ll hurry down there this minute. I’m more grateful than you can guess for this chance. And this time — but you’ll see.”
He found the back stairs, and descended. In the kitchen the hermit got in his path.
“Mr. Magee,” he pleaded, “I consider that, in a way, I work for you here. I’ve got something important to tell you. Just a minute—”
“Sorry,” answered Magee, “but I can’t possibly stop now. In an hour I’ll talk to you. Show me the cellar door, and don’t mention where I’ve gone, there’s a good fellow.”
Mr. Peters protested that his need of talk was urgent, but to no avail. Magee hurried to the cellar, and with the aid of a box of matches found a ladder leading to a door cut in the floor above. He climbed through dust and cobwebs, unfastened the catch, and pushed cautiously upward. In another minute he was standing in the chill little card-room. Softly he opened the card-room door about half an inch, and put his ear to it.
The three men were grouped very close at hand, and he heard Mr. Bland speaking in low tones:
“I’m talking to you boys as a friend. The show is over. There ain’t no use hanging round for the concert — there won’t be none. Go home and get some clean collars and a square meal.”
“If you think I’m going to be shook off by any fairy story like that,” said the mayor of Reuton “you’re a child with all a child’s touching faith.”
“All right,” replied Mr. Bland, “I thought I’d pass you the tip, that’s all. It ain’t nothing to me what you do. But it’s all over, and you’ve lost out. I’m sorry you have — but I take Hayden’s orders.”
“Damn Hayden!” snarled the mayor. “It was his idea to make a three-act play out of this thing. He’s responsible for this silly trip to Baldpate. This audience we’ve been acting for — he let us in for them.”
“I know,” said Bland. “But you can’t deny that Baldpate Inn looked like the ideal spot at first. Secluded, off the beaten path, you know, and all that.”
“Yes,” sneered the mayor, “as secluded as a Sunday-school the Sunday before Christmas.”
“Well, who could have guessed it?” went on Mr. Bland. “As I say, I don’t care what you do. I just passed you the tip. I’ve got that nice little package of the long green — I’ve got it where you’ll never find it. Yes, sir, it’s returned to the loving hands of little Joe Bland, that brought it here first. It ain’t going to roam no more. So what’s the use of your sticking around?”
“How did you get hold of it?” inquired Mr. Lou Max.
“I had my eye on this little professor person,” explained Mr. Bland. “This morning when Magee went up the mountain I trailed the high-brow to Magee’s room. When I busted in, unannounced by the butler, he was making his getaway. I don’t like to talk about what followed. He’s an old man, and I sure didn’t mean to break his glasses, nor scratch his dome of thought. There’s ideas in that dome go back to the time of Anthony J. Chaucer. But — he’s always talking about that literature chair of his — why couldn’t he stay at home and sit in it? Anyhow, I got the bundle all right, all right. I wonder what the little fossil wants with it.”
“The Doc’s glasses was broke,” said Max, evidently to the mayor of Reuton.
“Um-m,” came Cargan’s voice. “Bland, how much do you make working for this nice kind gentleman, Mr. Hayden?”
“Oh, about two thousand a year, with pickings,” replied Bland.
“Yes?” went on Mr. Cargan. “I ain’t no Charles Dana Gibson with words. My talk’s a little rough and sketchy, I guess. But here’s the outline, plain as I can make it. Two thousand a year from Hayden. Twenty thousand in two seconds if you hand that package to me.”
“No,” objected Bland. “I’ve been honest — after a fashion. I can’t quite stand for that. I’m working for Hayden.”
“Don’t be a fool,” sneered Max.
“Of course,” said the mayor, “I appreciate your scruples, having had a few in my day myself, though you’d never think so to read the Star. But look at it sensible. The money belongs to me. If you was to hand it over you’d be just doing plain justice. What right has Hayden on his side? I did what was agreed — do I get my pay? No. Who are you to defeat the ends of justice this way? That’s how you ought to look at it. You give me what’s my due — and you put twenty thousand in your pocket by an honest act. Hayden comes. He asks for the bundle. You point to the dynamited safe. You did your best.”
“No,” said Bland, but his tone was less firm. “I can’t go back on Hayden. No — it wouldn’t—”
“Twenty thousand,” repeated Cargan. “Ten years’ salary the way you’re going ahead at present. A lot of money for a young man. If I was you I wouldn’t hesitate a minute. Think. What’s Hayden ever done for you? He’ll throw you down some day, the way he’s thrown me.”
“I–I— don’t know—” wavered Bland. Mr. Magee, in the card-room, knew that Hayden’s emissary was tottering on the brink.
“You could set up in business,” whined Mr. Max. “Why, if I’d had that much money at your age, I’d be a millionaire to-day.”
“You get the package,” suggested the mayor, “take twenty thousand out, and slip the rest to me. No questions asked. I guess there ain’t nobody mixed up in this affair will go up on the housetops and shout about it when we get back to Reuton.”
“Well, — ” began Bland. He was lost. Suddenly the quiet of Baldpate Mountain was assailed by a loud pounding at the inn door, and a voice crying, “Bland. Let me in.”
“There’s Hayden now,” cried Mr. Bland.
“It ain’t too late,” came the mayor’s voice, “You can do it yet. It ain’t too late.”
“Do what?” cried Bland in a firm tone. “You can’t bribe me, Cargan.” He raised his voice. “Go round to the east door, Mr. Hayden.” Then he added, to Cargan: “That’s my answer. I’m going to let him in.”
“Let him in,” bellowed the mayor. “Let the hound in. I guess I’ve got something to say to Mr. Hayden.”
There came to Magee’s ears the sound of opening doors, and of returning footsteps.
“How do you do, Cargan,” said a voice new to Baldpate.
“Cut the society howdydoes,” replied the mayor hotly. “There’s a little score to be settled between me and you, Hayden. I ain’t quite wise to your orchid-in-the-buttonhole ways. I don’t quite follow them. I ain’t been bred in the club you hang around — they blackballed me when I tried to get in. You know that. I’m a rough rude man. I don’t understand your system. When I give my word, I keep it. Has that gone out of style up on the avenue, where you live?”
“There are conditions—” began Hayden.
“The hell there are!” roared Cargan. “A man’s word’s his word, and he keeps it to me, or I know the reason why. You can’t come down to the City Hall with any new deal like this. I was to have two hundred thousand. Why didn’t I get it?”
“Because,” replied Hayden smoothly, “the — er — little favor you were to grant me in return is to be made useless by the courts.”
“Can I help that?” the mayor demanded. “Was there anything about that in the agreement? I did my work. I want my pay. I’ll have it, Mister Hayden.”
Hayden’s voice was cool and even as he spoke to Bland.
“Got the money, Joe?”
“Yes,” Bland answered.
“Where?”
“Well — we’d better wait, hadn’t we?” Bland’s, voice was shaky.
“No. We’ll take it and get out,” answered Hayden.
“I want to see you do it,” cried Cargan. “If you think I’ve come up here on a pleasure trip, I got a chart and a pointer all ready for your next lesson. And let me put you wise — this nobby little idea of yours about Baldpate Inn is the worst ever. The place is as full of people as if the regular summer rates was being charged.”