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The other's smile was peculiarly irritating.
"Oh, indeed yes! We expect to make the trip quite an elaborate excursion.
Sorry I can't ask you to join us on the homeward voyage, but--" he shrugged his fat shoulders. "Run in and see me before you leave. I may be able to give you some pointers."
"Thank you. I hope you'll enjoy the summer up there in the wilderness. It will be a relief to get away from all conventions and restraints."
The men extended their hands and the Trust's manager said, in final invitation, "Drop in on me any day at the office. I'm at the National Building."
"Oh, you've moved, eh?" said Boyd, with a semblance of careless interest.
"Moved? No!"
"Indeed! I thought you were still at 610, Hotel Buller." With a short laugh and a casual gesture of adieu he turned, leaving the manager of the Trust staring after him, an astonished pucker upon his womanish mouth, a vindictive glare in his eyes. Not until his rival had turned the corner did Willis Marsh remove his gaze. Then he found that he was trembling as if from weakness.
"The ruffian!" He reached into his pocket and produced a gold cigarette- case, repeatedly snapping the heavy sides together with vicious force.
When he attempted to light a match it broke in his fingers, then in a temper he threw the cigarette from him and hurried away, his plump face working, his lips drawn into a spiteful fold.
For the first time in a fortnight Boyd allowed himself the luxury of a long sleep, and a late breakfast on the following morning. But the meal came to an abrupt conclusion when Balt, who always arose with the sun, rushed in upon him and exclaimed:
"Hey! come on down to the dock, quick. There's h.e.l.l to pay!"
"What's up now?"
"Strike! The longsh.o.r.emen have walked out on us. I was on hand early to oversee the loading, but the whole mob refused to commence. There's some union trouble because _The Bedford Castle_ discharged her cargo with scab labor."
"In Tacoma?"
"No. In Frisco; next to her last trip."
"Why, that's ridiculous! What does Captain Peasley say?"
"He says--I'll have to wait till we're outside before I can repeat what he says."
Together the two hurried to the water-front to find a crowd of surly stevedores loafing about the dock, and an English sea-captain at breakfast in his cabin, his attention divided equally between toast, tea, marmalade and profanity.
"The beggars are mad, absolutely mad," declared the Captain. "I can't understand it. I'm still in my bed when I'm aroused by an insolent loafer who calls himself a walking delegate and tells me his union won't load me until I pay some absurd sum."
"What did you tell him?" inquired Emerson.
"What did I tell him?" Captain Peasley laid down his knife gently and wiped the tea from his drooping mustache, then squared about in his seat.
"Here's what I told him as near as my memory serves." Whereupon he broke into a tornado of nautical profanity so picturesquely British in its figures, and so whole-souled in its vigor, that his auditors could not but smile. "Then I bashed him with my boot, and b.l.o.o.d.y well pursued him over the rail. Two thousand dollars! Sweet mother of Queen Anne! Wouldn't I look well, now, handing four hundred pounds over to those highbinders? My owners would hang me."
"So they demand two thousand dollars!"
"Yes! Just because of some bally rot about who may and who may not work for a living on the docks at Frisco."
"What are you going to do about it?"
"I'm going to make a swimming delegate out of the next walking emissary that boards me. Two thousand dollars!" He hid half a slice of toast behind his mustache and stirred his tea violently.
"It's Marsh again," said Big George.
"I dare say," Emerson answered. "It's a hold-up pure and simple. However, if s.h.i.+ps can be unloaded with non-union labor they can be loaded in the same manner, and Captain Peasley talks like a man who would like to have the argument out. I want you to stay here and watch our freight while I see the head of the union."
CHAPTER XVII
A NEW ENEMY APPEARS
When Boyd returned some two hours later he found the dock deserted save for Big George, who prowled watchfully about the freight piles.
"Well, did you fix it up?" the fisherman inquired.
"No," exclaimed Boyd. "It's a rank frame-up, and I refused to be bled."
"Good for you."
"There are some things a fellow's manhood won't stand for. I'll carry that freight aboard with my own hands before I'll be robbed by a labor union at the bidding of Willis Marsh."
"Say! Will you let me load this s.h.i.+p my way?" George asked.
"Can you do it?"
Balt's thick lips drew back from his yellow teeth in that smile which Emerson had come to recognize as a harbinger of the violent acts that rejoiced his lawless soul.
"Listen," said he, with a chuckle. "Down the street yonder I've got a hundred fishermen. Half of them are drunk at this minute, and the rest are half drunk."
"Then they are of no use to us."
"I don't reckon you ever seen a herd of Kalvik fishermen out of a job, did you? Well, there's just two things they know, fis.h.i.+ng and fighting, and this ain't the fis.h.i.+ng season. When they hit Seattle, the police force goes up into the residence section and stufts cotton in its ears, because the only thing that is strong enough to stand between a uniform and a fisherman is a hill."
"Can you induce them to work?"
"I can. All I'm afraid of is that I can't induce them to quit. They're liable to put this freight aboard _The Bedford Castle_, and then pull down the dock in a spirit of playfulness and pile it in Captain Peasley's cabin. There ain't no convulsion of nature that's equal to a gang of idle fishermen."
"When can they begin?"
"Well, it will take me all night to round them up, and I'll have to lick four or five, but there ought to be a dozen or two on hand in the morning." George cast a roving eye over the warehouse from the heavy planking under foot to the wide-spanning rafters above. "Yes," he concluded, "I don't see nothing breakable, so I guess it's safe."
"Would you like me to go with you?"
The giant considered him speculatively. "I don't think so. I ain't never seen you in action. No, you better stay here and arrange to guard this stuff till morning. I'll do the rest."