The Red Mouse - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"I can't put you there."
Murgatroyd cast an appealing glance at the other.
"But--you want to, don't you?"
"Indeed I do not!" returned Broderick, indignantly.
Murgatroyd rose to his feet, saying, as though speaking to a spoiled child:--
"I don't like to see that spirit; it looks as though you were opposed to me."
"Have I ever been anythin' else?" returned Broderick. "Will I ever be anythin' else?"
Murgatroyd continued to reprove him.
"I prefer to see a man do with a good grace that which he has to do."
"And who has got to do?" queried Broderick, also rising.
"I have just told you," went on Murgatroyd, looking him full in the face, "that you've got to put me in the Senate."
Instantly Broderick became doggedly belligerent.
"I'll spend my last dollar to keep you out of it--I'll work against you till I drop in my tracks!"
Murgatroyd seized a small thick book and leafed it over.
"You'll do both," he remarked, "and when you drop in your tracks, Broderick, it will be with hard labour. Sit down, and take that pencil and piece of paper--I want you to do some figuring."
Broderick, wondering, seated himself; Murgatroyd peered over the little book.
"Seven and seven are fourteen," he mused, "and six are twenty, and eleven----"
"What have you got there?" Broderick asked with mild interest.
"The Penal Code," answered Murgatroyd, lightly.
"Look under B. for Bribe," suggested Broderick, with an accusing glance.
Murgatroyd shook his head.
"I'm just figuring up the number of years you'd have to serve----"
"But I'm not goin' to the Senate," protested the politician.
"No, but I am," retorted the prosecutor. "Four times six are twenty-four; besides the amount of fines you'll have to pay. Take the first on the list, Broderick. You'll get seven years on that, and seven thousand dollars fine. Put that down."
"I'll put nothin' down--I never was a hand at figures."
"Then I'll do it. Twenty indictments for corrupting voters--I've got the goods on that; twenty years and twenty thousand dollars fines. Hold on a minute, we won't add up just yet. There's your interest in Cradlebaugh's; there's the hospital; there's your pool-rooms; log-rolling with police-headquarters--Why, say, Broderick," he exclaimed suddenly, gasping with surprise, "it will cost you in the neighbourhood of one hundred thousand cash in fines!"
"You don't say!" sarcastically returned the chairman.
"And," continued Murgatroyd, suavely, "about one hundred and thirty-five years to serve in sentences."
"I'm booked for a ripe old age," returned Broderick, still with sarcasm in his voice.
"So that eliminates you from the Senate," facetiously continued the prosecutor; "you'll go up for the rest of your unnatural life." He paused and shot at Broderick a glance that went home--one that meant business.
Broderick squirmed.
"You don't mean to tell me, prosecutor," he exclaimed, "that you're going to prosecute me for these things?"
The other shrugged his shoulders.
"How can I help it?"
"You don't dare prosecute me! You blamed idiot!" screamed Broderick. "If you do, I'll send you up myself--you with three-quarters of a million dirty money in your clothes."
Murgatroyd thought over his words and weighed them. Presently, he said:--
"I would get out in five years; you would be there for a hundred and thirty more."
Broderick snorted with rage.
"What are you driving at, anyway?"
The prosecutor was silent for a moment, then he said:--
"Broderick, since I've been prosecutor, I have achieved a reputation for just three things: first, whenever I have tried to induce the Grand Jury to indict, I've succeeded; second, whenever they indicted, I have secured a verdict of conviction; third, my verdicts of conviction are always affirmed upon appeal." He stood over Broderick, threateningly, and finally declared:--
"Now, you put me in the United States Senate, or I'll put you where the penal code provides! What are you going to do about it?"
Broderick swelled with anger.
"I'm going to call your bluff, Murgatroyd!" he yelled. "You can't work me! And you don't dare touch me, either! Why, there ain't a man in this whole State who dares to lay a hand on me! By George, I call your bluff!"
Murgatroyd sat at his desk and pressed a b.u.t.ton; the door opened and two men entered.
"Mixley, McGrath," said Murgatroyd, picking up some rectangular slips of paper from his desk and pa.s.sing them over to them, "Chairman Peter Broderick is going to leave this room inside of thirty seconds----"
"You bet I am!" Broderick interposed.
"There are ten warrants for his arrest," went on the prosecutor; "take him into custody the instant he leaves this room."
"'Right, Chief!" the men replied in chorus, and, facing about, left the room.
"Now, Broderick," said Murgatroyd, "you called my bluff--you may go."