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Blake bent forward, frowning. "I've stood about enough of this."
"Wait," said Mr. Leslie. "I'm not going to drag that in. I mention it only that you will understand without argument why my offer is based on the condition that you at once and for all time give over your ridiculous idea of becoming my son-in-law."
"You--mean--that--?"
"That I'd rather see my daughter in her grave than married to you. Is that plain enough? You're a good engineer--when you're not a _drunkard_."
For a moment Blake sat tense and silent. Then he replied steadily: "I haven't touched a drop of drink since that steamer piled up on that coral reef."
"Three months, at the outside," rejoined Mr. Leslie. "You've been known to go half a year. But always--"
"Yes, always before this try," said Blake. "It's different, though, now, with the backing of two such--ladies!"
"Two?" queried Mr. Leslie sharply.
"One's dead," replied Blake with simple gravity.
"H'm. I--it's possible I've misjudged you in some things. But this question of drink--I'll risk backing you in a business way, if it costs me a million. I owe you that much. But I won't risk my daughter's happiness--supposing you had so much as a shadow of a chance of winning her. No! You saved her life. You shall have no chance whatever to make her miserable. But I'll give you opportunities--I'll put you on the road to making your own millions."
Blake raised his cigar and flecked off the ash. "_That_ for your d.a.m.ned millions!" he swore.
Mr. Leslie stared and muttered to himself: "Might have known it! Man of that kind. Crazy fool!"
"Fool?" repeated Blake contemptuously. "Just because money is _your_ G.o.d, you needn't think it's everybody else's. You--money--hog! You think I'd sell out my chance of winning _her!_"
"You have no chance, sir! The thought of such a thing is absurd--ridiculous!"
"Well, then, why don't you laugh? No; you hear me. If I knew I didn't have one chance in a million, I'd tell you to take your offer and--"
"Now, now! make no rash statements. I'm offering you, to begin with, a twenty-five-thousand-dollar position, and your chance to acquire a fortune, if you--"
Blake's smouldering anger flared out in white heat. "Think you can bribe me, do you? Well, you can just take your positions and your dollars, and go clean, plumb to h.e.l.l!"
"That will do, sir!--that will do!" gasped Mr. Leslie, shocked almost beyond speech.
"No, it won't do, Mr. H. V. Leslie!" retorted Blake. "I'm not one of your employees, to throw a fit when you put on the heavy pedal, and I'm not one of the lickspittles that are always _baa-ing_ around the Golden Calf. You've had your say. Now I'll have mine. To begin with, let me tell you, I don't need your positions or your money. Griffith has given me work. I'm working for him, not you. Understand?"
"You are? He's my consulting engineer."
"That cuts no ice. I'm doing some work for him--for _him_; understand?
It's not for you. He gave me the job--not you. After what you've said to me here, I wouldn't take a _hundred_-thousand-dollar job from you, not if I was walking around on my uppers. Understand?"
"But--but-"
Blake's anger burst out in volcanic rage. "That's it, straight! I don't want your jobs or your money. They're dirty! You've looked up my record, have you? How about your own? How about the Michamac Bridge?
Griffith says the Coville Company has taken it over; but you started it--you called for plans--you advertised a compet.i.tion. Where are my plans?--you!"
Mr. Leslie shrank back before the enraged engineer.
"Calm yourself, Mr. Blake!" he soothed in a quavering voice. "Calm yourself! This illusion of yours about lost plans--"
"Illusion?" cried Blake. "When I handed them in myself to your secretary--that dude, Ashton."
Mr. Leslie sat up, keenly alert. "To him? You say you handed in a set of bridge plans to my former secretary?"
"He wasn't a _former_ secretary then."
"To young Ashton, at that time my secretary. Where was it?"
"In there," muttered Blake, jerking his thumb towards the empty anteroom. "I had to b.u.t.t in to get even that far."
"Why didn't you show your receipt when you applied for your plans?"
"Hadn't a receipt."
"You didn't take a receipt?"
"And after that Q. T. survey, too!" thrust Blake. "I sure did play the fool, didn't I? But I was all up in the air over the way I had worked out that central span, and didn't think of anything but the committee you'd appointed to pa.s.s on the competing plans. Those judges were all right. I knew they'd be square."
"Sure you had any plans? Where's your proof?" demanded Mr. Leslie with a shrewdness that won a sarcastic grin from Blake.
"Don't fash yourself," he jeered. "You're safe--legally. Of course my scratch copy of them went down in the steamer. The fact I wrote Griffith about them before the contest wouldn't cut any ice--with your lawyers across the table from any I could afford to hire."
"Griffith knows about your plans?"
"Didn't get a chance to show them to him. All he knows is I wrote him I was drawing them to compete for the bridge--which of course was part of my plan to blackmail you," gibed Blake. He rose, with a look that was almost good-humored. "Well, guess we're through swapping compliments. I won't take up any of your valuable time discussing the weather."
With shrewd eyes blinking uneasily under their s.h.a.ggy brows, Mr. Leslie watched his visitor cross towards the door. The engineer walked firmly and resolutely, with his head well up, yet without any trace of swagger or bravado.
As he reached for the doork.n.o.b, Mr. Leslie bent forward and called in an irritable tone: "Wait! I want to tell you--"
"Excuse _me!_ My time's too valuable," rejoined Blake, and he swung out of the room.
Mr. Leslie sat for a few moments with his forehead creased in intent thought. He roused, to touch a b.u.t.ton with an incisive thrust of his finger. To the clerk who came hastening in he ordered tersely: "Phone Griffith--appointment nine-fifteen to-morrow. Important."
CHAPTER IX
PLAYS FOR POSITION
About three o'clock of the same day a smart electric _coupe_ whirled up Lake Sh.o.r.e Drive under a rattling fusillade of sleet from over the lake. At the entrance of the grounds of the Leslie mansion it curved around and shot in under the _porte cochere._
A footman in the quiet dark green and black of the Leslie livery sprang out to open the _coupe_ door, while the footman with the _coupe_, whose livery was not so quiet, swung down to hand out the occupants. Before the servant could offer his services, Dolores Gantry darted out past him and in through the welcome doorway of the side entrance. Her mother followed with stately leisure, regardless of a wind-flung dash of sleet on her sealskins.
Having been relieved of their furs, the callers were shown to the drawing-room. As the footman glided away to inform his mistress of their arrival, Dolores danced across to the door of the rear drawing-room and called in a clear, full-throated, contralto voice: "Ho, Vievie! Vievie! You in here? Hurry up! There's something I do so want to tell you."