The Vagrant Duke. Gibbs George

The Vagrant Duke - Gibbs George


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the impression that the inspection to which Peter had been subjected was nothing but a joke. But when his employer began speaking rather jerkily, Peter noticed that his hands were unsteady and that neither the muscles of his face nor of his body were under complete control. Normally, he would have seemed much as Sheldon, Senior, had described him – a hard-fisted man, a close bargainer who had won his way to his great wealth by the sheer force of a strong personality. There was little of softness in his face, little that was imaginative. This was not a man to be frightened at the Unseen or to see terrors that did not exist. Otherwise, to Peter he seemed commonplace to the last degree, of Irish extraction probably, the kind of person one meets daily on Broadway or on the Strand. In a fur coat he might have been taken for a banker; in tweeds, for a small tradesman; or in his shirt as Peter now saw him, the wristbands and collar somewhat soiled from perspiration, for a laboring man taking his rest after an arduous day. In other words, he was very much what his clothes would make of him, betraying his origins in a rather strident voice meant perhaps to conceal the true state of his mind.

      "Glad to see you, Mr. Nichols. Thought you were never comin'," he jerked out.

      "I walked most of the way from Pickerel River. Something went wrong, with the 'Lizzie.'"

      "Oh – er – 'Lizzie'. The flivver! I couldn't send my own car. I've got only one down here and I might need it."

      "It doesn't matter in the least – since I'm here."

      "Sit down, Mr. Nichols," went on McGuire indicating a chair. "You've been well recommended by Mr. Sheldon. I talked to him yesterday over long distance. He told you what I wanted?"

      "Something. Not much," said Peter with a view to getting all the information possible. "You wanted a forester – ?"

      "Er – er – yes, that's it. A forester." And then he went on haltingly – "I've got about twenty thousand acres here – mostly scrub oak – pine and spruce. I've sold off a lot to the Government. A mess of it has been cut – there's been a lot of waste – and the fire season is coming around. That's the big job – the all-the-year job. You've had experience?"

      "Yes – in Russia. I'm a trained woodsman."

      "You're a good all-round man?"

      "Exactly what – ?" began Peter.

      "You know how to look after yourself – to look after other men, to take charge of a considerable number of people in my employ?"

      "Yes. I'm used to dealing with men."

      "It's a big job, Mr. Nichols – a ticklish kind of a job for a furriner – one with some – er – unusual features – that may call for – er – a lot of tact. And – er – courage."

      It seemed to Peter that Jonathan K. McGuire was talking almost at random, that the general topic of forestry was less near his heart to-night than the one that was uppermost in Peter's mind, the mystery that surrounded his employer and the agencies invoked to protect him. It seemed as if he were loath to speak of them, as if he were holding Peter off at arm's length, so to say, until he had fully made up his mind that this and no other man was the one he wanted, for all the while he was examining the visitor with burning, beady, gray eyes, as though trying to peer into his mind.

      "I'm not afraid of a forester's job, no matter how big it is, if I have men enough," said Peter, still curious.

      "And you're a pretty good man in a pinch, I mean – " he put in jerkily, "you're not easy scared – don't lose your nerve."

      "I'll take my chances on that," replied Peter calmly. "I'm used to commanding men, in emergencies – if that's what you mean."

      "Yes. That's what I mean. Er – you're an Englishman, Mr. Sheldon says."

      "Er – yes," said Peter, "an Englishman," for this was the truth now more than ever before, and then repeated the story he had told in New York about his work in Russia. While Peter was talking, McGuire was pacing up and down the room with short nervous strides, nodding his head in understanding from time to time. When Peter paused he returned to his chair.

      "You British are a pretty steady lot," said McGuire at last. "I think you'll do. I like the way you talk and I like your looks. Younger than I'd hoped maybe, but then you're strong – Mr. Sheldon says you're strong, Mr. Nichols."

      "Oh, yes," said Peter, his curiosity now getting the better of him. "But it might be as well, Mr. McGuire, if you let me know just what, that is unusual, is to be required of me. I assume that you want me to take command of the men policing your grounds – and immediate property?"

      "Er – yes. That will have to be put in shape at once – at once." He leaned suddenly forward in his chair, his hairy hands clutching at his knees, while he blurted out with a kind of relieved tension, "No one must come near the house at night. No one, you understand – "

      "I understand, sir – " said Peter, waiting patiently for a revelation.

      "There'll be no excuse if any one gets near the house without my permission," he snarled. And then almost sullenly again – "You understand?"

      "Perfectly. That should not be difficult to – "

      "It may be more difficult than you think," broke in McGuire, springing to his feet again, and jerking out his phrases with strange fury.

      "Nothing is to be taken for granted. Nothing," he raged. Peter was silent for a moment, watching McGuire who had paced the length of the room and back.

      "I understand, sir," he said at last. "But doesn't it seem to you that both I and the man under me could do our work with more intelligence if we knew just who or what is to be guarded against?" Mr. McGuire stopped beside him as though transfixed by the thought. Then his fingers clutched at the back of a chair to which he clung for a moment in silence, his brows beetling. And when he spoke all the breath of his body seemed concentrated in a hoarse whisper.

      "You won't know that. You understand, I give the orders. You obey them. I am not a man who answers questions. Don't ask them."

      "Oh, I beg your pardon. So long as this thing you fear is human – "

      "Human! A ghost! Who said I was afraid? Sheldon? Let him think it. This is my business. There are many things of value in this house," and he glanced towards the safe. "I'm using the right of any man to protect what belongs to him."

      "I see," said Peter.

      The man's tension relaxed as he realized Peter's coolness.

      "Call it a fancy if you like, Mr. Nichols – " he said with a shrug. "A man of my age may have fancies when he can afford to gratify 'em."

      "That's your affair," said Peter easily. "I take it then that the systematic policing of the grounds is the first thing I am to consider."

      "Exactly. The systematic policing of the grounds – the dividing of your men into shifts for day and night work – more at night than in the day. Three more men come to-morrow. They will all look to you for orders."

      "And who is in charge now?"

      "A man named Wells – a native – the foreman from one of the sawmills – but he – er – well, Mr. Nichols – I'm not satisfied. That's why I wanted a man from outside."

      "I understand. And will you give the necessary orders to him?"

      "Wells was up here to-day, I told him."

      "How many men are on guard here at the house?"

      "Ten and with the three coming – that makes thirteen – " McGuire halted – "thirteen – but you make the fourteenth," he added.

      Peter nodded. "And you wish me to take charge at once?"

      "At once. To-night. To-morrow you can look over the ground more carefully. You'll sleep in the old playhouse – the log cabin – down by the creek. They'll show you. It's connected with this house by 'phone. I'll talk to you again to-morrow; you'd better go down and get something to eat."

      McGuire went to the door and called out "Tillie!"

      And as a faint reply was heard, "Get Mr. Nichols some supper."

      Peter rose and offered his hand.

      "I'll


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