The Poisoned Pen(Fiscle Part-3) by Arthur B. Reeve (the little red hen ebook .TXT) 📖
- Author: Arthur B. Reeve
Book online «The Poisoned Pen(Fiscle Part-3) by Arthur B. Reeve (the little red hen ebook .TXT) 📖». Author Arthur B. Reeve
It Would Have Taken No Great Astuteness, Even Without Seeing The
Surroundings, To Deduce Instantly That They Were Engaged In The
Annual Struggle Of Seeking The Votes Of Their Fellow-Citizens For
Something Or Other, And Were Nearly Worn Out By The Arduous Nature
Of That Process.
Their Headquarters Were In A Tower Of A Skyscraper, Whence Poured
Forth A Torrent Of Appeal To The Moral Sense Of The Electorate,
Both In Printed And Oral Form. Yet There Was A Different Tone To
The Place From That Which I Had Ordinarily Associated With
Political Headquarters In Previous Campaigns. There Was An Absence
Of The Old-Fashioned Politicians And Of The Air Of Intrigue Laden
With Tobacco. Rather, There Was An Air Of Earnestness And
Efficiency Which Was Decidedly Prepossessing. Maps Of The State
Were Hanging On The Walls, Some Stuck Full Of Various Coloured
Pins Denoting The Condition Of The Canvass. A Map Of The City In
Colours, Divided Into All Sorts Of Districts, Told How Fared The
Battle In The Stronghold Of The Boss, Billy Mcloughlin. Huge
Systems Of Card Indexes, Loose Leaf Devices, Labour-Saving
Appliances For Getting Out A Vast Mass Of Campaign "Literature" In
A Hurry, In Short A Perfect System, Such As A Great, Well-Managed
Business Might Have Been Proud Of, Were In Evidence Everywhere.
Wesley Travis Was A Comparatively Young Man, A Lawyer Who Had
Early Made A Mark In Politics And Had Been Astute Enough To Shake
Off The Thraldom Of The Bosses Before The Popular Uprising Against
Them. Now He Was The Candidate Of The Reform League For Governor
And A Good Stiff Campaign He Was Putting Up.
His Campaign Manager, Dean Bennett, Was A Business Man Whose
Financial Interests Were Opposed To Those Usually Understood To Be
Behind Billy Mcloughlin, Of The Regular Party To Which Both Travis
And Bennett Might Naturally Have Been Supposed To Belong In The
Old Days. Indeed The Reform League Owed Its Existence To A
Fortunate Conjunction Of Both Moral And Economic Conditions
Demanding Progress.
"Things Have Been Going Our Way Up To The Present," Began Travis
Confidentially, When We Were Seated Democratically With Our
Campaign Cigars Lighted. "Of Course We Haven't Such A Big 'Barrel'
As Our Opponents, For We Are Not Frying The Fat Out Of The
Corporations. But The People Have Supported Us Nobly, And I Think
The Opposition Of The Vested Interests Has Been A Great Help. We
Seem To Be Winning, And I Say 'Seem' Only Because One Can Never Be
Certain How Anything Is Going In This Political Game Nowadays.
"You Recall, Mr. Kennedy, Reading In The Papers That My Country
House Out On Long Island Was Robbed The Other Day? Some Of The
Reporters Made Much Of It. To Tell The Truth, I Think They Had
Become So Satiated With Sensations That They Were Sure That The
Thing Was Put Up By Some Muckrakers And That There Would Be An
Expose Of Some Kind. For The Thief, Whoever He Was, Seems To Have
Taken Nothing From My Library But A Sort Of Scrap-Book Or Album Of
Photographs. It Was A Peculiar Robbery, But As I Had Nothing To
Conceal It Didn't Worry Me. Well, I Had All But Forgotten It When
A Fellow Came Into Bennett's Office Here Yesterday And Demanded--
Tell Us What It Was, Bennett. You Saw Him."
Bennett Cleared His Throat. "You See, It Was This Way. He Gave His
Name As Harris Hanford And Described Himself As A Photographer. I
Think He Has Done Work For Billy Mcloughlin. At Any Rate, His
Offer Was To Sell Us Several Photographs, And His Story About Them
Was Very Circumstantial. He Hinted That They Had Been Evidently
Among Those Stolen From Mr. Travis And That In A Roundabout Way
They Had Come Into The Possession Of A Friend Of His Without His
Knowing Who The Thief Was. He Said That He Had Not Made The
Photographs Himself, But Had An Idea By Whom They Were Made, That
The Original Plates Had Been Destroyed, But That The Person Who
Made Them Was Ready To Swear That The Pictures Were Taken After
The Nominating Convention This Fall Which Had Named Travis. At Any
Rate The Photographs Were Out And The Price For Them Was $25,000."
"What Are They That He Should Set Such A Price On Them?" Asked
Kennedy, Keenly Looking From Bennett Quickly To Travis.
Travis Met His Look Without Flinching. "They Are Supposed To Be
Photographs Of Myself," He Replied Slowly. "One Purports To
Represent Me In A Group On Mcloughlin's Porch At His Farm On The
South Shore Of The Island, About Twenty Miles From My Place. As
Hanford Described It, I Am Standing Between Mcloughlin And J.
Cadwalader Brown, The Trust Promoter Who Is Backing Mcloughlin To
Save His Investments. Brown's Hand Is On My Shoulder And We Are
Talking Familiarly. Another Is A Picture Of Brown, Mcloughlin, And
Myself Riding In Brown's Car, And In It Brown And I Are Evidently
On The Best Of Terms. Oh, There Are Several Of Them, All In The
Same Vein. Now," He Added, And His Voice Rose With Emotion As If
He Were Addressing A Cart-Tail Meeting Which Must Be Convinced
That There Was Nothing Criminal In Riding In A Motor-Car, "I Don't
Hesitate To Admit That A Year Or So Ago I Was Not On Terms Of
Intimacy With These Men, But At Least Acquainted With Them. At
Various Times, Even As Late As Last Spring, I Was Present At
Conferences Over The Presidential Outlook In This State, And Once
I Think I Did Ride Back To The City With Them. But I Know That
There Were No Pictures Taken, And Even If There Had Been I Would
Not Care If They Told The Truth About Them. I Have Frankly
Admitted In My Speeches That I Knew These Men, That My Knowledge
Of Them And Breaking From Them Is My Chief Qualification For
Waging An Effective War On Them If I Am Elected. They Hate Me
Cordially. You Know That. What I Do Care About Is The Sworn
Allegation That Now Accompanies These--These Fakes. They Were Not,
Could Not Have Been Taken After The Independent Convention That
Part 3 Chapter 12 (The Campaign Grafter) Pg 140Nominated Me. If The Photographs Were True I Would Be A Fine
Traitor. But I Haven't Even Seen Mcloughlin Or Brown Since Last
Spring. The Whole Thing Is A--"
"Lie From Start To Finish," Put In Bennett Emphatically. "Yes,
Travis, We All Know That. I'd Quit Right Now If I Didn't Believe
In You. But Let Us Face The Facts. Here Is This Story, Sworn To As
Hanford Says And Apparently Acquiesced In By Billy Mcloughlin And
Cad. Brown. What Do They Care Anyhow As Long As It Is Against You?
And There, Too, Are The Pictures Themselves--At Least They Will Be
In Print Or Suppressed, According As We Act. Now, You Know That
Nothing Could Hurt The Reform Ticket Worse Than To Have An Issue
Like This Raised At This Time. We Were Supposed At Least To Be On
The Level, With Nothing To Explain Away. There May Be Just Enough
People To Believe That There Is Some Basis For This Suspicion To
Turn The Tide Against Us. If It Were Earlier In The Campaign I'd
Say Accept The Issue, Fight It Out To A Finish, And In The Turn Of
Events We Should Really Have The Best Campaign Material. But It Is
Too Late Now To Expose Such A Knavish Trick Of Theirs On The
Friday Before Election. Frankly, I Believe Discretion Is The
Better Part Of Valour In This Case And Without Abating A Jot Of My
Faith In You, Travis, Well, I'd Pay First And Expose The Fraud
Afterward, After The Election, At Leisure."
"No, I Won't," Persisted Travis, Shutting His Square Jaw Doggedly.
"I Won't Be Held Up."
The Door Had Opened And A Young Lady In A Very Stunning Street
Dress, With A Huge Hat And A Tantalising Veil, Stood In It For A
Moment, Hesitated, And Then Was About To Shut It With An Apology
For Intruding On A Conference.
"I'll Fight It If It Takes My Last Dollar," Declared Travis, "But
I Won't Be Blackmailed Out Of A Cent. Good-Morning, Miss Ashton.
I'll Be Free In A Moment. I'll See You In Your Office Directly."
The Girl, With A Portfolio Of Papers In Her Hand, Smiled, And
Travis Quickly Crossed The Room And Held The Door Deferentially
Open As He Whispered A Word Or Two. When She Had Disappeared He
Returned And Remarked, "I Suppose You Have Heard Of Miss Margaret
Ashton, The Suffragette Leader, Mr. Kennedy? She Is The Head Of
Our Press Bureau." Then A Heightened Look Of Determination Set His
Fine Face In Hard Lines, And He Brought His Fist Down On The Desk.
"No, Not A Cent," He Thundered.
Bennett Shrugged His Shoulders Hopelessly And Looked At Kennedy In
Mock Resignation As If To Say, "What Can You Do With Such A
Fellow?" Travis Was Excitedly Pacing The Floor And Waving His Arms
As If He Were Addressing A Meeting In The Enemy's Country.
"Hanford Comes At Us In This Way," He Continued, Growing More
Excited As He Paced Up And Down. "He Says Plainly That The
Pictures Will Of Course Be Accepted As Among Those Stolen From Me,
And In That, I Suppose, He Is Right. The Public Will Swallow It.
When Bennett Told Him I Would Prosecute He Laughed And Said, 'Go
Ahead. I Didn't Steal The Pictures. That Would Be A Great Joke For
Travis To Seek Redress From The Courts He Is Criticising. I Guess
He'd Want To Recall The Decision If It Went Against Him--Hey?'
Hanford Says That A Hundred Copies Have Been Made Of Each Of The
Photographs And That This Person, Whom We Do Not Know, Has Them
Ready To Drop Into The Mail To The One Hundred Leading Papers Of
The State In Time For Them To Appear In The Monday Editions Just
Before Election Day. He Says No Amount Of Denying On Our Part Can
Destroy The Effect--Or At Least He Went Further And Said 'Shake
Their Validity.'
"But I Repeat. They Are False. For All I Know, It Is A Plot Of
Mcloughlin's, The Last Fight Of A Boss For His Life, Driven Into A
Corner. And It Is Meaner Than If He Had Attempted To Forge A
Letter. Pictures Appeal To The Eye And Mind Much More Than
Letters. That's What Makes The Thing So Dangerous. Billy
Mcloughlin Knows How To Make The Best Use Of Such A Roorback On
Part 3 Chapter 12 (The Campaign Grafter) Pg 141The Eve Of An Election, And Even If I Not Only Deny But Prove That
They Are A Fake, I'm Afraid The Harm Will Be Done. I Can't Reach
All The Voters In Time. Ten See Such A Charge To One Who Sees The
Denial."
"Just So," Persisted Bennett Coolly. "You Admit That We Are
Practically Helpless. That's What I Have Been Saying All Along.
Get Control Of The Prints First, Travis, For God's Sake. Then
Raise Any Kind Of A Howl You Want--Before Election Or After. As I
Say, If We Had A Week Or Two It Might Be All Right To Fight. But
We Can Make No Move Without Making Fools Of Ourselves Until They
Are Published Monday As The Last Big Thing Of The
Comments (0)