<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
<h3>THE FIRST COUNTER-MOVE</h3></div>
<p class="dropcap" ><span class="dcap">The</span> little paragraph in the newspaper, which,
irrelevant as it would seem, had caught the keenly
discerning eye of Henry Blaine, grew in length
and importance from day to day until it reached a position
on the first page, and then spread in huge headlines
over the entire sheet. Instead of relating merely
the incidents of a labor strike in a manufacturing city––and
that city a far-distant one––it became speedily
a sociological question of almost national import. The
yellow journals were quick to seize upon it at the psychological
moment of civic unrest, and throw out hints,
vague but vast in their significance, of the mighty interests
behind the mere fact of the strike, the great
financial question involved, the crisis between capital and
labor, the trusts and the common people, the workers and
the wasters, in the land of the free.</p>
<p>Henry Blaine, seated in his office, read the scare-heads
and smiled his slow, inscrutable, illuminating
smile––the smile which, without menace or rancor, had
struck terror to the hearts of the greatest malefactors of
his generation––which, without flattery or ingratiation,
had won for him the friendship of the greatest men in
the country. He knew every move in the gigantic game
which was being played solely for his attention, long
before a pawn was lifted from its place, a single counter
changed; he had known it, from the moment that the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_67' name='page_67'></SPAN>67</span>
seemingly unimportant paragraph had met his eyes; and
he also knew the men who sat in the game, whose hands
passed over the great chessboard of current events,
whose brains directed the moves. And the stakes? Not
the welfare of the workingmen in that distant city, not
the lifting of the grinding heel of temporal power from
the supine bodies of the humble––but the peace of mind,
the honorable, untarnished name, the earthly riches of
the slender girl who sat in that great darkened house on
Belleair Avenue.</p>
<p>Hence Blaine sat back quietly, and waited for the decisive
move which he knew to be forthcoming––waited,
and not in vain. The spectacular play to the gallery of
one was dramatically accomplished; it was heralded by
extras bawled through the midnight streets, and full-page
display headlines in the papers the next morning.</p>
<p>Promptly on the stroke of nine, Henry Blaine arrived
at his office, and as he expected, found awaiting him an
urgent telegram from the chief of police of the city
where the strike had assumed such colossal importance,
earnestly asking him for his immediate presence and assistance.
He sent a tentative refusal––and waited.
Still more insistent messages followed in rapid succession,
from the mayor of that city, the governor of that
state, even its representative in the Senate at Washington,
to all of which he replied in the same emphatic, negative
strain. Then, late in the afternoon, there eventuated
that which he had anticipated. Mohammed came
to the mountain.</p>
<p>Blaine read the card which his confidential secretary
presented, and laid it down upon the desk before him.</p>
<p>“Show him in,” he directed, shortly. He did not
rise from his chair, nor indeed change his position an
iota, but merely glanced up from beneath slightly raised
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_68' name='page_68'></SPAN>68</span>
eyebrows, when the door opened again and a bulky,
pompous figure stood almost obsequiously before him.</p>
<p>“Come in, Mr. Carlis,” he invited coolly. “Take
this chair. What can I do for you?”</p>
<p>It was significant that neither man made any move
toward shaking hands, although it was obvious that they
were acquainted, at least. The great detective’s tone
when he greeted his visitor was as distinctly ironical as
the latter’s was uneasy, although he replied with a mirthless
chuckle, which was intended to be airily nonchalant.</p>
<p>“Nothing for me, Mr. Blaine––that is, not to-day.
One can never tell in this period of sudden changes and
revolt, when our city may be stricken as another was just
a few hours ago. There is no better, cleaner, more
honestly prosperous metropolis in these United States
to-day, than Illington, but––” Mr. Carlis, the political
boss who had ruled for more than a decade in almost
undisputed sway, paused and gulped, as if his oratorical
eloquence stuck suddenly in his throat.</p>
<p>The detective watched him passively, a disconcerting
look of inquiring interest on his mobile face. “It is because
of our stricken sister city that I am here,” went on
the visitor. “I know I will not be in great favor with
you as an advocate, Mr. Blaine. We have had our little
tilts in the past, when you––er––disapproved of my
methods of conducting my civic office and I distrusted
your motives, but that is forgotten now, and I come to
you merely as one public-spirited citizen to another.
The mayor of Grafton has wired me, as has the chief of
police, to urge you to proceed there at once and take
charge of the investigation into last night’s bomb outrages
in connection with the great strike. They inform
me that you have repeatedly refused to-day to come to
their assistance.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_69' name='page_69'></SPAN>69</span></div>
<p>Blaine nodded.</p>
<p>“That is quite true, Mr. Carlis. I did decline the
offers extended to me.”</p>
<p>“But surely you cannot refuse! Good heavens, man,
do you realize what it means if you do? It isn’t only
that there is a fortune in it for you, your reputation
stands or falls on your decision! This is a public
charge! The people rely upon you! If you won’t,
for some reason of your own, come to the rescue now,
when you are publicly called upon, you’ll be a ruined
man!” The voice of the Boss ascended in a shrill
falsetto of remonstrance.</p>
<p>“There may be two opinions as to that, Mr. Carlis,”
Blaine returned quietly. “As far as the financial argument
goes, I think you discovered long ago that its appeal
to me is based upon a different point of view than
your own. You forget that I am not a servant of the
public, but a private citizen, free to accept or decline
such offers as are made to me in my line of business, as I
choose. This affair is not a public charge, but a business
proposition, which I decline. As to my reputation
depending upon it, I differ with you. My reputation
will stand, I think, upon my record in the past, even if
every yellow newspaper in the city is paid to revile me.”</p>
<p>Carlis rested his plump hands upon his widespread
knees, and leaned as far forward, in his eager anxiety,
as his obese figure would permit.</p>
<p>“But why?” he fairly wailed, his carefully rounded,
oratorical tones forgotten. “Why on earth do you decline
this offer, Blaine? You’ve nothing big on hand
now––nothing your operatives can’t attend to. There
isn’t a case big enough for your attention on the calendar!
You know as well as I do that Illington is clean
and that the lid is on for keeps! The police are taking
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_70' name='page_70'></SPAN>70</span>
care of the petty crimes, and there’s absolutely nothing
doing in your line here at the moment. This is the
chance of your career! Why on earth do you refuse
it?”</p>
<p>“Well, Mr. Carlis, let us say, for instance, that my
health is not quite as good as it was, and I find the air
of Illington agrees with it better just now than that of
Grafton.” Blaine leaned back easily in his chair, and
after a slight pause he added speculatively, with deliberate
intent, “I didn’t know you had interests there!”</p>
<p>The Boss purpled.</p>
<p>“Look here, Blaine!” he bellowed. “What d’you
mean by that?”</p>
<p>“Merely following a train of thought, Mr. Carlis,”
returned the detective imperturbably. “I was trying
to figure out why you were so desperately anxious to
have me go to Grafton––”</p>
<p>“I tell you I am here at the urgent request of the
mayor and the chief of police!” the fat man protested,
but faintly, as if the unexpected attack had temporarily
winded him. “Why in h––ll should I want you to go to
Grafton?”</p>
<p>“Presumably because Grafton is some fourteen hundred
miles from Illington,” remarked Blaine, his quietly
unemotional tones hardening suddenly like tempered
steel. “Going to try to pull off something here in
town which you think could be more easily done if I
were away? Cards on the table, Mr. Carlis! You
tried to bribe me in a case once, and you failed. Then
you tried bullying me and you found that didn’t work,
either. Now you’ve come again with your hook baited
with patriotism, public spirit, the cry of the people and
all the rest of the guff the newspapers you control have
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_71' name='page_71'></SPAN>71</span>
been handing out to their readers since you took them
over. What’s the idea?”</p>
<p>The Boss rose, with what was intended for an air of
injured dignity, but his fat face all at once seemed
sagged and wrinkled, like a pricked balloon.</p>
<p>“I did not come here to be insulted!” he announced
in his most impressive manner. “I came, as I told you,
as a public-spirited citizen, because the officials of another
city called upon me to urge you to aid them. I
have failed in my mission, and I will go. I am surprised,
Blaine, at your attitude; I thought you were too big a
man to permit your personal antagonism to me to interfere
with your duty––”</p>
<p>For the first time during their interview Blaine smiled
slightly.</p>
<p>“Have you ever known me, Mr. Carlis, to permit my
personal antagonism to you or any other man to interfere
with what I conceive to be my duty?”</p>
<p>Before he replied, the politician produced a voluminous
silk handkerchief, and mopped his brow. For
some reason he did not feel called upon to make a direct
answer.</p>
<p>“Well, what reason am I to give to the Mayor of
Grafton and its political leaders, for your refusal?
That talk about me trying to get you out of Illington,
Blaine, is all bosh, and you know it. <i>I’m</i> running Illington
just as I’ve run it for the last ten years, in spite of
your interference or any other man’s, and I’m going to
stay right on the job! If you won’t give any other
reason for declining the call to Grafton, than your
preference for the air of Illington, then the bets go as
they lay!”</p>
<p>He jammed his hat upon his head, and strode from
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_72' name='page_72'></SPAN>72</span>
the room with all the ferocity his rotund figure could
express. The first decisive move in the game had failed.</p>
<p>The door was scarcely closed behind him, when Blaine
turned to the telephone and called up Anita Lawton on
the private wire.</p>
<p>“Can you arrange to meet me at once, at your Working
Girls’ Club?” he asked. “I wish to suggest a plan
to be put into immediate operation.”</p>
<p>“Very well. I can be there in fifteen minutes.”</p>
<p>When the detective arrived at the club, he was
ushered immediately to the small ante-room on the second
floor, where he found Anita anxiously awaiting
him.</p>
<p>“Miss Lawton,” he began, without further greeting
than a quick handclasp, “you told me, the other day,
that your girls here were all staunch and faithful to
you. Your secretary downstairs had previously informed
me that they were trained to hold positions of
trust, and that you obtained such positions for them.
I want you to obtain four positions for four of the girls
in whom you place the most implicit confidence.”</p>
<p>“Why, certainly, Mr. Blaine, if I can. Do you mean
that they are to have something to do with your investigation
into my father’s affairs?”</p>
<p>“I want them to play detective for me, Miss Lawton.
Have you four girls unemployed at the moment?––Say,
for instance, a filing clerk, a stenographer, a governess
and a switchboard operator, who are sufficiently intelligent
and proficient in their various occupations, to assume
such a trust?”</p>
<p>“Why, yes, I––I think we have. I can find out, of
course. Where do you wish to place them?”</p>
<p>“That is the most difficult part of all, Miss Lawton.
You must obtain the positions for them. These three
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_73' name='page_73'></SPAN>73</span>
men who stand in <i>loco parentis</i> toward you, as you
say, and your spiritual adviser, Dr. Franklin, who so
obviously wishes to ingratiate himself with them, would
none of them refuse a request of this sort from you at
this stage of the game, particularly if they are really
engaged in a conspiracy against you. Go to these four
men––Mr. Mallowe first––and tell them that because
of the sudden, complete loss of your fortune, your club
must be disorganized, and beg them each to give one of
your girls, special protégées of yours, a position. Send
your filing clerk to Mr. Mallowe, your most expert
stenographer to Mr. Rockamore, your switchboard operator
to Mr. Carlis, and your governess into the household
of your minister. I have learned that he has three
small children, and his wife applied only yesterday at an
agency for a nursery governess. The last proposition
may be the most difficult for you to handle, but I think
if you manage to convey to the Reverend Dr. Franklin
the fact that your three self-appointed guardians have
each taken one of your girls into their employ, in order
to help them, and that his following their benevolent example
would bring him into closer <i>rapport</i> with them,
no objection will be made––provided, of course, the
young woman is suitable.”</p>
<p>“I will try, Mr. Blaine, but of course I can do nothing
about that until to-morrow, as it is so late in the
afternoon. However, I can have a talk with the girls,
if they are in now––or would you prefer to interview
them?”</p>
<p>“No, you talk with them first, Miss Lawton, and to-morrow
morning while you are arranging for their positions
I will interview them and instruct them in their
primary duties. I will leave you now. Remember that
the girls must be absolutely trustworthy, and the stenographer
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_74' name='page_74'></SPAN>74</span>
who will be placed in the office of Mr. Rockamore
must be particularly expert.”</p>
<p>After the detective had taken his departure, Anita
Lawton descended quickly to the office of the secretary.</p>
<p>“Emily,” she asked, “is Loretta Murfree in, or
Fifine Déchaussée?”</p>
<p>“I think they both are, Miss Lawton. Shall I ring
for them?”</p>
<p>“Yes, please, Emily; send them to me one at a time,
in the ante-room, and let me know when Agnes Olson and
Margaret Hefferman come in. I wish to talk with all
four of them, but separately.”</p>
<p>Loretta Murfree was the first to put in an appearance.
She was a short, dumpy, black-haired girl of
twenty, and she bounced into the room with a flashing,
wide-mouthed smile.</p>
<p>“How are you, dear Miss Lawton? We have missed
you around here so much lately, but of course we knew
that you must be very much occupied––”</p>
<p>She stopped and a little embarrassed flush spread
over her face.</p>
<p>“I have been, Loretta. Thank you so much for your
kind note, and for your share in the beautiful wreath you
girls sent in memory of my dear father.”</p>
<p>“Sure, we’re all of us your friends, Miss Lawton;
why wouldn’t we be, after all you’ve done for us?”</p>
<p>“It is because I feel that, that I wanted to have a
talk with you this afternoon. Loretta, if a position
were offered to you as filing clerk in the office of a great
financier of this city, at a suitable salary, would you
accept it, if you could be doing me a great personal service
at the same time?”</p>
<p>“Would I, Miss Lawton? Just try me! I’d take it
for the experience alone, without the salary, and jump
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_75' name='page_75'></SPAN>75</span>
at the chance, even if you weren’t concerned in it at all,
but if it would be doing you a service at the same time,
I’m more than glad.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, Loretta. The position will be with an
associate of my father’s, I think, President Mallowe of
the Street Railways. You must attend faithfully to
your duties, if I am able to obtain this place for you,
but I think the main part of your service to me will consist
of keeping your eyes open. To-morrow morning
a man will come here and interview you––a man in
whom you must place implicit confidence and trust, and
whose directions you must follow to the letter. He will
tell you just what to do for me. This man is my friend;
he is working in my interests, and if you care for me you
must not fail him.”</p>
<p>“Indeed I won’t, Miss Lawton! I’ll do whatever he
tells me.... You said that I was to keep my eyes
open. Does that mean that there is something you wish
me to find out for you?” she asked shrewdly.</p>
<p>“I cannot tell you exactly what you are to do for me,
Loretta. The gentleman whom you are to meet to-morrow
morning will give you all the details.” Anita
Lawton approached the girl and laid her hand on her
shoulder. “I can surely trust you? You will not fail
me?”</p>
<p>The quick tears sprang to the Irish girl’s eyes, and
for a moment softened their rather hard brilliance.</p>
<p>“You know that you can trust me, Miss Lawton!
I’d do anything in the world for you!”</p>
<p>Anita Lawton held a similar conversation with each of
the three girls, with a like result. To Fifine Déchaussée,
a tall, refined girl, with the colorless, devout face of a
religieuse, the probability of entering a minister’s home,
as governess for his children, was most welcome. The
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_76' name='page_76'></SPAN>76</span>
young French girl, homesick and alone in a strange
land, had found in Anita Lawton her one friend, and her
gratitude for this first opportunity given her, seemed
overwhelming. Margaret Hefferman rejoiced at the
possible opportunity of becoming a stenographer to the
great promoter, Mr. Rockamore; and demure, fair-haired
little Agnes Olson was equally pleased with the
prospect of operating a switchboard in the office of Timothy
Carlis, the politician.</p>
<p>Meantime, back in his office, Henry Blaine was receiving
the personal report of Guy Morrow.</p>
<p>“The old man seems to be strictly on the level,” he
was saying. “He attends to his own affairs and seems
to be running a legitimate business in his little shop,
where he prints and sells maps. I went there, of course,
to look it over, but I couldn’t see anything crooked about
it. However, when I left, I took a wax impression of
the lock, in case you wanted me to have a key made and
institute a more thorough investigation, at a time when
I would not be disturbed.”</p>
<p>“That’s good, Morrow. We may need to do that
later. At present I want you merely to keep an eye on
them, and note who their visitors are. You’ve been
talking with the girl you say––the daughter?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir––” The young man paused in sudden confusion.
“She’s a very quiet, respectable, proud sort of
young woman, Mr. Blaine––not at all the kind you
would expect to find the daughter of an old crook like
Jimmy Brunell. And by the way, here’s a funny coincidence!
She’s a protégée of Miss Lawton’s, employed in
some philanthropic home or club, as she calls it, which
Pennington Lawton’s daughter runs.”</p>
<p>“By Jove!” Blaine exclaimed, “I might have known
it! I thought there was something familiar about her
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_77' name='page_77'></SPAN>77</span>
appearance when I first saw her! No wonder Miss Lawton
had promised not to divulge her name. It’s a small
world, Morrow. I’ll have to look into this. Go back
now and keep your eye on Jimmy.”</p>
<p>“Very well, sir.” Guy Morrow paused at the door
and turned toward his chief. “Have you seen the late
editions of the evening papers, Mr. Blaine? They’re
all slamming you, for refusing to accept the call to
Grafton, to investigate those bomb outrages last night.”</p>
<p>Henry Blaine smiled.</p>
<p>“There won’t be any more of them,” he remarked
quietly. “That strike will die down as quickly as it
arose, Morrow; the whole thing was a plant, and the
labor leaders and factory owners themselves were merely
tools in the hands of the politicians. That strike was
arranged by our friend Timothy Carlis, to get me away
from Illington on a false mission.”</p>
<p>“You don’t think, sir, that they suspect––”</p>
<p>“No, but they are taking no chances on my getting
into the game. They don’t suspect yet, but they will
soon––because the time has come for us to get busy.”</p>
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