PAGE 10
The Twinkling Of An Eye
by
“Would I get up if I hadn’t got to get up to get my livin’?” the porter replied.
Paul entered the office, followed by Mike, still wondering why the young man was there at that hour.
After a swift glance round the office Paul put down his bag on the table and turned suddenly to the porter with a question.
“When does Bob get down here?”
Mike looked at the clock in the corner before answering.
“It’ll be ten minutes,” he said, “or maybe twenty, before the boy does be here to-day, seein’ it’s Monday mornin’, an’ he’ll be tired with not workin’ of Sunday.”
“Ten minutes,” repeated Paul, slowly. After a moment’s thought he continued, “Then I’ll have to ask you to go out for me, Mike.”
“I can go anywhere ye want, Mister Paul,” the porter responded.
“I want you to go—-” began Paul, “I want you to go—-” and he hesitated, as though he was not quite sure what it was he wished the porter to do, “I want you to go to the office of the Gotham Gazette and get me two copies of yesterday’s paper. Do you understand?”
“Maybe they won’t be open so early in the mornin’,” said the Irishman.
“That’s no matter,” said Paul, hastily correcting himself; “I mean that I want you to go there now and get the papers if you can. Of course, if the office isn’t open I shall have to send again later.”
“I’ll be goin’ now, Mister Paul,” and Mike took his hat from a chair and started off at once.
Paul walked through the store with the porter. When Mike had gone the young man locked the front door and returned at once to the private office in the rear. He shut himself in, and lowered all the shades so that whatever he might do inside could not be seen by any one on the outside.
Whatever it was he wished to do he was able to do it swiftly, for in less than a minute after he had closed the door of the office he opened it again and came out into the main store with his bag in his hand. He walked leisurely to the front of the store, arriving just in time to unlock the door as the office-boy came around the corner smoking a cigarette.
When Bob, still puffing steadily, was about to open the door and enter the store he looked up and discovered that Paul was gazing at him. The boy pinched the cigarette out of his mouth and dropped it outside, and then came in, his eyes expressing his surprise at the presence of the senior partner’s son down-town at that early hour in the morning.
Paul greeted the boy pleasantly, but Bob got away from him as soon as possible. Ever since the young man had told what had gone on in the office when Bob was its only occupant, the office-boy was a little afraid of the young man, as though somewhat mysterious, not to say uncanny.
Paul thought it best to wait for the porter’s return, and he stood outside under the archway for five minutes, smoking a cigar, with his bag at his feet.
When Mike came back with the two copies of the Sunday newspaper he had been sent to get, Paul gave him the money for them and an extra quarter for himself. Then the young man picked up his bag again.
“When my father comes down, Mike,” he said, “tell him I may be a little late in getting back this morning.”
“An’ are ye goin’ away now, Mister Paul?” the porter asked. “What good was it that ye got out o’ bed before breakfast and come down here so early in the mornin’?”
Paul laughed a little. “I had a reason for coming here this morning,” he answered, briefly; and with that he walked away, his bag in one hand and the two bulky, gaudy papers in the other.
Mike watched him turn the corner, and then went into the store again, where Bob greeted him promptly with the query why the old man’s son had been getting up by the bright light.