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PAGE 9

The Twinkling Of An Eye
by [?]

“It ain’t no bird,” said Bob. “You can bet your life on that. No birds can’t tell him nothin’ no more’n you can catch ’em by putting salt on their tails. I know what it is Mr. Paul does–least, I know how he does it. It’s second-sight, that’s what it is! I see a man onct at the theayter, an’ he—-“

But perhaps it is not necessary to set down here the office-boy’s recollection of the trick of an ingenious magician.

About half an hour after Paul had arrived at the office Mr. Wheatcroft appeared. The junior partner hesitated in the doorway for a second, and then entered.

Paul was watching him, and the same mischievous smile flashed over the face of the young man.

“You need not be alarmed to-day, Mr. Wheatcroft,” he said. “There is no fascinating female waiting for you this morning.”

“Confound the woman!” ejaculated Mr. Wheatcroft, testily. “I couldn’t get rid of her.”

“But you subscribed for the book at last,” asserted Paul, “and she went away happy.”

“I believe I did agree to take one copy of the work she showed me,” admitted Mr. Wheatcroft, a little sheepishly. Then he looked up suddenly. “Why, bless my soul,” he cried, “that was yesterday morning—-“

“Allowing for differences of clocks,” Paul returned, “it was about ten minutes to ten yesterday morning.”

“Then how do you come to know anything about it? I should like to be told that!” the junior partner inquired. “You did not get down till nearly twelve.”

“I had an eye on you,” Paul answered, as the smile again flitted across his face.

“But I thought you were detained all the morning by a sick friend,” insisted Mr. Wheatcroft.

“So I was,” Paul responded. “And if you won’t believe I had an eye on you, all I can say then is that a little bird told me.”

“Stuff and nonsense!” cried Mr. Wheatcroft. “Your little bird has two legs, hasn’t it?”

“Most birds have,” laughed Paul.

“I mean two legs in a pair of trousers,” explained the junior partner, rumpling his grizzled hair with an impatient gesture.

“You see how uncomfortable it is to be shadowed,” said Paul, turning the topic as his father entered the office.

That Saturday afternoon Mr. Whittier and Mr. Wheatcroft agreed on the bid to be made on the steel rails needed by the Springfield and Athens road. While the elder Mr. Whittier wrote the letter to the railroad with his own hand, his son manoeuvred the junior partner into the outer office, where all the clerks happened to be at work, including the old book-keeper. Then Paul managed his conversation with Mr. Wheatcroft so that any one of the five employees who chose to listen to the apparently careless talk should know that the firm had just made a bid on another important contract. Paul also spoke as though his father and himself would probably go out of town that Saturday night, to remain away till Monday morning.

And just before the store was closed for the night, Paul Whittier wound up the eight-day clock that stood in the corner opposite the private safe.

IV

Although the Whittiers, father and son, spent Sunday out of town, Paul made an excuse to the friends whom they were visiting, and returned to the city by a midnight train. Thus he was enabled to present himself at the office of the Ramapo Works very early on Monday morning.

It was so early, indeed, that no one of the employees had arrived when the son of the senior partner, bag in hand, pushed open the street door and entered the long store, at the far end of which the porter was still tidying up for the day’s work.

“An’ is that you, Mister Paul?” Mike asked in surprise, as he came out of the private office to see who the early visitor might be. “An’ what brought ye out o’ your bed before breakfast like this?”

“I always get out of bed before breakfast,” Paul replied. “Don’t you?”