PAGE 4
With Interest To Date
by
Owing to government needs, this huge, eleven-span structure had to be on the ground within ninety days from the date of the signing of the contract, and erected within eight months thereafter. The Commission’s clerk, a big, red-faced, jovial fellow, informed Hanford that price was not nearly so essential as time of delivery; that although the contract glittered with alluring bonuses and was heavily weighted with forfeits, neither bonuses nor forfeitures could in the slightest manner compensate for a delay in time. It was due to this very fact, to the peculiar urgency of the occasion, that the Commissioners were inclined to look askance at prospective bidders who might in any way fail to complete the task as specified.
“If all that is true, tell me why Wylie gets the call?” Hanford inquired.
“I understand he has the very highest references,” said the Englishman.
“No doubt. But you can’t build bridges with letters of introduction, even in Africa.”
“Probably not. But Sir Thomas is a big man; Mr. Wylie is one of his sort. They meet on common ground, don’t you see?”
“Well, if I can’t arrange an interview with any member of the Commission, I can at least take you to lunch. Will you go?”
The clerk declared that he would, indeed, and in the days that followed the two saw much of each other. This fellow, Lowe by name, interested Hanford. He was a cosmopolite; he was polished to the hardness of agate by a life spent in many lands. He possessed a cold eye and a firm chin; he was a complex mixture of daredeviltry and meekness. He had fought in a war or two, and he had led hopes quite as forlorn as the one Hanford was now engaged upon. It was this bond, perhaps, which drew the two together.
In spite of Lowe’s assistance Hanford found it extremely difficult, nay, almost impossible, to obtain any real inside information concerning the Barrata Bridge; wherever he turned he brought up against a blank wall of English impassiveness: he even experienced difficulty in securing the blue-prints he wanted.
“It looks pretty tough for you,” Lowe told him one day. “I’m afraid you’re going to come a cropper, old man. This chap Wylie has the rail and he’s running well. He has opened an office, I believe.”
“So I understand. Well, the race isn’t over yet, and I’m a good stayer. This is the biggest thing I ever tackled and it means a lot to me–more than you imagine.”
“How so?”
Hanford recited the story of his old wrong, to Lowe’s frank amazement.
“What a rotten trick!” the latter remarked.
“Yes! And–I don’t forget.”
“You’d better forget this job. It takes pull to get consideration from people like Sir Thomas, and Wylie has more than he needs. A fellow without it hasn’t a chance. Look at me, for instance, working at a desk! Bah!”
“Want to try something else?”
“I do! And you’d better follow suit.”
Hanford shook his head. “I never quit–I can’t. When my chance at this bridge comes along–“
Lowe laughed.
“Oh, the chance will come. Chances always come; sometimes we don’t see them, that’s all. When this one comes I want to be ready. Meanwhile, I think I’ll reconnoiter Wylie’s new office and find out what’s doing.”
Day after day Henry Hanford pursued his work doggedly, seeing much of Lowe, something of Wylie’s clerk, and nothing whatever of Sir Thomas Drummond or the other members of the Royal Barrata Bridge Commission. He heard occasional rumors of the social triumphs of his rival, and met him once, to be treated with half-veiled amusement by that patronizing young man. Meanwhile, the time was growing short and Hanford’s firm was not well pleased with his progress.
Then the chance came, unexpectedly, as Hanford had declared chances always come. The remarkable thing in this instance was not that the veiled goddess showed her face, but that Hanford was quick enough to recognize her and bold enough to act. He had taken Lowe to the Trocadero for dinner, and, finding no seats where they could watch the crowd, he had selected a stall in a quiet corner. They had been there but a short time when Hanford recognized a voice from the stall adjacent as belonging to the representative of the Atlantic Bridge Company. From the sounds he could tell that Wylie was giving a dinner-party, and with Lowe’s aid he soon identified the guests as members of the Royal Barrata Bridge Commission. Hanford began to strain his ears.