The Girl in his House by Harold MacGrath (learn to read activity book .TXT) 📕
He leaned against the bars, panting, but completely and thoroughly reveneered. "Of all the colossal tomfools!" he said, aloud. "What in thunder am I going to do now?"
"Well, Aloysius," boomed a heavy voice, which was followed by a still heavier hand, "you might come along with me; the walking's good. Bell out o' order? Was there any beer in the ice-chest?" The policeman peered under the peak of Armitage's cap. "I saw you climb over that grille. Up with your hands, and no monkey-shines, or I'll rap you one on the conk!"
Armitage obeyed mechanically. There was a temporary cut-off between his mind and his body; they had ceased to co-ordinate. The policeman patted all the pockets, and a thrill of relief ran over the victim. Somewhere along the route he had lost the automatic. As he felt the experienced fingers going over his body he summoned with Herculean effort his scattered forces. Smack into the arms of a policeman! Here was a situation which called f
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“On some points. Always paid his bills; so we hadn’t any kick coming. Oh, he was all right. We all liked the old codger, if you come to that.”
“Did a woman ever call on him?”
“Bo, whenever he saw a strange female he beat it for the dumb-waiter, believe me. They couldn’t get near him with a ten-foot pole. Nope; nothing like that in his. He was here for about eighteen years; so I know. But you never can tell. He may have gone off the track. No fool like an old fool. A good sixty, if a day. Well, if he ran away to get married his things are here waiting for him, an old trunk and his furniture.”
“I may have to come around for a peek into that trunk.”
“If you come with the right papers.”
“Thanks for your trouble.”
“That’s all right,” replied the janitor as he followed Armitage to the door. “Those old boys—they run along forty years like clockwork, and then, pop! goes the weasel. But I never saw any dame asking for him.”
Armitage went down the steps to the sidewalk. He was perfectly calm. Perhaps this was due to the fact that the suspense was over. Bordman, for thirty years a trusted agent, had absconded. The next step was to ascertain the extent of the damage. Out of a fortune of more than half a million dollars he might possess at this particular moment what he had in two letters of credit and the deposit in the Credito Italiano in Milan—thirty-seven thousand in all.
If Bordman had found it easy to sell the house in Seventy-second Street, how much easier to dispose of stocks and bonds and mortgages and cash! But how had he worked it without creating suspicion? How had he hoodwinked the keen bankers? How had he managed the transfer of the property without arousing some inquiry? These puzzles Armitage determined to solve at once. There was, however, a dim recollection regarding some power of attorney.
Six blocks below the Concord apartments was the Armitage office - building, where, behind a door with the modest sign, ” Estates,” Bordman had labored honorably for three decades. Toward this building Armitage measured his steps energetically, despite the fact that each step became heavier and harder, until his sensations were something akin to those of a man fighting a gale across sand dunes. Supposing the Armitage was gone?
Dread and self-analysis—dread for the possibilities of the future and tingling scorn for the past! Ruined; and he had no one to thank except himself. He took James
Armitage, former clubman, hunter, and idler, and analytically tore him into so many fragments that he was presently in the same category as Humpty Dumpty after the fall. Bob Burlingham had hit the nail on the head; For years he had lolled on metaphorical sofa pillows, a well-meaning, inefficient, pleasure-loving idler. Set to it, he could not have made out a list of his properties from memory. Never having been a spendthrift in the Broadway sense, there had always been fat balances to draw against. Bordman had taken care of everything. Once in a great while Bordman had called him down to the office to sign some paper; but he had never gone there for any other reason. The pale, obsequious little man had always bored him.
Armitage nibbled his mustache as he went along. The whole emptiness of his life stretched out vividly in a kind of processional review. Social routine: a ride in the Park in the morning, tea somewhere in the afternoon, a dinner dance or the theater, and a rubber or two at the club, broken by fishing and hunting trips and weekends ii the country. A grasshopper’s life! An idle, inconsequent grasshopper’s life! And here was the first shrewd blast of winter tingling his isinglass wings!
Excuses—one after another he cast them aside. What he had done, to avoid the simple business cares of his estate, was inexcusable. Once upon a time he would have felt only bitterly wronged and abused by fate; but for six years he had been living very close to natural things, and—with the exception of what he had honestly believed to be love—he had learned that it was folly to lie to oneself. He laughed aloud. If his life that day had depended upon earning a dollar, he would have gone to his death at sundown. James Armitage, aged thirty-four; occupation, grasshopper.
A cynical, insidious idea crept into his head and tried to find lodgment there. Clare Wendell, rich and free….
“No! By the Lord Harry! I’ll never stoop that low. I’ll work. I wouldn’t make a bad riding-master.” He laughed again. “I suppose this is the kind of situation that offers a normally good man a fine chance to become a rogue. No, thanks!”
But what of the other girl, the girl who was living in his house, believing it to be lawfully hers? She or her father had paid eighty thousand for it in good faith, and she was living there all alone, for her father was evidently something of a will-o’-the-wisp. He couldn’t go to her and tell her she’d been rooked by a dishonest lawyer. Pearl and pomegranate and Persian peach! It was very pleasant to recall the amber nimbus over her hair, the round, lovely arms. What would have happened had she caught him behind those curtains? What an infernal muddle! And here was the very gate to it, the Armitage office building.
He went in, prepared for the worst. After a search he found Morrissy, the janitor of the building, who had occupied his post for twenty-odd years.
“I’m Armitage,” he announced without preamble. “Have you got the key to Bordman’s office?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Are all his things there?”
“Just as he left them. Been wondering if he was ever coming back. I recognize you, Mr. Armitage, and I’m glad to see you. I’ve been handling the rents without any legal authority. Had to take ‘em over to the bank an’ explain. The president said he guessed it would be all right, but that I ought to cable you the facts. But nobody knew your address.”
A great weight slipped off Armitage’s shoulders. “Then I’m still owner here?”
“Well, I guess so.” Morrissy grinned. The young boss was having his joke.
“I say, didn’t Bordman have a stenographer?”
“Ye-ah. Want her?”
“I jolly well do!”
“She’s on the same floor. Here’s the key. You go to the office and I’ll get Miss Corrigan. She can get off for the morning. Heard anything from Bordman?”
“No.”
“Queer.”
Bordman’s office looked as though he had left it only yesterday. It was scrupulously clean and orderly, due doubtless to the cleaning-woman’s tri-weekly rounds. There was an old-fashioned safe in one comer, a large globe of the world, rows of letter-files and shelves of brown law-books. There was nothing whatever to indicate that Bordman had left the office in a hurry or upon impulse.
Armitage sat down in the chair at the desk and began to whistle softly. The outlook wasn’t so dark as might be. If the office-building was still free and unattached, why, he would have between ten and twelve thousand a year. Presently the janitor and Miss Corrigan came in.
“I’m Miss Corrigan,” she said. “You wished to see me?” She recognized him instantly. Three times before she had seen him in this office. A little sigh pressed against her lips as she recalled how yonder clean-cut, handsome face had stirred the romantic in her. Nearly all her book heroes had taken upon themselves the face of this man now smiling at her amiably. A vague thrill of gladness ran over her. She had made a hero out of him eight years ago, and his countenance was still open and manly. Here was a man who had traveled straight; money hadn’t slackened the fiber. “You are Mr. Armitage.”
“Yes. And I believe you are the only person in the world who can aid me in my present predicament,”
“I can give you as much time as you need, sir.”
“I’ll be very grateful for that. Thanks, Morrissy.”
“Say,” said the janitor, “there’s a fat stack of mail I’ve been holding for Bordman. Maybe I’d better bring it up.”
“Not a bad idea.”
“Anything wrong?”
“I’ll let you know about that later.”
Morrissy made off for Bordman’s letters.
“Tell me what you know,” said Armitage, turning to the young woman.
“First, what has happened? Where is Mr. Bordman?”
Her pleasant, if careworn, face and her friendly eyes gave Armitage a feeling of comfortable assurance. “What I’m going to tell you will be in absolute confidence.”
“I am used to keeping secrets.”
“Well, Bordman has absconded with a goodly bulk of my property.”
A deep, perpendicular line formed above the young woman’s nose. “Mr. Bordman? That patient, kindly little old man? It isn’t possible!”
“I wish it wasn’t. I shouldn’t risk calling a man a thief unless I had sufficient grounds for doing so, Miss Corrigan. Please tell me what you can about him.”
“I came to work as usual one morning in April and couldn’t get in. I went for Morrissy and got his key. Mr. Bordman was always here at eight, and I came in at half past eight. I thought perhaps he was ill, so I called up his apartments. He had gone away the night before with a lot of luggage. It was rather odd, but I credited it to some hasty out-of-town call. I came down every day for a week; but as no news whatever came in I was forced to give up. I secured my present position. That is all I honestly know. But Mr. Bordman a thief? I can’t get that through my head.”
“Nevertheless, it’s a fact, a bitter one to me. He sold my house, furnished, for eighty thousand in April.”
“Let me think,” she said, drumming on the desk with her pencil and frowning at the skyscraper across the street.
Suddenly she ran over to a shelf where there was a stack of stenographer’s notebooks. After a search she plucked forth one and returned.
“What have you found?” he asked.
“I never forgot this,” she answered. “I thought it rather singular and careless at the time. When you went away you left him with the power of attorney. Shall I read the articles?”
“Please.”
“Right to sell and transfer real estate, bonds, stocks, mortgages, to collect rents, draw against banks, to pay current expenses against the estate. I remembered this transaction, it was so unusually broad. I witnessed the documents—for there were three duplicates for the banks—and we went next door for the notary’s seal.”
“Power of attorney,” he murmured.
“Yes. If Mr. Bordman has robbed you…”
“I shall doubtless stay robbed,” he interrupted.
“Exactly. And yet, I can t see how you can be blamed. Your father before you trusted him quite as fully. I’ve seen the old records. I know a little about law. I was in this office for about eight years. Whatever Bordman sold is beyond legal reach. You cannot come against the buyers. You can only follow him and make him disgorge. He was a queer little old man, with a raggedy gray mustache, partly bald, and magnifying lenses in his spectacles. But he always impressed me as being the honestest thing imaginable. He used to worry over postage stamps that didn’t belong to him.”
“Stock markets?”
“Impossible.”
“Well, there’s my nouse. But go on; give me a good picture of him.”
Miss Corrigan stared out of the window again, her eyes half-closed the better to recall her impressions.
“He was frugal. I don’t believe he’d been to a place of amusement in years. He had only one fad as I remember. He was always receiving folders and cabin plans from steamship companies. He was always peering over that globe there. In imagination he traveled everywhere.
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