Part 13 (2/2)
”Well, what more do you want, Jim?”
”Nothing--I'm quitting the business.”
”Ho! you are? You can't quit, Jim; you can't. If you do, what'll become of the ring?” asked Peter, now for the first time bringing his reasoning faculties into play in connection with such a probable event.
”Bust, I suppose,” replied Dalls.
”Never!” exclaimed Peter.
”I am going to quit, I tell you, Peter.”
”How much do you want to go away from here?” asked Peter, rubbing and squinting.
”Ten thousand,” replied Jim Dalls, slowly.
”You are cheap,” said Peter. ”Come around tomorrow, when I will pay you and furnish a ticket for you to Europe.”
”Agreed, Peter! Shake! I always knew you'd be on the square with me. But put it down in writing,” returned Dalls, with less gloom pictured in his face than when he entered.
”I never put anything down in writing, Jim; particularly such things as we have been discussing. I consider my word good, Jim,” answered Peter, palaveringly.
”I'll take you at your word, then, Peter.”
”Very well; you have been a good lieutenant, Jim, and we don't like to lose you. But if you have scruples on the matter, Jim, I want you to leave--get out of the country, and stay out till I call you back. Jim, do you understand?”
”Just so I get the cash, I'll go anywhere, Peter,” answered Jim Dalls.
”That will do, then, Jim; come tomorrow at two,” said Peter.
”You have a mighty obnoxious clerk out here,” said Dalls, rising to go away.
”Oh, he's all right, Jim; you know the pa.s.sword, and didn't give it,”
replied Peter.
”That's my fault, then,” answered Dalls, as he stepped into the shop, there to encounter the angry look of Eli, who was at that moment waiting on a customer, or otherwise there might have been another little affray, on the spot.
Jim Dalls, as he was familiarly known among Peter's henchmen, had been a member of the present political ring since its inception back in the early nineties. He had now but a poor chance of ever rising higher in the ranks than a poorly paid lieutenant; and so what was the use, he argued with himself, of playing third fiddle any longer, if there was any likelihood at all of getting out with a good round sum in cash. So, as a bluff, he preferred to work the ”conscientious scruple” scheme to get what he thought was due him for his valiant services in the corporals' guard of the gang; and he went to Peter playing that he wanted to lead a new life, and his bluff worked out better than he ever antic.i.p.ated.
It was very necessary, in the workings of this mysterious inst.i.tution, that whenever an officer felt conscience stricken to remove him, with great dispatch, from the scene of operation, so as to keep out the light of investigation when house-cleaning time should come, which it would sometime. Jim Dalls had been bred in the business and knew its entire ramifications in every branch of civic affairs of the city. He had not prospered in it, as some others had, considering the length of his services and the good that he had done, and the care he had taken in fighting for success. He had not been raised to the sublime degree in the ranks of the upper luminaries, where marched the fitted, to which others had been raised, considering the amount of service he had put into the cause. He had not been treated as equitably in the division of the spoils that had come into the coffers of the charmed circle of grafters, as others had been treated, considering the sum of his own earnings he had put into the hands of his own satellites s.h.i.+ning around him, as those above him shone around the great center of this gigantic solar system. In consequence, the monster, Disaffection, lurked within his breast, and became a thing for the master minds to watch with care.
Yes, watch with care, and hold in check.
Of course, Jim Dalls was no squealer. No--if he got his price. And now, getting his price, he would leave the city. He would leave his country; and go to Europe, and live like an American Captain of Industry lives in that land when his native soil becomes sterile in its bountifulness of pleasure. Yes, he would go to Europe at the behest of his superiors, so that he could not, for a time, tamper with any of their marked cards, and cause a breaking up in their game.
And to Europe he would go, with his trusting wife and family believing that he had earned his lucre honestly; and they proudly looked every one in the face, believing that the world is on the square.
Oh Europe! Europe! If you only knew the private history of many of those Americans you receive with open arms, craft and graft and greed you would see as their only virtues.
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