Part 35 (1/2)
”The inside conditions are between you and me personally. You'll have to live up to them, Braddock.”
”Oh, I'm a man of my word, don't fret.”
”You are to get out at the end of the week. That's plain, is it?”
”If the cash is pa.s.sed over. Don't forget that. Say, Bob, I swear, you're treating me dirt mean. I ought to have five times more than you are payin' me, and you know it. Five thousand dollars! Why, it's givin'
the show away, that's what it is. I've built up this here show--”
”It is your own proposition. I didn't suggest buying you out. You came to me to sell. If you don't want to let it go at the price we've agreed on I'll tear up this bill of sale.”
”I've got to take it, so what's the use kicking? I'm going to get out of the business. My wife's against me. Everybody is. d.a.m.n them all!”
Colonel Grand knew quite well that Mrs. Braddock, as the man's wife, could interpose legal objections to the transfer, but he was not really buying Tom's interest in the show; he was deliberately paying him to desert his wife and child. That was the sum and substance of it.
Braddock was not so drugged with liquor that he could not appreciate that side of the transaction quite as fully as the other.
Down in his besotted soul there lurked the hope that some day, in the long run, through the wife whom he was selling so basely, he might succeed in obtaining the upper hand of Bob Grand, and crush him as he was being crushed!
”It will be a week before the currency can get here from Baltimore. I refuse to draw on my banker in the regular way. This money, being evil, must come from an evil source. My dealers will send it from the 'place.' Now, again, you understand that I can put you in the penitentiary if you go back on your word. You _did_ take the boy's money out of the dressing-tent. My man saw you.”
”I don't see why you hired a canvasman to watch me,” growled the other, pouring another drink. ”Mighty cheap work, Bob Grand.”
”I always go on the principle that it isn't safe to have business dealings with a man until you know all that is to be found out about him. In your case I had to choose my own way of finding out.”
”I'll knock off a couple of hundred if you'll tell me the name of that sneaking--”
”You need the two hundred more than I do, Brad,” said Grand with infinite sarcasm--and finality.
”Well, I'm a Jonah in the show business. I guess it's the best thing I can do to get out of it. You'll do the right thing by Mary and--and--”
he swallowed hard, casting a half glance at the other out of his bleary eyes--”and the young 'un. They'll get what's coming to them, Bob?”
”Certainly.”
”I wouldn't sell out like this if--if Mary had acted decent by me,” he said, trying to justify his action. He was congratulating himself that he had sold her out before she had the chance to sell him out. He closed his eyes to the real transaction involved in the deal. It gave him some secret satisfaction, however, to contemplate the futility of Colonel Grand's designs upon Mary Braddock.
”Of course,” said Bob Grand.
”I am going to California,” said Tom Braddock, for the third time during the interview.
”I've asked you not to mention that fact to me, Braddock. You are supposed to stay with the show as manager and overseer.”
”Humph!” grunted the other. ”You want to be as much shocked as the rest of 'em when I skip by the light of the moon, eh?”
”We'll sign the paper,” was the only response of the purchaser.
Ten minutes later, after two men had witnessed their signatures, the doc.u.ment reposed in Bob Grand's pocketbook.
The next morning Mary Braddock appeared before the master of Van Slye's Circus and offered her interest for sale. He calmly announced that he could not afford to put any more money into the concern.
”I must sell out,” she said. ”All the money I have in the world is in this show.”