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Literature Post > Sinclair, Upton > 100%: The Story of a Patriot > Chapter 66

100%: The Story of a Patriot by Sinclair, Upton - Chapter 66

Section 66





They went to the office of the secret service department of the
Traction Trust, a place where Peter had never been allowed to come
hitherto. It was on the fourteenth floor of the Merchant's Trust
Building, and the sign on the door read: "The American City Land &
Investment Company. Walk In." When you walked in, you saw a
conventional real estate office, and it was only when you had
penetrated several doors that you came to the secret rooms where
Guffey and his staff conducted the espionage work of the big
business interests of the city.

Peter was hustled into one of these rooms, and there stood Guffey;
and the instant Guffey saw him, he bore down upon him, shaking his
fist. "You stinking puppy!" he exclaimed. "You miserable little
whelp! You dirty, sneaking hound!" He added a number of other
descriptive phrases taken from the vocabulary of the kennel.

Peter's knees were shaking, his teeth were chattering, and he
watched every motion of Guffey's angry fingers, and every grimace of
Guffey's angry features. Peter had been fully prepared for the most
horrible torture he had experienced yet; but gradually he realized
that he wasn't going to be tortured, he was only going to be scolded
and raged at, and no words could describe the wave of relief in his
soul. In the course of his street-rat's life Peter had been called
more names than Guffey could think of if he spent the next month
trying. If all Guffey was going to do was to pace up and down the
room, and shake his fist under Peter's nose every time he passed
him, and compare him with every kind of a domestic animal, Peter
could stand it all night without a murmur.

He stopped trying to find out what it was that had happened, because
he saw that this only drove Guffey to fresh fits of exasperation.
Guffey didn't want to talk to Peter, he didn't want to hear the
sound of Peter's whining gutter-pup's voice. All he wanted was to
pour out his rage, and have Peter listen in abject abasement, and
this Peter did. But meantime, of course, Peter's wits were working
at high speed, he was trying to pick up hints as to what the devil
it could mean. One thing was quite clear--the damage, whatever it
was, was done; the jig was up, it was all over but the funeral. They
had taken Peter's money to pay for the funeral, and that was all
they hoped to get out of him.

Gradually came other hints. "So you thought you were going into
business on your own!" snarled Guffey, and his fist, which was under
Peter's nose, gave an upward poke that almost dislocated Peter's
neck.

"Aha!" thought Peter. "Nelse Ackerman has given me away!"

"You thought you were going to make your fortune and retire for life
on your income!"

Yes, that was it, surely! But what could Nelse Ackerman have told
that was so very bad?

"You were going to have a spy of your own, set up your own bureau,
and kick me out, perhaps!"

"My God!" thought Peter. "Who told that?"

Then suddenly Guffey stopped in front of him. "Was that what you
thought?" he demanded. He repeated the question, and it appeared
that he really wanted an answer, and so Peter stammered, "N-n-no,
sir." But evidently the answer didn't suit Guffey, for he grabbed
Peter's nose and gave it a tweak that brought the tears into his
eyes.

"What was it then?" A nasty sneer came on the head detective's
face, and he laughed at Peter with a laugh of venomous contempt. "I
suppose you thought she really loved you! Was it that? You thought
she really loved you?" And McGivney and Hammett and Guffey ha-ha-ed
together, and to Peter it seemed like the mockery of demons in the
undermost pit of hell. Those words brought every pillar of Peter's
dream castle tumbling in ruins about his ears. Guffey had found out
about Nell!

Again and again on the automobile ride to Guffey's office Peter had
reminded himself of Nell's command, "Stick it out, Peter! Stick it
out!" He had meant to stick it out in spite of everything; but now
in a flash he saw that all was lost. How could he stick it out when
they knew about Nell, and when Nell, herself, was no longer sticking
it out?

Guffey saw these thoughts plainly written in Peter's face, and his
sneer turned into a snarl. "So you think you'll tell me the truth
now, do you? Well, it happens there's nothing left to tell!"

Again he turned and began pacing up and down the room. The pressure
of rage inside him was so great that it took still more time to work
it off. But finally the head detective sat down at his desk, and
opened the drawer and took out a paper. "I see you're sitting there,
trying to think up some new lie to tell me," said he. And Peter did
not try to deny it, because any kind of denial only caused a fresh
access of rage. "All right," Guffey said, "I'll read you this, and
you can see just where you stand, and just how many kinds of a boob
you are."

So he started to read the letter; and before Peter had heard one
sentence, he knew this was a letter from Nell, and he knew that the
castle of his dreams was flat in the dust forever. The ruins of
Sargon and Nineveh were not more hopelessly flat!

"Dear Mr. Guffey," read the letter, "I am sorry to throw you down,
but fifty thousand dollars is a lot of money, and we all get tired
of work and need a rest. This is to tell you that Ted Crothers has
just broke into Nelse Ackerman's safe in his home, and we have got
some liberty bonds and some jewels which we guess to be worth fifty
thousand dollars, and you know Ted is a good judge of jewels.

"Now of course you will find out that I was working in Mr.
Ackerman's home and you will be after me hot-foot, so I might as
well tell you about it, and tell you it won't do you any good to
catch us, because we have got all the inside dope on the Goober
frame-up, and everything else your bureau has been pulling off in
American City for the last year. You can ask Peter Gudge and he'll
tell you. It was Peter and me that fixed up that dynamite
conspiracy, but you mustn't blame Peter, because he only did what I
told him to do. He hasn't got sense enough to be really dangerous,
and he will make you a perfectly good agent if you treat him kind
and keep him away from the women. You can do that easy enough if you
don't let him get any money, because of course he's nothing much on
looks, and the women would never bother with him if you didn't pay
him too much.

"Now Peter will tell you how we framed up that dynamite job, and of
course you wouldn't want that to get known to the Reds, and you may
be sure that if Ted and me get pinched, we'll find some way to let
the Reds know all about it. If you keep quiet we'll never say a
word, and you've got a perfectly good dynamite conspiracy, with all
the evidence you need to put the Reds out of business, and you can
just figure it cost you fifty thousand dollars, and it was cheap at
the price, because Nelse Ackerman has paid a whole lot more for your
work, and you never got anything half as big as this. I know you'll
be mad when you read this, but think it over and keep your shirt on.
I send it to you by messenger so you can get hold of Nelse Ackerman
right quick, and have him not say anything to the police; because
you know how it is--if those babies find it out, it will get to the
Reds and the newspapers, and it'll be all over town and do a lot of
harm to your frame-up. And you know after those Reds have got beaten
up and Shawn Grady lynched, you wouldn't like to have any rumor get
out that that dynamite was planted by your own people. Ted and me
will keep out of sight, and we won't sell the jewels for a while,
and everything will be all right.

"Yours respectfully,

"Edythe.

"P. S. It really ain't Peter's fault that he's silly about women,
and he would have worked for you all right if it hadn't been for my
good looks!"