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"By the great horn spoon! but this is wonderful."
Chester did not feel called upon to say anything.
"How long did it take you to draw this picture?"
"A little over half an hour."
"Jerusalem! that is at the rate of ten dollars an hour. I am contented to make ten dollars a day."
"So should I be, sir. I don't draw all the time," said Chester, with a smile.
"I was going to ask if you wouldn't give me lessons in drawing and sketching."
"I should be afraid to, sir," laughed Chester. "You might prove a dangerous rival."
"You needn't be afraid. I can play as well as I can sing."
"I suppose you sing well, sir," said Chester, roguishly.
"You can judge. When I was a young man I thought I would practice singing a little in my room one night. The next morning my landlady said, in a tone of sympathy, 'I heard you groaning last night, Mr.
Perkins. Did you have the toothache?'"
Chester burst into a hearty laugh.
"If that is the case," he said, "I won't be afraid of you as a rival in drawing."
Mr. Perkins set himself to finishing his letter, and in twenty minutes it was done.
"Now, I am ready," he said.
As they went downstairs, Chester observed, "I will ask you as a favor, Mr. Perkins, not to refer to my work in _Puck_, as it is not known at the office that I do any work outside."
"All right, my boy. By the way, how much do they pay you at the office?"
"Five dollars a week."
"Evidently it isn't as good a business as drawing."
"No, sir; but it is more reliable. I can't always satisfy the comic papers, and I am likely to have sketches left on my hands."
"Yes; that is a practical way of looking at it, and shows that you are a boy of sense. What sort of a man is Mr. Fairchild?"
"A very kind, considerate man, but I forgot to say that you won't see him."
"But I thought he sent you to call on me?"
"No, sir; Mr. Fairchild started for the West this morning. It was Mr.
Mullins, the bookkeeper, who sent me."
"That complicates the mystery. Is he a good friend of yours?"
"No, sir; he dislikes me."
Mr. Perkins looked curious, and Chester, considerably to his own surprise, confided to him the story of his relations with the bookkeeper.
"He's a scamp!" commented the man from Minneapolis. "Why does Mr.
Fairchild keep him. I wouldn't! I'd bounce him very quick."
"He has been with Mr. Fairchild five years and understands his business thoroughly."
"Well, there is something in that; but I wouldn't like to have in my employ a man whom I couldn't trust. Have you ever been out West?"
"No, sir."
"You ought to come out there. The city I represent is a smart one and no mistake. Of course you've heard of the rivalry between Minneapolis and St. Paul."
"Yes, sir."
"I don't take sides, for I live in both, but I think business facilities in Minneapolis are greater. I think you are a boy who would succeed at the West."
"I should like to go there some day. I own some property in Washington Territory."
"You do?" exclaimed Paul Perkins, in great surprise. "Whereabouts?"
"In Tacoma. I own some lots there."
"Then let me tell you, my boy, that you will be a rich man."
"But I thought prices of land in Tacoma were small."
"So they are--at present; but it is the future terminus of the Northern Pacific Railroad. When it is completed there will be a boom. How many lots do you own?"
"Five."
"Take my advice and hold on to them. What square is this?"
They had reached Seventeenth Street.
"Union Square."
"It's a pretty place. Is Tiffany's near here?"
"Yes, sir; only two blocks away. We shall pa.s.s it."
"All right! Point it out to me. I'm going to buy a gold watch for myself there. I've needed one for a long time, but I wanted the satisfaction of buying one at Tiffany's. Anything that is sold there must be A No. 1."
"I have no doubt of it, but I don't trade there much yet."
"No; you must wait till you have realized on your Western lots."