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Ashton, attired in a lounging-robe of scarlet silk, was half reclining in an easy chair. The big desk beside him was littered with engineering journals, reports, and blueprints of bridge plans, topped with detail drawings in ink of the long central span. The Resident Engineer was not studying the plans. He was reading a French novel of the variety seldom translated.
At Blake's entrance, he looked up, his delicate high-arched eyebrows gathered in a frown of annoyance. Almost in the same moment he recognized the intruder, and started to his feet in open alarm.
"How!--why!" he stammered. "You here? I thought you--that after--"
"Too bad, eh?" bantered Blake. "But you mustn't blame yourself. You did your best. But accidents will happen."
"Then you're--you're not--Yet you look--"
"Appearances often deceive," quoted Blake lightly. "You gave me a great start-off--had me going South. So I went."
"Going South?"
"Yes. But that's all by-the-bye, as my friend, the Right Honorable the Earl of Avondale, would say. I'm here now for you to enter my acceptance of the standing offer of the a.s.sistant Engineership."
"You--you agree to take it--under me?" cried Ashton in astonishment.
"Why not?" asked Blake with well-feigned surprise.
"Why, of course if--You see, it's--it's rather unexpected," Ashton sought to explain as he regained a.s.surance. "Old Griffith wrote me about the way you had put through the Zariba Dam. After that I never dreamed you'd accept any position as a.s.sistant."
"Well, I like to please Grif," was Blake's easy reply. "He's been worrying because office work uses me up. Nothing suits me better than an outdoor job, and I happened to take a fancy to your bridge the other time I came. It's a good deal like those plans of mine that got mislaid. Of course you can't know that."
"No, of course not!" a.s.sented Ashton, moistening his lower lip.
"Course not," repeated Blake. "So I can't blame you if you find it hard to believe that my plans would have been accepted before you drew yours if they hadn't been mislaid."
"Then you--no longer accuse Mr. Leslie of--having taken them?" Ashton ventured to ask.
"Couldn't prove it on him, could I? No use _baa-ing_ over spilt milk.
Well, you understand I'm on the job now; I've accepted the offer."
"Ye-es," reluctantly admitted Ashton. "Not that I see the use. There's no need for another engineer."
"That's no lie. One engineer is enough," said Blake dryly. "You sure proved yourself one when you planned this little old cantilever.
However, I'm short of cash. I'll hang around and do what I can. May be able to save you bother by carrying orders out to McGraw or checking over reports for you."
He picked up the vellum-cloth drawings of the central span and some of the blueprints, and began in a matter-of-fact manner to roll them up.
"Hold on!" sharply interposed Ashton. "What are you about?"
"I'm going to bunk with McGraw. Thought I'd take these over and try to get in touch with the work."
"No, you sha'n't! I can't allow you to take those. They're the original drawings. They must not be taken out of my office."
"Original drawings?" repeated Blake in a tone of perfect innocence.
"Excuse me. I took them for copies."
"C-copies!" stuttered Ashton, turning white even to his lips.
"Yes. Hasn't Grif the originals?" asked Blake in a careless tone that was barely touched with surprise.
Ashton rallied from his fright. "No, you're mistaken, completely mistaken! These are the originals. I drew them myself. I couldn't trust to a draughtsman."
"Sure not, such important work as this span of yours. Grif tells me there's never before been anything built like this suspension span,"
agreed Blake, bending over to study the drawings. "But you'll admit some of these figures are rather slipshod for work on original drawings put in to win a compet.i.tion."
"But I--I didn't compete. The idea came to me too late for that. I tried my utmost to be in time for the contest. I was working fast to get my plans drawn. That's why I made some errors--which you may have noticed."
Blake looked up with an ironical smile.
Ashton moistened his lips, hesitated, and asked in an uneasy tone: "About--about how long do you expect to stay? I suppose you will stay, won't you?"
"Well, three or four days, maybe. As you probably know, Grif screwed the company up to offer me a stiff salary--on the strength of that Zariba work, I suppose. I didn't intend to take the offer at all, but my clothes were--they got rather out of repair on my Southern tour, and I came on up here without stopping at my tailor's. Happened to leave my checkbook, too, and it's a long walk to town."
"Oh, if it's only that you're strapped," Ashton hastened to reply; "I'll be pleased to draw you a check--little loan, you know--anything from a hundred to a thousand. No hurry about paying it back. I'm flush."
"You're too kind!" said Blake dryly.
"It's nothing--nothing--a mere trifle!" a.s.sured Ashton, with a touch of condescension. "You know I'll have scads of money to burn some day." He opened a drawer of his desk and took out a checkbook. "I know you can't be anxious to hang around a dreary hole like this. Suppose I make it five thousand? You can keep the money as long as you wish. There's just time for you to catch the extra train we're sending down to the junction for more steel."
"Thanks. But I need a good rest," said Blake.
"I'll think it over, and let you know. Maybe I'll decide to loaf around with you a few days and save borrowing."
"Oh, well, if you can stand this jumping-off place," replied Ashton, visibly disappointed.
He glanced down into the open drawer, and his eyes narrowed with a look of furtive eagerness that did not escape Blake. In a corner of the drawer was a squat black bottle and a tumbler. Ashton lifted them out and poured a half-gla.s.sful of whiskey that was thick and oily with age.
"The real stuff!" he said, holding out the tumbler to Blake. "Older than your grandmother. Let's wet your welcome to Michamac!"
"Here's how!" replied Blake, with a geniality of tone and manner that diverted the other's attention from the glint in his eyes. He took the gla.s.s and deliberately twisted his hand backward so that the whiskey poured out on the bare floor in front of the desk.
"Look out! You're spilling it!" exclaimed Ashton.
"No, just pouring it," explained Blake. "German custom. Next time you're in a beer-garden do it, and they'll let you know what it means."
"Means?" echoed Ashton.
"In this case, it means I never drink when I'm on a job. One of my rules. Told you I had accepted that standing offer, didn't I?"
"Yes. But I didn't know that you--"
"Well, you know now. I'm on this job."
Ashton shot a covert glance at his square-jawed opponent.
"Then it's a mistake--the report that you refused to accept any position from Mr. Leslie," he murmured.