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Miss Winthrop removed from her typewriter the final page of the long letter she had finished and rapidly went over it for errors. She found none. But, as she gathered her papers together before taking them into the private office of Mr. Farnsworth, she spoke. She spoke without even then glancing at Don--as if voicing a thought to herself.
"Believe me," she said, "they are not going to pay you for sitting there and watching me."
Don felt the color spring to his cheeks.
"I beg your pardon," he apologized.
"It doesn't bother me any," she continued, as she rose. "Only there isn't any money for the firm in that sort of thing."
"But there doesn't seem to be anything around here for me to do."
"Then make something," she concluded, as she moved away.
Blake, to whom he had been introduced, was sitting at his desk reading an early edition of an evening paper. Spurred on by her admonition, he strolled over there. Blake glanced up with a nod.
"How you making it?" he inquired.
"There doesn't seem to be much for me to do," said Don. "Can you suggest anything?"
"Farnsworth will dig up enough for you later on. I wouldn't worry about that."
"But I don't know anything about the game."
"You'll pick it up. Did I understand Farnsworth to say you were Harvard?"
"Yes."
"I'm Princeton. Say, what sort of a football team have you this year?"
Don knew football. He had played right end on the second team. He also knew Princeton, and if the information he gave Blake about the team ever went back to New Jersey it did not do the coaching staff there any good. However, it furnished a subject for a pleasant half hour's conversation. Then Blake went out, and Don returned to his former place back of Powers's desk.
"I'll bet you didn't get much out of him," observed Miss Winthrop, without interrupting the click of her machine.
"He seems rather a decent sort," answered Don.
"Perhaps he is," she returned.
"He's a Princeton man," Don informed her.
"He's Percy A. Blake," she declared--as if that were a fact of considerably more importance.
He waited to see if she was ready to volunteer any further information, but apparently she considered this sufficient.
At that point Farnsworth came out and took a look about the office.
His eyes fell upon Don, and he crossed the room.
He handed Don a package.
"I wish you would deliver these to Mr. Hayden, of Hayden & Wigglesworth,"
he requested.
Farnsworth returned to his office, leaving Don staring helplessly at the package in his hands.
"For Heaven's sake, get busy!" exclaimed Miss Winthrop.
"But where can I find Mr. Hayden?" inquired Don.
"Get out of the office and look up the firm in a directory," she returned sharply. "But hustle out of here just as if you did know."
Don seized his hat and obeyed. He found himself on the street, quite as ignorant of where to find a directory as he was of where to find Mr. Hayden, of Hayden & Wigglesworth. But in rounding a corner--still at full speed--he ran into a messenger boy.
"Take me to the office of Hayden & Wigglesworth and there's a quarter in it for you," he offered.
"I'm on," nodded the boy.
The office was less than a five minutes' walk away. In another two minutes Don had left his package with Mr. Hayden's clerk and was back again in his own office.
"Snappy work," Miss Winthrop complimented him. "The closing prices must be out by now. You'd better look them over."
"Closing prices of what?" he inquired.
"The market, of course. Ask Eddie--the boy at the ticker. He'll give you a sheet."
So Don went over and asked Eddie, and was handed a list of closing quotations--which, for all he was concerned, might have been football signals. However, he sat down and looked them over, and continued to look them over until Farnsworth pa.s.sed him on his way home.
"You may as well go now," Farnsworth said. "You'll be here at nine to-morrow?"
"Nine to-morrow," nodded Don.
He returned to Miss Winthrop's desk.
"He says I may go now," he reported.
"Then I'd go," she advised.
"But I--I want to thank you."
"For Heaven's sake, don't!" she exploded. "I'm busy."
"Good-night."
"Good-night."
He took the Subway back to the Grand Central, and walked from there to the club. Here he found a message from Frances:--
Dad sent up a box for the theater to-night. Will you come to dinner and go with us?
When Don, after dressing, left his house for the Stuyvesants' that evening, it was with a curious sense of self-importance. He now had the privilege of announcing to his friends that he was in business in New York--in the banking business--with Carter, Rand & Seagraves, as a matter of fact. He walked with a freer stride and swung his stick with a jauntier air than he had yesterday.