<h2><SPAN name="#id4">CHAPTER III--A Deal in Clerios</SPAN></h2>
<p>George Gallon had lately left a
well-known firm of stockbrokers, in
which he had been junior partner, and set
up business on his own account. He had
started at a trying time, about the close of
the Boer war, when the financial world was
in a state of depression; but he had since
brought off two or three <em class="italics">coups</em> for his clients
and himself, and though he was unpopular, he
had begun to be talked of among a limited
circle in the City as a man who would succeed.</p>
<p>Joan Carthew had heard "George's luck"
discussed by guests at Lady Thorndyke's,
when she had been at home from school on
her holidays; therefore it was that she had
so promptly accepted the offer thrown to
her in derision, as a bone is flung to a chained
dog. "If I keep my eyes and ears open, I
shall get tips," was the thought that flashed
into her mind.</p>
<p>If Joan had been an ordinary eighteen-year-old
girl, she would have faltered before
the difficulty of turning such "tips" to her
own advantage, on a salary of two pounds a
week; but she would not have entered George
Gallon's service if she had been one to falter
before difficulties; and three days after
the reading of the will which left the girl a
pensioner on her own wits, she presented
herself at the office in Copthall Court.</p>
<p>It was early, and Gallon had not yet arrived.
However, his curiosity to see whether Joan
would really keep her engagement brought
him to the City half an hour earlier than
usual. When he came in, there sat at an
inner office, at the desk used by his late
stenographer, a young woman plainly dressed
in black, though not in mourning deep
enough to depress the spirits of the beholder.</p>
<p>It was Joan Carthew. She had already
taken off her hat and hung it on a peg.
Gallon noticed instantly that her beautiful
golden-brown hair was dressed more simply
than he had seen it. Every detail of her
costume was suited to the new part she was
about to play--that of the business woman.</p>
<p>"Good morning, Mr. Gallon," she said
crisply. "Your head clerk told me this
would be my desk. I have brought my
own typewriter. I hope you don't mind.
You know, from the test you made the other
day, that I take down quickly from dictation,
and that my typing is clear. I am ready to
begin work whenever you are."</p>
<p>"Glad to find you so businesslike," said
Gallon, uncomfortable in spite of himself,
though there was a keen relish in the situation.</p>
<p>"You will, I hope, never find me anything
else," quietly replied Joan.</p>
<p>So the new <em class="italics">régime</em> began. At first, for
some days, the man was ill at ease, could
not collect his thoughts for dictation, and
stammered in his speech. He regretted that
his desire to humiliate the girl had tempted
him to offer this position; but Joan's attitude
was so tactful, so unobtrusive, that little
by little he forgot his awkwardness and
even the meanness of his motive in making
her his dependent. He almost forgot that
he had ever asked her to marry him; and
because he found her astonishingly clever
and useful, he waived the idea of further
insults which had flitted through his head
when first the dethroned heiress became
his secretary.</p>
<p>One autumn morning, Gallon was late.
Joan sat waiting in his office, and had opened
such correspondence as was not marked
"Private," had typed several letters ready
for her employer's signature, and having
no more business which could be transacted
until he appeared, began to glance through
an illustrated Society weekly which she
took in. This paper she always read with
eagerness; not because she had the morbid
interest of an outsider in the doings of Society,
with a capital S, but because any information
she could glean about important people
might be of service in the career to which
she undauntedly looked forward.</p>
<p>On one page of this particular paper,
country houses, electric-launches, libraries,
motor-cars, and even family jewels were
advertised; and it was an absorbing page
to Joan. To-day she gazed long at the
reproduction of a handsome steam-yacht,
which for some weeks past had been advertised
for sale, for the sum of twelve thousand
pounds. Only a few months ago, she had been
planning to have some day a yacht of her
own. It had been one of the many pleasant
things she had meant to do with Lady
Thorndyke's money.</p>
<p>"I shouldn't mind owning the <em class="italics">Titania</em>, if
she's as good as her photograph," the girl was
thinking, when George Gallon and a fat,
foreign-looking man came in.</p>
<p>"You can go back into the next room,
Miss Carthew," said George, abruptly. "I
shall not need you at present, and you may
tell them outside that I am not to be disturbed."</p>
<p>Joan rose and walked into the outer office,
where the three clerks, who were all more or
less in love with the beautiful secretary,
glanced up joyfully from their work at
sight of her. The youngest, whose desk
was close to the door, had already proposed.
He was a dreamy youth with a fluffy brain,
but his father was a rich man known in the
City as "the Salmon King," who cherished
hopes that one day his son would cut a
figure on the Stock Exchange. These family
details the young man had confided to Joan
as a lure to matrimony, and though she had
answered that he was a "foolish boy," and
nothing was farther from her intention than
to settle down as Mrs. Tommy Mellis, she had
not in so many words refused the honour.</p>
<p>Now she whispered a request that, if he
had still a regard for her, he would slip away
and buy a box of chocolates, for the need
of which she was perishing. A moment
later Tommy was out of his chair, and Joan
was in it. His was the one seat in the room
where conversation in Gallon's private office
could by any means be overheard; and
Gallon was aware that whatever might go
in at Tommy's right ear promptly went out
at the left, without leaving the smallest
impression of its meaning.</p>
<p>"Is the deal certain to come off?" she
heard George inquire.</p>
<p>"Sure as the sun is to rise to-morrow,"
replied another voice with a foreign accent.
"You are the only outsider in the know.
That's worth something, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"It's worth what I've promised for it."</p>
<p>"At least that. And I want an advance to-day."</p>
<p>"In such a hurry? Remember I shan't make
anything, or be sure you haven't fooled me,
for weeks. Still, I can manage a hundred."</p>
<p>"I need ten times that."</p>
<p>"You'll have it the day the Clerios are taken over."</p>
<p>"'Sh! not so loud! And no names, for
Heaven's sake, man!"</p>
<p>"Oh, that's all right. The clerk near
the door is a fool. The only one out there
with any real brains is a girl, but she doesn't
know the difference between Clerios and
clerics. That's why I employ a woman for
a secretary. She spends her spare energy
on the fashions, and doesn't bother about
things which are none of her business."</p>
<p>In spite of this protest, Gallon dropped
his voice. Only a word here and there
started out of the broken murmurs on the
other side of the door; but one more sentence,
almost whole, came to her ears. "Grierson
Mordaunt ... sort of chap ... carries these
things through." Then reappeared Tommy
with the chocolates, and Joan went to her
own desk; but the stray bits of information
were as flint and steel in her brain, and
together they struck out a spark of inspiration.
She was as sure as if she had heard all details
of the transaction that the World's Shipping
Combine, of which the American millionaire,
Grierson Mordaunt, stood at the head, had
arranged to take over the Clerio line of
Italian boats plying between Mediterranean
ports. The fat man with the foreign accent
was no doubt the confidential agent of the
Italian company, and being acquainted with
George Gallon and his methods, had given
the secret away for a consideration. Doubtless
he was poor, perhaps in difficulties;
otherwise he would have kept the information
and bought all the Clerio shares he could
lay his hands upon.</p>
<p>Now Joan knew why Gallon had written
yesterday to a man in Manchester, asking
him how many Clerios he had to sell, and
what was the lowest price he was prepared
to take for them, adding that it would be
useless, in the present depressed state of the
market, to name a high figure. This man
had been requested to wire his answer, and
at any moment it might arrive.</p>
<p>When Joan had jumped so far in her
conclusions, Gallon escorted his visitor out,
flinging back word that he would be in again
in half an hour.</p>
<p>The girl's blood sang in her ears. It
seemed to her that Fortune was knocking
at the door; but could she find the key to
open it? She called all her wits to the
rescue, and in five minutes that key was
grating in the lock.</p>
<p>In Gallon's private room was a small
desk, which she used when her services were
wanted there. This gave her an excuse to go
in, and in passing she threw a glance at
Tommy Mellis, which caused him, after the
lapse of a decent interval (he counted eighty
seconds), to follow.</p>
<p>"Once you said you would do anything
for me," she began, with a lovely look.
"Did you mean it?"</p>
<p>"Rather!"</p>
<p>"Well, then, the next question is: Will
your father do anything for <em class="italics">you</em>?"</p>
<p>"He'll do a good deal."</p>
<p>"If you tell him you've a tip about some
shares that are bound to rise, will he give you
the money to buy them?"</p>
<p>"He'd lend it. That's his way. He'd
be tickled to see me taking an interest in
business. But what has that got to do
with----"</p>
<p>"I want to buy some shares--lots of shares--all
I can get hold of. To-day they're
going cheap. To-morrow, who can say?
They are Clerios."</p>
<p>"But, look here, even I know that Clerios
are no good. It's a badly managed line,
and the shares are down to next to nothing."</p>
<p>"All the better. Mr. Gallon mustn't know
you are in this, as he wants to get hold of
all the shares himself. You must trust me
enough to have them put into my name, and
when I've got your profit for you, we'll go
halves. Can you see your father inside half
an hour?"</p>
<p>"His place is just round the corner."</p>
<p>"Well, then, if you <em class="italics">do</em> care anything for
me, ask him to see you through a big deal.
You shall really make on it, I promise you,
something worth having besides my--gratitude."</p>
<p>"The governor's a queer fish. If I should
let him in----"</p>
<p>"You won't let him in. But we don't
want your father or anybody else in with us.
All we want is the loan, and his name, which
is a good one in the City, I know. I trust
you for that. You must show how clever
you are, if you're anxious to please me.
I'll manage the rest. Now, like a dear, good
boy, run off and arrange things with your father."</p>
<p>Again Tommy became knight-errant, and
hardly was he out of the way when a strange
voice was heard in the adjoining office.
"Mr. Gallon in? I'm Mr. Mitchison, from
Manchester."</p>
<p>"Mr. Gallon is out at present, but----"
a clerk had begun, when Joan appeared
and cut him short. "Mr. Gallon wishes
me to see Mr. Mitchison, in his absence.
Will you kindly step in here, sir?"</p>
<p>The gentleman from Manchester obeyed.
Joan's quick eyes noted his worried air and
the genteel shabbiness of his clothing. "I am
Mr. Gallon's confidential secretary," she said.
"I know about this business of Clerios.
You came instead of wiring? Mr. Gallon
rather expected you would."</p>
<p>"I had to come to London in a day or
two, anyhow, and it's always more
satisfactory to do business in person."</p>
<p>"Exactly. Well, I'm sorry to tell you
that Mr. Gallon has seen reason to change his
mind about buying your block of shares
in the Clerio line, as he has some big things
on now, and finds his hands full; but
Mr. Mellis, a client of his--'the Salmon King,'
you know--wants to invest some money
privately for his son. Mr. Gallon has advised
them that, though Clerios are not likely to
rise much for some years, there is a certain,
if small, dividend; and if you can tell young
Mr. Mellis where they can get hold of other
blocks of the same shares, it might then be
worth his while to take over yours. Those
you hold are hardly enough for him without others."</p>
<p>"I know several men in Genoa, where I
did business for some years, who hold shares
and would part with them for a decent price.
I could work the deal for Mr. Mellis, I'm
certain."</p>
<p>"Good. He's at his father's office now.
I have Mr. Gallon's permission to introduce
you to him, but his only free time this morning
is in the next half-hour. I can go with
you to Mr. Mellis senior's office, if you're
inclined to settle matters at once."</p>
<p>"The Salmon King," who had earned
his title by building up the largest "canned
goods" business of its kind in England, had
offices on the ground floor of an imposing
building not far away, and Joan was lucky
enough to guide her companion to the door
without the dreaded misfortune of meeting
George Gallon on the way. As they crossed
the threshold, Tommy Mellis issued from
a room with a ground-glass door. Joan
hurried to him, asked if his father had been
kind, was assured that all was well so far,
and hastened to explain the new development
of affairs so clearly that even Tommy's
slow intelligence grasped her meaning
without difficulty. "When I've introduced you
to Mr. Mitchison, offer him twenty pounds
a share (their nominal value is fifty), and if
necessary go up to twenty-five. Tell him
he shall have a commission on all the other
shares he can get, if the whole thing can be
fixed up by wire to-morrow. Say there is a
man coming to see you the day after about
some other investment, which your father
prefers, but you've taken a fancy to this, and
want everything settled before the two older
men come together. As Gallon must do all
his business in Clerios privately, and doesn't
want to ask for them in the House, that will
give us time to work."</p>
<p>"By Jove! this will mean a lot of money,"
faltered Tommy. "Of course, I'm delighted
to do this for you, but if the governor----"</p>
<p>Joan soothed his fears; and introduced
Mitchison to young Mellis, who took them
both into a small, empty office. She hovered
about during the business conversation which
ensued, putting in a word here and there,
and impressing the Manchester man with her
shrewdness. In his opinion, George Gallon
had a treasure for a secretary, and he was
grateful to her for pushing on his affairs so
well, especially as he did not believe he could
have got from Gallon the price which Mellis
was willing to give.</p>
<p>When Joan returned to the office in
Copthall Court, her employer had not yet come
back. "Don't tell Mr. Gallon I've been out,
will you?" she appealed to the clerks, her
slaves. As she spoke, the door opened, and
Gallon entered, just in time to hear the
ingenuous request. The young men flushed
in consternation for her, but the girl did not
change colour. As a matter of fact, she
had known that George was coming up,
and had probably seen her on the stairs.
She had not spoken without design.</p>
<p>Having been delayed vexatiously, Gallon
was not in a good mood, and his black ones
were unpleasant for underlings. A frowning
look and a gesture of the head called
Joan to his private office. She followed
meekly; but when the scolding had reached
the stage which she mentally designated
as "ripe," her meekness vanished like snow
in sunshine.</p>
<p>"How dare you speak to me like that!"
she exclaimed, her eyes blazing. "I'm not
your servant, though I have served you
well. I leave to-day."</p>
<p>"This moment, if you choose," George
flung back at her furiously, though in reality
he had not intended matters to touch this
climax. Joan had become valuable, but,
as he said to himself in his sullen anger,
she was the "last person in the world whose
impudence he would stand."</p>
<p>When Joan had gathered up her few
belongings, and remarked that she would
send for her typewriter, she added:
"Mr. Mitchison, of Manchester, called, and wanted
me to tell you that he'd already parted
with the shares you wired about last night.
I asked who had bought them, but he was
pledged to secrecy. I believe that is all I
need say, except that you will find all your
correspondence in good order, to be taken
over by my successor; and as you have
declared so often that clever stenographers
are starving for want of employment, you
will not be long in obtaining one."</p>
<p>With this she was off, and, hailing the
first cab she saw (though in her
circumstances a cab was an extravagance), drove
to Woburn Place, where she lived in a back
bedroom on the top floor of a cheap boarding-house.</p>
<p>She remained only long enough, however,
to change into one of the pretty dresses left
from last spring's wardrobe. Looking as if
her home should be Park Lane instead of
Bloomsbury, she went to the office of the
illustrated weekly in which she had been
interested that morning. When she inquired
the address of <em class="italics">Titania's</em> owner, she was
told that all business connected with the
yacht would be done at the advertising
bureau of the paper. This was a blow, for
the proposal that Joan had to make was not,
perhaps, of a kind suited to the taste of a
mere commonplace agent. She thought for
a moment, and then said, with a slight
accent which she had learned through mimicking
a girl at school: "Well, I'm very sorry,
but I'm afraid we can't do business, then.
I'm an American girl; my name is
Mordaunt. Grierson Mordaunt is my uncle.
I guess you've heard of him. I want to
buy a yacht, in a hurry--my people generally
are in a hurry--and I thought this one
might do. But if I can't see the owner
myself, it's no use. <em class="italics">Good</em> morning."</p>
<span id="looking-as-if-her-home-should-be-park-lane-instead-of-bloomsbury-she-went-to-the-office"></span><ANTIMG class="align-center" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt=" " src="images/img-064.jpg" />
<p>Before she had got half-way to the door
the dapper manager of the advertising bureau
stopped her. Possibly an exception might
be made in her favour; he would write to
his client.</p>
<p>"Can you send the letter by district
messenger?" shrewdly asked the
newly-fledged Miss Mordaunt.</p>
<p>The manager admitted that this could be
done. To what hotel should he transmit
the answer? "I'm staying with friends,
and I don't want them to know about this
till it's settled," said Joan. "I tell you
what I'll do: I'll wait here."</p>
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