Blow the Man Down - A Romance of the Coast - Page 309/334

Not by a flicker of an eyelid did Mayo betray his total ignorance of

what Fogg referred to.

"I want to ask you, man to man," proceeded the emissary, "whether you

propose to use those papers simply for yourself--to get back--well--you

know!" He waved his hand. "Or are you going to slash right and left with

'em, for general revenge?"

"I haven't decided."

"It's a fair question I have asked. So far as you are concerned

in anything which may be in those papers--and that's mostly my own

reports--you will be squared and more, captain. You can have the

Triton with a ten-years' contract as master, contract to be protected

by a bond, your pay two hundred and fifty dollars a month. Of course

that trade includes your reinstatement as a licensed master and the

dropping of all charges in the Montana matter. There is no indictment,

and the witnesses will be taken care of, so that the matter will not

come up, providing you have enemies. This is man's talk, Mayo! You'll

have to admit it!"

"There's another thing which must be admitted, Fogg! I have been

disgraced, hounded, and persecuted. The men along this coast, the most

of them, will always believe I made a mistake. You know what that means

to a shipmaster!"

Mr. Fogg wiped the moisture off his cheeks with a purple handkerchief.

"You were put in devilish wrong. I admit it. I went too far. That's

why Marston is making me the goat now. I shall be dumped if this matter

isn't straightened out between us!"

"I was in this very room one day, Mr. Fogg, and saw how you dumped one

Burkett. You seemed to enjoy doing it. Why shouldn't I have a little

enjoyment of my own?"

"I had to dump him. He was a fool. He had bragged. I had to protect

interests as well as myself. But you haven't anything to consider, right

now, but your own profit."

"Is that so?" inquired Mayo, sardonically. "You seem to have me sized up

as one of these mild and forgiving angels."

"Now, look here, Mayo, don't let any fool notions stand in the way of

your making good. It isn't sense; it isn't business! You have something

we want and we're willing to come across for it."

"What other strings are hitched on?" asked the young man, feigning

intractability as his best resource in this puzzling affair.

"Well, of course you give up that fool job you're working on. Quit being

a junkman!"