‘Look here, Mr. Bamberger,’ said Feist, waking up, ’if you want my evidence, don’t talk of dropping me as you did just now, or you won’t get it, do you understand? You’ve paid me the compliment of telling me that I can hold my tongue. All right. But it won’t suit you if I hold my tongue in the witness-box, will it? That’s all, Mr. Bamberger. I’ve nothing more to say about that.’
There was a sudden vehemence in the young man’s tone which portrayed that in spite of his broken nerves he could still be violent. But Isidore Bamberger was not the man to be brow-beaten by any one he employed. He almost smiled when Feist stopped speaking.
‘That’s all right,’ he said half good-naturedly and half contemptuously. ‘We understand each other. That’s all right.’
‘I hope it is,’ Feist answered in a dogged way. ’I only wanted you to know.’
’Well, I do, since you’ve told me. But you needn’t get excited like that. It’s just as well you gave up studying medicine and took to business, Feist, for you haven’t got what they call a pleasant bedside manner.’
Mr. Feist had once been a medical student, but had given up the profession on inheriting a sum of money with which he at once began to speculate. After various vicissitudes he had become Mr. Bamberger’s private secretary, and had held that position some time in spite of his one failing, because he had certain qualities which made him invaluable to his employer until his nerves began to give away. One of those qualities was undoubtedly his power of holding his tongue even when under the influence of drink; another was his really extraordinary memory for details, and especially for letters he had written under dictation, and for conversations he had heard. He was skilful, too, in many ways when in full possession of his faculties; but though Isidore Bamberger used him, he despised him profoundly, as he despised every man who preferred present indulgence to future profit.
Feist lit a cigarette and blew a vast cloud of smoke round him, but made no answer to his employer’s last observation.
‘Now this is what I want you to do,’ said the latter. ’Go to this Count Leven and tell him it’s a cash transaction or nothing, and that he runs no risk. Find out what he’ll really take, but don’t come talking to me about five thousand pounds or anything of that kind, for that’s ridiculous. Tell him that if proceedings are not begun by the first of May his wife won’t get any more money from Van Torp, and he won’t get any more from his wife. Use any other argument that strikes you. That’s your business, because that’s what I pay you for. What I want is the result, and that’s justice and no more, and I don’t care anything about the means. Find them and I’ll pay. If you can’t find them I’ll pay somebody who can, and if nobody can I’ll go to the end without. Do you understand?’
‘Oh, I understand right enough,’ answered Feist, with his bad smile.’ If I can hit on the right scheme I won’t ask you anything extra for it, Mr. Bamberger! By the bye, I wrote you I met Cordova, the Primadonna, at the Turkish Embassy, didn’t I? She hates him as much as the other woman likes him, yet she and the other have struck up a friendship. I daresay I shall get something out of that too.’