“No!... Say! That’s slick, hain’t it? Wisht you’d come along when we try, Miss O’Toole. Somehow I’d feel easier in my mind if you was along.... See you early in the mornin’.... Got to git to bed, now. Always aim to be in bed by nine.... G’ night.”
“Say,” expostulated Mr. Peaney, “do you expect me to hand over five thousand to that hick? He might walk off with it.”
“He might walk off with the hotel.... I told you you hadn’t any nerve.... Why, give that fat man a taste of easy money and you couldn’t drive him away. Let him sleep all night with five thousand dollars that came as easy as that, and you couldn’t drive him away from your office with a gun.... Besides, I’m here to take care of him ...or are you a quitter?”
“Twenty thousand dollars,” Mr. Peaney said to himself. “Then I’ll show you how good my nerve is. Bring on your fat man....”
Scattergood was up at his accustomed early hour, and before breakfast had examined Mr. Peaney’s premises from front and rear. The bucket shop was in a small wooden building. The ground floor consisted of a large office where was visible the big blackboard upon which stock quotations were posted, and of a back room whose interior was invisible from the street. A corner of the main office had been partitioned off as a private retreat for Mr. Peaney. What was upstairs Scattergood could not tell with accuracy, but he judged it to be a single room or perhaps two small rooms.... It was here, he felt certain, Ovid was secreting himself, and, with a certain grimness, he hoped the young man was not happy in his surroundings.
“I calc’late,” he said to himself, “that Ovid, bein’ shet up with his own figgerin’s and imaginin’s, hain’t in no jubilant frame of mind.... Meanest punishment you kin give a feller is to lock him in for a spell with himself, callin’ himself names....” When the office opened, Scattergood and Pansy were at the door, where Mr. Peaney welcomed them, not without a certain uneasiness at the prospect of intrusting his money to Scattergood.
“Let’s git started right off,” Scattergood said. “I’d like to tell it to the folks how I gained five thousand dollars in one mornin’—jest doin’ nothin’ but settin’.”
“Very well,” said Mr. Peaney. “You buy a thousand shares of International Utilities on a one-point margin.... Sign this order slip.”
“And you set out five thousand dollars right where I kinn see it,” said Scattergood, with anxious fatuity.
“Certainly.... Certainly.”
Mr. Peaney deposited on his desk a bundle of currency which Scattergood counted meticulously, and then laid his own thousand beside it.
“It’s as good as yours, right now,” said Pansy.
“We’ll stay right here in my private room,” said Peaney. “We can watch the board from here, and nobody will disturb us.”
“I’d kinder like to have folks see me makin’ all this money,” complained Scattergood, but he acquiesced, and presently quotations commenced to be posted on the board. International Utilities opened at seventy-six. Presently they advanced half a point, lingered, and returned to their original position.