“What do you think of that, Davis?” asked Mr. McMurtrie at the end of six minutes’ rapid dictation. It was his pardonable weakness to claim the admiration of his subordinates.
“Bully, sir,” replied the shorthand-writer timidly. As a matter of fact, he thought nothing at all, his whole attention having been so completely absorbed by his task of making dots and curves and dashes as to leave no portion of his brain available for receiving mental impressions. But the editor was satisfied. Telling the youth to transcribe his notes and send the flimsies page by page as completed to the printer, he took up his golf sticks, passed through the outer office, instructing his assistant to read the proof, and departed to his recreation.
There is an excellent golf course on the Scarborough Bluffs, the rugged, seamed, and fissured cliffs that form the northern shore of Lake Ontario, near Toronto. Boarding a trolley-car, Mr. McMurtrie soon reached the club-house, where he found his friend Harry Cleave already awaiting him.
“Hullo, Mac. Day’s work done?” was Mr. Cleave’s salutation.
“Indeed it is. The best day’s work I have done for a good while.”
“Then you are pitching into somebody or something, that’s certain. What is it this time?”
“Bubbles, my boy. Those flying-men are after spinning again. Some of the ’Frisco men will have a pain within side of ’em when they read how I have touched ’em up. Now then, Cleave, we’ve got the course to ourselves. I’m sure I can give you half a stroke and a beating. ’Tis your honour.”
The consciousness of having touched up the ’Frisco men seemed to have a salutary influence on Mr. McMurtrie’s play. He was in the top of form, won the first two holes, and was in the act of lifting his club to drive off from the tee of number three, when a faint buzzing sound from the direction of the lake caused him to suspend the stroke and glance over the placid blue water. Far away in the sky he saw a dark speck about the size of a swallow, which, however, grew with extraordinary rapidity, and in a few moments declared itself to be an aeroplane containing two men.
“Be jabers!” quoth Mr. McMurtrie, resting his club on the ground and watching the flying machine with eyes in which might have been discerned a shade of misgiving.
It was, perhaps, thirty seconds from the time when he first caught sight of it that the aeroplane came perpendicularly above his head, the whirring ceased, and the machine descended with graceful swoop upon the well-cropt turf within fifty yards of the spot where the two golfers stood. As soon as it alighted, Mr. McMurtrie handed his sticks to the caddie, and, as one released from a spell, hurried to meet the man who had just stepped out of the car.