The Auction Block eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 424 pages of information about The Auction Block.

The Auction Block eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 424 pages of information about The Auction Block.

“Hop in, Mister.  I’ll drive you an’ your friends to Philadelphy for ten dollars,” the cabby offered, invitingly.

But Bob was obdurate.  “I’ll make it fifteen, and you can lend me your coat and hat.  We’ll exchange—­have to, or no joke.  Is it a go?”

The offer was tempting, but the driver cannily demanded Wharton’s name and address before committing himself.  The card that Bob handed him put an end to the parley; he wheeled into the side-street and removed his long nickel-buttoned coat and his battered tile, taking Bob’s broadcloth garment and well-blocked hat in return.

“First one o’ these I ever had on,” he chuckled.  “But it’s a bit cool for shirt-sleeves, ain’t it?  Mind now, if you get lost give the horse his head and he’ll find the stable, but don’t run ’im.  If you ain’t back in an hour I’ll know you’ve got a puncture.  Ha!  In the mornin’ I’ll take these glad rags to Charley Voice’s hotel, eh?”

“Right!  The Charlevoix.  But I’ll be back.”  Bob drove away with a parting flourish of his whip.

The elevator was in its place, the hall-man was dozing, with heels propped upon the telephone switchboard, when Wharton entered the Elegancia and rang the bell of Lilas Lynn’s apartment; but a careless glimpse of the glittering buttons and the rusty hat sent the attendant back into his drowse.

Once Bob had gained admittance little time was wasted.  He and Merkle helped Hammon to his feet, then each took an arm; but the exertion told, and Jarvis hung between them like a drunken man, a gray look of death upon his face.

“Watch out for the door-man,” Jimmy Knight cautioned for the twentieth time.  “Make him think you’ve got a souse.”

“Aren’t you coming along?” asked Bob.

But Jim recoiled.  “Me?  No.  I’ll stay and help Lilas make her get-away.”

Merkle nodded agreement.  “Don’t let her get out of your sight, either, understand?  There’s a ship sailing in the morning.  See that she’s aboard.”

Jarvis Hammon spoke.  “I want you all to know that I’m entirely to blame and that I did this myself.  Lilas is a—­good girl.”  The words came laboriously, but his heavy brows were drawn down, his jaw was square.  “I was clumsy.  I might have killed her.  But she’s all right, and I’ll be all right, too, when I get a doctor.  Now put that pistol in my pocket, John.  Do as I say.  There!  Now I’m ready.”

The hall-man of the Elegancia was somewhat amused at sight of the three figures that emerged from Miss Lynn’s apartment, and surmised that there had been a gay time within, judging from the condition of the old man in the center.  Theatrical people were a giddy lot, anyhow.  Since there was no likelihood of a tip from one so deeply in his cups, the attendant did not trouble to lend a hand, but raised his heels to the switchboard and dozed off again.

Bob Wharton mounted the box and drove eastward across Broadway, through the gloomy block to Columbus Avenue and on to Central Park West, the clop-clop-clop of the horse’s feet echoing lonesomely in the empty street.  At Sixty-seventh Street he wheeled into the sunken causeway that links the East and West sides.

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Project Gutenberg
The Auction Block from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.