“I don’t know except that she is going down to the Harringtons’ this afternoon and Taylor’s got some scheme on hand. I tell you he’s a pretty smart boy.”
“You bet he is,” Gibbs returned promptly, “and may be he’s smarter than you know. Ever hear of R. J.?”
“R. J.?” Duncan repeated. “You mean that secret service agent?”
“Yes,” Gibbs told him with an air of one knowing secret things. “They say he’s a pal of the President’s.”
“Well, what’s that to do with this?” Duncan wanted to know.
“Don’t you know who he is?”
“No,” Duncan retorted, “and neither does anyone else. Nobody but the President and the Secretary of the Treasury knows who he really is.”
Gibbs rose from his chair and patted his chest proudly. “Well, I know, too,” he declared.
Duncan laughed contemptuously. “Yes, you do, just the same as I do – that he’s the biggest man in the secret service, and that’s all you know.”
Gibbs smiled complacently. “Ain’t it funny,” he observed, “that you right here in the office don’t know?”
“Don’t know what?” Duncan retorted sharply; he disliked Gibbs in a patronizing rôle.
“That your boss Taylor is R. J.”
“Taylor!” Duncan cried. “You’re crazy! The heat’s got you, Harry.”
“Oh, indeed!” Gibbs said sarcastically. “Do you remember the Stuyvesant case?”
Duncan nodded.
“And do you remember that when Taylor took his vacation last year R. J. did some great work in the Crosby case? Put two and two together, Jim, and may be you’ll see daylight.”
“By George!” Duncan exclaimed, now impressed by Gibbs’ news. “I believe you’re right. Taylor never will speak about this R. J., now I come to think of it.” He raised his head as the sound of voices was heard in the passage.
“There he is,” Duncan whispered busying himself with a sheaf of declarations.
Gibbs looked toward the opening door nervously. It was one thing to criticize the deputy-surveyor in his absence and another to meet his look and endure his satire. His collar seemed suddenly too small, and he chewed his cigar violently.
DANIEL TAYLOR entered quickly without acknowledging the presence of his inferiors and crossed to his desk by the window. He was a man above medium height, broad of shoulder, thick through the chest and giving the idea of one who was alert and aggressive mentally and physically. Those in the service who had set themselves against him had been broken. His path had been strewn with other men’s regrets; but Taylor climbed steadily, never caring for what was below, but grasping eagerly for power.
Naturally a man of his type must have had other qualities than mere aggressiveness to aid him in such vigorous competition. He had commended himself to the powers above him for snap judgment and quick action. And although men of his temperament must inevitably make mistakes, it was notorious that Taylor made fewer than his rivals.
Toward men like Duncan and Gibbs who were not destined to rise, men who could be replaced without trouble, Taylor paid small heed. They did what he told them and if they failed he never forgot. It was to the men above him that Taylor showed what small social gifts nature had given him. He had sworn to rise in the service and he cultivated only those who might aid him.
After glancing over the papers arranged on his desk he called to Duncan: “Has Miss Cartwright been here yet?”
“No, sir,” Duncan responded promptly.
His superior pushed the buzzer on his desk and then looked across at the uncomfortable Gibbs. “Want to see me?” he snapped.
“Yes, sir,” Gibbs made answer as Peter the doorkeeper entered in answer to Taylor’s summons.
“Then wait outside,” Taylor said, “I’ll see you in five minutes.”
“Yes, sir,” Gibbs said obediently and made his exit.
The deputy-surveyor turned toward the attendant. “Peter, let me know the instant Miss Cartwright arrives. Don’t forget; it’s important. That’s all.”
He dismissed Peter with a nod and then called to Duncan.
“Did Bronson of the New York Burglar Insurance Company send over some papers to me relating to the theft of Miss Cartwright’s jewels?”
Duncan took a long envelope and laid it on his chief’s desk. “Here they are, sir.”
Taylor looked at the documents eagerly. “By George!” he cried, when he had looked into them, “I knew I was right. I knew there was something queer about the way her diamonds were stolen.”
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