Children of the Whirlwind eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 380 pages of information about Children of the Whirlwind.

Children of the Whirlwind eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 380 pages of information about Children of the Whirlwind.

“That’s your ultimatum?”

“If you care to call it so—­yes.”

“Then here’s mine!  I told you I was holding back my high cards.  Either you do as I say, and work with Gavegan and Casey, or you’ll not be able to hold a job in New York!  My men will see to that.  And here’s another high card.  You do as I’ve said, or I’ll hang some charge on you, one that’ll stick, and back up the river you’ll go for another stretch!  There’s an ultimatum for you to think about!”

It certainly was.  Larry gazed into the harsh, glaring face, set in fierce determination.  He knew that Barlow, as part of his policy, loved to break down the spirit of criminals; and he knew that nothing so roused Barlow as opposition from a man he considered in his power.  Close beside the Chief he saw the gloating, malignant face of Gavegan; Casey, who had been restless since the beginning of the scene, had moved to the window and was gazing down into Center Street.

For a moment Larry did not reply.  Barlow mistook Larry’s silence for wavering, or the beginning of an inclination to yield.

“You turn that over in your noodle,” Barlow drove on.  “You’re going to go crooked, anyhow, so you might as well go crooked in the only way that’s safe for you.  I’m going to have Gavegan and Casey watch you, and if in the next few days you don’t begin to string along with Barney and Old Jimmie and that bunch, and if you don’t get me word that your answer to my proposition is ‘yes,’ hell’s going to fall on you!  Now get out of here!”

Larry got out.  He was liquid lava of rage inside; but he had had enough to do with police power to know that it would help him not at all to permit an eruption against a police official while he was in the very heart of the police stronghold.

He walked back toward his own street in a fury, beneath which was subconsciously an element of uneasiness:  an uneasiness which would have been instantly roused to caution had he known that Barney Palmer had this hour and more been following him in a taxicab, and that across the street from the car’s window Barney’s sharp face had watched him enter Police Headquarters and had watched him emerge.

Home reached, Larry briefly recounted his experience at Headquarters to Hunt and the Duchess.  The painter whistled; the Duchess blinked and said nothing at all.

“Maggie was more right than she knew when she first said you were facing a tough proposition!” exclaimed Hunt.  “Believe me, young fellow, you’re certainly up against it!”

“Can you beat it for irony!” said Larry, pacing the floor.  “A man wants to go straight.  His pals ask him to be a crook, and are sore because he won’t be a crook.  The police ask him to be a crook, and threaten him because he doesn’t want to be a crook.  Some situation!”

“Some situation!” repeated Hunt.  “What’re you going to do?”

“Do?” Larry halted, his face set with defiant determination.  “I’m going to keep on doing exactly what I’ve been doing!  And they can all go to hell!”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Children of the Whirlwind from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.