第11章
加入书架 A- A+
点击下载App,搜索"To Him That Hath",免费读到尾

  “Youwouldgoout,eh?Ibelieveonmysoulyouwould。You——you——

  oldfool。But,“saidMaitland,reachinghishandacrossthedesk,“Idon’tgobackonoldfriendsthatway。“

  Thetwomenstoodfacingeachotherforafewminutes,withhandsclasped,Maitland’sfacesternandset,Wickes’workinginapitifulefforttostaythetearsthatrandownhischeeks,tochokebackthesobsthatshookhisoldbodyasifinthegripofsomeunseenpowerfulhand。

  “Wemustfindaway,“saidMaitland,whenhefeltsureofhisvoice。“Someway,butnotthatway。Sitdown。Wemustgothroughthistogether。“

  GrantMaitland抯businessinstinctsandtrainingweresuchastoforbidanytriflingwithloosemanagementinanydepartmentofhisplant。Hewas,moreover,toojustamantoallowanyofhisworkmentosufferforfailuresnottheirown。Hisfirststepwastogetatthefacts。Hispreliminarymovewascharacteristicofhim。HesentforMcNish。

  “McNish,“hesaid,“yourfiguresIhaveexamined。TheytellmenothingIdidnotknow,buttheyarecleverlysetdown。ThematterofwagesIshalldealwithasIhavealwaysdealtwithitinmybusiness。Theothermatter——“Mr。Maitlandpaused,thenproceededwithgravedeliberation,“Imustdealwithinmyownway。Itwilltakealittletime。Ishallnotdelayunnecessarily,butIshallacceptdictationfromnomanastomymethods。“

  McNishstoodsilentlysearchinghisfacewithsteadyeyes。

  “Youareanewmanhere,andIfindyouareagoodworkman,“

  continuedMr。Maitland。“Idon抰knowyounoryouraimsandpurposesinthisGrievanceCommitteebusinessofyours。Ifyouwantasteadyjobwithachancetogeton,youwillgetboth;ifyouwanttrouble,youcangetthattoo,butnotforlong,here。“

  StilltheScotheldhimwithgravesteadygaze,butspeakingnoword。

  “Youunderstandme,McNish?“saidMaitland,nettledattheman抯

  silence。

  “Aye,A抳egotaheid,“hesaidinanimpassivevoice。

  “Well,then,Ihopeyouwillgovernyourselfaccordingly。Good-

  day,“saidMaitland,closingtheinterview。

  McNishstillstoodimmovable。

  “That抯allIhavetosay,“saidMaitland,glancingimpatientlyattheman。

  “Butit抯noallAhavetosay,ifyewillpairmitme,“answeredMcNishinavoicequietandrespectfulandapparently,exceptforitsDoricflavour,quiteuntouchedbyemotionofanykindsoever。

  “Goon,“saidMaitlandshortly,astheScotstoodwaiting。

  “MaisterMaitland,“saidMcNish,rollingoutadeeperDoric,“yehavemadeapromiseandathreat。Yerethreatisnaethingtaeme。

  Astaeyerejob,AwantitandAwanttaegeton,butA抦afreemanthenooan?afreemanAshalleverbe。Good-daytaeye。“Hebowedrespectfullytohisemployerandstrodefromtheroom。

  Mr。Maitlandsatlookingatthecloseddoor。

  “Heisaman,thatchap,atanyrate,“hesaidtohimself,“butwhat抯hisgame,Iwonder。Hewillbearwatching。“

  TheverynextdayMaitlandmadeacloseinspectionofhisplant,beginningwiththesawmill。HefoundMcNishrunningoneofthelargercircularsaws,andnonetoodeftly。Hestoodobservingthemanforsomemomentsinsilence。Thensteppingtotheworkman抯

  sidehesaid,“Youwillsavetime,Ithink,ifyoudoitthisway。“Heseizedtheleversand,eliminatinganunnecessarymovement,ranthelog。

  McNishstoodcalmlyobserving。

  “Aye,yerer-right,“hesaid。“Ye抣lhavedoneyonbefore。“

  “YoujustbetIhave,“saidMaitland,notalittlepleasedwithhimself。

  “A抦nosawman,“saidMcNish,alittlesullenly。“Adinnaken——I

  don’tknowsawsofthissort。I’majoiner。Heputmeoffthebench。“

  “Who?“saidMaitlandquickly。

  “Yonmanny,“repliedMcNishwithunmistakabledisgust。

  “Youwereonthebench,eh?Whatsortofworkwereyouon?“

  “Awasdaein’abitcounterwork。Awasnafastenoughforhim。“

  Mr。Maitlandcalledtheheadsawyer。

  “Putamanonhereforawhile,Powell,willyou?Youcomewithme,McNish。“

  Togethertheywentintotheplaningmill。Askingfortheforemanhefoundthathewasnowheretobeseen,thatindeedhehadnotbeeninthemillthatmorning。

  “Showmeyourwork,McNish,“hesaid。

  McNishledhimtoacornerofthemillwheresomefinecounterworkwasinprocess。

  “That’smywork,“hesaid,pointingtoapieceofoakrailing。

  Maitland,turningtheworkoverinhishands,ranhisfingeralongajointsomewhatclumsilyfitted。

  “Notthat,“saidMcNishhastily。“Maworkstopshere。“

  AgainMaitlandexaminedtherail。Hisexperiencedeyedetectedeasilythedifferenceintheworkmanship。

  “Isthereanythingelseofyoursabouthere?“heasked。McNishwenttoapileoffinishedworkandfromitselectedasmallswingdoorbeautifullypanelled。Maitland’seyegleamed。

  “Ah,that’sbetter,“hesaid。“Yes,that’sbetter。“

  Heturnedtooneoftheworkmenatthebenchnearby。

  “Whatjobisthis,Gibbon?“heasked。

  “It’stheBankjob,Ithink,“saidGibbon。

  “What?TheMerchants’Bankjob?Surelythatcan’tbe。Thatjobwasduetwoweeksago。“Maitlandturnedimpatientlytowardanolderman。“Ellis,“hesaidsharply,“doyouknowwhatjobthisis?“

  Elliscameandturnedoverthedifferentpartsofthework。

  “That’stheMerchants’Bankjob,sir,“hesaid。

  “Thenwhatisholdingthisup?“enquiredMaitlandwrathfully。

  “It’stheturnedwork,Ithink,sir。Iamnotsure,butIthinkI

  heardMr。Perrotteaskingaboutthattwoorthreedaysago。“Mr。

  Maitland’slipsmetinathinstraightline。

  “Youcangobacktoyoursaw,McNish,“hesaidshortly。

  “Ay,sir,“saidMcNish,histoneindicatingquietsatisfaction。

  AtGibbon’sbenchhepaused。“Ye’llnopitonythingpasthim,adoot,“hesaid,withagrimsmile,andpassedout。

  IneverypartoftheshopMr。Maitlandfoundsimilarexamplesofmismanagementandlackofco-ordinationinthevariousdepartmentsofthework。Itneedednomorethanacursoryinspectiontoconvincehimthatachangeofforemanwasasimplenecessity。

  Everywherehefoundnotonlyevidenceofwasteoftimebutalsoofwasteofmaterial。Itcuthimtothehearttoseebeautifulwoodmangledandruined。Allhislifehehadworkedwithwoodsofdifferentkinds。Heknewthemstandinginalltheirmatchlessgrandeur,intheprimevalforestandhadfollowedthemstepbystepallthewaytothefinishedproduct。Neverwithoutaheartpangdidhewitnessanoblewhitepine,God’shandiworkofcenturies,comecrashingtoearththroughthemeanergrowthbeneaththechopper’saxe。Theonlythingthatredeemedsuchadeedfromsacrilege,inhismind,wastoseethetreefittinglytransformedintoarticlesofbeautyandworthsuitableforman’suse。Hence,whenhesawlyinghereandtheredeformedanddisfiguredfragmentsoftheexquisitelygrainedwhitespruce,whichduringthewar,hehadwithsuchcareselectedforhisaeroplaneparts,hisveryheartroseinindignantwrath。AndfilledwiththiswrathhemadehiswaytotheofficeandstraightwaysummonedWickesandhissonJacktoconference。

  “Tonywillnevermakeaworkerinwood。Hecaresnothingforit,“

  hesaidbitterly。

  “Norinanythingelse,Dad,“saidJack,withalittlelaugh。

  “Youlaugh,butitisnolaughingmatter,“saidhisfatherreproachfully。

  “Iamsorry,Father,butyouknowIalwaysthoughtitwasamistaketoputTonyinchargeofanything。Why,hemighthavehadhiscommissionifhewerenotsuchanirresponsible,downwrightlazybeggar。Whatheneeds,asmyColonelusedtoprofanelysay,is’agoodold-fashionedSergeant-Majortoknockhelloutofhim’。And,believeme,Tonywasarattlingfinesoldierifhisofficerwouldregularly,systematicallyandeffectivelyexpelhisownspecialdevilfromhissystem。Heneedsthatstill。“

  “Whatcanwedowithhim?Isimplycan’tandwon’tdismisshim,asthatinfernallyefficientandcoolheadedScotdemands。YouheardabouttheGrievanceCommittee?“

  “Oh,thetownhasthestorywithembellishments。RupertStillwelltookcaretogivemeapicturesqueaccount。ButIwouldnothesitate,Dad。KickTonyagoodswiftkickonceaweekorso,or,ifthatisbeneathyourdignity,firehim。“

  “But,Jack,lad,wecan’tdothat,“saidhisfather,greatlydistressed,“afterwhat——“

  “Whynot?Hecarriedmeoutofthathellallright,andwhileI

  liveIshallrememberthat。Butheisaselfishbeggar。Hehasn’ttheinstinctforteamplay。Hehasn’ttheideaofresponsibilityfortheteam。Hegetssothathecannotmakehimselfdowhathejustdoesn’tfeellikedoing。Hedoesn’tcareatinker’scursefortheotherfellowsinthegamewithhim。“

  “Themanthatdoesn’tcareforotherfellowswillnevermakeaforeman,“saidMr。Maitlanddecisively。“Butcan’tsomethingbedonewithhim?“

  “There’sonlyonewaytohandleTony,“saidJack。“Ilearnedthatlongagoinschool。Hewasaprinceofhalf-backs,youknow,butI

  hadregularlytokickhimaboutbeforeeverybigmatch。Oh,TonyisafinesortbuthenearlybrokemyhearttillInearlybrokehisback。“

  “Thatdoesnothelpmuch,Jack。“ForthefirsttimeinhislifeGrantMaitlandwasatalossastohowheshouldhandleoneofhismen。WereitnotfortheletterinthedeskathishandhewouldhavemadeshortworkofTonyPerrotte。Buttheretheletterlayandinhishearttheinerasiblepictureitsetforth。

  “WhatisthespecialformthatTony’sdevilmenthastaken,mayI

  ask?“enquiredJack。

  “Well,Imaysaytoyou,whatWickesknowsandhasknownandhastriedforthreemonthstohidefrommeandfromhimself,Tonyhasmadeaboutascompleteamessoftheorganizationunderhiscareintheplaningmillascanbeimagined。Themillisstrewnwiththewreckageofunfulfilledorders。Hehasnosenseoftimevalue。

  To-morrowisasgoodasto-day,nextweekasthisweek。Aforemanwithoutasenseoftimevalueisnogood。Andhedoesnotvaluematerial。Wastetohimisnothing。Anotherfataldefect。Themantowhomminutesarenotpotentialgoldandmaterialpotentialproductcanneverhopetobeamanufacturer。IfonlyIhadnotbeenawayfromhome!Butthethingis,whatistobedone?“

  “Inthewordsofafamousstatesmanmuchabusedindeed,Isuggest,’Waitandsee。’Meantime,findsomewayofkickinghimintohisjob。“

  Thisprovedtobeinthepresentsituationapolicyofwisdom。ItwasTonyhimselfwhofurnishedthesolution。FromthemensupposedtobeworkingunderhisordershelearnedthedayfollowingMaitland’svisitofinspectionsomethingofthedetailsofthatvisit。Hequicklymadeuphismindthatthedayofreckoningcouldnotlongbepostponed。NoneknewbetterthanTonyhimselfthathewasnoforeman;nonesowellthatheloathedthejobwhichhadbeenthrustuponhimbythefatherofthemanwhomhehadcarriedoutfromtheverymouthofhell。Itwassomethingtohiscreditthatheloathedhimselfforacceptingtheposition。Yet,withirresponsibleprocrastination,heputoffthedayofreckoning。

  But,sometendayslater,andafteranightwithsomekindredspiritsofhisownBattalion,anightprolongedintotheearlyhoursoftheworkingday,Tonypresentedhimselfattheoffice,gay,reckless,desperate,butquitecomposmentisandquitemasterofhismeansoflocomotion。

  Heappearedintheouteroffice,stillinhiseveninggarb。

  “Mr。Wickes,“hesaidinsolemngravity,“pleasehaveyourstenographertakethisletter。“

  Mr。Wickes,aghast,strovetohushhisvibranttones,indicatinginexcitedpantomimethepresenceofthechiefintheinneroffice。

  HemightaseffectivelyhavestriventostaytheEastwindatthattimesweepingupthevalley。

  “Areyouready,mydear?“saidTony,smilingpleasantlyatthegirl。“Allright,proceed。’DearMr。Maitland:’Gotthat?

  ’Consciousofmyunfitnessforthepositionofforemanin——’“

  “Hush,hush,Tony,“imploredMr。Wickes。

  Tonywavedhimaside。

点击下载App,搜索"To Him That Hath",免费读到尾