Five minutes later the girl came into the office with a slip of paper.

"The Plover Motor Car Company is registered at 604, Gracechurch

Street," she said. "It has a capital of eighty thousand pounds, of

which forty thousand pounds is paid up. It has works at Kenwood, in

the north-west of London, and the managing director is Mr. Charles O.

Soames."

Bones could only look at her open-mouthed.

"Where on earth did you discover all this surprising information, dear

miss?" he asked, and the girl laughed quietly.

"I can even tell you their telephone number," she said, "because it

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happens to be in the Telephone Book. The rest I found in the Stock

Exchange Year Book."

Bones shook his head in silent admiration.

"If there's a typewriter in London----" he began, but she had fled.

An hour later Bones had evolved his magnificent idea. It was an idea

worthy of his big, generous heart and his amazing optimism.

Mr. Charles O. Soames, who sat at a littered table in his

shirt-sleeves, was a man with a big shock of hair and large and heavily

drooping moustache, and a black chin. He smoked a big, heavy pipe,

and, at the moment Bones was announced, his busy pencil was calling

into life a new company offering the most amazing prospects to the

young and wealthy.

He took the card from the hands of his very plain typist, and

suppressed the howl of joy which rose to his throat. For the name of

Bones was known in the City of London, and it was the dream of such men

as Charles O. Soames that one day they would walk from the office of

Mr. Augustus Tibbetts with large parcels of his paper currency under

each arm.

He jumped up from his chair and slipped on a coat, pushed the

prospectus he was writing under a heap of documents--one at least of

which bore a striking family likeness to a county court writ--and

welcomed his visitor decorously and even profoundly.

"In re Plover Car," said Bones briskly. He prided himself upon

coming to the point with the least possible delay.

The face of Mr. Soames fell.

"Oh, you want to buy a car?" he said. He might have truly said "the

car," but under the circumstances he thought that this would be

tactless.

"No, dear old company promoter," said Bones, "I do not want to buy your

car. In fact, you have no cars to sell."

"We've had a lot of labour trouble," said Mr. Soames hurriedly.

"You've no idea of the difficulties in production--what with the

Government holding up supplies--but in a few months----"

"I know all about that," said Bones. "Now, I'm a man of affairs and a

man of business."

He said this so definitely that it sounded like a threat.




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