ouble. These Lancashire
lads don't stick at a bit. They'll pull you limb from limb if you give
them any of Mr. Foley's soft sawder. We're out to fight--in our own
way, perhaps, but to fight."
"It is true that I have spent the week-end with Mr. Foley," Maraton
admitted. "I had thought, perhaps, to have reported to you to-day the
substance of our conversation. I feel now, though," he continued, "that
it would be useless. You call yourselves Labour Members, and in your
way you are no doubt excellent machines. I, too, call myself a Labour
man, but we stand far apart in our ideas, in our methods. I think, Mr.
Peter Dale and gentlemen, that we will go our own ways. We will fight
for the people as seems best to us. I do not think that an alliance is
possible."
They stared at him, a little amazed.
"Look here, young man," Peter Dale expostulated, "what's it all about?
What do you want from us? I spoke of a job as lecturer just now. If
you've really got the gift of speaking that they say you have, that'll
bring you into Parliament in time, and I reckon you'll settle down fast
enough with the rest of us then. Until then, what is it you want? We
are sensible men. We all know you can't go spouting round the country
for nothing, whether it's for the people, or woman's suffrage, or any
old game. Open your mouth and let's hear what you have to say."
Maraton rose to his feet.
"I will, perhaps," he said, "come to you with an offer a little later
on. For the present I must be excused. I have an appointment which Mr.
Henneford has arranged for me with Mr. Preston, Secretary of the Union
here. There are a good many facts I need to make sure of before
to-night."
Mr. Dale moved his pipe to the other side of his mouth.
"That's all very well for a tale," he muttered, "but I'm not so sure
about letting you go on to the platform at all to-night. We don't want
our people fed up with the wrong sort of stuff."
Maraton smiled.
"Mr. Dale," he begged quietly, "listen." They were all, for a moment,
silent. Maraton opened the window. From outside came a low roar of
voices from the packed crowds who were even now blocking the street.
"These are my masters, Mr. Dale," Maraton said, "and I don't think
there's any power you or your friends could make use of to-night, which
will keep me from my appointment with them."
CHAPTER XVII
In the roar of applause which followed Maraton's brilliant but wholly
unprepared peroration, a roa
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