He turned and walked quickly to the door.
Butler got up.
He had thought to manage this differently.
He had thought to denounce or even assault this man.
He was about to make some insinuating remark which would compel an answer, some direct charge; but Cowperwood was out and away as jaunty as ever.
The old man was flustered, enraged, disappointed.
He opened the small office door which led into the adjoining room, and called,
"Owen!"
"Yes, father."
"Send over to Cowperwood's office and get that money."
"You decided to call it, eh?"
"I have."
Owen was puzzled by the old man's angry mood.
He wondered what it all meant, but thought he and Cowperwood might have had a few words.
He went out to his desk to write a note and call a clerk.
Butler went to the window and stared out.
He was angry, bitter, brutal in his vein.
"The dirty dog!" he suddenly exclaimed to himself, in a low voice.
"I'll take every dollar he's got before I'm through with him.
I'll send him to jail, I will.
I'll break him, I will.
Wait!"
He clinched his big fists and his teeth.
"I'll fix him.
I'll show him.
The dog!
The damned scoundrel!"
Never in his life before had he been so bitter, so cruel, so relentless in his mood.
He walked his office floor thinking what he could do.
Question Aileen—that was what he would do.
If her face, or her lips, told him that his suspicion was true, he would deal with Cowperwood later.
This city treasurer business, now.
It was not a crime in so far as Cowperwood was concerned; but it might be made to be.
So now, telling the clerk to say to Owen that he had gone down the street for a few moments, he boarded a street-car and rode out to his home, where he found his elder daughter just getting ready to go out.
She wore a purple-velvet street dress edged with narrow, flat gilt braid, and a striking gold-and-purple turban.
She had on dainty new boots of bronze kid and long gloves of lavender suede.
In her ears was one of her latest affectations, a pair of long jet earrings.
The old Irishman realized on this occasion, when he saw her, perhaps more clearly than he ever had in his life, that he had grown a bird of rare plumage.
"Where are you going, daughter?" he asked, with a rather unsuccessful attempt to conceal his fear, distress, and smoldering anger.
"To the library," she said easily, and yet with a sudden realization that all was not right with her father.
His face was too heavy and gray.
He looked tired and gloomy.
"Come up to my office a minute," he said.
"I want to see you before you go."
Aileen heard this with a strange feeling of curiosity and wonder.
It was not customary for her father to want to see her in his office just when she was going out; and his manner indicated, in this instance, that the exceptional procedure portended a strange revelation of some kind.
Aileen, like every other person who offends against a rigid convention of the time, was conscious of and sensitive to the possible disastrous results which would follow exposure.
She had often thought about what her family would think if they knew what she was doing; she had never been able to satisfy herself in her mind as to what they would do.
Her father was a very vigorous man.
But she had never known him to be cruel or cold in his attitude toward her or any other member of the family, and especially not toward her.