Pemberton did not think it necessary to discuss with the architect his reasons for engaging Mr. Trimble as superintendent, but he had what seemed to him sufficient cause to look into the building more thoroughly than he was able to himself. After the contract had been let, the trustees had received a number of anonymous letters, which made charges that all had not been square in getting the bids for the building. These letters had gone into the waste basket, as mere cowardly attacks from some disgruntled contractor. Then, one day while the building was still in the rough, and the tile was going in, Pemberton overheard one of the laborers say to his mate:—
"Look at that stuff, now. It ain't no good at all," and the man gave the big yellow tile a kick with his foot; "it's nothin' but dust. Them's rotten bad tiles, I tell yer."
And the other Paddy answered reflectively, scratching his elbow the while:—
"It'll go all the same. Sure, it's more money in his pocket. Ain't that so, boss?"
He appealed to Pemberton, whom he took for one of the passers-by gaping idly at the building.
"What do you mean?" the trustee demanded sharply.
"Mane? The less you pay the more you git in this wurld!"
"Hist, you fule," the other one warned, twisting his head in the direction of the boss mason, who was not far away.
Pemberton was not the man to take much thought of a laborer's idle talk. But the words remained in his mind, and a few weeks later, happening to meet the superintendent of a large construction company in the smoking-car of the Forest Park train, he asked the man some questions about fireproof building.
"Why did your people refuse to bid the second time?" he inquired finally.