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"You're not crippled?"
"No, but I've lost every dollar I have made since I've been in the city.
Jones has gone under; Pell has gone under. Cramp & Co. will have to make a statement, and get a little time, but they will swim. The General is the only man of the lot who isn't shaken. But, Toll, it's devilish hard. It scares me. A few more such slices would spoil my cheese."
"Well, now, General, why do you go into these things at all? You are making money fast enough in a regular business."
"Ah, but it's tame, tame, tame! I must have excitement. Theatres are played out, horses are played out, and suppers raise the devil with me."
"Then take it easy. Don't risk so much. You used to do this sort of thing well--used to do it right every time. You got up a good deal of reputation for foresight and skill."
"I know, and every man ruined in the International Mail will curse me. I led them into it. I shall have a sweet time in Wall street when I go there again. But it's like brandy; a man wants a larger dose every time, and I shall clean them out yet."
Talbot's policy was to make the General last. He wanted to advise him for his good, because his princ.i.p.al's permanent prosperity was the basis of his own. He saw that he was getting beyond control, and, under an exterior of compliance and complaisance, he was genuinely alarmed.
"Toll," said Mr. Belcher, "you are a good fellow."
"Thank you, General," said the factor, a smile spreading around his s.h.i.+ning teeth. "My wife will be glad to know it."
"By the way--speaking of your wife--have you seen anything of Mrs.
Dillingham lately?"
"Nothing. She is commonly supposed to be absorbed by the General."
"Common Supposition is a greater fool than I wish it were."
"That won't do, General. There never was a more evident case of killing at first sight than that."
"Well, Toll, I believe the woman is fond of me, but she has a queer way of showing it. I think she has changed. It seems so to me, but she's a devilish fine creature. Ah, my heart! my heart! Toll."
"You were complaining of it the other day. It was a theological seminary then. Perhaps that is the name you know her by."
"Not much theological seminary about her!" with a laugh.
"Well, there's one thing that you can comfort yourself with, General; she sees no man but you."
"Is that so?" inquired Mr. Belcher, eagerly.
"That is what everybody says."
Mr. Belcher rolled this statement as a sweet morsel under his tongue.
She must be hiding her pa.s.sion from him under an impression of its hopelessness! Poor woman! He would see her at the first opportunity.
"Toll," said Mr. Belcher, after a moment of delicious reflection, "you're a good fellow."
"I think I've heard that remark before."
"Yes, you're a good fellow, and I'd like to do something for you."
"You've done a great deal for me already, General."
"Yes, and I'm going to do something more."
"Will you put it in my hand or my hat?" inquired Talbot, jocularly.
"Toll, how much Crooked Valley stock have you?"
"A thousand shares."
"What did you buy it for?"
"To help you."
"What have you kept it for?"
"To help keep the General at the head of the management."
"Turn about is fair play, isn't it?"
"That's the adage," responded Talbot.
"Well, I'm going to put that stock up; do you understand?"
"How will you do it?"
"By saying I'll do it. I want it whispered along the line that the General is going to put that stock up within a week. They're all greedy.
They are all just like the rest of us. They know it isn't worth a continental copper, but they want a hand in the General's speculations, and the General wants it understood that he would like to have them share in his profits."
"I think I understand," said Talbot.
"Toll, I've got another vision. Hold on now! I behold a man in the General's confidence--a reliable, business man--who whispers to his friend that he heard the General say that he had all his plans laid for putting up the Crooked Valley stock within a week. This friend whispers it to another friend. No names are mentioned. It goes from friend to friend. It is whispered through every town along the line. Everybody gets crazy over it, and everybody quietly sends in an order for stock.
In the meantime the General and his factor, yielding to the pressure--melted before the public demand--gently and tenderly unload!
The vision still unrolls. Months later I behold the General buying back the stock at his own price, and with it maintaining his place in the management. Have you followed me?"
"Yes, General, I've seen it all. I comprehend it, and I shall unload with all the gentleness and tenderness possible."
Then the whimsical scoundrel and his willing lieutenant laughed a long, heartless laugh.
"Toll, I feel better, and I believe I'll get up," said the General. "Let this vision sink deep into your soul. Then give it wings, and speed it on its mission. Remember that this is a vale of tears, and don't set your affections on things below. By-by!"
Talbot went down stairs, drawing on his gloves, and laughing. Then he went out into the warm light, b.u.t.toned up his coat instinctively, as if to hide the plot he carried, jumped into his coupe, and went to his business.
Mr. Belcher dressed himself with more than his usual care, went to Mrs.
Belcher's room and inquired about his children, then went to his library, and drew forth from a secret drawer a little book. He looked it over for a few minutes, then placed it in his packet, and went out. The allusion that had been made to Mrs. Dillingham, and the a.s.surance that he was popularly understood to be her lover, and the only man who was regarded by her with favor, intoxicated him, and his old pa.s.sion came back upon him.
It was a strange manifestation of his brutal nature that at this moment of his trouble, and this epoch of his cruelty and crime, he longed for the comfort of a woman's sympathy. He was too much absorbed by his affairs to be moved by that which was basest in his regard for his beautiful idol. If he could feel her hand upon his forehead; if she could tell him that she was sorry for him; if he could know that she loved him; ay, if he could be a.s.sured that this woman, whom he had believed to be capable of guilt, had prayed for him, it would have been balm to his heart. He was sore with struggle, and guilt, and defeat. He longed for love and tenderness. As if he were a great b.l.o.o.d.y dog, just coming from the fight of an hour, in which he had been worsted, and seeking for a tender hand to pat his head, and call him "poor, good old fellow," the General longed for a woman's loving recognition. He was in his old mood of self-pity. He wanted to be petted, smoothed, commiserated, rea.s.sured; and there was only one woman in all the world from whom such ministry would be grateful.
He knew that Mrs. Dillingham had heard of his loss, for she heard of and read everything. He wanted her to know that it had not shaken him. He would not for the world have her suppose that he was growing poor. Still to appear to her as a person of wealth and power; still to hold her confidence as a man of multiplied resources, was, perhaps, the deepest ambition that moved him. He had found that he could not use her in the management of his affairs. Though from the first, up to the period of her acquaintance with Harry Benedict, she had led him on to love her by every charm she possessed, and every art she knew, she had always refused to be debased by him in any way.
When he went out of his house, at the close of his interviews with Talbot and Mrs. Belcher, it was without a definitely formed purpose to visit the charming widow. He simply knew that his heart was hungry. The sun-flower is gross, but it knows the sun as well as the morning-glory, and turns to it as naturally. It was with like unreasoning instinct that he took the little book from its drawer, put on his hat, went down his steps, and entered the street that led him toward Mrs. Dillingham's house. He could not keep away from her. He would not if he could, and so, in ten minutes, he was seated with her, _vis a vis_.