Dolly Longestaffe had found himself
compelled to go to Fetter Lane immediately after that
meeting in Bruton Street at which he had consented
to wait two days longer for the payment of his money.
This was on a Wednesday, the day appointed for the
payment being Friday. He had undertaken that,
on his part, Squercum should be made to desist from
further immediate proceedings, and he could only carry
out his word by visiting Squercum. The trouble
to him was very great, but he began to feel that he
almost liked it. The excitement was nearly as
good as that of loo. Of course it was a ’horrid
bore,’ this having to go about in
cabs under the sweltering sun of a London July day.
Of course it was a ’horrid bore,’ this
doubt about his money. And it went altogether
against the grain with him that he should be engaged
in any matter respecting the family property in agreement
with his father and Mr Bideawhile. But there
was an importance in it that sustained him amidst
his troubles. It is said that if you were to take
a man of moderate parts and make him Prime Minister
out of hand, he might probably do as well as other
Prime Ministers, the greatness of the work elevating
the man to its own level. In that way Dolly was
elevated to the level of a man of business, and felt
and enjoyed his own capacity. ‘By George!’
It depended chiefly upon him whether such a man as
Melmotte should or should not be charged before the
Lord Mayor. ‘Perhaps I oughtn’t to
have promised,’ he said to Squercum, sitting
in the lawyer’s office on a high-legged stool
with a cigar in his mouth. He preferred Squercum
to any other lawyer he had met because Squercum’s
room was untidy and homely, because there was nothing
awful about it, and because he could sit in what position
he pleased, and smoke all the time.
‘Well; I don’t think you
ought, if you ask me,’ said Squercum.
‘You weren’t there to be asked, old fellow.’
’Bideawhile shouldn’t
have asked you to agree to anything in my absence,’
said Squercum indignantly. ’It was a very
unprofessional thing on his part, and so I shall take
an opportunity of telling him.’
‘It was you told me to go.’
’Well; yes.
I wanted you to see what they were at in that room;
but I told you to look on and say nothing.’
‘I didn’t speak half-a-dozen words.’
’You shouldn’t have spoken
those words. Your father then is quite clear
that you did not sign the letter?’
‘Oh, yes; the governor
is pig-headed, you know, but he’s honest.’
‘That’s a matter of course,’
said the lawyer. ’All men are honest; but
they are generally specially honest to their own side.
Bideawhile’s honest; but you’ve got to
fight him deuced close to prevent his getting the
better of you. Melmotte has promised to pay the
money on Friday, has he?’
‘He’s to bring it with him to Bruton Street.’
’I don’t believe a word
of it; and I’m sure Bideawhile doesn’t.
In what shape will he bring it? He’ll give
you a cheque dated on Monday, and that’ll give
him two days more, and then on Monday there’ll
be a note to say the money can’t be lodged till
Wednesday. There should be no compromising with
such a man. You only get from one mess into another.
I told you neither to do anything or to say anything.’
’I suppose we can’t help
ourselves now. You’re to be there on Friday.
I particularly bargained for that. It you’re
there, there won’t be any more compromising.’
Squercum made one or two further remarks
to his client, not at all flattering to Dolly’s
vanity, which might have caused offence
had not there been such perfectly good feeling between
the attorney and the young man. As it was, Dolly
replied to everything that was said with increased
flattery. ‘If I was a sharp fellow like
you, you know,’ said Dolly, ‘of course
I should get along better; but I ain’t, you know.’
It was then settled that they should meet each other,
and also meet Mr Longestaffe senior, Bideawhile, and
Melmotte, at twelve o’clock on Friday morning
in Bruton Street.
Squercum was by no means satisfied.
He had busied himself in this matter, and had ferreted
things out, till he had pretty nearly got to the bottom
of that affair about the houses in the East, and had
managed to induce the heirs of the old man who had
died to employ him. As to the Pickering property
he had not a doubt on the subject. Old Longestaffe
had been induced by promises of wonderful aid and by
the bribe of a seat at the Board of the South Central
Pacific and Mexican Railway to give up the title-deeds
of the property, as far as it was in his
power to give them up; and had endeavoured to induce
Dolly to do so also. As he had failed, Melmotte
had supplemented his work by ingenuity, with which
the reader is acquainted. All this was perfectly
clear to Squercum, who thought that he saw before him
a most attractive course of proceeding against the
Great Financier. It was pure ambition rather
than any hope of lucre that urged him on. He
regarded Melmotte as a grand swindler, perhaps
the grandest that the world had ever known, and
he could conceive no greater honour than the detection,
successful prosecution, and ultimate destroying of
so great a man. To have hunted down Melmotte
would make Squercum as great almost as Melmotte himself.
But he felt himself to have been unfairly hampered
by his own client. He did not believe that the
money would be paid; but delay might rob him of his
Melmotte. He had heard a good many things in
the City, and believed it to be quite out of the question
that Melmotte should raise the money, but
there were various ways in which a man might escape.
It may be remembered that Croll, the
German clerk, preceded Melmotte into the City on Wednesday
after Marie’s refusal to sign the deeds.
He, too, had his eyes open, and had perceived that
things were not looking as well as they used to look.
Croll had for many years been true to his patron,
having been, upon the whole, very well paid for such
truth. There had been times when things had gone
badly with him, but he had believed in Melmotte, and,
when Melmotte rose, had been rewarded for his faith.
Mr Croll at the present time had little investments
of his own, not made under his employer’s auspices,
which would leave him not absolutely without bread
for his family should the Melmotte affairs at any time
take an awkward turn. Melmotte had never required
from him service that was actually fraudulent, had
at any rate never required it by spoken words.
Mr Croll had not been over-scrupulous, and had occasionally
been very useful to Mr Melmotte. But there must
be a limit to all things; and why should any man sacrifice
himself beneath the ruins of a falling house, when
convinced that nothing he can do can prevent the fall?
Mr Croll would have been of course happy to witness
Miss Melmotte’s signature; but as for that other
kind of witnessing, this clearly to his
thinking was not the time for such good-nature on
his part.
‘You know what’s up now; don’t
you?’ said one of the junior clerks to Mr Croll
when he entered the office in Abchurch Lane.
‘A good deal will be up soon,’ said the
German.
‘Cohenlupe has gone!’
‘And to vere has Mr Cohenlupe gone?’
’He hasn’t been civil
enough to leave his address. I fancy he don’t
want his friends to have to trouble themselves by writing
to him. Nobody seems to know what’s become
of him.’
‘New York,’ suggested Mr Croll.
’They seem to think not.
They’re too hospitable in New York for Mr Cohenlupe
just at present. He’s travelling private.
He’s on the continent somewhere, half
across France by this time; but nobody knows what
route he has taken. That’ll be a poke in
the ribs for the old boy; eh, Croll?’
Croll merely shook his head. ’I wonder what
has become of Miles Grendall,’ continued the
clerk.
’Ven de rats is going avay it
is bad for de house. I like de rats to stay.’
’There seems to have been a
regular manufactory of Mexican Railway scrip.’
‘Our governor knew noding about dat,’
said Croll.
’He has a hat full of them at
any rate. If they could have been kept up another
fortnight they say Cohenlupe would have been worth
nearly a million of money, and the governor would
have been as good as the bank. Is it true they
are going to have him before the Lord Mayor about
the Pickering title-deeds?’ Croll declared that
he knew nothing about the matter, and settled himself
down to his work.
In little more than two hours he was
followed by Melmotte, who thus reached the City late
in the afternoon. It was he knew too late to
raise the money on that day, but he hoped that he might
pave the way for getting it on the next day, which
would be Thursday. Of course the first news which
he heard was of the defection of Mr Cohenlupe.
It was Croll who told him. He turned back, and
his jaw fell, but at first he said nothing.
‘It’s a bad thing,’ said Mr Croll.
’Yes; it is bad.
He had a vast amount of my property in his hands.
Where has he gone?’ Croll shook his head.
’It never rains but it pours,’ said Melmotte.
’Well; I’ll weather it all yet. I’ve
been worse than I am now, Croll, as you know, and
have had a hundred thousand pounds at my banker’s, loose
cash, before the month was out.’
‘Yes, indeed,’ said Croll.
’But the worst of it is that
every one around me is so damnably jealous. It
isn’t what I’ve lost that will crush me,
but what men will say that I’ve lost. Ever
since I began to stand for Westminster there has been
a dead set against me in the City. The whole of
that affair of the dinner was planned, planned,
by G , that it might ruin me.
It was all laid out just as you would lay the foundation
of a building. It is hard for one man to stand
against all that when he has dealings so large as
mine.’
‘Very hard, Mr Melmotte.’
’But they’ll find they’re
mistaken yet. There’s too much of the real
stuff, Croll, for them to crush me. Property’s
a kind of thing that comes out right at last.
It’s cut and come again, you know, if the stuff
is really there. But I mustn’t stop talking
here. I suppose I shall find Brehgert in Cuthbert’s
Court.’
’I should say so, Mr Melmotte.
Mr Brehgert never leaves much before six.’
Then Mr Melmotte took his hat and
gloves, and the stick that he usually carried, and
went out with his face carefully dressed in its usually
jaunty air. But Croll as he went heard him mutter
the name of Cohenlupe between his teeth. The
part which he had to act is one very difficult to
any actor. The carrying an external look of indifference
when the heart is sinking within, or has
sunk almost to the very ground, is more
than difficult; it is an agonizing task. In all
mental suffering the sufferer longs for solitude, for
permission to cast himself loose along the ground,
so that every limb and every feature of his person
may faint in sympathy with his heart. A grandly
urbane deportment over a crushed spirit and ruined
hopes is beyond the physical strength of most men; but
there have been men so strong. Melmotte very
nearly accomplished it. It was only to the eyes
of such a one as Herr Croll that the failure was perceptible.
Melmotte did find Mr Brehgert.
At this time Mr Brehgert had completed his correspondence
with Miss Longestaffe, in which he had mentioned the
probability of great losses from the anticipated commercial
failure in Mr Melmotte’s affairs. He had
now heard that Mr Cohenlupe had gone upon his travels,
and was therefore nearly sure that his anticipation
would be correct. Nevertheless, he received his
old friend with a smile. When large sums of money
are concerned there is seldom much of personal indignation
between man and man. The loss of fifty pounds
or of a few hundreds may create personal wrath; but
fifty thousand require equanimity. ’So
Cohenlupe hasn’t been seen in the City to-day,’
said Brehgert.
‘He has gone,’ said Melmotte hoarsely.
’I think I once told you that
Cohenlupe was not the man for large dealings.’
‘Yes, you did,’ said Melmotte.
‘Well; it can’t
be helped; can it? And what is it now?’
Then Melmotte explained to Mr Brehgert what it was
that he wanted then, taking the various documents
out of the bag which throughout the afternoon he had
carried in his hand. Mr Brehgert understood enough
of his friend’s affairs, and enough of affairs
in general, to understand readily all that was required.
He examined the documents, declaring, as he did so,
that he did not know how the thing could be arranged
by Friday. Melmotte replied that L50,000 was
not a very large sum of money, that the security offered
was worth twice as much as that. ’You will
leave them with me this evening,’ said Brehgert.
Melmotte paused for a moment, and said that he would
of course do so. He would have given much, very
much, to have been sufficiently master of himself to
have assented without hesitation; but then
the weight within was so very heavy!
Having left the papers and the bag
with Mr Brehgert, he walked westwards to the House
of Commons. He was accustomed to remain in the
City later than this, often not leaving it till seven, though
during the last week or ten days he had occasionally
gone down to the House in the afternoon. It was
now Wednesday, and there was no evening sitting; but
his mind was too full of other things to allow him
to remember this. As he walked along the Embankment,
his thoughts were very heavy. How would things
go with him? What would be the end of it?
Ruin; yes, but there were worse things than
ruin. And a short time since he had been so fortunate; had
made himself so safe! As he looked back at it,
he could hardly say how it had come to pass that he
had been driven out of the track that he had laid
down for himself. He had known that ruin would
come, and had made himself so comfortably safe, so
brilliantly safe, in spite of ruin. But insane
ambition had driven him away from his anchorage.
He told himself over and over again that the fault
had been not in circumstances, not in that
which men call Fortune, but in his own
incapacity to bear his position. He saw it now.
He felt it now. If he could only begin again,
how different would his conduct be!
But of what avail were such regrets
as these? He must take things as they were now,
and see that, in dealing with them, he allowed himself
to be carried away neither by pride nor cowardice.
And if the worst should come to the worst, then let
him face it like a man! There was a certain manliness
about him which showed itself perhaps as strongly in
his own self-condemnation as in any other part of his
conduct at this time. Judging of himself, as
though he were standing outside himself and looking
on to another man’s work, he pointed out to himself
his own shortcomings. If it were all to be done
again he thought that he could avoid this bump against
the rocks on one side, and that terribly shattering
blow on the other. There was much that he was
ashamed of, many a little act which recurred
to him vividly in this solitary hour as a thing to
be repented of with inner sackcloth and ashes.
But never once, not for a moment, did it occur to
him that he should repent of the fraud in which his
whole life had been passed. No idea ever crossed
his mind of what might have been the result had he
lived the life of an honest man. Though he was
inquiring into himself as closely as he could, he
never even told himself that he had been dishonest.
Fraud and dishonesty had been the very principle of
his life, and had so become a part of his blood and
bones that even in this extremity of his misery he
made no question within himself as to his right judgment
in regard to them. Not to cheat, not to be a scoundrel,
not to live more luxuriously than others by cheating
more brilliantly, was a condition of things to which
his mind had never turned itself. In that respect
he accused himself of no want of judgment. But
why had he, so unrighteous himself, not made friends
to himself of the Mammon of unrighteousness?
Why had he not conciliated Lord Mayors? Why had
he trod upon all the corns of all his neighbours?
Why had he been insolent at the India Office?
Why had he trusted any man as he had trusted Cohenlupe?
Why had he not stuck to Abchurch Lane instead of going
into Parliament? Why had he called down unnecessary
notice on his head by entertaining the Emperor of
China? It was too late now, and he must bear
it; but these were the things that had ruined him.
He walked into Palace Yard and across
it, to the door of Westminster Abbey, before he found
out that Parliament was not sitting. ’Oh,
Wednesday! Of course it is,’ he said, turning
round and directing his steps towards Grosvenor Square.
Then he remembered that in the morning he had declared
his purpose of dining at home, and now he did not know
what better use to make of the present evening.
His house could hardly be very comfortable to him.
Marie no doubt would keep out of his way, and he did
not habitually receive much pleasure from his wife’s
company. But in his own house he could at least
be alone. Then, as he walked slowly across the
park, thinking so intently on matters as hardly to
observe whether he himself were observed or no, he
asked himself whether it still might not be best for
him to keep the money which was settled on his daughter,
to tell the Longestaffes that he could make no payment,
and to face the worst that Mr Squercum could do to
him, for he knew already how busy Mr Squercum
was in the matter. Though they should put him
on his trial for forgery, what of that? He had
heard of trials in which the accused criminals had
been heroes to the multitude while their cases were
in progress, who had been feted from the
beginning to the end though no one had doubted their
guilt, and who had come out unscathed
at the last. What evidence had they against him?
It might be that the Longestaffes and Bideawhiles and
Squercums should know that he was a forger, but their
knowledge would not produce a verdict. He, as
member for Westminster, as the man who had entertained
the Emperor, as the owner of one of the most gorgeous
houses in London, as the great Melmotte, could certainly
command the best half of the bar. He already
felt what popular support might do for him. Surely
there need be no despondency while so good a hope
remained to him! He did tremble as he remembered
Dolly Longestaffe’s letter, and the letter of
the old man who was dead. And he knew that it
was possible that other things might be adduced; but
would it not be better to face it all than surrender
his money and become a pauper, seeing, as he did very
clearly, that even by such surrender he could not
cleanse his character?
But he had given those forged documents
into the hands of Mr Brehgert! Again he had acted
in a hurry, without giving sufficient thought
to the matter in hand. He was angry with himself
for that also. But how is a man to give sufficient
thought to his affairs when no step that he takes
can be other than ruinous? Yes; he
had certainly put into Brehgert’s hands means
of proving him to have been absolutely guilty of forgery.
He did not think that Marie would disclaim the signatures,
even though she had refused to sign the deeds, when
she should understand that her father had written
her name; nor did he think that his clerk would be
urgent against him, as the forgery of Croll’s
name could not injure Croll. But Brehgert, should
he discover what had been done, would certainly not
permit him to escape. And now he had put these
forgeries without any guard into Brehgert’s hands.
He would tell Brehgert in the morning
that he had changed his mind. He would see Brehgert
before any action could have been taken on the documents,
and Brehgert would no doubt restore them to him.
Then he would instruct his daughter to hold the money
fast, to sign no paper that should be put before her,
and to draw the income herself. Having done that,
he would let his foes do their worst. They might
drag him to gaol. They probably would do so.
He had an idea that he could not be admitted to bail
if accused of forgery. But he would bear all that.
If convicted he would bear the punishment, still hoping
that an end might come. But how great was the
chance that they might fail to convict him! As
to the dead man’s letter, and as to Dolly Longestaffe’s
letter, he did not think that any sufficient evidence
could be found. The evidence as to the deeds by
which Marie was to have released the property was
indeed conclusive; but he believed that he might still
recover those documents. For the present it must
be his duty to do nothing, when he should
have recovered and destroyed those documents, and
to live before the eyes of men as though he feared
nothing.
He dined at home alone, in the study,
and after dinner carefully went through various bundles
of papers, preparing them for the eyes of those ministers
of the law who would probably before long have the
privilege of searching them. At dinner, and while
he was thus employed, he drank a bottle of champagne, feeling
himself greatly comforted by the process. If
he could only hold up his head and look men in the
face, he thought that he might still live through it
all. How much had he done by his own unassisted
powers! He had once been imprisoned for fraud
at Hamburg, and had come out of gaol a pauper; friendless,
with all his wretched antecedents against him.
Now he was a member of the British House of Parliament,
the undoubted owner of perhaps the most gorgeously
furnished house in London, a man with an established
character for high finance, a commercial
giant whose name was a familiar word on all the exchanges
of the two hemispheres. Even though he should
be condemned to penal servitude for life, he would
not all die. He rang the bell and desired that
Madame Melmotte might be sent to him, and bade the
servant bring him brandy.
In ten minutes his poor wife came
crawling into the room. Every one connected with
Melmotte regarded the man with a certain amount of
awe, every one except Marie, to whom alone
he had at times been himself almost gentle. The
servants all feared him, and his wife obeyed him implicitly
when she could not keep away from him. She came
in now and stood opposite him, while he spoke to her.
She never sat in his presence in that room. He
asked her where she and Marie kept their jewelry; for
during the last twelve months rich trinkets had been
supplied to both of them. Of course she answered
by another question. ‘Is anything going
to happen, Melmotte?’
’A good deal is going to happen.
Are they here in this house, or in Grosvenor Square?’
‘They are here.’
’Then have them all packed up, as
small as you can; never mind about wool and cases
and all that. Have them close to your hand so
that if you have to move you can take them with you.
Do you understand?’
‘Yes; I understand.’
‘Why don’t you speak, then?’
‘What is going to happen, Melmotte?’
’How can I tell? You ought
to know by this time that when a man’s work
is such as mine, things will happen. You’ll
be safe enough. Nothing can hurt you.’
‘Can they hurt you, Melmotte?’
’Hurt me! I don’t
know what you call hurting. Whatever there is
to be borne, I suppose it is I must bear it.
I have not had it very soft all my life hitherto,
and I don’t think it’s going to be very
soft now.’
‘Shall we have to move?’
’Very likely. Move!
What’s the harm of moving? You talk of moving
as though that were the worst thing that could happen.
How would you like to be in some place where they
wouldn’t let you move?’
‘Are they going to send you to prison?’
‘Hold your tongue.’
‘Tell me, Melmotte; are
they going to?’ Then the poor woman did sit
down, overcome by her feelings.
‘I didn’t ask you to come
here for a scene,’ said Melmotte. ’Do
as I bid you about your own jewels, and Marie’s.
The thing is to have them in small compass, and that
you should not have it to do at the last moment, when
you will be flurried and incapable. Now you needn’t
stay any longer, and it’s no good asking any
questions because I shan’t answer them.’
So dismissed, the poor woman crept out again, and
immediately, after her own slow fashion, went to work
with her ornaments.
Melmotte sat up during the greater
part of the night, sometimes sipping brandy and water,
and sometimes smoking. But he did no work, and
hardly touched a paper after his wife left him.