The suicide of Charles Cressler had
occurred on the tenth of June, and the report of it,
together with the wretched story of his friend’s
final surrender to a temptation he had never outlived,
reached Curtis Jadwin early on the morning of the
eleventh.
He and Gretry were at their accustomed
places in the latter’s office, and the news
seemed to shut out all the sunshine that had been flooding
in through the broad plate-glass windows. After
their first incoherent horror, the two sat staring
at each other, speechless.
“My God, my God,” groaned
Jadwin, as if in the throes of a deadly sickness.
“He was in the Crookes’ ring, and we never
knew it I’ve killed him, Sam.
I might as well have held that pistol myself.”
He stamped his foot, striking his fist across his
forehead, “Great God my best friend Charlie Charlie
Cressler! Sam, I shall go mad if this if
this ”
“Steady, steady does it, J.,”
warned the broker, his hand upon his shoulder, “we
got to keep a grip on ourselves to-day. We’ve
got a lot to think of. We’ll think about
Charlie, later. Just now ... well it’s
business now. Mathewson & Knight have called on
us for margins twenty thousand dollars.”
He laid the slip down in front of
Jadwin, as he sat at his desk.
“Oh, this can wait?” exclaimed
Jadwin. “Let it go till this afternoon.
I can’t talk business now. Think of Carrie Mrs.
Cressler, I ”
“No,” answered Gretry,
reflectively and slowly, looking anywhere but in Jadwin’s
face. “N no, I don’t think
we’d better wait. I think we’d better
meet these margin calls promptly. It’s always
better to keep our trades margined up.”
Jadwin faced around.
“Why,” he cried, “one
would think, to hear you talk, as though there was
danger of me busting here at any hour.”
Gretry did not answer. There
was a moment’s silence Then the broker caught
his principal’s eye and held it a second.
“Well,” he answered, “you
saw how freely they sold to us in the Pit yesterday.
We’ve got to buy, and buy and buy, to keep our
price up; and look here, look at these reports from
our correspondents everything points to
a banner crop. There’s been an increase
of acreage everywhere, because of our high prices.
See this from Travers” he picked
up a despatch and read: “’Preliminary
returns of spring wheat in two Dakotas, subject to
revision, indicate a total area seeded of sixteen
million acres, which added to area in winter wheat
states, makes total of forty-three million, or nearly
four million acres greater than last year.’”
“Lot of damned sentiment,”
cried Jadwin, refusing to be convinced. “Two-thirds
of that wheat won’t grade, and Europe will take
nearly all of it. What we ought to do is to send
our men into the Pit and buy another million, buy
more than these fools can offer. Buy ’em
to a standstill.”
“That takes a big pile of money
then,” said the broker. “More than
we can lay our hands on this morning. The best
we can do is to take all the Bears are offering, and
support the market. The moment they offer us
wheat and we don’t buy it, that moment as
you know, yourself they’ll throw
wheat at you by the train load, and the price will
break, and we with it.”
“Think we’ll get rid of
much wheat to-day?” demanded Jadwin.
By now it had became vitally necessary
for Jadwin to sell out his holdings. His “long
line” was a fearful expense, insurance and storage
charges were eating rapidly into the profits.
He must get rid of the load he was carrying, little
by little. To do this at a profit, he had adopted
the expedient of flooding the Pit with buying orders
just before the close of the session, and then as
the price rose under this stimulus, selling quickly,
before it had time to break. At first this had
succeeded. But of late he must buy more and more
to keep the price up, while the moment that he began
to sell, the price began to drop; so that now, in
order to sell one bushel, he must buy two.
“Think we can unload much on
’em to-day?” repeated Jadwin.
“I don’t know,”
answered Gretry, slowly and thoughtfully. “Perhaps there’s
a chance . Frankly, J., I don’t think
we can. The Pit is taking heart, that’s
the truth of it. Those fellows are not so scared
of us as they were a while ago. It’s the
new crop, as I’ve said over and over again.
We’ve put wheat so high, that all the farmers
have planted it, and are getting ready to dump it
on us. The Pit knows that, of course. Why,
just think, they are harvesting in some places.
These fellows we’ve caught in the corner will
be able to buy all the wheat they want from the farmers
if they can hold out a little longer. And that
Government report yesterday showed that the growing
wheat is in good condition.”
“Nothing of the sort. It was a little over
eighty-six.”
“Good enough,” declared
Gretry, “good enough so that it broke the price
down to a dollar and twenty. Just think, we were
at a dollar and a half a little while ago.”
“And we’ll be at two dollars
in another ten days, I tell you.”
“Do you know how we stand, J.?”
said the broker gravely. “Do you know how
we stand financially? It’s taken
pretty nearly every cent of our ready money to support
this July market. Oh, we can figure out our paper
profits into the millions. We’ve got thirty,
forty, fifty million bushels of wheat that’s
worth over a dollar a bushel, but if we can’t
sell it, we’re none the better off and
that wheat is costing us six thousand dollars a day.
Hell, old man, where’s the money going to come
from? You don’t seem to realise that we
are in a precarious condition.” He raised
an arm, and pointed above him in the direction of the
floor of the Board of Trade.
“The moment we can’t give
our boys Landry Court, and the rest of
’em the moment we can’t give
them buying orders, that Pit will suck us down like
a chip. The moment we admit that we can’t
buy all the wheat that’s offered, there’s
the moment we bust.”
“Well, we’ll buy it,”
cried Jadwin, through his set teeth. “I’ll
show those brutes. Look here, is it money we
want? You cable to Paris and offer two million,
at oh, at eight cents below the market;
and to Liverpool, and let ’em have twopence
off on the same amount. They’ll snap it
up as quick as look at it. That will bring in
one lot of money, and as for the rest, I guess I’ve
got some real estate in this town that’s pretty
good security.”
“What you going to mortgage part
of that?”
“No,” cried Jadwin, jumping
up with a quick impatient gesture, “no, I’m
going to mortgage all of it, and I’m going to
do it to-day this morning. If you
say we’re in a precarious condition, it’s
no time for half measures. I’ll have more
money than you’ll know what to do with in the
Illinois Trust by three o’clock this afternoon,
and when the Board opens to-morrow morning, I’m
going to light into those cattle in the Pit there,
so as they’ll think a locomotive has struck ’em.
They’d stand me off, would they? They’d
try to sell me down; they won’t cover when I
turn the screw! I’ll show ’em, Sam
Gretry. I’ll run wheat up so high before
the next two days, that the Bank of England can’t
pull it down, and before the Pit can catch its breath,
I’ll sell our long line, and with the profits
of that, by God! I’ll run it up again.
Two dollars! Why, it will be two fifty here so
quick you won’t know how it’s happened.
I’ve just been fooling with this crowd until
now. Now, I’m really going to get down
to business.”
Gretry did not answer. He twirled
his pencil between his fingers, and stared down at
the papers on his desk. Once he started to speak,
but checked himself. Then at last he turned about.
“All right,” he said,
briskly. “We’ll see what that will
do.”
“I’m going over to the
Illinois Trust now,” said Jadwin, putting on
his hat. “When your boys come in for their
orders, tell them for to-day just to support the market.
If there’s much wheat offered they’d better
buy it. Tell them not to let the market go below
a dollar twenty. When I come back we’ll
make out those cables.”
That day Jadwin carried out his programme
so vehemently announced to his broker. Upon every
piece of real estate that he owned he placed as heavy
a mortgage as the property would stand. Even his
old house on Michigan Avenue, even the “homestead”
on North State Street were encumbered. The time
was come, he felt, for the grand coup, the last huge
strategical move, the concentration of every piece
of heavy artillery. Never in all his multitude
of operations on the Chicago Board of Trade had he
failed. He knew he would not fail now; Luck, the
golden goddess, still staid at his shoulder. He
did more than mortgage his property; he floated a
number of promissory notes. His credit, always
unimpeachable, he taxed to its farthest stretch; from
every source he gathered in the sinews of the war
he was waging. No sum was too great to daunt
him, none too small to be overlooked. Reserves,
van and rear, battle line and skirmish outposts he
summoned together to form one single vast column of
attack.
It was on this same day while Jadwin,
pressed for money, was leaving no stone unturned to
secure ready cash, that he came across old Hargus in
his usual place in Gretry’s customers’
room, reading a two days old newspaper. Of a
sudden an idea occurred to Jadwin. He took the
old man aside. “Hargus,” he said,
“do you want a good investment for your money,
that money I turned over to you? I can give you
a better rate than the bank, and pretty good security.
Let me have about a hundred thousand at oh,
ten per cent.”
“Hey what?”
asked the old fellow querulously. Jadwin repeated
his request.
But Hargus cast a suspicious glance at him and drew
away.
“I I don’t lend my money,”
he observed.
“Why you old fool,”
exclaimed Jadwin. “Here, is it more interest
you want? Why, we’ll say fifteen per cent.,
if you like.”
“I don’t lend my money,”
exclaimed Hargus, shaking his head. “I ain’t
got any to lend,” and with the words took himself
off.
One source of help alone Jadwin left
untried. Sorely tempted, he nevertheless kept
himself from involving his wife’s money in the
hazard. Laura, in her own name, was possessed
of a little fortune; sure as he was of winning, Jadwin
none the less hesitated from seeking an auxiliary
here. He felt it was a matter of pride. He
could not bring himself to make use of a woman’s
succour.
But his entire personal fortune now
swung in the balance. It was the last fight,
the supreme attempt the final consummate
assault, and the thrill of a victory more brilliant,
more conclusive, more decisive than any he had ever
known, vibrated in Jadwin’s breast, as he went
to and fro in Jackson, Adams, and La Salle streets
all through that day of the eleventh.
But he knew the danger knew
just how terrible was to be the grapple. Once
that same day a certain detail of business took him
near to the entrance of the Floor. Though he
did not so much as look inside the doors, he could
not but hear the thunder of the Pit; and even in that
moment of confidence, his great triumph only a few
hours distant, Jadwin, for the instant, stood daunted.
The roar was appalling, the whirlpool was again unchained,
the maelstrom was again unleashed. And during
the briefest of seconds he could fancy that the familiar
bellow of its swirling, had taken on another pitch.
Out of that hideous turmoil, he imagined, there issued
a strange unwonted note; as it were, the first rasp
and grind of a new avalanche just beginning to stir,
a diapason more profound than any he had yet known,
a hollow distant bourdon as of the slipping and sliding
of some almighty and chaotic power.
It was the Wheat, the Wheat!
It was on the move again. From the farms of Illinois
and Iowa, from the ranches of Kansas and Nebraska,
from all the reaches of the Middle West, the Wheat,
like a tidal wave, was rising, rising. Almighty,
blood-brother to the earthquake, coeval with the volcano
and the whirlwind, that gigantic world-force, that
colossal billow, Nourisher of the Nations, was swelling
and advancing.
There in the Pit its first premonitory
eddies already swirled and spun. If even the
first ripples of the tide smote terribly upon the heart,
what was it to be when the ocean itself burst through,
on its eternal way from west to east? For an
instant came clear vision. What were these shouting,
gesticulating men of the Board of Trade, these brokers,
traders, and speculators? It was not these he
fought, it was that fatal New Harvest; it was the
Wheat; it was as Gretry had said the
very Earth itself. What were those scattered
hundreds of farmers of the Middle West, who because
he had put the price so high had planted the grain
as never before? What had they to do with it?
Why the Wheat had grown itself; demand and supply,
these were the two great laws the Wheat obeyed.
Almost blasphemous in his effrontery, he had tampered
with these laws, and had roused a Titan. He had
laid his puny human grasp upon Creation and the very
earth herself, the great mother, feeling the touch
of the cobweb that the human insect had spun, had
stirred at last in her sleep and sent her omnipotence
moving through the grooves of the world, to find and
crush the disturber of her appointed courses.
The new harvest was coming in; the
new harvest of wheat, huge beyond possibility of control;
so vast that no money could buy it, so swift that
no strategy could turn it. But Jadwin hurried
away from the sound of the near roaring of the Pit.
No, no. Luck was with him; he had mastered the
current of the Pit many times before he
would master it again. The day passed and the
night, and at nine o’clock the following morning,
he and Gretry once more met in the broker’s office.
Gretry turned a pale face upon his principal.
“I’ve just received,”
he said, “the answers to our cables to Liverpool
and Paris. I offered wheat at both places, as
you know, cheaper than we’ve ever offered it
there before.”
“Yes well?”
“Well,” answered Gretry,
looking gravely into Jadwin’s eyes, “well they
won’t take it.”
On the morning of her birthday the
thirteenth of the month when Laura descended
to the breakfast room, she found Page already there.
Though it was barely half-past seven, her sister was
dressed for the street. She wore a smart red
hat, and as she stood by the French windows, looking
out, she drew her gloves back and forth between her
fingers, with a nervous, impatient gesture.
“Why,” said Laura, as
she sat down at her place, “why, Pagie, what
is in the wind to-day?”
“Landry is coming,” Page
explained, facing about and glancing at the watch
pinned to her waist. “He is going to take
me down to see the Board of Trade from
the visitor’s gallery, you know. He said
this would probably be a great day. Did Mr. Jadwin
come home last night?”
Laura shook her head, without speech.
She did not choose to put into words the fact that
for three days with the exception of an
hour or two, on the evening after that horrible day
of her visit to the Cresslers’ house she
had seen nothing of her husband.
“Landry says,” continued
Page, “that it is awful down there,
these days. He says that it is the greatest fight
in the history of La Salle Street. Has Mr. Jadwin,
said anything to you? Is he going to win?”
“I don’t know,”
answered Laura, in a low voice; “I don’t
know anything about it, Page.”
She was wondering if even Page had
forgotten. When she had come into the room, her
first glance had been towards her place at table.
But there was nothing there, not even so much as an
envelope; and no one had so much as wished her joy
of the little anniversary. She had thought Page
might have remembered, but her sister’s next
words showed that she had more on her mind than birthdays.
“Laura,” she began, sitting
down opposite to her, and unfolding her napkin, with
laborious precision. “Laura Landry
and I Well ... we’re going to be
married in the fall.”
“Why, Pagie,” cried Laura,
“I’m just as glad as I can be for you.
He’s a fine, clean fellow, and I know he will
make you a good husband.”
Page drew a deep breath.
“Well,” she said, “I’m
glad you think so, too. Before you and Mr. Jadwin
were married, I wasn’t sure about having him
care for me, because at that time well ”
Page looked up with a queer little smile, “I
guess you could have had him if you had
wanted to.”
“Oh, that,” cried Laura.
“Why, Landry never really cared for me.
It was all the silliest kind of flirtation. The
moment he knew you better, I stood no chance at all.”
“We’re going to take an
apartment on Michigan Avenue, near the Auditorium,”
said Page, “and keep house. We’ve
talked it all over, and know just how much it will
cost to live and keep one servant. I’m going
to serve the loveliest little dinners; I’ve learned
the kind of cooking he likes already. Oh, I guess
there he is now,” she cried, as they heard the
front door close.
Landry came in, carrying a great bunch
of cut flowers, and a box of candy. He was as
spruce as though he were already the bridegroom, his
cheeks pink, his blonde hair radiant. But he was
thin and a little worn, a dull feverish glitter came
and went in his eyes, and his nervousness, the strain
and excitement which beset him were in his every gesture,
in every word of his rapid speech.
“We’ll have to hurry,”
he told Page. “I must be down there hours
ahead of time this morning.”
“How is Curtis?” demanded
Laura. “Have you seen him lately? How
is he getting on with with his speculating?”
Landry made a sharp gesture of resignation.
“I don’t know,”
he answered. “I guess nobody knows.
We had a fearful day yesterday, but I think we controlled
the situation at the end. We ran the price up
and up and up till I thought it would never stop.
If the Pit thought Mr. Jadwin was beaten, I guess
they found out how they were mistaken. For a
time there, we were just driving them. But then
Mr. Gretry sent word to us in the Pit to sell, and
we couldn’t hold them. They came back at
us like wolves; they beat the price down five cents,
in as many minutes. We had to quit selling, and
buy again. But then Mr. Jadwin went at them with
a rush. Oh, it was grand! We steadied the
price at a dollar and fifteen, stiffened it up to eighteen
and a half, and then sent it up again, three cents
at a time, till we’d hammered it back to a dollar
and a quarter.”
“But Curtis himself,”
inquired Laura, “is he all right, is he well?”
“I only saw him once,”
answered Landry. “He was in Mr. Gretry’s
office. Yes, he looked all right. He’s
nervous, of course. But Mr. Gretry looks like
the sick man. He looks all frazzled out.”
“I guess, we’d better
be going,” said Page, getting up from the table.
“Have you had your breakfast, Landry? Won’t
you have some coffee?”
“Oh, I breakfasted hours ago,”
he answered. “But you are right. We
had better be moving. If you are going to get
a seat in the gallery, you must be there half an hour
ahead of time, to say the least. Shall I take
any word to your husband from you, Mrs. Jadwin?”
“Tell him that I wish him good
luck,” she answered, “and yes,
ask him, if he remembers what day of the month this
is or no, don’t ask him that.
Say nothing about it. Just tell him I send him
my very best love, and that I wish him all the success
in the world.”
It was about nine o’clock, when
Landry and Page reached the foot of La Salle Street.
The morning was fine and cool. The sky over the
Board of Trade sparkled with sunlight, and the air
was full of fluttering wings of the multitude of pigeons
that lived upon the leakage of grain around the Board
of Trade building.
“Mr. Cressler used to feed them
regularly,” said Landry, as they paused on the
street corner opposite the Board. “Poor poor
Mr. Cressler the funeral is to-morrow,
you know.”
Page shut her eyes.
“Oh,” she murmured, “think,
think of Laura finding him there like that. Oh,
it would have killed me, it would have killed me.”
“Somehow,” observed Landry,
a puzzled expression in his eyes, “somehow,
by George! she don’t seem to mind very much.
You’d have thought a shock like that would have
made her sick.”
“Oh! Laura,” cried
Page. “I don’t know her any more these
days, she is just like stone just as though
she were crowding down every emotion or any feeling
she ever had. She seems to be holding herself
in with all her strength for something and
afraid to let go a finger, for fear she would give
way altogether. When she told me about that morning
at the Cresslers’ house, her voice was just
like ice; she said, ’Mr. Cressler has shot himself.
I found him dead in his library.’ She never
shed a tear, and she spoke, oh, in such a terrible
monotone. Oh! dear,” cried Page, “I
wish all this was over, and we could all get away from
Chicago, and take Mr. Jadwin with us, and get him back
to be as he used to be, always so light-hearted, and
thoughtful and kindly. He used to be making jokes
from morning till night. Oh, I loved him just
as if he were my father.”
They crossed the street, and Landry,
taking her by the arm, ushered her into the corridor
on the ground floor of the Board.
“Now, keep close to me,”
he said, “and see if we can get through somewhere
here.”
The stairs leading up to the main
floor were already crowded with visitors, some standing
in line close to the wall, others aimlessly wandering
up and down, looking and listening, their heads in
the air. One of these, a gentleman with a tall
white hat, shook his head at Landry and Page, as they
pressed by him.
“You can’t get up there,”
he said, “even if they let you in. They’re
packed in like sardines already.”
But Landry reassured Page with a knowing nod of his
head.
“I told the guide up in the
gallery to reserve a seat for you. I guess we’ll
manage.”
But when they reached the staircase
that connected the main floor with the visitors’
gallery, it became a question as to whether or not
they could even get to the seat. The crowd was
packed solidly upon the stairs, between the wall and
the balustrades. There were men in top hats,
and women in silks; rough fellows of the poorer streets,
and gaudily dressed queens of obscure neighborhoods,
while mixed with these one saw the faded and shabby
wrecks that perennially drifted about the Board of
Trade, the failures who sat on the chairs of the customers’
rooms day in and day out, reading old newspapers, smoking
vile cigars. And there were young men of the
type of clerks and bookkeepers, young men with drawn,
worn faces, and hot, tired eyes, who pressed upward,
silent, their lips compressed, listening intently to
the indefinite echoing murmur that was filling the
building.
For on this morning of the thirteenth
of June, the Board of Trade, its halls, corridors,
offices, and stairways were already thrilling with
a vague and terrible sound. It was only a little
after nine o’clock. The trading would not
begin for another half hour, but, even now, the mutter
of the whirlpool, the growl of the Pit was making itself
felt. The eddies were gathering; the thousands
of subsidiary torrents that fed the cloaca were moving.
From all over the immediate neighborhood they came,
from the offices of hundreds of commission houses,
from brokers’ offices, from banks, from the
tall, grey buildings of La Salle Street, from the
street itself. And even from greater distances
they came; auxiliary currents set in from all the
reach of the Great Northwest, from Minneapolis, Duluth,
and Milwaukee. From the Southwest, St. Louis,
Omaha, and Kansas City contributed to the volume.
The Atlantic Seaboard, New York, and Boston and Philadelphia
sent out their tributary streams; London, Liverpool,
Paris, and Odessa merged their influences with the
vast world-wide flowing that bore down upon Chicago,
and that now began slowly, slowly to centre and circle
about the Wheat Pit of the Board of Trade.
Small wonder that the building to
Page’s ears vibrated to a strange and ominous
humming. She heard it in the distant clicking
of telegraph keys, in the echo of hurried whispered
conversations held in dark corners, in the noise of
rapid footsteps, in the trilling of telephone bells.
These sounds came from all around her; they issued
from the offices of the building below her, above
her and on either side. She was surrounded with
them, and they mingled together to form one prolonged
and muffled roar, that from moment to moment increased
in volume.
The Pit was getting under way; the
whirlpool was forming, and the sound of its courses
was like the sound of the ocean in storm, heard at
a distance.
Page and Landry were still halfway
up the last stairway. Above and below, the throng
was packed dense and immobilised. But, little
by little, Landry wormed a way for them, winning one
step at a time. But he was very anxious; again
and again he looked at his watch. At last he
said:
“I’ve got to go.
It’s just madness for me to stay another minute.
I’ll give you my card.”
“Well, leave me here,”
Page urged. “It can’t be helped.
I’m all right. Give me your card.
I’ll tell the guide in the gallery that you kept
the seat for me if I ever can get there.
You must go. Don’t stay another minute.
If you can, come for me here in the gallery, when it’s
over. I’ll wait for you. But if you
can’t come, all right. I can take care of
myself.”
He could but assent to this.
This was no time to think of small things. He
left her and bore back with all his might through the
crowd, gained the landing at the turn of the balustrade,
waved his hat to her and disappeared.
A quarter of an hour went by.
Page, caught in the crowd, could neither advance nor
retreat. Ahead of her, some twenty steps away,
she could see the back rows of seats in the gallery.
But they were already occupied. It seemed hopeless
to expect to see anything of the floor that day.
But she could no longer extricate herself from the
press; there was nothing to do but stay where she
was.
On every side of her she caught odds
and ends of dialogues and scraps of discussions, and
while she waited she found an interest in listening
to these, as they reached her from time to time.
“Well,” observed the man
in the tall white hat, who had discouraged Landry
from attempting to reach the gallery, “well,
he’s shaken ’em up pretty well. Whether
he downs ’em or they down him, he’s made
a good fight.”
His companion, a young man with eyeglasses,
who wore a wonderful white waistcoat with queer glass
buttons, assented, and Page heard him add:
“Big operator, that Jadwin.”
“They’re doing for him now, though.”
“I ain’t so sure. He’s got
another fight in him. You’ll see.”
“Ever see him?”
“No, no, he don’t come into the Pit these
big men never do.”
Directly in front of Page two women kept up an interminable
discourse.
“Well,” said the one,
“that’s all very well, but Mr. Jadwin made
my sister-in-law she lives in Dubuque,
you know a rich woman. She bought
some wheat, just for fun, you know, a long time ago,
and held on till Mr. Jadwin put the price up to four
times what she paid for it. Then she sold out.
My, you ought to see the lovely house she’s building,
and her son’s gone to Europe, to study art,
if you please, and a year ago, my dear, they didn’t
have a cent, not a cent, but her husband’s salary.”
“There’s the other side,
too, though,” answered her companion, adding
in a hoarse whisper: “If Mr. Jadwin fails
to-day well, honestly, Julia, I don’t
know what Philip will do.”
But, from another group at Page’s
elbow, a man’s bass voice cut across the subdued
chatter of the two women.
“’Guess we’ll pull
through, somehow. Burbank & Co., though by
George! I’m not sure about them. They
are pretty well involved in this thing, and there’s
two or three smaller firms that are dependent on them.
If Gretry-Converse & Co. should suspend, Burbank would
go with a crash sure. And there’s that
bank in Keokuk; they can’t stand much more.
Their depositors would run ’em quick as how-do-you-do,
if there was a smash here in Chicago.”
“Oh, Jadwin will pull through.”
“Well, I hope so by
Jingo! I hope so. Say, by the way, how did
you come out?”
“Me! Hoh! Say my boy,
the next time I get into a wheat trade you’ll
know it. I was one of the merry paretics who believed
that Crookes was the Great Lum-tum. I tailed
on to his clique. Lord love you! Jadwin put
the knife into me to the tune of twelve thousand dollars.
But, say, look here; aren’t we ever going to
get up to that blame gallery? We ain’t
going to see any of this, and I hark! by
God! there goes the gong. They’ve begun.
Say, say, hear ’em, will you! Holy Moses!
say listen to that! Did you ever hear Lord!
I wish we could see could get somewhere
where we could see something.”
His friend turned to him and spoke
a sentence that was drowned in the sudden vast volume
of sound that all at once shook the building.
“Hey what?”
The other shouted into his ear.
But even then his friend could not hear. Nor
did he listen. The crowd upon the staircases had
surged irresistibly forward and upward. There
was a sudden outburst of cries. Women’s
voices were raised in expostulation, and even fear.
“Oh, oh don’t push so!”
“My arm! oh! oh, I shall faint ...
please.”
But the men, their escorts, held back
furiously; their faces purple, they shouted imprecations
over their shoulders.
“Here, here, you damn fools, what you doing?”
“Don’t crowd so!”
“Get back, back!”
“There’s a lady fainted
here. Get back you! We’ll all have
a chance to see. Good Lord! ain’t there
a policeman anywheres?”
“Say, say! It’s going
down the price. It broke three cents,
just then, at the opening, they say.”
“This is the worst I ever saw or heard of.”
“My God! if Jadwin can only hold ’em.
“You bet he’ll hold ’em.”
“Hold nothing! Oh!
say my friend, it don’t do you any good to crowd
like that.”
“It’s the people behind:
I’m not doing it. Say, do you know where
they’re at on the floor? The wheat, I mean,
is it going up or down?”
“Up, they tell me. There
was a rally; I don’t know. How can we tell
here? We Hi! there they go again.
Lord! that must have been a smash. I guess the
Board of Trade won’t forget this day in a hurry.
Heavens, you can’t hear yourself think!
“Glad I ain’t down there in the Pit.”
But, at last, a group of policemen
appeared. By main strength they shouldered their
way to the top of the stairs, and then began pushing
the crowd back. At every instant they shouted:
“Move on now, clear the stairway. No seats
left!”
But at this Page, who, by the rush
of the crowd had been carried almost to the top of
the stairs, managed to extricate an arm from the press,
and hold Landry’s card in the air. She even
hazarded a little deception:
“I have a pass. Will you let me through,
please?”
Luckily one of the officers heard
her. He bore down heavily with all the mass of
his two hundred pounds and the majesty of the law he
represented, to the rescue and succour of this very
pretty girl.
“Let the lady through,”
he roared, forcing a passage with both elbows.
“Come right along, Miss. Stand back you,
now. Can’t you see the lady has a pass?
Now then, Miss, and be quick about it, I can’t
keep ’em back forever.”
Jostled and hustled, her dress crumpled,
her hat awry, Page made her way forward, till the
officer caught her by the arm, and pulled her out
of the press. With a long breath she gained the
landing of the gallery.
The guide, an old fellow in a uniform
of blue, with brass buttons and a visored cap, stood
near by, and to him she presented Landry’s card.
“Oh, yes, oh, yes,” he
shouted in her ear, after he had glanced it over.
“You were the party Mr. Court spoke about.
You just came in time. I wouldn’t ’a
dared hold your seat a minute longer.”
He led her down the crowded aisle
between rows of theatre chairs, all of which were
occupied, to one vacant seat in the very front row.
“You can see everything, now,”
he cried, making a trumpet of his palm. “You’re
Mister Jadwin’s niece. I know, I know.
Ah, it’s a wild day, Miss. They ain’t
done much yet, and Mr. Jadwin’s holding his own,
just now. But I thought for a moment they had
him on the run. You see that my, my,
there was a sharp rally. But he’s holding
on strong yet.”
Page took her seat, and leaning forward
looked down into the Wheat Pit.
Once free of the crowd after leaving
Page, Landry ran with all the swiftness of his long
legs down the stair, and through the corridors till,
all out of breath, he gained Gretry’s private
office. The other Pit traders for the house,
some eight or ten men, were already assembled, and
just as Landry entered by one door, the broker himself
came in from the customers’ room. Jadwin
was nowhere to be seen.
“What are the orders for to-day, sir?”
Gretry was very pale. Despite
his long experience on the Board of Trade, Landry
could see anxiety in every change of his expression,
in every motion of his hands. The broker before
answering the question crossed the room to the water
cooler and drank a brief swallow. Then emptying
the glass he refilled it, moistened his lips again,
and again emptied and filled the goblet. He put
it down, caught it up once more, filled it, emptied
it, drinking now in long draughts, now in little sips.
He was quite unconscious of his actions, and Landry
as he watched, felt his heart sink. Things must,
indeed, be at a desperate pass when Gretry, the calm,
the clear-headed, the placid, was thus upset.
“Your orders?” said the
broker, at last. “The same as yesterday;
keep the market up that’s all.
It must not go below a dollar fifteen. But act
on the defensive. Don’t be aggressive, unless
I send word. There will probably be very heavy
selling the first few moments. You can buy, each
of you, up to half a million bushels apiece. If
that don’t keep the price up, if they still
are selling after that ... well”; Gretry paused
a moment, irresolutely, “well,” he added
suddenly, “if they are still selling freely
after you’ve each bought half a million, I’ll
let you know what to do. And, look here,”
he continued, facing the group, “look here keep
your heads cool ... I guess to-day will decide
things. Watch the Crookes crowd pretty closely.
I understand they’re up to something again.
That’s all, I guess.”
Landry and the other Gretry traders
hurried from the office up to the floor. Landry’s
heart was beating thick and slow and hard, his teeth
were shut tight. Every nerve, every fibre of him
braced itself with the rigidity of drawn wire, to
meet the issue of the impending hours. Now, was
to come the last grapple. He had never lived through
a crisis such as this before. Would he prevail,
would he keep his head? Would he avoid or balk
the thousand and one little subterfuges, tricks, and
traps that the hostile traders would prepare for him prepare
with a quickness, a suddenness that all but defied
the sharpest, keenest watchfulness?
Was the gong never going to strike?
He found himself, all at once, on the edge of the
Wheat Pit. It was jammed tight with the crowd
of traders and the excitement that disengaged itself
from that tense, vehement crowd of white faces and
glittering eyes was veritably sickening, veritably
weakening. Men on either side of him were shouting
mere incoherencies, to which nobody, not even themselves,
were listening. Others silent, gnawed their nails
to the quick, breathing rapidly, audibly even, their
nostrils expanding and contracting. All around
roared the vague thunder that since early morning had
shaken the building. In the Pit the bids leaped
to and fro, though the time of opening had not yet
come; the very planks under foot seemed spinning about
in the first huge warning swirl of the Pit’s
centripetal convulsion. There was dizziness in
the air. Something, some infinite immeasurable
power, onrushing in its eternal courses, shook the
Pit in its grasp. Something deafened the ears,
blinded the eyes, dulled and numbed the mind, with
its roar, with the chaff and dust of its whirlwind
passage, with the stupefying sense of its power, coeval
with the earthquake and glacier, merciless, all-powerful,
a primal basic throe of creation itself, unassailable,
inviolate, and untamed.
Had the trading begun? Had the
gong struck? Landry never knew, never so much
as heard the clang of the great bell. All at once
he was fighting; all at once he was caught, as it
were, from off the stable earth, and flung headlong
into the heart and centre of the Pit. What he
did, he could not say; what went on about him, he
could not distinguish. He only knew that roar
was succeeding roar, that there was crashing through
his ears, through his very brain, the combined bellow
of a hundred Niagaras. Hands clutched and tore
at him, his own tore and clutched in turn. The
Pit was mad, was drunk and frenzied; not a man of
all those who fought and scrambled and shouted who
knew what he or his neighbour did. They only
knew that a support long thought to be secure was
giving way; not gradually, not evenly, but by horrible
collapses, and equally horrible upward leaps.
Now it held, now it broke, now it reformed again,
rose again, then again in hideous cataclysms fell from
beneath their feet to lower depths than before.
The official reporter leaned back in his place, helpless.
On the wall overhead, the indicator on the dial was
rocking back and forth, like the mast of a ship caught
in a monsoon. The price of July wheat no man could
so much as approximate. The fluctuations were
no longer by fractions of a cent, but by ten cents,
fifteen cents twenty-five cents at a time. On
one side of the Pit wheat sold at ninety cents, on
the other at a dollar and a quarter.
And all the while above the din upon
the floor, above the tramplings and the shoutings
in the Pit, there seemed to thrill and swell that
appalling roar of the Wheat itself coming in, coming
on like a tidal wave, bursting through, dashing barriers
aside, rolling like a measureless, almighty river,
from the farms of Iowa and the ranches of California,
on to the East to the bakeshops and hungry
mouths of Europe.
Landry caught one of the Gretry traders by the arm.
“What shall we do?” he
shouted. “I’ve bought up to my limit.
No more orders have come in. The market has gone
from under us. What’s to be done?”
“I don’t know,”
the other shouted back, “I don’t know.
We’re all gone to hell; looks like the last
smash. There are no more supporting orders something’s
gone wrong. Gretry hasn’t sent any word.”
Then, Landry, beside himself with
excitement and with actual terror, hardly knowing
even yet what he did, turned sharply about. He
fought his way out of the Pit; he ran hatless and
panting across the floor, in and out between the groups
of spectators, down the stairs to the corridor below,
and into the Gretry-Converse offices.
In the outer office a group of reporters
and the representatives of a great commercial agency
were besieging one of the heads of the firm.
They assaulted him with questions.
“Just tell us where you are
at that’s all we want to know.”
“Just what is the price of July wheat?”
“Is Jadwin winning or losing?”
But the other threw out an arm in a wild gesture of
helplessness.
“We don’t know, ourselves,”
he cried. “The market has run clean away
from everybody. You know as much about it as I
do. It’s simply hell broken loose, that’s
all. We can’t tell where we are at for days
to come.”
Landry rushed on. He swung open
the door of the private office and entered, slamming
it behind him and crying out:
“Mr. Gretry, what are we to do? We’ve
had no orders.”
But no one listened to him. Of
the group that gathered around Gretry’s desk,
no one so much as turned a head.
Jadwin stood there in the centre of
the others, hatless, his face pale, his eyes congested
with blood. Gretry fronted him, one hand upon
his arm. In the remainder of the group Landry
recognised the senior clerk of the office, one of
the heads of a great banking house, and a couple of
other men confidential agents, who had helped
to manipulate the great corner.
“But you can’t,”
Gretry was exclaiming. “You can’t;
don’t you see we can’t meet our margin
calls? It’s the end of the game. You’ve
got no more money.”
“It’s a lie!” Never
so long as he lived did Landry forget the voice in
which Jadwin cried the words: “It’s
a lie! Keep on buying, I tell you. Take
all they’ll offer. I tell you we’ll
touch the two dollar mark before noon.”
“Not another order goes up to
that floor,” retorted Gretry. “Why,
J., ask any of these gentlemen here. They’ll
tell you.”
“It’s useless, Mr. Jadwin,”
said the banker, quietly. “You were practically
beaten two days ago.”
“Mr. Jadwin,” pleaded
the senior clerk, “for God’s sake listen
to reason. Our firm ”
But Jadwin was beyond all appeal.
He threw off Gretry’s hand.
“Your firm, your firm you’ve
been cowards from the start. I know you, I know
you. You have sold me out. Crookes has bought
you. Get out of my way!” he shouted.
“Get out of my way! Do you hear? I’ll
play my hand alone from now on.”
“J., old man why see
here, man,” Gretry implored, still holding him
by the arm; “here, where are you going?”
Jadwin’s voice rang like a trumpet call:
"Into the Pit."
“Look here wait here.
Hold him back, gentlemen. He don’t know
what he’s about.”
“If you won’t execute
my orders, I’ll act myself. I’m going
into the Pit, I tell you.”
“J., you’re mad, old fellow.
You’re ruined don’t you understand? you’re
ruined.”
“Then God curse you, Sam Gretry,
for the man who failed me in a crisis.”
And as he spoke Curtis Jadwin struck the broker full
in the face.
Gretry staggered back from the blow,
catching at the edge of his desk. His pale face
flashed to crimson for an instant, his fists clinched;
then his hands fell to his sides.
“No,” he said, “let
him go, let him go. The man is merely mad.”
But, Jadwin, struggling for a second
in the midst of the group that tried to hold him,
suddenly flung off the restraining clasps, thrust
the men to one side, and rushed from the room.
Gretry dropped into his chair before his desk.
“It’s the end,” he said, simply.
He drew a sheet of note paper to him,
and in a shaking hand wrote a couple of lines.
“Take that,” he said,
handing the note to the senior clerk, “take that
to the secretary of the Board at once.”
And straight into the turmoil and
confusion of the Pit, to the scene of so many of his
victories, the battle ground whereon again and again,
his enemies routed, he had remained the victor undisputed,
undismayed came the “Great Bull.”
No sooner had he set foot within the entrance to the
Floor, than the news went flashing and flying from
lip to lip. The galleries knew it, the public
room, and the Western Union knew it, the telephone
booths knew it, and lastly even the Wheat Pit, torn
and tossed and rent asunder by the force this man
himself had unchained, knew it, and knowing stood
dismayed.
For even then, so great had been his
power, so complete his dominion, and so well-rooted
the fear which he had inspired, that this last move
in the great game he had been playing, this unexpected,
direct, personal assumption of control struck a sense
of consternation into the heart of the hardiest of
his enemies.
Jadwin himself, the great man, the
“Great Bull” in the Pit! What was
about to happen? Had they been too premature in
their hope of his defeat? Had he been preparing
some secret, unexpected manoeuvre? For a second
they hesitated, then moved by a common impulse, feeling
the push of the wonderful new harvest behind them,
they gathered themselves together for the final assault,
and again offered the wheat for sale; offered it by
thousands upon thousands of bushels; poured, as it
were, the reapings of entire principalities out upon
the floor of the Board of Trade.
Jadwin was in the thick of the confusion
by now. And the avalanche, the undiked Ocean
of the Wheat, leaping to the lash of the hurricane,
struck him fairly in the face.
He heard it now, he heard nothing
else. The Wheat had broken from his control.
For months, he had, by the might of his single arm,
held it back; but now it rose like the upbuilding
of a colossal billow. It towered, towered, hung
poised for an instant, and then, with a thunder as
of the grind and crash of chaotic worlds, broke upon
him, burst through the Pit and raced past him, on
and on to the eastward and to the hungry nations.
And then, under the stress and violence
of the hour, something snapped in his brain.
The murk behind his eyes had been suddenly pierced
by a white flash. The strange qualms and tiny
nervous paroxysms of the last few months all at once
culminated in some indefinite, indefinable crisis,
and the wheels and cogs of all activities save one
lapsed away and ceased. Only one function of
the complicated machine persisted; but it moved with
a rapidity of vibration that seemed to be tearing the
tissues of being to shreds, while its rhythm beat out
the old and terrible cadence:
“Wheat wheat wheat, wheat wheat wheat.”
Blind and insensate, Jadwin strove
against the torrent of the Wheat. There in the
middle of the Pit, surrounded and assaulted by herd
after herd of wolves yelping for his destruction,
he stood braced, rigid upon his feet, his head up,
his hand, the great bony hand that once had held the
whole Pit in its grip, flung high in the air, in a
gesture of defiance, while his voice like the clangour
of bugles sounding to the charge of the forlorn hope,
rang out again and again, over the din of his enemies:
“Give a dollar for July give a dollar
for July!”
With one accord they leaped upon him.
The little group of his traders was swept aside.
Landry alone, Landry who had never left his side since
his rush from out Gretry’s office, Landry Court,
loyal to the last, his one remaining soldier, white,
shaking, the sobs strangling in his throat, clung
to him desperately. Another billow of wheat was
preparing. They two the beaten general
and his young armour bearer heard it coming;
hissing, raging, bellowing, it swept down upon them.
Landry uttered a cry. Flesh and blood could not
stand this strain. He cowered at his chief’s
side, his shoulders bent, one arm above his head,
as if to ward off an actual physical force.
But Jadwin, iron to the end, stood
erect. All unknowing what he did, he had taken
Landry’s hand in his and the boy felt the grip
on his fingers like the contracting of a vise of steel.
The other hand, as though holding up a standard, was
still in the air, and his great deep-toned voice went
out across the tumult, proclaiming to the end his battle
cry:
“Give a dollar for July give a dollar
for July!”
But, little by little, Landry became
aware that the tumult of the Pit was intermitting.
There were sudden lapses in the shouting, and in these
lapses he could hear from somewhere out upon the floor
voices that were crying: “Order order,
order, gentlemen.”
But, again and again the clamour broke
out. It would die down for an instant, in response
to these appeals, only to burst out afresh as certain
groups of traders started the pandemonium again, by
the wild outcrying of their offers. At last,
however, the older men in the Pit, regaining some
measure of self-control, took up the word, going to
and fro in the press, repeating “Order, order.”
And then, all at once, the Pit, the
entire floor of the Board of Trade was struck dumb.
All at once the tension was relaxed, the furious struggling
and stamping was stilled. Landry, bewildered,
still holding his chief by the hand, looked about
him. On the floor, near at hand, stood the president
of the Board of Trade himself, and with him the vice-president
and a group of the directors. Evidently it had
been these who had called the traders to order.
But it was not toward them now that the hundreds of
men in the Pit and on the floor were looking.
In the little balcony on the south
wall opposite the visitors’ gallery a figure
had appeared, a tall grave man, in a long black coat the
secretary of the Board of Trade. Landry with the
others saw him, saw him advance to the edge of the
railing, and fix his glance upon the Wheat Pit.
In his hand he carried a slip of paper.
And then in the midst of that profound
silence the secretary announced:
“All trades with Gretry, Converse
& Co. must be closed at once.”
The words had not ceased to echo in
the high vaultings of the roof before they were greeted
with a wild, shrill yell of exultation and triumph,
that burst from the crowding masses in the Wheat Pit.
Beaten; beaten at last, the Great
Bull! Smashed! The great corner smashed!
Jadwin busted! They themselves saved, saved, saved!
Cheer followed upon cheer, yell after yell. Hats
went into the air. In a frenzy of delight men
danced and leaped and capered upon the edge of the
Pit, clasping their arms about each other, shaking
each others’ hands, cheering and hurrahing till
their strained voices became hoarse and faint.
Some few of the older men protested. There were
cries of:
“Shame, shame!”
“Order let him alone.”
“Let him be; he’s down now. Shame,
shame!”
But the jubilee was irrepressible,
they had been too cruelly pressed, these others; they
had felt the weight of the Bull’s hoof, the rip
of his horn. Now they had beaten him, had pulled
him down.
“Yah-h-h, whoop, yi, yi, yi.
Busted, busted, busted. Hip, hip, hip, and a
tiger!”
“Come away, sir. For God’s sake,
Mr. Jadwin, come away.”
Landry was pleading with Jadwin, clutching
his arm in both his hands, his lips to his chief’s
ear to make himself heard above the yelping of the
mob.
Jadwin was silent now. He seemed
no longer to see or hear; heavily, painfully he leaned
upon the young man’s shoulder.
“Come away, sir for God’s sake!”
The group of traders parted before
them, cheering even while they gave place, cheering
with eyes averted, unwilling to see the ruin that meant
for them salvation.
“Yah-h-h. Yah-h-h, busted, busted!”
Landry had put his arm about Jadwin,
and gripped him close as he led him from the Pit.
The sobs were in his throat again, and tears of excitement,
of grief, of anger and impotence were running down
his face.
“Yah-h-h. Yah-h-h, he’s done for,
busted, busted!”
“Damn you all,” cried
Landry, throwing out a furious fist, “damn you
all; you brutes, you beasts! If he’d so
much as raised a finger a week ago, you’d have
run for your lives.”
But the cheering drowned his voice;
and as the two passed out of the Pit upon the floor,
the gong that closed the trading struck and, as it
seemed, put a period, definite and final to the conclusion
of Curtis Jadwin’s career as speculator.
Across the floor towards the doorway
Landry led his defeated captain. Jadwin was in
a daze, he saw nothing, heard nothing. Quietly
he submitted to Landry’s guiding arm. The
visitors in the galleries bent far over to see him
pass, and from all over the floor, spectators, hangers-on,
corn-and-provision traders, messenger boys, clerks
and reporters came hurrying to watch the final exit
of the Great Bull, from the scene of his many victories
and his one overwhelming defeat.
In silence they watched him go by.
Only in the distance from the direction of the Pit
itself came the sound of dying cheers. But at
the doorway stood a figure that Landry recognised
at once a small man, lean-faced, trimly
dressed, his clean-shaven lips pursed like the mouth
of a shut money bag, imperturbable as ever, cold, unexcited Calvin
Crookes himself.
And as Jadwin passed, Landry heard the Bear leader
say:
“They can cheer now, all they
want. They didn’t do it. It was the
wheat itself that beat him; no combination of men
could have done it go on, cheer, you damn
fools! He was a bigger man than the best of us.”
With the striking of the gong, and
the general movement of the crowd in the galleries
towards the exits, Page rose, drawing a long breath,
pressing her hands an instant to her burning cheeks.
She had seen all that had happened, but she had not
understood. The whole morning had been a whirl
and a blur. She had looked down upon a jam of
men, who for three hours had done nothing but shout
and struggle. She had seen Jadwin come into the
Pit, and almost at once the shouts had turned to cheers.
That must have meant, she thought, that Jadwin had
done something to please those excited men. They
were all his friends, no doubt. They were cheering
him cheering his success. He had won
then! And yet that announcement from the opposite
balcony, to the effect that business with Mr. Gretry
must be stopped, immediately! That had an ominous
ring. Or, perhaps, that meant only a momentary
check.
As she descended the stairways, with
the departing spectators, she distinctly heard a man’s
voice behind her exclaim:
“Well, that does for him!”
Possibly, after all, Mr. Jadwin had
lost some money that morning. She was desperately
anxious to find Landry, and to learn the truth of what
had happened, and for a long moment after the last
visitors had disappeared she remained at the foot
of the gallery stairway, hoping that he would come
for her. But she saw nothing of him, and soon
remembered she had told him to come for her, only in
case he was able to get away. No doubt he was
too busy now. Even if Mr. Jadwin had won, the
morning’s work had evidently been of tremendous
importance. This had been a great day for the
wheat speculators. It was not surprising that
Landry should be detained. She would wait till
she saw him the next day to find out all that had
taken place.
Page returned home. It was long
past the hour for luncheon when she came into the
dining-room of the North Avenue house.
“Where is my sister?”
she asked of the maid, as she sat down to the table;
“has she lunched yet?”
But it appeared that Mrs. Jadwin had
sent down word to say that she wanted no lunch, that
she had a headache and would remain in her room.
Page hurried through with her chocolate
and salad, and ordering a cup of strong tea, carried
it up to Laura’s “sitting-room” herself.
Laura, in a long tea-gown lay back
in the Madeira chair, her hands clasped behind her
head, doing nothing apparently but looking out of
the window. She was paler even than usual, and
to Page’s mind seemed preoccupied, and in a
certain indefinite way tense and hard. Page, as
she had told Landry that morning, had remarked this
tenseness, this rigidity on the part of her sister,
of late. But to-day it was more pronounced than
ever. Something surely was the matter with Laura.
She seemed like one who had staked everything upon
a hazard and, blind to all else, was keeping back
emotion with all her strength, while she watched and
waited for the issue. Page guessed that her sister’s
trouble had to do with Jadwin’s complete absorption
in business, but she preferred to hold her peace.
By nature the young girl “minded her own business,”
and Laura was not a woman who confided her troubles
to anybody. Only once had Page presumed to meddle
in her sister’s affairs, and the result had
not encouraged a repetition of the intervention.
Since the affair of the silver match box she had kept
her distance.
Laura on this occasion declined to
drink the tea Page had brought. She wanted nothing,
she said; her head ached a little, she only wished
to lie down and be quiet.
“I’ve been down to the
Board of Trade all the morning,” Page remarked.
Laura fixed her with a swift glance;
she demanded quickly:
“Did you see Curtis?”
“No or, yes, once;
he came out on the floor. Oh, Laura, it was so
exciting there this morning. Something important
happened, I know. I can’t believe it’s
that way all the time. I’m afraid Mr. Jadwin
lost a great deal of money. I heard some one
behind me say so, but I couldn’t understand
what was going on. For months I’ve been
trying to get a clear idea of wheat trading, just
because it was Landry’s business, but to-day
I couldn’t make anything of it at all.”
“Did Curtis say he was coming home this evening?”
“No. Don’t you understand, I didn’t
see him to talk to.”
“Well, why didn’t you, Page?”
“Why, Laura, honey, don’t
be cross. You don’t know how rushed everything
was. I didn’t even try to see Landry.”
“Did he seem very busy?”
“Who, Landry? I ”
“No, no, no, Curtis.”
“Oh, I should say so. Why,
Laura, I think, honestly, I think wheat went down
to oh, way down. They say that means
so much to Mr. Jadwin, and it went down, down, down.
It looked that way to me. Don’t that mean
that he’ll lose a great deal of money? And
Landry seemed so brave and courageous through it all.
Oh, I felt for him so; I just wanted to go right into
the Pit with him and stand by his shoulder.”
Laura started up with a sharp gesture
of impatience and exasperation, crying:
“Oh, what do I care about wheat about
this wretched scrambling for money. Curtis was
busy, you say? He looked that way?”
Page nodded: “Everybody
was,” she said. Then she hazarded:
“I wouldn’t worry, Laura.
Of course, a man must give a great deal of time to
his business. I didn’t mind when Landry
couldn’t come home with me.”
“Oh Landry,” murmured Laura.
On the instant Page bridled, her eyes snapping.
“I think that was very uncalled
for,” she exclaimed, sitting bolt upright, “and
I can tell you this, Laura Jadwin, if you did care
a little more about wheat about your husband’s
business if you had taken more of an interest
in his work, if you had tried to enter more into his
life, and be a help to him and and
sympathise and ” Page
caught her breath, a little bewildered at her own vehemence
and audacity. But she had committed herself now;
recklessly she plunged on. “Just think;
he may be fighting the battle of his life down there
in La Salle Street, and you don’t know anything
about it no, nor want to know. ‘What
do you care about wheat,’ that’s what you
said. Well, I don’t care either, just for
the wheat itself, but it’s Landry’s business,
his work; and right or wrong ” Page
jumped to her feet, her fists tight shut, her face
scarlet, her head upraised, “right or wrong,
good or bad, I’d put my two hands into the fire
to help him.”
“What business ”
began Laura; but Page was not to be interrupted.
“And if he did leave me alone sometimes,”
she said; “do you think I would draw a long
face, and think only of my own troubles. I guess
he’s got his own troubles too. If my husband
had a battle to fight, do you think I’d mope
and pine because he left me at home; no I wouldn’t.
I’d help him buckle his sword on, and when he
came back to me I wouldn’t tell him how lonesome
I’d been, but I’d take care of him and
cry over his wounds, and tell him to be brave and and and
I’d help him.”
And with the words, Page, the tears
in her eyes and the sobs in her throat, flung out
of the room, shutting the door violently behind her.
Laura’s first sensation was
one of anger only. As always, her younger sister
had presumed again to judge her, had chosen this day
of all others, to annoy her. She gazed an instant
at the closed door, then rose and put her chin in
the air. She was right, and Page her husband,
everybody, were wrong. She had been flouted, ignored.
She paced the length of the room a couple of times,
then threw herself down upon the couch, her chin supported
on her palm.
As she crossed the room, however,
her eye had been caught by an opened note from Mrs.
Cressler, received the day before, and apprising her
of the date of the funeral. At the sight, all
the tragedy leaped up again in her mind and recollection,
and in fancy she stood again in the back parlour of
the Cressler home; her fingers pressed over her mouth
to shut back the cries, horror and the terror of sudden
death rending her heart, shaking the brain itself.
Again and again since that dreadful moment had the
fear come back, mingled with grief, with compassion,
and the bitter sorrow of a kind friend gone forever
from her side. And then, her resolution girding
itself, her will power at fullest stretch, she had
put the tragedy from her. Other and for
her more momentous events impended.
Everything in life, even death itself, must stand
aside while her love was put to the test. Life
and death were little things. Love only existed;
let her husband’s career fail; what did it import
so only love stood the strain and issued from the struggle
triumphant? And now, as she lay upon her couch,
she crushed down all compunction for the pitiful calamity
whose last scene she had discovered, her thoughts
once more upon her husband and herself. Had the
shock of that spectacle in the Cresslers’ house,
and the wearing suspense in which she had lived of
late, so torn and disordered the delicate feminine
nerves that a kind of hysteria animated and directed
her impulses, her words, and actions? Laura did
not know. She only knew that the day was going
and that her husband neither came near her nor sent
her word.
Even if he had been very busy, this
was her birthday, though he had lost millions!
Could he not have sent even the foolishest little
present to her, even a line three words
on a scrap of paper? But she checked herself.
The day was not over yet; perhaps, perhaps he would
remember her, after all, before the afternoon was over.
He was managing a little surprise for her, no doubt.
He knew what day this was. After their talk that
Sunday in his smoking-room he would not forget.
And, besides, it was the evening that he had promised
should be hers. “If he loved her,”
she had said, he would give that evening to her.
Never, never would Curtis fail her when conjured by
that spell.
Laura had planned a little dinner
for that night. It was to be served at eight.
Page would have dined earlier; only herself and her
husband were to be present. It was to be her
birthday dinner. All the noisy, clamourous world
should be excluded; no faintest rumble of the Pit
would intrude. She would have him all to herself.
He would, so she determined, forget everything else
in his love for her. She would be beautiful as
never before brilliant, resistless, and
dazzling. She would have him at her feet, her
own, her own again, as much her own as her very hands.
And before she would let him go he would forever and
forever have abjured the Battle of the Street that
had so often caught him from her. The Pit should
not have him; the sweep of that great whirlpool should
never again prevail against the power of love.
Yes, she had suffered, she had known
the humiliation of a woman neglected. But it
was to end now; her pride would never again be lowered,
her love never again be ignored.
But the afternoon passed and evening
drew on without any word from him. In spite of
her anxiety, she yet murmured over and over again as
she paced the floor of her room, listening for the
ringing of the door bell:
“He will send word, he will send word.
I know he will.”
By four o’clock she had begun
to dress. Never had she made a toilet more superb,
more careful. She disdained a “costume”
on this great evening. It was not to be “Theodora”
now, nor “Juliet,” nor “Carmen.”
It was to be only Laura Jadwin just herself,
unaided by theatricals, unadorned by tinsel.
But it seemed consistent none the less to choose her
most beautiful gown for the occasion, to panoply herself
in every charm that was her own. Her dress, that
closely sheathed the low, flat curves of her body
and that left her slender arms and neck bare, was
one shimmer of black scales, iridescent, undulating
with light to her every movement. In the coils
and masses of her black hair she fixed her two great
cabochons of pearls, and clasped about her neck
her palm-broad collaret of pearls and diamonds.
Against one shoulder nodded a bunch of Jacqueminots,
royal red, imperial.
It was hard upon six o’clock
when at last she dismissed her maid. Left alone,
she stood for a moment in front of her long mirror
that reflected her image from head to foot, and at
the sight she could not forbear a smile and a sudden
proud lifting of her head. All the woman in her
preened and plumed herself in the consciousness of
the power of her beauty. Let the Battle of the
Street clamour never so loudly now, let the suction
of the Pit be never so strong, Eve triumphed.
Venus toute entière s’attachait
a sa proie.
These women of America, these others
who allowed business to draw their husbands from them
more and more, who submitted to those cruel conditions
that forced them to be content with the wreckage left
after the storm and stress of the day’s work the
jaded mind, the exhausted body, the faculties dulled
by overwork she was sorry for them.
They, less radiant than herself, less potent to charm,
could not call their husbands back. But she,
Laura, was beautiful; she knew it; she gloried in
her beauty. It was her strength. She felt
the same pride in it as the warrior in a finely tempered
weapon.
And to-night her beauty was brighter
than ever. It was a veritable aureole that crowned
her. She knew herself to be invincible. So
only that he saw her thus, she knew that she would
conquer. And he would come. “If he
loved her,” she had said. By his love for
her he had promised; by his love she knew she would
prevail.
And then at last, somewhere out of
the twilight, somewhere out of those lowest, unplumbed
depths of her own heart, came the first tremor of
doubt, come the tardy vibration of the silver cord
which Page had struck so sharply. Was it after
all Love, that she cherished and strove
for love, or self-love? Ever since
Page had spoken she seemed to have fought against
the intrusion of this idea. But, little by little,
it rose to the surface. At last, for an instant,
it seemed to confront her.
Was this, after all, the right way
to win her husband back to her this display
of her beauty, this parade of dress, this exploitation
of self?
Self, self. Had she been selfish
from the very first? What real interest had she
taken in her husband’s work? “Right
or wrong, good or bad, I would put my two hands into
the fire to help him.” Was this the way?
Was not this the only way? Win him back to her?
What if there were more need for her to win back to
him? Oh, once she had been able to say that love,
the supreme triumph of a woman’s life, was less
a victory than a capitulation. Had she ordered
her life upon that ideal? Did she even believe
in the ideal at this day? Whither had this cruel
cult of self led her?
Dimly Laura Jadwin began to see and
to understand a whole new conception of her little
world. The birth of a new being within her was
not for that night. It was conception only the
sensation of a new element, a new force that was not
herself, somewhere in the inner chambers of her being.
The woman in her was too complex,
the fibres of character too intricate and mature to
be wrenched into new shapes by any sudden revolution.
But just so surely as the day was going, just so surely
as the New Day would follow upon the night, conception
had taken place within her. Whatever she did
that evening, whatever came to her, through whatever
crises she should hurry, she would not now be quite
the same. She had been accustomed to tell herself
that there were two Lauras. Now suddenly, behold,
she seemed to recognise a third a third
that rose above and forgot the other two, that in
some beautiful, mysterious way was identity ignoring
self.
But the change was not to be abrupt.
Very, very vaguely the thoughts came to her.
The change would be slow, slow would be
evolution, not revolution. The consummation was
to be achieved in the coming years. For to-night
she was what was she? Only a woman,
weak, torn by emotion, driven by impulse, and entering
upon what she imagined was a great crisis in her life.
But meanwhile the time was passing.
Laura descended to the library and, picking up a book,
composed herself to read. When six o’clock
struck, she made haste to assure herself that of course
she could not expect him exactly on the hour.
No, she must make allowances; the day as
Page had suspected had probably been an
important one. He would be a little late, but
he would come soon. “If you love me, you
will come,” she had said.
But an hour later Laura paced the
room with tight-shut lips and burning cheeks.
She was still alone; her day, her hour, was passing,
and he had not so much as sent word. For a moment
the thought occurred to her that he might perhaps
be in great trouble, in great straits, that there was
an excuse. But instantly she repudiated the notion.
“No, no,” she cried, beneath
her breath. “He should come, no matter
what has happened. Or even, at the very least,
he could send word.”
The minutes dragged by. No roll
of wheels echoed under the carriage porch; no step
sounded at the outer door. The house was still,
the street without was still, the silence of the midsummer
evening widened, unbroken around her, like a vast
calm pool. Only the musical Gregorians of the
newsboys chanting the evening’s extras from corner
to corner of the streets rose into the air from time
to time. She was once more alone. Was she
to fail again? Was she to be set aside once more,
as so often heretofore set aside, flouted,
ignored, forgotten? “If you love me,”
she had said.
And this was to be the supreme test.
This evening was to decide which was the great influence
of his life was to prove whether or not
love was paramount. This was the crucial hour.
“And he knows it,” cried Laura. “He
knows it. He did not forget, could not have forgotten.”
The half hour passed, then the hour,
and as eight o’clock chimed from the clock over
the mantelshelf Laura stopped, suddenly rigid, in the
midst of the floor.
Her anger leaped like fire within
her. All the passion of the woman scorned shook
her from head to foot. At the very moment of her
triumph she had been flouted, in the pitch of her
pride! And this was not the only time. All
at once the past disappointments, slights, and humiliations
came again to her memory. She had pleaded, and
had been rebuffed again and again; she had given all
and had received neglect she, Laura, beautiful
beyond other women, who had known love, devoted service,
and the most thoughtful consideration from her earliest
girlhood, had been cast aside.
Suddenly she bent her head quickly,
listening intently. Then she drew a deep breath,
murmuring “At last, at last!”
For the sound of a footstep in the
vestibule was unmistakable. He had come after
all. But so late, so late! No, she could
not be gracious at once; he must be made to feel how
deeply he had offended; he must sue humbly, very humbly,
for pardon. The servant’s step sounded in
the hall on the way towards the front door.
“I am in here, Matthew,”
she called. “In the library. Tell him
I am in here.”
She cast a quick glance at herself
in the mirror close at hand, touched her hair with
rapid fingers, smoothed the agitation from her forehead,
and sat down in a deep chair near the fireplace, opening
a book, turning her back towards the door.
She heard him come in, but did not
move. Even as he crossed the floor she kept her
head turned away. The footsteps paused near at
hand. There was a moment’s silence.
Then slowly Laura, laying down her book, turned and
faced him.
“With many very, very happy
returns of the day,” said Sheldon Corthell,
as he held towards her a cluster of deep-blue violets.
Laura sprang to her feet, a hand upon
her cheek, her eyes wide and flashing.
“You?” was all she had breath to utter.
“You?”
The artist smiled as he laid the flowers
upon the table. “I am going away again
to-morrow,” he said, “for always, I think.
Have I startled you? I only came to say good-by and
to wish you a happy birthday.”
“Oh you remembered!” she
cried. “You remembered! I might have
known you would.”
But the revulsion had been too great.
She had been wrong after all. Jadwin had forgotten.
Emotions to which she could put no name swelled in
her heart and rose in a quick, gasping sob to her throat.
The tears sprang to her eyes. Old impulses, forgotten
impetuosities whipped her on.
“Oh, you remembered, you remembered!”
she cried again, holding out both her hands.
He caught them in his own.
“Remembered!” he echoed. “I
have never forgotten.”
“No, no,” she replied,
shaking her head, winking back the tears. “You
don’t understand. I spoke before I thought.
You don’t understand.”
“I do, believe me, I do,”
he exclaimed. “I understand you better than
you understand yourself.”
Laura’s answer was a cry.
“Oh, then, why did you ever
leave me you who did understand me?
Why did you leave me only because I told you to go?
Why didn’t you make me love you then? Why
didn’t you make me understand myself?”
She clasped her hands tight together upon her breast;
her words, torn by her sobs, came all but incoherent
from behind her shut teeth. “No, no!”
she exclaimed, as he made towards her. “Don’t
touch me, don’t touch me! It is too late.”
“It is not too late. Listen listen
to me.”
“Oh, why weren’t you a
man, strong enough to know a woman’s weakness?
You can only torture me now. Ah, I hate you!
I hate you!”
“You love me! I tell you,
you love me!” he cried, passionately, and before
she was aware of it she was in his arms, his lips were
against her lips, were on her shoulders, her neck.
“You love me!” he cried.
“You love me! I defy you to say you do not.”
“Oh, make me love you, then,”
she answered. “Make me believe that you
do love me.”
“Don’t you know,”
he cried, “don’t you know how I have loved
you? Oh, from the very first! My love has
been my life, has been my death, my one joy, and my
one bitterness. It has always been you, dearest,
year after year, hour after hour. And now I’ve
found you again. And now I shall never, never
let you go.”
“No, no! Ah, don’t,
don’t!” she begged. “I implore
you. I am weak, weak. Just a word, and I
would forget everything.”
“And I do speak that word, and
your own heart answers me in spite of you, and you
will forget forget everything of unhappiness
in your life ”
“Please, please,” she
entreated, breathlessly. Then, taking the leap:
“Ah, I love you, I love you!”
“ Forget all your
unhappiness,” he went on, holding her close to
him. “Forget the one great mistake we both
made. Forget everything, everything, everything
but that we love each other.”
“Don’t let me think, then,”
she cried. “Don’t let me think.
Make me forget everything, every little hour, every
little moment that has passed before this day.
Oh, if I remembered once, I would kill you, kill you
with my hands! I don’t know what I am saying,”
she moaned, “I don’t know what I am saying.
I am mad, I think. Yes I it
must be that.” She pulled back from him,
looking into his face with wide-opened eyes.
“What have I said, what have
we done, what are you here for?”
“To take you away,” he
answered, gently, holding her in his arms, looking
down into her eyes. “To take you far away
with me. To give my whole life to making you
forget that you were ever unhappy.”
“And you will never leave me alone never
once?”
“Never, never once.”
She drew back from him, looking about
the room with unseeing eyes, her fingers plucking
and tearing at the lace of her dress; her voice was
faint and small, like the voice of a little child.
“I I am afraid to
be alone. Oh, I must never be alone again so long
as I shall live. I think I should die.”
“And you never shall be; never
again. Ah, this is my birthday, too, sweetheart.
I am born again to-night.”
Laura clung to his arm; it was as
though she were in the dark, surrounded by the vague
terrors of her girlhood. “And you will always
love me, love me, love me?” she whispered.
“Sheldon, Sheldon, love me always, always, with
all your heart and soul and strength.”
Tears stood in Corthell’s eyes as he answered:
“God forgive whoever whatever has
brought you to this pass,” he said.
And, as if it were a realisation of
his thought, there suddenly came to the ears of both
the roll of wheels upon the asphalt under the carriage
porch and the trampling of iron-shod hoofs.
“Is that your husband?”
Corthell’s quick eye took in Laura’s disarranged
coiffure, one black lock low upon her neck, the roses
at her shoulder crushed and broken, and the bright
spot on either cheek.
“Is that your husband?”
“My husband I don’t
know.” She looked up at him with unseeing
eyes. “Where is my husband? I have
no husband. You are letting me remember,”
she cried, in terror. “You are letting me
remember. Ah, no, no, you don’t love me!
I hate you!”
Quickly he bent and kissed her.
“I will come for you to-morrow
evening,” he said. “You will be ready
then to go with me?”
“Ready then? Yes, yes, to go with you anywhere.”
He stood still a moment, listening.
Somewhere a door closed. He heard the hoofs upon
the asphalt again.
“Good-by,” he whispered.
“God bless you! Good-by till to-morrow night.”
And with the words he was gone. The front door
of the house closed quietly.
Had he come back again? Laura
turned in her place on the long divan at the sound
of a heavy tread by the door of the library.
Then an uncertain hand drew the heavy
curtain aside. Jadwin, her husband, stood before
her, his eyes sunken deep in his head, his face dead
white, his hand shaking. He stood for a long instant
in the middle of the room, looking at her. Then
at last his lips moved:
“Old girl.... Honey.”
Laura rose, and all but groped her
way towards him, her heart beating, the tears streaming
down her face.
“My husband, my husband!”
Together they made their way to the
divan, and sank down upon it side by side, holding
to each other, trembling and fearful, like children
in the night.
“Honey,” whispered Jadwin,
after a while. “Honey, it’s dark,
it’s dark. Something happened....
I don’t remember,” he put his hand uncertainly
to his head, “I can’t remember very well;
but it’s dark a little.”
“It’s dark,” she
repeated, in a low whisper. “It’s
dark, dark. Something happened. Yes.
I must not remember.”
They spoke no further. A long
time passed. Pressed close together, Curtis Jadwin
and his wife sat there in the vast, gorgeous room,
silent and trembling, ridden with unnamed fears, groping
in the darkness.
And while they remained thus, holding
close by one another, a prolonged and wailing cry
rose suddenly from the street, and passed on through
the city under the stars and the wide canopy of the
darkness.
“Extra, oh-h-h, extra!
All about the Smash of the Great Wheat Corner!
All about the Failure of Curtis Jadwin!”