After Crittenton Madeira had organised
the Canaan Mining and Development Company the Canaan
Call sent him in one leaping, exultant paragraph
out of his position as “our esteemed fellow townsman”
into a position of far more classic significance by
naming him the “Colossus of Canaan.”
Madeira was a man of lightning-like execution of a
plan, once he had got hold of his plan, and Bruce
Steering, sharpened by circumstances into a consideration
of every chance about him and even beyond him, had
brought Madeira the plan from far away New York.
Throwing his immense energies toward the prospect
of ore in the Canaan Tigmores, bringing forward every
dollar of his fortunes, as usual not so
large as they were accredited with being, to
finance his new projects, Madeira had accomplished
wonders within an incredibly short time. There
were those, unacquainted with the contents of an envelope
in Madeira’s vest pocket, who marvelled that
a sharp man should let his projects be entangled with
entailed property, but for the most part Canaanites
were too accustomed to follow where Madeira led to
marvel, or to ask foolish questions. Even for
those so inclined Madeira had good answers. On
the one side, he could show, from the progress already
made, that there must be such a great quantity of
ore in the Canaan Tigmores that it would be possible
to take fortunes out of them during old Grierson’s
possession of the hills, even though the old man lived
but a few years. On the other side he could show
that it was not in the Canaan Tigmores alone that he
was pushing the search for ore, but in the outlying
land that had passed into his control as well.
It was true that he had put a steam-drill into the
Canaan Tigmores, but it was equally true that he had
put steam-drills up the Di at two or three points
far beyond the Tigmores. He made it as plain
as day that the operations of the Canaan Mining and
Development Company would extend all over that section,
and that the Company’s chances could not be
taken away even by the death of Grierson. And
he made it equally and cheerfully plain that Grierson
would not die.
Out on the streets of Canaan, among
the puppets who danced at his touch upon the strings,
Madeira never faltered in his exposition of the Company’s
affairs and enterprises, and in the Company’s
offices behind the Bank of Canaan, his direction was
steady, resourceful and comforting. He could
build up potential profits for the investing Canaanites
and build down potential failure in a manner so satisfying
that the Canaanites gladly gave him their money and
fondly hung upon him.
It was Mr. Quin Beasley, that conclusive
reasoner, who said, “Simlike ef you talk to
Crit fer abaout th’ee bats of your eye he
cand show you that ef innybody, don’t
keer who, would putt, wall say, wall,
don’t keer haow much you say, as
much as tin thousand, in the Comp’ny
an’ leave it slumber fer say wall,
don’t keer haow long you say, as much
as fo’, five months, it ’ud
be wuth, be wuth, wall, I don’t
keer to over-fetch, but I reckin f’m whut Crit
says, th’aint no tellin’ whut it would
be wuth.”
And it was the Canaan Call
that endorsed Mr. Madeira in that emphatic editorial,
which is herewith reproduced, just as it was doled
out relentlessly to the few Canaan sulkers, under
the caption of
“IT WILL
BE DRAMATIC, BY GOSH!
“When Crit Madeira, the Colossus
of Canaan, accomplishes what he surely shall
accomplish, when the roar of mill machinery begins
to reverberate through the hills of the future
Joplin, arousing the vast energies and resources
of We-all, Pewee and Big Wheat, let us be generous.
If there was a sponge, kicker, shirk or drone, let
us cover his selfishness with the mantle of charity.
Leave him under the beating light of progress
to wrestle with whatever remnant of a conscience
he may happen to have. If he can stand by and
coolly watch us work our gizzards out for the
common good, and then reach out to share the
fruits of our sacrifices, energies and enterprise,
without a qualm, we can remember that there are
many things in this world worth far more than
money, one of which is that sense of having done
our neighbour’s share as well as our own.
It will be enough for us to watch when, bewildered
by the lusty life and growth and the maze of
new-made streets of the future city, the laggard
stands debating with that other self, that genius that
has kept him what he is. Fancy his striking
attitude, thumbs in arm-pits and eyes rolling
up to some tall spire, crying out to his other
self, ’Thou canst not say I helped do this!
Shake not thy towseled locks at me!’ By
gosh, it will be dramatic!"
Within a month after Bruce Steering
had entered the portals of Missouri, Madeira had put
his first steam-drill into the hills. Within two
more weeks he had put in another. It took him
less time to do the things that other men think about
and talk about and put off than any man Steering had
ever known. One day, not so very long after old
Bernique’s find in Choke Gulch, word had gone
over Canaan like an eagle’s scream that ore
had been struck in the Canaan Tigmores. Old Bernique
had wrung his hands, and Steering had gone grimly
back to a little up-river shack, at Redbud, below
Sowfoot Crossing, where he was spending a great deal
of his time these later days.
As the winter broke, Madeira’s
ability to seize the pivotal point on which to turn
theory into practice wrought so surely and so swiftly
as to be inexplicable to anyone unaware of the fever
that drove him on. His first face of ore had
cut blind, but he only put two more drills to work,
and in the early spring one of the drills struck ore
again, a small face, but ore. They had not found
the big lode yet, but every indication was that much
to the good. The Canaan Call became so
jubilant over the second find that even the sulkers
lost sight of the fact that the find was on entailed
property. Confidence in Madeira went to high
pitch, a supreme tension that a touch might snap.
All Canaan was waking up in these
days, all Tigmore County was nervous. Town and
county were in a pleased, tortured, ante-boom consciousness
that, first thing you know, there would be a new Canaan.
Some new streets were laid out; a number of people
bought chenille portieres; and though Crittenton Madeira
quietly drew his money out of the Grange, for other
and weightier uses, the Grange secured new capital
elsewhere and flourished mightily. For farmers
from We-all Prairie and Pewee and Big Wheat Valley,
cotton raisers from the “Upper Bottom”
and corn and cattle men from the “Lower Bottom”
came into Canaan “to trade,” and filled
the aisles of the Grange, gossiping, getting information
about the ore developments, then crossing swiftly
and determinedly to Madeira’s bank to leave
their money with the president of the Canaan Mining
and Development Company.
Out at his house, in his office, in
the garden, on horseback, on foot, Madeira kept his
daughter Sally near him. He watched his daughter
almost constantly, just for the satisfaction of seeing
her. As the girl went about her household duties,
or walked in the garden with her long, supple stride,
or rode the high-tempered horses from the stable, or
drove with him, the fine glow on her face, her magnificent
health and honesty and strength radiating from her,
she was, for Madeira, a continual justification.
“Catch me taking anything away
from a girl like that to give it to a damn Yankee
like Steering,” he would tell himself over and
over. “Won’t she do the most good
with it? It’ll be hers soon. Won’t
she do the most good? Answer me that, now.”
So much for the outside where Madeira
lived in the world of realities and met the various
demands of each day’s relations capably and coolly.
Inside his private office behind the bank, at his desk,
he lived in another world, a world where shadow became
substance, possibility became actuality and fear made
facts out of fancy.
At night, after Canaan had put its
lights out and had lapsed into the shroud-like stillness
of a country town’s sleep, Madeira was there,
with his ghost, in his office, figuring,
figuring. On the roll-top of his desk he kept
a letter spread out in front of him. It always
happened that he took that letter out of his vest
pocket for the purpose of destroying it, and it always
happened that when he got up, far into the night,
he picked the letter up and replaced it in his pocket.
If the words of the letter had been seared across
eternity with the red-hot iron of fate they could
not have been more indestructible.
Besides the letter, Madeira always
had on the desk maps, geological surveys, time estimates.
Von Moltke never figured half so carefully nor on
half so many shaky hypotheses as did Madeira in his
office during these nights. He came to know,
through awful, blood-sweating hours, that with so
much blasting, so much pick-and-shovel work, allowing
for so many back-sets from water and blind rock, so
many shifts of men could progress to certain points,
in so many days. He sometimes realised that all
this was unnecessary; that it was aging him and crazing
him; that he could put his work through on the Tigmores
long before word of old Grierson’s death would,
by any unfortuitous accident, leak into Canaan, if
it ever got there; that he would never have to resort
to the subways that he was figuring on to steal the
ore out of the Canaan Tigmores; that all this ceaseless,
merciless calculation was but the reaction of a conscience,
stalking, gaunt and lunatic, through the charnel-house
of its own experience. But for all that he had
to go on crossing bridges that he was never to reach,
covering black tracks that he was never to make.
Often at his desk there, his mind became strangely
obtunded and he babbled vapidly; his big face pinched
up till it seemed lean and grey, and he pitched forward,
face down, upon the desk.