A number of times during the following
year, and finally on the anniversary of the Sands
tragedy, Bob carried the Exchange to the verge of
panic, only to turn the market and save “the
Street” in the end. His profits were fabulous.
Already his fortune was estimated to be between two
and three hundred millions, one of the largest in the
world. His name had become one of terror wherever
stocks were dealt in. Wall Street had come to
regard his every deal, from the moment that he began
operations, as inevitably successful. Now and
again he would jump into the market when some of the
plunging cliques had a bear raid under way, and would
put them to rout by buying everything in sight and
bidding up prices until it looked as though he intended
to do as extraordinary work on the up-side as he was
wont to do on the down. At such times he was the
idol of the Exchange, which worships the man who puts
prices up as it hates him who pulls them down.
Once when war news flashed over the wires from Washington
and rumour had the Cabinet members, Senators, and Congressmen
selling the market short on advance information, when
the “Standard Oil” banks had put up money
rates to 150 per cent, and a crash seemed inevitable,
Bob suddenly smashed the loan market by offering to
lend one hundred millions at four per cent.; and by
buying and bidding up prices at the same time, he
put the whole Washington crowd and its New York accomplices
to disastrous rout and caused them to lose millions.
He continued his operations with increasing violence
and increasing profits up to the fourth anniversary
of the tragedy. On the intervening anniversary
I had been compelled by self-interest and fear that
he would really pull down the entire Wall Street structure,
to rush in and fairly drag him off. But with
his growing madness my influence was waning. Each
raid it was with greater difficulty that I got his
ear.
Finally, on the fourth anniversary,
in a panic that seemed to be running into something
more terrible than any previous, he savagely refused
to accede to my appeal, telling me that he would not
stop, even if Randolph & Randolph were doomed to go
down in the crash. It had become known on the
floor that I was the only one who could do anything
with him in his frenzies, and my pleading with him
in the lobby was watched by the members of the Exchange
with triple eyed suspense. When it was clear from
his emphatic gestures and raised voice for
he was in a reckless mood from drink and madness and
took no pains to disguise his intentions that
I could not prevail upon him, there was a frantic
rush for the poles to throw over stocks in advance
of him. Suddenly, after I had turned from him
in despair, there flashed into my mind an idea.
The situation was desperate. I was dealing with
a madman, and I decided that I was justified in making
this last try. I rushed back to him. “Bob,
good-bye,” I whispered in his ear, “good-bye.
In ten minutes you will get word that Jim Randolph
has cut his throat!” He stopped as though I had
plunged a knife into him, struck his forehead a resounding
blow, and into his wild brown eyes came a sickening
look of fear.
“Stop, Jim, for God’s
sake, don’t say that to me. My cup is full
now. Don’t tell me I am to have that crime
on my soul.” He thought a moment.
“I don’t know whether you mean it, Jim,
but I can take no chances, not for all the money in
the world, not even for revenge. Wait here, Jim.”
He yelled for his brokers, and several rushed to him
from different parts of the room. He sent them
back into the crowd while he dashed for the Amalgamated-pole.
The day was saved.
Presently he came back to me.
“Jim, I must have a talk with you. Come
over to my office.” When we got there he
turned the key and stood in front of me. His
great eyes looked full into mine. In college days,
gazing into their brown depths, by some magic I seemed
to see the heroes and heroines of always happy-ending
tales, as the child sees enchanted creatures far back
in the burning Yule log flames. But there were
no joyous beings in the haunted depths of Bob’s
eyes that day.
“Jim, you gave me an awful scare,”
he said brokenly. “Don’t ever do it
again. I have little left to live for. To
be sure I have some feeling for mother, Fred, and
sisters. But for you I have a love second only
to that I should have felt for Beulah had I been allowed
to have her. The thought, Jim, that I had wrecked
your life, with all you have to live for, would have
been the last straw. My life is purgatory.
Beulah is only an ever-present curse to me a
ghost that rends my heart and soul, one minute with
a blind frenzy to revenge her wrongs, the next with
an icy remorse that I have not already done so.
If I did not have her, perhaps in time I could forget;
perhaps I might lay out some scheme to help poor devils
whose poverty makes life unendurable, and with the
millions I have taken from that main shaft of hell
I might do things that would at least bring quiet
to my soul; but it is impossible with the living corpse
of Beulah Sands before me every minute and that devil
machinery whirling in my brain all the time the song,
‘Revenge her and her father, revenge yourself.’
It is impossible to give it up, Jim. I must have
revenge. I must stop this machinery that is smashing
up more American hearts and souls each year than all
the rest of earth’s grinders combined. Every
day I delay I become more fiendish in my desires.
Jim, don’t think I do not know that I have literally
turned into a fiend. Whenever of late I see myself
in the mirror, I shudder. When I think of what
I was when your father stood us up in his office and
started us in this heart-shrivelling, soul-callousing
business, and what I am now, I cannot keep the madness
down except with rum. You know what it means
for me to say this, me who started with all the pride
of a Brownley; but it is so, Jim. The other night
I went home with my soul frozen with thoughts of the
past and with my brain ablaze with rum, intending
to end it all. I got out my revolver, and woke
Beulah, but as I said, ‘Bob is going to kill
Beulah and himself,’ she laughed that sweet
child’s laugh and clapping her hands said, ’Bob
is so good to play with Beulah,’ and then I
thought of that devil Reinhart and the other fiends
of the ‘System’ being left to continue
their work unhindered and I could not do it.
I must have revenge; I must smash that heart-crushing
machinery. Then I can go, and take Beulah with
me. Now, Jim, let us have it clearly understood
once and for all.”
Remorse and softness were past; he
was the Indian again. “I am going to wreck
that hell-annex some day, and that some day will be
the next time I start in. Don’t argue with
me, don’t misunderstand me. To-day you stopped
me. I don’t know whether you meant what
you threatened; I don’t care now. It is
just as well that I stopped, for the ‘System’s’
machine will be there whenever I start in again.
It loses nothing of its fiendishness, none of its
destructive powers by grinding, but, on the contrary,
as you know, it increases its speed every day it runs.
Now, Jim Randolph, I want to tell you that you must
get yours and the house’s affairs in such shape
that you won’t be hurt when I go into that human
rat-pit the next time, for when I come from it the
New York Stock Exchange and the ‘System’
will have had their spines unjointed. Yes, and
I’ll have their hearts out, too. Neither
will ever again be able to take from the American people
their savings and their manhood and womanhood and
give them in exchange unadulterated torment.
I am going to be fair with you, Jim; this is the last
time I will discuss the subject. After this you
must take your chance with the rest of those who have
to do with the cursed business. When I strike
again, none will be spared. I will wreck ‘the
Street’, and the innocent will go down with
the guilty, if they have any stocks on hand at that
time.
“My power, Jim, is unlimited;
nothing can stay it. I am not going to explain
any further. You have seen me work. You must
know that my power is greater than the ‘System’s,’
and you and I and ‘the Street’ have always
known that the ‘System’ is more powerful
than the Government, more powerful than are the courts,
legislatures, Congress, and the President of the United
States combined, that it absolutely controls the foundation
on which they rest the money of the nation.
But my power is greater, a thousand, yes, a million
times greater than theirs. Jim, they say that
I have made more money than any man in the world.
They say that I have five hundred millions of dollars,
but the fools don’t keep track of my movements.
They only know that I have pulled five hundred millions
from my open whirls, the ones they have had an opportunity
to keep tab on. But I tell you that I have made
even more in my secret deals than the amount they
have seen me take. I have had my agents with my
capital in every deal, every steal the ‘System’
has rigged up. The world has been throwing up
its hands in horror because Carnegie, the blacksmith
of Pittsburgh, pulled off three hundred millions of
swag in the Steel hold-up yes, swag, Jim.
Don’t scowl as though you wanted to read me a
lecture on the coarseness of my language. I have
learned to call this game of ours by its right name.
It is not business enterprise with earned profits as
results, but pulled-off tricks with bags of loot black-jack
swag for their end.
“I got away with three hundred
millions when Steel slumped from 105 to 50 and from
50 to 8, and no one knew I’d made a dollar.
You and ‘the Street’ read every morning
last year the ‘guesses’ as to who could
be rounding up the hundreds of millions on the slump.
The papers and the market letters one morning said
it was ‘Standard Oil’; the next, that it
was Morgan; then it was Frick, Schwab, Gates, and
so on down through the list. Of course, none
of them denied; it is capital to all these knights
of the road to be making millions in the minds of
the world, even though they never get any of the money.
Dick Turpin and Jonathan Wild never were fonder of
having the daring hold-ups that other highwaymen perpetrated
laid to their doors, than are these modern bandits
of being credited with ruthless deeds that they did
not commit. But Jim, ’twas I, ’twas
I who sold Pennsylvania every morning for a year,
while the selling was explained by the press as ’Cassatt
cutting down Gould’s telegraph poles. Gould
and old man Rockefeller selling Pennsylvania to get
even.’ Jim Randolph, I have to-day a billion
dollars, not the Rockefeller or Carnegie kind, but
a real billion. If I had no other power but the
power to call to-morrow for that billion in cash,
it would be sufficient to lay in waste the financial
world before to-morrow night. You are welcome,
Jim, to any part of that billion, and the more you
take the happier you will make me, but when I strike
in again, don’t attempt to stay me, for it will
do no good.”
Shortly after this talk Bob left for
Europe with Beulah. A great German expert on
brain disorders had held out hope that a six month’s
treatment at his sanitarium in Berlin might aid in
restoring her mind. They returned the following
August. The trip had been fruitless. It was
plain to me that Bob was the same hopelessly desperate
man as when he left, more hopeless, more desperate
if anything than when he warned me of his determination.
When he left for Europe “the
Street” breathed more freely, and as time went
by and there was no sign of his confidence-disturbing
influence in the market, the “System”
began to bring out its deferred deals. Times were
ripe for setting up the most wildly inflated stock
lamb-shearing traps. It had been advertised throughout
the world that Tom Reinhart, now a two-hundred-time
millionaire, was to consolidate his and many other
enterprises into one gigantic trust with twelve billions
of capital. His Union and Southern Pacific Railroads,
his coal and Southern lines, together with his steamship
company and lead, iron, and copper mines, were to
be merged with the steel, traction, gas, and other
enterprises he owned jointly with “Standard
Oil.” Some of the railroads owned by Rockefeller
and his pals, in which Reinhart had no part, were to
go in too, and with these was to unite that mother
hog of them all, “Standard Oil” itself.
The trust was to be an enormous holding company, the
like of which had until then not even been dreamed
of by the most daring stock manipulators. The
“System’s” banks, as well as trust
and insurance companies throughout the country, had
for a long time been getting into shape by concentrating
the money of the country for this monster trust.
It was newspaper and news bureau gossip that Reinhart
and his crowd had bought millions of shares of the
different stocks involved in the deal, and it was common
knowledge that upon its successful completion Reinhart’s
fortune would be in the neighbourhood of a billion.
On October 1st the certificate of the Anti-People’s
Trust, $12,000,000,000 capital, 120,000,000 shares,
were listed upon the New York, London, and Boston
Stock Exchanges, and the German and French Bourses,
and trading in them started off fast and furious at
106. The claim that one billion of the twelve
billions capital had been set aside to be used in
protecting and manipulating the stock in the market,
had been so widely advertised that even the most daring
plunger did not think of selling it short.
It was evident to all in the stock-gambling
world that this was to be the “System’s”
grand coup, that at its completion the masses would
be rudely awakened to a realisation that their savings
were invested in the combined American industries
at vastly inflated values, that the few had all the
real money, and that any attempt upon the people’s
part to regulate and control the new system of robbery,
would be fraught with unparalleled disaster not
to the “System,” but to the people.
Since Bob’s return from Europe
I had seen him but a few times. Up to October
1st he had not been near the Stock Exchange or “the
Street.” Shortly after the listing of the
“People Be Damned,” as “the Street”
had dubbed the new trust, he began to show up at his
office regularly. This was the condition of affairs
when Fred Brownley called me up on the telephone,
as I related at the beginning of my story, which I
did not realise I had been so long in telling.
My thoughts had been chasing each
other with lightning-like rapidity back over the last
five years and the fifteen before them, and each thought
deepened the black mist over my present mental vision.
In the midst of my reflections my telephone rang again.
“Mr. Randolph, for Heaven’s
sake have you done nothing yet?” It was Fred
Brownley’s voice. “Things are frightful
here. Bob’s brokers are selling stocks
at five and ten thousand-lot clips. Barry Conant
is leading Reinhart’s forces. It is said
he has the pool’s protection order in Anti-People’s
and that it is unlimited, but Bob has the Reinhart
crowd pretty badly scared. Swan has just finished
giving Conant a hundred thousand off the reel in 10,000
lots, and he told me a moment ago he was going over
to get Bob himself to face Barry Conant. They’re
down twenty points on the average, although they haven’t
let Anti-People’s break an eighth yet.
They have it pegged at 106, but there is an ugly rumour
just in that Bob, under cover of a general attack,
is unloading Anti-People’s on to the Reinhart
wing for Rogers and Rockefeller, and the rumour is
getting in its work. Even Barry Conant is growing
a bit anxious. The latest talk is that Reinhart
is borrowing hundreds of millions on Anti-People’s,
and that his loans are being called in all directions.
Do you know Reinhart is at his place in Virginia and
cannot get here before to-morrow night? If Bob
breaks through Anti-People’s peg, it will be
the worst crash yet.”
“All right, Fred,” I answered.
“I will go over to Bob’s right now.
I hate to do it, but there is no other hope.”
I dropped the receiver and started
for Bob’s office. As I went through his
counting-room one of the clerks said, “They have
just broken Anti-People’s to 90 on a bulletin
that Tom Reinhart’s wife and only daughter have
been killed in an automobile accident at their place
in Virginia. They first had it that Reinhart
himself was killed. That has been corrected, although
the latest word is that he is prostrated.”
I rapped on Bob’s private-office
door. I felt the coming struggle as I heard his
hoarse bellow, “Come in.” He stood
at the ticker, with the tape in one hand, while with
the other he held the telephone receiver to his ear.
My God, what a picture for a stage! His magnificent
form was erect, his feet were as firmly planted as
if he were made of bronze, his shoulders thrown back
as if he were withstanding the rush of the Stock Exchange
hordes, his eyes afire with a sullen, smouldering blaze,
his jaw was set in a way that brought into terrible
relief the new, hard lines of desperation that had
recently come into his face. His great chest was
rising and falling as though he were engaged in a physical
struggle; his perfect-fitting, heavy black Melton
cutaway coat, thrown back from the chest, and a low,
turned-down, white collar formed the setting for a
throat and head that reminded one of a forest monarch
at bay on the mountain crag awaiting the coming of
the hounds and hunters.
I hesitated at the threshold to catch
my breath, as I took in the terrific figure.
Had Bob Brownley been an enemy of mine I should have
backed out in fear, and I do not confess to more than
my fair share of cowardice. Inwardly I thanked
God that Bob was in his office instead of on the floor
of the Exchange. His whole appearance was frightful.
He showed in every line and lineament that he was
a man who would hesitate at nothing, even at killing,
if he should find a human obstacle in his road and
his mind should suggest murder. He was the personification
of the most awful madness. Even when he caught
sight of me, he hardly moved, although my coming must
have been a surprise.
“So it is you, Jim Randolph,
is it? What brings you here?” His
voice was hoarse, but it had a metallic ring that
went to my marrow. Bob Brownley in all the years
of our friendship had never spoken to me except in
kind and loving regard. I looked at him, stunned.
I must have shown how hurt I was. But if he saw
it, he gave no sign. His eyes, looking straight
into mine, changed no more than if he had been addressing
his deadliest enemy.
Again his voice rang out, “What
brings you here? Do you come to plead again for
that dastard Reinhart after the warning I gave you?”
I clenched both hands until I felt
the nails cut the flesh of my palms. I loved
Bob Brownley. I would have done anything to make
him happy, would willingly have sacrificed my own
life to protect his from himself or others, but this
madman, this wild brute, was no more Bob Brownley as
I had known him than the howling northeast gale of
December is the gentle, welcome zephyr of August;
and I felt a resentment at his brutal speech that
I could hardly suppress. With a mighty effort
I crushed it back, trying to think of nothing but
his awful misery and the Bob of our college days.
I said in a firm voice, “Bob,
is this the way to talk to me in your own office?”
At any time before, my words and tone would have touched
his all-generous Southern chivalry, but now he said
harshly “To hell with sentiment.
What ” He did not take his
eyes from mine, but they told me that he was listening
to a voice in the receiver. Only for a second;
then he let loose a wild laugh, which must have penetrated
to the outer office.
Eighty and coming like a spring freshet, he said into the
mouthpiece, and the boys want to know if I wont let up now that Reinhart is
down? Go back and smother them with all they will take down to 60. Thats my
answer. Tell them if Reinhart had ten more wives and daughters and they were all
killed, Id rend his bastard trust to help him dull his sorrow. Give the word at
every pole that I will have Reinhart where he will curse his luck that he was
not in the automobile with the rest of his tribe
“To hell with sentiment!”
He was speaking to me again. “What do you
want? If you are here to beg for Reinhart and
his pack of yellow curs, you’ve got your answer.
I wouldn’t let up on that fiendish hyena, not
if his wife and daughter and all the dead wives and
daughters of every ‘System’ man came back
in their grave clothes and begged. I wouldn’t
let up a share.” I gasped in horror.
“When did those robbers of men
and despoilers of women and children ever let up because
of death? When were they ever known to wait even
till the corpse stiffened to pluck out the hearts
of the victims? It is my turn now, and if I let
up a hair may I, yes, and Beulah, too, be damned,
eternally damned.”
I could not stand it. If I stayed,
I, too, should become mad. I reached for the
doorknob, but before I could swing the door open Bob
was upon me like a wolf. He grasped me by the
shoulders and with the strength of a madman hurled
me half across the room. I sank into a chair.
“No, you don’t, Jim Randolph,
no, you don’t. You came here for something
and, by heaven, you will tell me what it is! You
know me; you are the only human being who does.
You know what I was, you see what I am. You know
what they did to me to make me what I am. You
know, Jim Randolph, you know whether I deserved it.
You know whether in all my life up to the day those
dollar-frenzied hounds tore my soul, I had done any
man, woman, or child a wrong. You know whether
I had, and now you are going to sneak off and leave
me as though I were a cur dog of the Reinhart-’Standard
Oil’ breed gone mad!”
He was standing over me, a terrible
yet a magnificent figure. As he hurled these
words at me, I was sure he had really lost his mind;
that I was in the presence of a man truly mad.
But only for an instant; then my horror, my anger
turned to a great, crushing, all-consuming agony of
pity for Bob, and I dropped my head on my hands and
wept. It is hard to admit it, but it is true I
wept uncontrollably. In an instant the room was
quiet except for the sound of my own awful grief.
I heard it, was ashamed of it, but I could not stop.
The telephone rang again and again, wildly, shrilly,
but there was no answer. The stillness became
so oppressive that even my own sobs quieted.
I gasped as the lump in my throat choked me, then I
slowly raised my eyes.
Bob’s towering figure was in
front of me. His head had fallen forward, and
his arms were folded across his breast. But that
he stood erect I should have thought him dead, so
still was he. I jumped to my feet and looked
into his face, down which great tears were dropping
silently. I touched him on the shoulder.
“Bob, my dear old chum, Bob,
forgive me. For God’s sake, forgive me for
intruding on your misery.”
I looked at him. I will never
forget his face. No heartbroken woman’s
could have been sadder. He slowly raised his head,
then staggered and grasped the ticker-stand for support.
“Don’t, Jim, don’t don’t
ask me to forgive you. Oh, Jim, Jim, my old friend,
forgive me for my madness; forget what I said to you,
forget the brute you just saw and think of me as of
old, when I would have plucked out my tongue if I
had caught it saying a harsh word to the best and
truest friend man ever had. Jim, forget it all.
I was mad, I am mad, I have been mad for a long time,
but it cannot last much longer. I know it can’t,
and, Jim, by all our past love, by the memories of
the dear old days at St. Paul’s and at Harvard,
the dear old days of hope and happiness, when we planned
for the future, try to think of me only as you knew
me then, as you know that I should now be, but for
the ‘System’s’ curse.”
The clerks were pounding on the door;
through the glass showed many forms. They had
been gathering for minutes while Bob talked in his
low, sad tone, a tone that no one could believe came
from the same mouth that a few moments before had
poured forth a flood of brutal heartlessness.
Bob went to the door. The office
was in an uproar. Twenty or thirty of Bob’s
brokers were there, aghast at not getting a reply to
their calls. Many more were pouring in through
the outer office. Bob looked at them coldly.
“Well, what is the trouble? Is it possible
we are down to a point where the Stock Exchange rushes
over to a man’s office when his wire happens
to break down?”
They saw his bluff. You cannot
deceive Stock Exchange men, at least not the kind
that Bob Brownley employed on panic days, but his coolness
reassured them, and when they saw me it was odds-on
that they guessed to a man why Bob had ignored his
wires guessed that I had been pleading for
the life of “the Street.”
“Well, where do you stand?”
Frank Swan answered for the crowd:
“The panic is in full swing. She’s
a cellar-to-ridge-pole ripper. They’re
down 40 or over on an average. Anti-People’s
is down to 35, and still coming like sawdust over a
broken dam. Barry Conant’s house and a
dozen other of Reinhart’s have gone under.
His banks and trust companies are going every minute.
The whole Street will be overboard before the close.
The governing committee has just called a meeting
to see whether it will not be best to adjourn the
Exchange over to-day and to-morrow.”
Bob listened as if he had been a master
at the wheel in a gale, receiving reports from his
mates.
There was no trace now of the scene
he had just been through. He was cool, masterful,
like the seasoned sea-dog who knows that in spite of
the ocean’s rage and the wind’s howl,
the wheel will answer his hand and the craft its rudder.
“Jim, come over to the Exchange.”
The crowd followed along. “We have but
a minute and I want to have you say you forgive me,”
he said to me. “I know, Jim, you understand
it all, but I must tell you how sorrowful I am that
in my madness I should have so forgotten my admiration,
respect, and love for you, yes, and my gratitude to
you, as to say what I did. I’ll do the
only thing I can to atone. I will stop this panic
and undo as much as possible of my work; and now that
I have wrecked Reinhart I am through with this game
forever, yes, through forever.”
He pressed my hand in his strong,
honest one and strode into the Exchange ahead of the
crowd. All was chaos, although the trading had
toned down to a sullen desperation. So many houses,
banks, and trust companies had failed that no man
knew whether the member he had traded with early in
the day would on the morrow be solvent enough to carry
out his trades. The man who had been “long”
in the morning, and had sold out before the crash,
and who thought he now had no interest in the panic,
found himself with his stock again on hand, because
of the failure of the one to whom he had sold, and
the price cut in two. The man who was “short”
and who a few minutes before had been eagerly counting
his profits now knew that they had been turned to
loss, because the man from whom he had borrowed his
short stocks for delivery would be in no condition
to repay for them, the next day, when they should
be returned to him. The “short” man
was himself, therefore, “long” stocks
he had bought to cover his “short” sale.
In depressing the price he had been working against
his own pocket instead of against the bulls he had
thought he was opposing. All was confusion and
black despair. There is, indeed, no blacker place
than the floor of the Stock Exchange after a panic
cyclone has swept it, and is yet lingering in its
corners, while the survivors of its fury do not know
whether or not it will again gather force.