<h2><SPAN name="chap25"></SPAN>Chapter XXV</h2>
<p>The residence of Henry A. Mollenhauer was, at that time, in a section of the
city which was almost as new as that in which Butler was living. It was on
South Broad Street, near a handsome library building which had been recently
erected. It was a spacious house of the type usually affected by men of new
wealth in those days—a structure four stories in height of yellow brick
and white stone built after no school which one could readily identify, but not
unattractive in its architectural composition. A broad flight of steps leading
to a wide veranda gave into a decidedly ornate door, which was set on either
side by narrow windows and ornamented to the right and left with pale-blue
jardinieres of considerable charm of outline. The interior, divided into twenty
rooms, was paneled and parqueted in the most expensive manner for homes of that
day. There was a great reception-hall, a large parlor or drawing-room, a
dining-room at least thirty feet square paneled in oak; and on the second floor
were a music-room devoted to the talents of Mollenhauer’s three ambitious
daughters, a library and private office for himself, a boudoir and bath for his
wife, and a conservatory.</p>
<p>Mollenhauer was, and felt himself to be, a very important man. His financial
and political judgment was exceedingly keen. Although he was a German, or
rather an American of German parentage, he was a man of a rather impressive
American presence. He was tall and heavy and shrewd and cold. His large chest
and wide shoulders supported a head of distinguished proportions, both round
and long when seen from different angles. The frontal bone descended in a
protruding curve over the nose, and projected solemnly over the eyes, which
burned with a shrewd, inquiring gaze. And the nose and mouth and chin below, as
well as his smooth, hard cheeks, confirmed the impression that he knew very
well what he wished in this world, and was very able without regard to let or
hindrance to get it. It was a big face, impressive, well modeled. He was an
excellent friend of Edward Malia Butler’s, as such friendships go, and
his regard for Mark Simpson was as sincere as that of one tiger for another. He
respected ability; he was willing to play fair when fair was the game. When it
was not, the reach of his cunning was not easily measured.</p>
<p>When Edward Butler and his son arrived on this Sunday evening, this
distinguished representative of one-third of the city’s interests was not
expecting them. He was in his library reading and listening to one of his
daughters playing the piano. His wife and his other two daughters had gone to
church. He was of a domestic turn of mind. Still, Sunday evening being an
excellent one for conference purposes generally in the world of politics, he
was not without the thought that some one or other of his distinguished
confreres might call, and when the combination footman and butler announced the
presence of Butler and his son, he was well pleased.</p>
<p>“So there you are,” he remarked to Butler, genially, extending his
hand. “I’m certainly glad to see you. And Owen! How are you, Owen?
What will you gentlemen have to drink, and what will you smoke? I know
you’ll have something. John”—to the
servitor—-“see if you can find something for these gentlemen. I
have just been listening to Caroline play; but I think you’ve frightened
her off for the time being.”</p>
<p>He moved a chair into position for Butler, and indicated to Owen another on the
other side of the table. In a moment his servant had returned with a silver
tray of elaborate design, carrying whiskies and wines of various dates and
cigars in profusion. Owen was the new type of young financier who neither
smoked nor drank. His father temperately did both.</p>
<p>“It’s a comfortable place you have here,” said Butler,
without any indication of the important mission that had brought him. “I
don’t wonder you stay at home Sunday evenings. What’s new in the
city?”</p>
<p>“Nothing much, so far as I can see,” replied Mollenhauer,
pacifically. “Things seem to be running smooth enough. You don’t
know anything that we ought to worry about, do you?”</p>
<p>“Well, yes,” said Butler, draining off the remainder of a brandy
and soda that had been prepared for him. “One thing. You haven’t
seen an avenin’ paper, have you?”</p>
<p>“No, I haven’t,” said Mollenhauer, straightening up.
“Is there one out? What’s the trouble anyhow?”</p>
<p>“Nothing—except Chicago’s burning, and it looks as though
we’d have a little money-storm here in the morning.”</p>
<p>“You don’t say! I didn’t hear that. There’s a paper
out, is there? Well, well—is it much of a fire?”</p>
<p>“The city is burning down, so they say,” put in Owen, who was
watching the face of the distinguished politician with considerable interest.</p>
<p>“Well, that is news. I must send out and get a paper. John!” he
called. His man-servant appeared. “See if you can get me a paper
somewhere.” The servant disappeared. “What makes you think that
would have anything to do with us?” observed Mollenhauer, returning to
Butler.</p>
<p>“Well, there’s one thing that goes with that that I didn’t
know till a little while ago and that is that our man Stener is apt to be short
in his accounts, unless things come out better than some people seem to
think,” suggested Butler, calmly. “That might not look so well
before election, would it?” His shrewd gray Irish eyes looked into
Mollenhauer’s, who returned his gaze.</p>
<p>“Where did you get that?” queried Mr. Mollenhauer icily. “He
hasn’t deliberately taken much money, has he? How much has he
taken—do you know?”</p>
<p>“Quite a bit,” replied Butler, quietly. “Nearly five hundred
thousand, so I understand. Only I wouldn’t say that it has been taken as
yet. It’s in danger of being lost.”</p>
<p>“Five hundred thousand!” exclaimed Mollenhauer in amazement, and
yet preserving his usual calm. “You don’t tell me! How long has
this been going on? What has he been doing with the money?”</p>
<p>“He’s loaned a good deal—about five hundred thousand dollars
to this young Cowperwood in Third Street, that’s been handlin’ city
loan. They’ve been investin’ it for themselves in one thing and
another—mostly in buyin’ up street-railways.” (At the mention
of street-railways Mollenhauer’s impassive countenance underwent a barely
perceptible change.) “This fire, accordin’ to Cowperwood, is
certain to produce a panic in the mornin’, and unless he gets
considerable help he doesn’t see how he’s to hold out. If he
doesn’t hold out, there’ll be five hundred thousand dollars
missin’ from the city treasury which can’t be put back.
Stener’s out of town and Cowperwood’s come to me to see what can be
done about it. As a matter of fact, he’s done a little business for me in
times past, and he thought maybe I could help him now—that is, that I
might get you and the Senator to see the big bankers with me and help support
the market in the mornin’. If we don’t he’s goin’ to
fail, and he thought the scandal would hurt us in the election. He
doesn’t appear to me to be workin’ any game—just anxious to
save himself and do the square thing by me—by us, if he can.”
Butler paused.</p>
<p>Mollenhauer, sly and secretive himself, was apparently not at all moved by this
unexpected development. At the same time, never having thought of Stener as
having any particular executive or financial ability, he was a little stirred
and curious. So his treasurer was using money without his knowing it, and now
stood in danger of being prosecuted! Cowperwood he knew of only indirectly, as
one who had been engaged to handle city loan. He had profited by his
manipulation of city loan. Evidently the banker had made a fool of Stener, and
had used the money for street-railway shares! He and Stener must have quite
some private holdings then. That did interest Mollenhauer greatly.</p>
<p>“Five hundred thousand dollars!” he repeated, when Butler had
finished. “That is quite a little money. If merely supporting the market
would save Cowperwood we might do that, although if it’s a severe panic I
do not see how anything we can do will be of very much assistance to him. If
he’s in a very tight place and a severe slump is coming, it will take a
great deal more than our merely supporting the market to save him. I’ve
been through that before. You don’t know what his liabilities are?”</p>
<p>“I do not,” said Butler.</p>
<p>“He didn’t ask for money, you say?”</p>
<p>“He wants me to l’ave a hundred thousand he has of mine until he
sees whether he can get through or not.”</p>
<p>“Stener is really out of town, I suppose?” Mollenhauer was innately
suspicious.</p>
<p>“So Cowperwood says. We can send and find out.”</p>
<p>Mollenhauer was thinking of the various aspects of the case. Supporting the
market would be all very well if that would save Cowperwood, and the Republican
party and his treasurer. At the same time Stener could then be compelled to
restore the five hundred thousand dollars to the city treasury, and release his
holdings to some one—preferably to him—Mollenhauer. But here was
Butler also to be considered in this matter. What might he not want? He
consulted with Butler and learned that Cowperwood had agreed to return the five
hundred thousand in case he could get it together. The various street-car
holdings were not asked after. But what assurance had any one that Cowperwood
could be so saved? And could, or would get the money together? And if he were
saved would he give the money back to Stener? If he required actual money, who
would loan it to him in a time like this—in case a sharp panic was
imminent? What security could he give? On the other hand, under pressure from
the right parties he might be made to surrender all his street-railway holdings
for a song—his and Stener’s. If he (Mollenhauer) could get them he
would not particularly care whether the election was lost this fall or not,
although he felt satisfied, as had Owen, that it would not be lost. It could be
bought, as usual. The defalcation—if Cowperwood’s failure made
Stener’s loan into one—could be concealed long enough, Mollenhauer
thought, to win. Personally as it came to him now he would prefer to frighten
Stener into refusing Cowperwood additional aid, and then raid the
latter’s street-railway stock in combination with everybody else’s,
for that matter—Simpson’s and Butler’s included. One of the
big sources of future wealth in Philadelphia lay in these lines. For the
present, however, he had to pretend an interest in saving the party at the
polls.</p>
<p>“I can’t speak for the Senator, that’s sure,” pursued
Mollenhauer, reflectively. “I don’t know what he may think. As for
myself, I am perfectly willing to do what I can to keep up the price of stocks,
if that will do any good. I would do so naturally in order to protect my loans.
The thing that we ought to be thinking about, in my judgment, is how to prevent
exposure, in case Mr. Cowperwood does fail, until after election. We have no
assurance, of course, that however much we support the market we will be able
to sustain it.”</p>
<p>“We have not,” replied Butler, solemnly.</p>
<p>Owen thought he could see Cowperwood’s approaching doom quite plainly. At
that moment the door-bell rang. A maid, in the absence of the footman, brought
in the name of Senator Simpson.</p>
<p>“Just the man,” said Mollenhauer. “Show him up. You can see
what he thinks.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps I had better leave you alone now,” suggested Owen to his
father. “Perhaps I can find Miss Caroline, and she will sing for me.
I’ll wait for you, father,” he added.</p>
<p>Mollenhauer cast him an ingratiating smile, and as he stepped out Senator
Simpson walked in.</p>
<p>A more interesting type of his kind than Senator Mark Simpson never flourished
in the State of Pennsylvania, which has been productive of interesting types.
Contrasted with either of the two men who now greeted him warmly and shook his
hand, he was physically unimpressive. He was small—five feet nine inches,
to Mollenhauer’s six feet and Butler’s five feet eleven inches and
a half, and then his face was smooth, with a receding jaw. In the other two
this feature was prominent. Nor were his eyes as frank as those of Butler, nor
as defiant as those of Mollenhauer; but for subtlety they were unmatched by
either—deep, strange, receding, cavernous eyes which contemplated you as
might those of a cat looking out of a dark hole, and suggesting all the
artfulness that has ever distinguished the feline family. He had a strange mop
of black hair sweeping down over a fine, low, white forehead, and a skin as
pale and bluish as poor health might make it; but there was, nevertheless,
resident here a strange, resistant, capable force that ruled men—the
subtlety with which he knew how to feed cupidity with hope and gain and the
ruthlessness with which he repaid those who said him nay. He was a still man,
as such a man might well have been—feeble and fish-like in his handshake,
wan and slightly lackadaisical in his smile, but speaking always with eyes that
answered for every defect.</p>
<p>“Av’nin’, Mark, I’m glad to see you,” was
Butler’s greeting.</p>
<p>“How are you, Edward?” came the quiet reply.</p>
<p>“Well, Senator, you’re not looking any the worse for wear. Can I
pour you something?”</p>
<p>“Nothing to-night, Henry,” replied Simpson. “I haven’t
long to stay. I just stopped by on my way home. My wife’s over here at
the Cavanaghs’, and I have to stop by to fetch her.”</p>
<p>“Well, it’s a good thing you dropped in, Senator, just when you
did,” began Mollenhauer, seating himself after his guest. “Butler
here has been telling me of a little political problem that has arisen since I
last saw you. I suppose you’ve heard that Chicago is burning?”</p>
<p>“Yes; Cavanagh was just telling me. It looks to be quite serious. I think
the market will drop heavily in the morning.”</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t be surprised myself,” put in Mollenhauer,
laconically.</p>
<p>“Here’s the paper now,” said Butler, as John, the servant,
came in from the street bearing the paper in his hand. Mollenhauer took it and
spread it out before them. It was among the earliest of the
“extras” that were issued in this country, and contained a rather
impressive spread of type announcing that the conflagration in the lake city
was growing hourly worse since its inception the day before.</p>
<p>“Well, that is certainly dreadful,” said Simpson. “I’m
very sorry for Chicago. I have many friends there. I shall hope to hear that it
is not so bad as it seems.”</p>
<p>The man had a rather grandiloquent manner which he never abandoned under any
circumstances.</p>
<p>“The matter that Butler was telling me about,” continued
Mollenhauer, “has something to do with this in a way. You know the habit
our city treasurers have of loaning out their money at two per cent.?”</p>
<p>“Yes?” said Simpson, inquiringly.</p>
<p>“Well, Mr. Stener, it seems, has been loaning out a good deal of the
city’s money to this young Cowperwood, in Third Street, who has been
handling city loans.”</p>
<p>“You don’t say!” said Simpson, putting on an air of surprise.
“Not much, I hope?” The Senator, like Butler and Mollenhauer, was
profiting greatly by cheap loans from the same source to various designated
city depositories.</p>
<p>“Well, it seems that Stener has loaned him as much as five hundred
thousand dollars, and if by any chance Cowperwood shouldn’t be able to
weather this storm, Stener is apt to be short that amount, and that
wouldn’t look so good as a voting proposition to the people in November,
do you think? Cowperwood owes Mr. Butler here one hundred thousand dollars, and
because of that he came to see him to-night. He wanted Butler to see if
something couldn’t be done through us to tide him over. If
not”—he waved one hand suggestively—“well, he might
fail.”</p>
<p>Simpson fingered his strange, wide mouth with his delicate hand. “What
have they been doing with the five hundred thousand dollars?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Oh, the boys must make a little somethin’ on the side,” said
Butler, cheerfully. “I think they’ve been buyin’ up
street-railways, for one thing.” He stuck his thumbs in the armholes of
his vest. Both Mollenhauer and Simpson smiled wan smiles.</p>
<p>“Quite so,” said Mollenhauer. Senator Simpson merely looked the
deep things that he thought.</p>
<p>He, too, was thinking how useless it was for any one to approach a group of
politicians with a proposition like this, particularly in a crisis such as bid
fair to occur. He reflected that if he and Butler and Mollenhauer could get
together and promise Cowperwood protection in return for the surrender of his
street-railway holdings it would be a very different matter. It would be very
easy in this case to carry the city treasury loan along in silence and even
issue more money to support it; but it was not sure, in the first place, that
Cowperwood could be made to surrender his stocks, and in the second place that
either Butler or Mollenhauer would enter into any such deal with him, Simpson.
Butler had evidently come here to say a good word for Cowperwood. Mollenhauer
and himself were silent rivals. Although they worked together politically it
was toward essentially different financial ends. They were allied in no one
particular financial proposition, any more than Mollenhauer and Butler were.
And besides, in all probability Cowperwood was no fool. He was not equally
guilty with Stener; the latter had loaned him money. The Senator reflected on
whether he should broach some such subtle solution of the situation as had
occurred to him to his colleagues, but he decided not. Really Mollenhauer was
too treacherous a man to work with on a thing of this kind. It was a splendid
chance but dangerous. He had better go it alone. For the present they should
demand of Stener that he get Cowperwood to return the five hundred thousand
dollars if he could. If not, Stener could be sacrificed for the benefit of the
party, if need be. Cowperwood’s stocks, with this tip as to his
condition, would, Simpson reflected, offer a good opportunity for a little
stock-exchange work on the part of his own brokers. They could spread rumors as
to Cowperwood’s condition and then offer to take his shares off his
hands—for a song, of course. It was an evil moment that led Cowperwood to
Butler.</p>
<p>“Well, now,” said the Senator, after a prolonged silence, “I
might sympathize with Mr. Cowperwood in his situation, and I certainly
don’t blame him for buying up street-railways if he can; but I really
don’t see what can be done for him very well in this crisis. I
don’t know about you, gentlemen, but I am rather certain that I am not in
a position to pick other people’s chestnuts out of the fire if I wanted
to, just now. It all depends on whether we feel that the danger to the party is
sufficient to warrant our going down into our pockets and assisting him.”</p>
<p>At the mention of real money to be loaned Mollenhauer pulled a long face.
“I can’t see that I will be able to do very much for Mr.
Cowperwood,” he sighed.</p>
<p>“Begad,” said Buler, with a keen sense of humor, “it looks to
me as if I’d better be gettin’ in my one hundred thousand dollars.
That’s the first business of the early mornin’.” Neither
Simpson nor Mollenhauer condescended on this occasion to smile even the wan
smile they had smiled before. They merely looked wise and solemn.</p>
<p>“But this matter of the city treasury, now,” said Senator Simpson,
after the atmosphere had been allowed to settle a little, “is something
to which we shall have to devote a little thought. If Mr. Cowperwood should
fail, and the treasury lose that much money, it would embarrass us no little.
What lines are they,” he added, as an afterthought, “that this man
has been particularly interested in?”</p>
<p>“I really don’t know,” replied Butler, who did not care to
say what Owen had told him on the drive over.</p>
<p>“I don’t see,” said Mollenhauer, “unless we can make
Stener get the money back before this man Cowperwood fails, how we can save
ourselves from considerable annoyance later; but if we did anything which would
look as though we were going to compel restitution, he would probably shut up
shop anyhow. So there’s no remedy in that direction. And it
wouldn’t be very kind to our friend Edward here to do it until we hear
how he comes out on his affair.” He was referring to Butler’s loan.</p>
<p>“Certainly not,” said Senator Simpson, with true political sagacity
and feeling.</p>
<p>“I’ll have that one hundred thousand dollars in the
mornin’,” said Butler, “and never fear.”</p>
<p>“I think,” said Simpson, “if anything comes of this matter
that we will have to do our best to hush it up until after the election. The
newspapers can just as well keep silent on that score as not. There’s one
thing I would suggest”—and he was now thinking of the
street-railway properties which Cowperwood had so judiciously
collected—“and that is that the city treasurer be cautioned against
advancing any more money in a situation of this kind. He might readily be
compromised into advancing much more. I suppose a word from you, Henry, would
prevent that.”</p>
<p>“Yes; I can do that,” said Mollenhauer, solemnly.</p>
<p>“My judgement would be,” said Butler, in a rather obscure manner,
thinking of Cowperwood’s mistake in appealing to these noble protectors
of the public, “that it’s best to let sleepin’ dogs run be
thimselves.”</p>
<p>Thus ended Frank Cowperwood’s dreams of what Butler and his political
associates might do for him in his hour of distress.</p>
<p>The energies of Cowperwood after leaving Butler were devoted to the task of
seeing others who might be of some assistance to him. He had left word with
Mrs. Stener that if any message came from her husband he was to be notified at
once. He hunted up Walter Leigh, of Drexel & Co., Avery Stone of Jay Cooke
& Co., and President Davison of the Girard National Bank. He wanted to see
what they thought of the situation and to negotiate a loan with President
Davison covering all his real and personal property.</p>
<p>“I can’t tell you, Frank,” Walter Leigh insisted, “I
don’t know how things will be running by to-morrow noon. I’m glad
to know how you stand. I’m glad you’re doing what you’re
doing—getting all your affairs in shape. It will help a lot. I’ll
favor you all I possibly can. But if the chief decides on a certain group of
loans to be called, they’ll have to be called, that’s all.
I’ll do my best to make things look better. If the whole of Chicago is
wiped out, the insurance companies—some of them, anyhow—are sure to
go, and then look out. I suppose you’ll call in all your loans?”</p>
<p>“Not any more than I have to.”</p>
<p>“Well, that’s just the way it is here—or will be.”</p>
<p>The two men shook hands. They liked each other. Leigh was of the city’s
fashionable coterie, a society man to the manner born, but with a wealth of
common sense and a great deal of worldly experience.</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you, Frank,” he observed at parting,
“I’ve always thought you were carrying too much street-railway.
It’s great stuff if you can get away with it, but it’s just in a
pinch like this that you’re apt to get hurt. You’ve been making
money pretty fast out of that and city loans.”</p>
<p>He looked directly into his long-time friend’s eyes, and they smiled.</p>
<p>It was the same with Avery Stone, President Davison, and others. They had all
already heard rumors of disaster when he arrived. They were not sure what the
morrow would bring forth. It looked very unpromising.</p>
<p>Cowperwood decided to stop and see Butler again for he felt certain his
interview with Mollenhauer and Simpson was now over. Butler, who had been
meditating what he should say to Cowperwood, was not unfriendly in his manner.
“So you’re back,” he said, when Cowperwood appeared.</p>
<p>“Yes, Mr. Butler.”</p>
<p>“Well, I’m not sure that I’ve been able to do anything for
you. I’m afraid not,” Butler said, cautiously. “It’s a
hard job you set me. Mollenhauer seems to think that he’ll support the
market, on his own account. I think he will. Simpson has interests which he has
to protect. I’m going to buy for myself, of course.”</p>
<p>He paused to reflect.</p>
<p>“I couldn’t get them to call a conference with any of the big
moneyed men as yet,” he added, warily. “They’d rather wait
and see what happens in the mornin’. Still, I wouldn’t be
down-hearted if I were you. If things turn out very bad they may change their
minds. I had to tell them about Stener. It’s pretty bad, but
they’re hopin’ you’ll come through and straighten that out. I
hope so. About my own loan—well, I’ll see how things are in the
mornin’. If I raisonably can I’ll lave it with you. You’d
better see me again about it. I wouldn’t try to get any more money out of
Stener if I were you. It’s pretty bad as it is.”</p>
<p>Cowperwood saw at once that he was to get no aid from the politicians. The one
thing that disturbed him was this reference to Stener. Had they already
communicated with him—warned him? If so, his own coming to Butler had
been a bad move; and yet from the point of view of his possible failure on the
morrow it had been advisable. At least now the politicians knew where he stood.
If he got in a very tight corner he would come to Butler again—the
politicians could assist him or not, as they chose. If they did not help him
and he failed, and the election were lost, it was their own fault. Anyhow, if
he could see Stener first the latter would not be such a fool as to stand in
his own light in a crisis like this.</p>
<p>“Things look rather dark to-night, Mr. Butler,” he said, smartly,
“but I still think I’ll come through. I hope so, anyhow. I’m
sorry to have put you to so much trouble. I wish, of course, that you gentlemen
could see your way clear to assist me, but if you can’t, you can’t.
I have a number of things that I can do. I hope that you will leave your loan
as long as you can.”</p>
<p>He went briskly out, and Butler meditated. “A clever young chap
that,” he said. “It’s too bad. But he may come out all right
at that.”</p>
<p>Cowperwood hurried to his own home only to find his father awake and brooding.
To him he talked with that strong vein of sympathy and understanding which is
usually characteristic of those drawn by ties of flesh and blood. He liked his
father. He sympathized with his painstaking effort to get up in the world. He
could not forget that as a boy he had had the loving sympathy and interest of
his father. The loan which he had from the Third National, on somewhat weak
Union Street Railway shares he could probably replace if stocks did not drop
too tremendously. He must replace this at all costs. But his father’s
investments in street-railways, which had risen with his own ventures, and
which now involved an additional two hundred thousand—how could he
protect those? The shares were hypothecated and the money was used for other
things. Additional collateral would have to be furnished the several banks
carrying them. It was nothing except loans, loans, loans, and the need of
protecting them. If he could only get an additional deposit of two or three
hundred thousand dollars from Stener. But that, in the face of possible
financial difficulties, was rank criminality. All depended on the morrow.</p>
<p>Monday, the ninth, dawned gray and cheerless. He was up with the first ray of
light, shaved and dressed, and went over, under the gray-green pergola, to his
father’s house. He was up, also, and stirring about, for he had not been
able to sleep. His gray eyebrows and gray hair looked rather shaggy and
disheveled, and his side-whiskers anything but decorative. The old
gentleman’s eyes were tired, and his face was gray. Cowperwood could see
that he was worrying. He looked up from a small, ornate escritoire of buhl,
which Ellsworth had found somewhere, and where he was quietly tabulating a list
of his resources and liabilities. Cowperwood winced. He hated to see his father
worried, but he could not help it. He had hoped sincerely, when they built
their houses together, that the days of worry for his father had gone forever.</p>
<p>“Counting up?” he asked, familiarly, with a smile. He wanted to
hearten the old gentleman as much as possible.</p>
<p>“I was just running over my affairs again to see where I stood in
case—” He looked quizzically at his son, and Frank smiled again.</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t worry, father. I told you how I fixed it so that Butler
and that crowd will support the market. I have Rivers and Targool and Harry
Eltinge on ’change helping me sell out, and they are the best men there.
They’ll handle the situation carefully. I couldn’t trust Ed or Joe
in this case, for the moment they began to sell everybody would know what was
going on with me. This way my men will seem like bears hammering the market,
but not hammering too hard. I ought to be able to unload enough at ten points
off to raise five hundred thousand. The market may not go lower than that. You
can’t tell. It isn’t going to sink indefinitely. If I just knew
what the big insurance companies were going to do! The morning paper
hasn’t come yet, has it?”</p>
<p>He was going to pull a bell, but remembered that the servants would scarcely be
up as yet. He went to the front door himself. There were the Press and the
Public Ledger lying damp from the presses. He picked them up and glanced at the
front pages. His countenance fell. On one, the Press, was spread a great black
map of Chicago, a most funereal-looking thing, the black portion indicating the
burned section. He had never seen a map of Chicago before in just this clear,
definite way. That white portion was Lake Michigan, and there was the Chicago
River dividing the city into three almost equal portions—the north side,
the west side, the south side. He saw at once that the city was curiously
arranged, somewhat like Philadelphia, and that the business section was
probably an area of two or three miles square, set at the juncture of the three
sides, and lying south of the main stem of the river, where it flowed into the
lake after the southwest and northwest branches had united to form it. This was
a significant central area; but, according to this map, it was all burned out.
“Chicago in Ashes” ran a great side-heading set in heavily leaded
black type. It went on to detail the sufferings of the homeless, the number of
the dead, the number of those whose fortunes had been destroyed. Then it
descanted upon the probable effect in the East. Insurance companies and
manufacturers might not be able to meet the great strain of all this.</p>
<p>“Damn!” said Cowperwood gloomily. “I wish I were out of this
stock-jobbing business. I wish I had never gotten into it.” He returned
to his drawing-room and scanned both accounts most carefully.</p>
<p>Then, though it was still early, he and his father drove to his office. There
were already messages awaiting him, a dozen or more, to cancel or sell. While
he was standing there a messenger-boy brought him three more. One was from
Stener and said that he would be back by twelve o’clock, the very
earliest he could make it. Cowperwood was relieved and yet distressed. He would
need large sums of money to meet various loans before three. Every hour was
precious. He must arrange to meet Stener at the station and talk to him before
any one else should see him. Clearly this was going to be a hard, dreary,
strenuous day.</p>
<p>Third Street, by the time he reached there, was stirring with other bankers and
brokers called forth by the exigencies of the occasion. There was a suspicious
hurrying of feet—that intensity which makes all the difference in the
world between a hundred people placid and a hundred people disturbed. At the
exchange, the atmosphere was feverish. At the sound of the gong, the staccato
uproar began. Its metallic vibrations were still in the air when the two
hundred men who composed this local organization at its utmost stress of
calculation, threw themselves upon each other in a gibbering struggle to
dispose of or seize bargains of the hour. The interests were so varied that it
was impossible to say at which pole it was best to sell or buy.</p>
<p>Targool and Rivers had been delegated to stay at the center of things, Joseph
and Edward to hover around on the outside and to pick up such opportunities of
selling as might offer a reasonable return on the stock. The
“bears” were determined to jam things down, and it all depended on
how well the agents of Mollenhauer, Simpson, Butler, and others supported
things in the street-railway world whether those stocks retained any strength
or not. The last thing Butler had said the night before was that they would do
the best they could. They would buy up to a certain point. Whether they would
support the market indefinitely he would not say. He could not vouch for
Mollenhauer and Simpson. Nor did he know the condition of their affairs.</p>
<p>While the excitement was at its highest Cowperwood came in. As he stood in the
door looking to catch the eye of Rivers, the ’change gong sounded, and
trading stopped. All the brokers and traders faced about to the little balcony,
where the secretary of the ’change made his announcements; and there he
stood, the door open behind him, a small, dark, clerkly man of thirty-eight or
forty, whose spare figure and pale face bespoke the methodic mind that knows no
venturous thought. In his right hand he held a slip of white paper.</p>
<p>“The American Fire Insurance Company of Boston announces its inability to
meet its obligations.” The gong sounded again.</p>
<p>Immediately the storm broke anew, more voluble than before, because, if after
one hour of investigation on this Monday morning one insurance company had gone
down, what would four or five hours or a day or two bring forth? It meant that
men who had been burned out in Chicago would not be able to resume business. It
meant that all loans connected with this concern had been, or would be called
now. And the cries of frightened “bulls” offering thousand and five
thousand lot holdings in Northern Pacific, Illinois Central, Reading, Lake
Shore, Wabash; in all the local streetcar lines; and in Cowperwood’s city
loans at constantly falling prices was sufficient to take the heart out of all
concerned. He hurried to Arthur Rivers’s side in the lull; but there was
little he could say.</p>
<p>“It looks as though the Mollenhauer and Simpson crowds aren’t doing
much for the market,” he observed, gravely.</p>
<p>“They’ve had advices from New York,” explained Rivers
solemnly. “It can’t be supported very well. There are three
insurance companies over there on the verge of quitting, I understand. I expect
to see them posted any minute.”</p>
<p>They stepped apart from the pandemonium, to discuss ways and means. Under his
agreement with Stener, Cowperwood could buy up to one hundred thousand dollars
of city loan, above the customary wash sales, or market manipulation, by which
they were making money. This was in case the market had to be genuinely
supported. He decided to buy sixty thousand dollars worth now, and use this to
sustain his loans elsewhere. Stener would pay him for this instantly, giving
him more ready cash. It might help him in one way and another; and, anyhow, it
might tend to strengthen the other securities long enough at least to allow him
to realize a little something now at better than ruinous rates. If only he had
the means “to go short” on this market! If only doing so did not
really mean ruin to his present position. It was characteristic of the man that
even in this crisis he should be seeing how the very thing that of necessity,
because of his present obligations, might ruin him, might also, under slightly
different conditions, yield him a great harvest. He could not take advantage of
it, however. He could not be on both sides of this market. It was either
“bear” or “bull,” and of necessity he was
“bull.” It was strange but true. His subtlety could not avail him
here. He was about to turn and hurry to see a certain banker who might loan him
something on his house, when the gong struck again. Once more trading ceased.
Arthur Rivers, from his position at the State securities post, where city loan
was sold, and where he had started to buy for Cowperwood, looked significantly
at him. Newton Targool hurried to Cowperwood’s side.</p>
<p>“You’re up against it,” he exclaimed. “I wouldn’t
try to sell against this market. It’s no use. They’re cutting the
ground from under you. The bottom’s out. Things are bound to turn in a
few days. Can’t you hold out? Here’s more trouble.”</p>
<p>He raised his eyes to the announcer’s balcony.</p>
<p>“The Eastern and Western Fire Insurance Company of New York announces
that it cannot meet its obligations.”</p>
<p>A low sound something like “Haw!” broke forth. The
announcer’s gavel struck for order.</p>
<p>“The Erie Fire Insurance Company of Rochester announces that it cannot
meet its obligations.”</p>
<p>Again that “H-a-a-a-w!”</p>
<p>Once more the gavel.</p>
<p>“The American Trust Company of New York has suspended payment.”</p>
<p>“H-a-a-a-w!”</p>
<p>The storm was on.</p>
<p>“What do you think?” asked Targool. “You can’t brave
this storm. Can’t you quit selling and hold out for a few days? Why not
sell short?”</p>
<p>“They ought to close this thing up,” Cowperwood said, shortly.
“It would be a splendid way out. Then nothing could be done.”</p>
<p>He hurried to consult with those who, finding themselves in a similar
predicament with himself, might use their influence to bring it about. It was a
sharp trick to play on those who, now finding the market favorable to their
designs in its falling condition, were harvesting a fortune. But what was that
to him? Business was business. There was no use selling at ruinous figures, and
he gave his lieutenants orders to stop. Unless the bankers favored him heavily,
or the stock exchange was closed, or Stener could be induced to deposit an
additional three hundred thousand with him at once, he was ruined. He hurried
down the street to various bankers and brokers suggesting that they do
this—close the exchange. At a few minutes before twelve o’clock he
drove rapidly to the station to meet Stener; but to his great disappointment
the latter did not arrive. It looked as though he had missed his train.
Cowperwood sensed something, some trick; and decided to go to the city hall and
also to Stener’s house. Perhaps he had returned and was trying to avoid
him.</p>
<p>Not finding him at his office, he drove direct to his house. Here he was not
surprised to meet Stener just coming out, looking very pale and distraught. At
the sight of Cowperwood he actually blanched.</p>
<p>“Why, hello, Frank,” he exclaimed, sheepishly, “where do you
come from?”</p>
<p>“What’s up, George?” asked Cowperwood. “I thought you
were coming into Broad Street.”</p>
<p>“So I was,” returned Stener, foolishly, “but I thought I
would get off at West Philadelphia and change my clothes. I’ve a lot of
things to ’tend to yet this afternoon. I was coming in to see you.”
After Cowperwood’s urgent telegram this was silly, but the young banker
let it pass.</p>
<p>“Jump in, George,” he said. “I have something very important
to talk to you about. I told you in my telegram about the likelihood of a
panic. It’s on. There isn’t a moment to lose. Stocks are way down,
and most of my loans are being called. I want to know if you won’t let me
have three hundred and fifty thousand dollars for a few days at four or five
per cent. I’ll pay it all back to you. I need it very badly. If I
don’t get it I’m likely to fail. You know what that means, George.
It will tie up every dollar I have. Those street-car holdings of yours will be
tied up with me. I won’t be able to let you realize on them, and that
will put those loans of mine from the treasury in bad shape. You won’t be
able to put the money back, and you know what that means. We’re in this
thing together. I want to see you through safely, but I can’t do it
without your help. I had to go to Butler last night to see about a loan of his,
and I’m doing my best to get money from other sources. But I can’t
see my way through on this, I’m afraid, unless you’re willing to
help me.” Cowperwood paused. He wanted to put the whole case clearly and
succinctly to him before he had a chance to refuse—to make him realize it
as his own predicament.</p>
<p>As a matter of fact, what Cowperwood had keenly suspected was literally true.
Stener had been reached. The moment Butler and Simpson had left him the night
before, Mollenhauer had sent for his very able secretary, Abner Sengstack, and
despatched him to learn the truth about Stener’s whereabouts. Sengstack
had then sent a long wire to Strobik, who was with Stener, urging him to
caution the latter against Cowperwood. The state of the treasury was known.
Stener and Strobik were to be met by Sengstack at Wilmington (this to forefend
against the possibility of Cowperwood’s reaching Stener first)—and
the whole state of affairs made perfectly plain. No more money was to be used
under penalty of prosecution. If Stener wanted to see any one he must see
Mollenhauer. Sengstack, having received a telegram from Strobik informing him
of their proposed arrival at noon the next day, had proceeded to Wilmington to
meet them. The result was that Stener did not come direct into the business
heart of the city, but instead got off at West Philadelphia, proposing to go
first to his house to change his clothes and then to see Mollenhauer before
meeting Cowperwood. He was very badly frightened and wanted time to think.</p>
<p>“I can’t do it, Frank,” he pleaded, piteously.
“I’m in pretty bad in this matter. Mollenhauer’s secretary
met the train out at Wilmington just now to warn me against this situation, and
Strobik is against it. They know how much money I’ve got outstanding. You
or somebody has told them. I can’t go against Mollenhauer. I owe
everything I’ve got to him, in a way. He got me this place.”</p>
<p>“Listen, George. Whatever you do at this time, don’t let this
political loyalty stuff cloud your judgment. You’re in a very serious
position and so am I. If you don’t act for yourself with me now no one is
going to act for you—now or later—no one. And later will be too
late. I proved that last night when I went to Butler to get help for the two of
us. They all know about this business of our street-railway holdings and they
want to shake us out and that’s the big and little of it—nothing
more and nothing less. It’s a case of dog eat dog in this game and this
particular situation and it’s up to us to save ourselves against
everybody or go down together, and that’s just what I’m here to
tell you. Mollenhauer doesn’t care any more for you to-day than he does
for that lamp-post. It isn’t that money you’ve paid out to me
that’s worrying him, but who’s getting something for it and what.
Well they know that you and I are getting street-railways, don’t you see,
and they don’t want us to have them. Once they get those out of our hands
they won’t waste another day on you or me. Can’t you see that? Once
we’ve lost all we’ve invested, you’re down and so am
I—and no one is going to turn a hand for you or me politically or in any
other way. I want you to understand that, George, because it’s true. And
before you say you won’t or you will do anything because Mollenhauer says
so, you want to think over what I have to tell you.”</p>
<p>He was in front of Stener now, looking him directly in the eye and by the
kinetic force of his mental way attempting to make Stener take the one step
that might save him—Cowperwood—however little in the long run it
might do for Stener. And, more interesting still, he did not care. Stener, as
he saw him now, was a pawn in whosoever’s hands he happened to be at the
time, and despite Mr. Mollenhauer and Mr. Simpson and Mr. Butler he proposed to
attempt to keep him in his own hands if possible. And so he stood there looking
at him as might a snake at a bird determined to galvanize him into selfish
self-interest if possible. But Stener was so frightened that at the moment it
looked as though there was little to be done with him. His face was a
grayish-blue: his eyelids and eye rings puffy and his hands and lips moist.
God, what a hole he was in now!</p>
<p>“Say that’s all right, Frank,” he exclaimed desperately.
“I know what you say is true. But look at me and my position, if I do
give you this money. What can’t they do to me, and won’t. If you
only look at it from my point of view. If only you hadn’t gone to Butler
before you saw me.”</p>
<p>“As though I could see you, George, when you were off duck shooting and
when I was wiring everywhere I knew to try to get in touch with you. How could
I? The situation had to be met. Besides, I thought Butler was more friendly to
me than he proved. But there’s no use being angry with me now, George,
for going to Butler as I did, and anyhow you can’t afford to be now.
We’re in this thing together. It’s a case of sink or swim for just
us two—not any one else—just us—don’t you get that?
Butler couldn’t or wouldn’t do what I wanted him to do—get
Mollenhauer and Simpson to support the market. Instead of that they are
hammering it. They have a game of their own. It’s to shake us
out—can’t you see that? Take everything that you and I have
gathered. It is up to you and me, George, to save ourselves, and that’s
what I’m here for now. If you don’t let me have three hundred and
fifty thousand dollars—three hundred thousand, anyhow—you and I are
ruined. It will be worse for you, George, than for me, for I’m not
involved in this thing in any way—not legally, anyhow. But that’s
not what I’m thinking of. What I want to do is to save us both—put
us on easy street for the rest of our lives, whatever they say or do, and
it’s in your power, with my help, to do that for both of us. Can’t
you see that? I want to save my business so then I can help you to save your
name and money.” He paused, hoping this had convinced Stener, but the
latter was still shaking.</p>
<p>“But what can I do, Frank?” he pleaded, weakly. “I
can’t go against Mollenhauer. They can prosecute me if I do that. They
can do it, anyhow. I can’t do that. I’m not strong enough. If they
didn’t know, if you hadn’t told them, it might be different, but
this way—” He shook his head sadly, his gray eyes filled with a
pale distress.</p>
<p>“George,” replied Cowperwood, who realized now that only the
sternest arguments would have any effect here, “don’t talk about
what I did. What I did I had to do. You’re in danger of losing your head
and your nerve and making a serious mistake here, and I don’t want to see
you make it. I have five hundred thousand of the city’s money invested
for you—partly for me, and partly for you, but more for you than for
me”—which, by the way, was not true—“and here you are
hesitating in an hour like this as to whether you will protect your interest or
not. I can’t understand it. This is a crisis, George. Stocks are tumbling
on every side—everybody’s stocks. You’re not alone in
this—neither am I. This is a panic, brought on by a fire, and you
can’t expect to come out of a panic alive unless you do something to
protect yourself. You say you owe your place to Mollenhauer and that
you’re afraid of what he’ll do. If you look at your own situation
and mine, you’ll see that it doesn’t make much difference what he
does, so long as I don’t fail. If I fail, where are you? Who’s
going to save you from prosecution? Will Mollenhauer or any one else come
forward and put five hundred thousand dollars in the treasury for you? He will
not. If Mollenhauer and the others have your interests at heart, why
aren’t they helping me on ’change today? I’ll tell you why.
They want your street-railway holdings and mine, and they don’t care
whether you go to jail afterward or not. Now if you’re wise you will
listen to me. I’ve been loyal to you, haven’t I? You’ve made
money through me—lots of it. If you’re wise, George, you’ll
go to your office and write me your check for three hundred thousand dollars,
anyhow, before you do a single other thing. Don’t see anybody and
don’t do anything till you’ve done that. You can’t be hung
any more for a sheep than you can for a lamb. No one can prevent you from
giving me that check. You’re the city treasurer. Once I have that I can
see my way out of this, and I’ll pay it all back to you next week or the
week after—this panic is sure to end in that time. With that put back in
the treasury we can see them about the five hundred thousand a little later. In
three months, or less, I can fix it so that you can put that back. As a matter
of fact, I can do it in fifteen days once I am on my feet again. Time is all I
want. You won’t have lost your holdings and nobody will cause you any
trouble if you put the money back. They don’t care to risk a scandal any
more than you do. Now what’ll you do, George? Mollenhauer can’t
stop you from doing this any more than I can make you. Your life is in your own
hands. What will you do?”</p>
<p>Stener stood there ridiculously meditating when, as a matter of fact, his very
financial blood was oozing away. Yet he was afraid to act. He was afraid of
Mollenhauer, afraid of Cowperwood, afraid of life and of himself. The thought
of panic, loss, was not so much a definite thing connected with his own
property, his money, as it was with his social and political standing in the
community. Few people have the sense of financial individuality strongly
developed. They do not know what it means to be a controller of wealth, to have
that which releases the sources of social action—its medium of exchange.
They want money, but not for money’s sake. They want it for what it will
buy in the way of simple comforts, whereas the financier wants it for what it
will control—for what it will represent in the way of dignity, force,
power. Cowperwood wanted money in that way; Stener not. That was why he had
been so ready to let Cowperwood act for him; and now, when he should have seen
more clearly than ever the significance of what Cowperwood was proposing, he
was frightened and his reason obscured by such things as Mollenhauer’s
probable opposition and rage, Cowperwood’s possible failure, his own
inability to face a real crisis. Cowperwood’s innate financial ability
did not reassure Stener in this hour. The banker was too young, too new.
Mollenhauer was older, richer. So was Simpson; so was Butler. These men, with
their wealth, represented the big forces, the big standards in his world. And
besides, did not Cowperwood himself confess that he was in great
danger—that he was in a corner. That was the worst possible confession to
make to Stener—although under the circumstances it was the only one that
could be made—for he had no courage to face danger.</p>
<p>So it was that now, Stener stood by Cowperwood meditating—pale, flaccid;
unable to see the main line of his interests quickly, unable to follow it
definitely, surely, vigorously—while they drove to his office. Cowperwood
entered it with him for the sake of continuing his plea.</p>
<p>“Well, George,” he said earnestly, “I wish you’d tell
me. Time’s short. We haven’t a moment to lose. Give me the money,
won’t you, and I’ll get out of this quick. We haven’t a
moment, I tell you. Don’t let those people frighten you off.
They’re playing their own little game; you play yours.”</p>
<p>“I can’t, Frank,” said Stener, finally, very weakly, his
sense of his own financial future, overcome for the time being by the thought
of Mollenhauer’s hard, controlling face. “I’ll have to think.
I can’t do it right now. Strobik just left me before I saw you,
and—”</p>
<p>“Good God, George,” exclaimed Cowperwood, scornfully,
“don’t talk about Strobik! What’s he got to do with it? Think
of yourself. Think of where you will be. It’s your future—not
Strobik’s—that you have to think of.”</p>
<p>“I know, Frank,” persisted Stener, weakly; “but, really, I
don’t see how I can. Honestly I don’t. You say yourself
you’re not sure whether you can come out of things all right, and three
hundred thousand more is three hundred thousand more. I can’t, Frank. I
really can’t. It wouldn’t be right. Besides, I want to talk to
Mollenhauer first, anyhow.”</p>
<p>“Good God, how you talk!” exploded Cowperwood, angrily, looking at
him with ill-concealed contempt. “Go ahead! See Mollenhauer! Let him tell
you how to cut your own throat for his benefit. It won’t be right to loan
me three hundred thousand dollars more, but it will be right to let the five
hundred thousand dollars you have loaned stand unprotected and lose it.
That’s right, isn’t it? That’s just what you propose to
do—lose it, and everything else besides. I want to tell you what it is,
George—you’ve lost your mind. You’ve let a single message
from Mollenhauer frighten you to death, and because of that you’re going
to risk your fortune, your reputation, your standing—everything. Do you
really realize what this means if I fail? You will be a convict, I tell you,
George. You will go to prison. This fellow Mollenhauer, who is so quick to tell
you what not to do now, will be the last man to turn a hand for you once
you’re down. Why, look at me—I’ve helped you, haven’t
I? Haven’t I handled your affairs satisfactorily for you up to now? What
in Heaven’s name has got into you? What have you to be afraid of?”</p>
<p>Stener was just about to make another weak rejoinder when the door from the
outer office opened, and Albert Stires, Stener’s chief clerk, entered.
Stener was too flustered to really pay any attention to Stires for the moment;
but Cowperwood took matters in his own hands.</p>
<p>“What is it, Albert?” he asked, familiarly.</p>
<p>“Mr. Sengstack from Mr. Mollenhauer to see Mr. Stener.”</p>
<p>At the sound of this dreadful name Stener wilted like a leaf. Cowperwood saw
it. He realized that his last hope of getting the three hundred thousand
dollars was now probably gone. Still he did not propose to give up as yet.</p>
<p>“Well, George,” he said, after Albert had gone out with
instructions that Stener would see Sengstack in a moment. “I see how it
is. This man has got you mesmerized. You can’t act for yourself
now—you’re too frightened. I’ll let it rest for the present;
I’ll come back. But for Heaven’s sake pull yourself together. Think
what it means. I’m telling you exactly what’s going to happen if
you don’t. You’ll be independently rich if you do. You’ll be
a convict if you don’t.”</p>
<p>And deciding he would make one more effort in the street before seeing Butler
again, he walked out briskly, jumped into his light spring runabout waiting
outside—a handsome little yellow-glazed vehicle, with a yellow leather
cushion seat, drawn by a young, high-stepping bay mare—and sent her
scudding from door to door, throwing down the lines indifferently and bounding
up the steps of banks and into office doors.</p>
<p>But all without avail. All were interested, considerate; but things were very
uncertain. The Girard National Bank refused an hour’s grace, and he had
to send a large bundle of his most valuable securities to cover his stock
shrinkage there. Word came from his father at two that as president of the
Third National he would have to call for his one hundred and fifty thousand
dollars due there. The directors were suspicious of his stocks. He at once
wrote a check against fifty thousand dollars of his deposits in that bank, took
twenty-five thousand of his available office funds, called a loan of fifty
thousand against Tighe & Co., and sold sixty thousand Green & Coates, a
line he had been tentatively dabbling in, for one-third their value—and,
combining the general results, sent them all to the Third National. His father
was immensely relieved from one point of view, but sadly depressed from
another. He hurried out at the noon-hour to see what his own holdings would
bring. He was compromising himself in a way by doing it, but his parental
heart, as well as is own financial interests, were involved. By mortgaging his
house and securing loans on his furniture, carriages, lots, and stocks, he
managed to raise one hundred thousand in cash, and deposited it in his own bank
to Frank’s credit; but it was a very light anchor to windward in this
swirling storm, at that. Frank had been counting on getting all of his loans
extended three or four days at least. Reviewing his situation at two
o’clock of this Monday afternoon, he said to himself thoughtfully but
grimly: “Well, Stener has to loan me three hundred
thousand—that’s all there is to it. And I’ll have to see
Butler now, or he’ll be calling his loan before three.”</p>
<p>He hurried out, and was off to Butler’s house, driving like mad.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />