登陆注册
7218500000072

第72章

Some called our loans and some demanded more collateral.And while I was fighting front and rear and both sides, bang came that lie about your condition.The market broke.All I could do was sell, sell, sell, to try to meet or protect our loans."Giddings heard a sound that made him glance at Dumont.His head had fallen forward and he was snoring.Giddings looked long and pityingly.

"A sure enough dead one," he muttered, unconsciously using the slang of the Street which he habitually avoided.And he went away, closing the door behind him.

After half an hour Dumont roused himself--out of a stupor into a half-delirious dream.

"Must get cash," he mumbled, "and look after the time loans."He lifted his head and pushed back his hair from his hot forehead."I'll stamp on those curs yet!"He took another drink--his hands were so unsteady that he had to use both of them in lifting it to his lips.He put the flask in his pocket instead of returning it to the drawer.No one spoke to him, all pretended not to see him as he passed through the offices on his way to the elevator.With glassy unseeing eyes he fumbled at the dash-board and side of the hansom; with a groan like a rheumatic old man's he lifted his heavy body up into the seat, dropped back and fell asleep.A crowd of clerks and messengers, newsboys and peddlers gathered and gaped, awed as they looked at the man who had been for five years one of the heroes of the Street, and thought of his dazzling catastrophe.

"What's the matter?" inquired a new-comer, apparently a tourist, edging his way into the outskirts of the crowd.

"That's Dumont, the head of the Woolens Trust," the curb-broker he addressed replied in a low tone."He was raided yesterday--woke up in the morning worth a hundred millions, went to bed worth--perhaps five, maybe nothing at all."At this exaggeration of the height and depth of the disaster, awe and sympathy became intense in that cluster of faces.A hundred millions to nothing at all, or at most a beggarly five millions--what a dizzy precipice! Great indeed must be he who could fall so far.The driver peered through the trap, wondering why his distinguished fare endured this vulgar scrutiny.He saw that Dumont was asleep, thrust down a hand and shook him.

"Where to, sir?" he asked, as Dumont straightened himself.

"To the National Industrial Bank, you fool," snapped Dumont.

"How many times must I tell you?"

"Thank you, sir," said the driver--without sarca**, thinking steadfastly of his pay--and drove swiftly away.

Theretofore, whenever he had gone to the National Industrial Bank he had been received as one king is received by another.Either eager and obsequious high officers of King Melville had escorted him directly to the presence, or King Melville, because he had a caller who could not be summarily dismissed, had come out apologetically to conduct King Dumont to another audience chamber.That day the third assistant cashier greeted him with politeness carefully graded to the due of a man merely moderately rich and not a factor in the game of high finance.

"Be seated, Mr.Dumont," he said, pointing to a chair just inside the railing--a seat not unworthy of a man of rank in the plutocratic hierarchy, but a man of far from high rank."I'll see whether Mr.Melville's disengaged."Dumont dropped into the chair and his heavy head was almost immediately resting upon his shirt-bosom.The third assistant cashier returned, roused him somewhat impatiently."Mr.

Melville's engaged," said he."But Mr.Cowles will see you."Mr.Cowles was the third vice-president.

Dumont rose.The blood flushed into his face and his body shook from head to foot."Tell Melville to go to hell," he jerked out, the haze clearing for a moment from his piercing, wicked eyes.And he stalked through the gateway in the railing.He turned."Tell him I'll tear him down and grind him into the gutter within six months."In the hansom again, he reflected or tried to reflect.But the lofty buildings seemed to cast a black shadow on his mind, and the roar and rush of the tremendous tide of traffic through that deep canon set his thoughts to whirling like drink-maddened bacchanals dancing round a punch-bowl."That woman!" he exclaimed suddenly."What asses they make of us men! And all these vultures--I'm not carrion yet.But THEY soon will be!"And he laughed and his thoughts began their crazy spin again.

A newsboy came, waving an extra in at the open doors of the hansom."Dumont's downfall!" he yelled in his shrill, childish voice."All about the big smash!"Dumont snatched a paper and flung a copper at the boy.

"Gimme a tip on Woolens, Mr.Dumont," said the boy, with an impudent grin, balancing himself for flight."How's Mrs.

Fanshaw?"

The newspapers had made his face as familiar as the details of his private life.He shrank and quivered.He pushed up the trap."Home!" he said, forgetting that the hansom and driver were not his own.

"All right, Mr.Dumont!" replied the driver.Dumont shrank again and sat cowering in the corner--the very calling him by his name, now a synonym for failure, disgrace, ridicule and contempt, seemed a subtile insult.

With roaring brain and twitching, dizzy eyes he read at the newspaper's account of his overthrow.And gradually there formed in his mind a coherent notion of how it had come to pass, of its extent; of why he found himself lying in the depths, the victim of humiliations so frightful that they penetrated even to him, stupefied and crazed with drink and fever though he was.His courage, his self-command were burnt up by the brandy.His body had at last revolted, was having its terrible revenge upon the mind that had so long misused it in every kind of indulgence.

"I'm done for--done for," he repeated audibly again and again, at each repetition looking round mentally for a fact or a hope that would deny this assertion--but he cast about in vain.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 梦在大唐

    梦在大唐

    这就是一个正经逗逼的故事。没错,我就是要正经的逗逼。女强+小弱受男主看惯了激动人心的小说以后,不妨来看看这本。只有脉脉温情。
  • 潮汐和风

    潮汐和风

    《潮汐和风》是中国当代印象派诗人柏明文的诗歌作品集,本作品集收入了作者的诗歌作品60余首。分五辑:在时间和白发的眠处,潮汐和风,内心的牧场,想念一片海,寓言打着手语。
  • 逆时针:曾经再见

    逆时针:曾经再见

    什么算是出轨?是身体上还是精神上抑或两者都算?而我所认为,当我已经不相信他的时候,他就已经出轨了。不管他是否是真的。而暗恋也是一样,当我认定他已经有对象之后,不管他是否真的有对象,他都已经有对象了。于是,我选择放弃。
  • Whale Done Parenting

    Whale Done Parenting

    Great leaders, saints, and sages have developed this skill. Since most of us are less advanced than those paragons, this book can serve as a guide for how to bring out the best in our children.
  • 我欢喜遇见你

    我欢喜遇见你

    他是同学眼中的王者,是老师眼中的祖宗,是家人眼中的混世魔王,他从小被万人捧在手中,傲娇,自信,多金,帅气是他的标签,直到17岁那年遇到了她……
  • 偶尔会想你

    偶尔会想你

    不要说再见,不要说怀念。因为一别就是永远,一念就是从前。青春年少里每一步,都该是深刻的,幸福的,永恒的,但也是最脆弱的,痛苦的,转瞬即逝的。从懵懂的初三,到青春的高中,再到成熟的大学…时光不老,“百乐会”不散。庄老大,胡蝶,安然,小狐狸,萌妹子,林飞,尤雨…还记得我们走过的一段段年少青春吗?故事的最后,你们也明白了吗?其实没有太多的笑与泪、痛与怨、爱与恨…眼前的一切,就是最好的安排。
  • 析梦师

    析梦师

    析梦师孔诗南帮助许多人解梦,最后他发现自己竟然……
  • 天使的剑恶魔的刀

    天使的剑恶魔的刀

    遥远的卡法尔大陆,剑与魔法的时代,龙族、魔物、精灵,构建出一个全新的世界。九大帝国,象征着无上的荣耀。五族共存,奇迹时代,为你带来一个完全不同的创新。十八位命运者的厮杀,大陆的哀嚎,救赎者的审判……吾名——洛伊姆·佩恩特扎姆夏。