<h2><SPAN name="chap18"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
<p>The newspapers said nothing more about the Hasbrook suit; but in financial
circles Montague had attained considerable notoriety because of it. And this
was the means of bringing him a number of new cases.</p>
<p>But alas, there were no more fifty-thousand-dollar clients! The first caller
was a destitute widow with a deed which would have entitled her to the greater
part of a large city in Pennsylvania—only unfortunately the deed was
about eighty years old. And then there was a poor old man who had been hurt in
a street-car accident and had been tricked into signing away his rights; and an
indignant citizen who proposed to bring a hundred suits against the traction
trust for transfers refused. All were contingency cases, with the chances of
success exceedingly remote. And Montague noticed that the people had come to
him as a last resort, having apparently heard of him as a man of altruistic
temper.</p>
<p>There was one case which interested him particularly, because it seemed to fit
in so ominously with the grim prognosis of his brother. He received a call from
an elderly gentleman, of very evident refinement and dignity of manner, who
proceeded to unfold to him a most amazing story. Five or six years ago he had
invented a storage-battery, which was the most efficient known. He had
organised a company with three million dollars’ capital to manufacture
it, himself taking a third interest for his patents, and becoming president of
the company. Not long afterward had come a proposal from a group of men who
wished to organize a company to manufacture automobiles; they proposed to form
an alliance which would give them the exclusive use of the battery. But these
men were not people with whom the inventor cared to deal—they were
traction and gas magnates widely known for their unscrupulous methods. And so
he had declined their offer, and set to work instead to organize an automobile
company himself. He had just got under way when he discovered that his rivals
had set to work to take his invention away from him. A friend who owned another
third share in his company had hypothecated his stock to help form the new
company; and now came a call from the bank for more collateral, and he was
obliged to sell out. And at the next stockholders’ meeting it developed
that their rivals had bought it, and likewise more stock in the open market;
and they proceeded to take possession of the company, ousting the former
president—and then making a contract with their automobile company to
furnish the storage-battery at a price which left no profit for the
manufacturers! And so for two years the inventor had not received a dollar of
dividends upon his million dollars’ worth of paper; and to cap the
climax, the company had refused to sell the battery to his automobile company,
and so that had gone into bankruptcy, and his friend was ruined also!</p>
<p>Montague went into the case very carefully, and found that the story was true.
What interested him particularly in it was the fact that he had met a couple of
these financial highwaymen in social life; he had come to know the son and heir
of one of them quite well, at Siegfried Harvey’s. This gilded youth was
engaged to be married in a very few days, and the papers had it that the
father-in-law had presented the bride with a cheque for a million dollars.
Montague could not but wonder if it was the million that had been taken from
his client!</p>
<p>There was to be a “bachelor dinner” at the Millionaires’ on
the night before the wedding, to which he and Oliver had been invited. As he
was thinking of taking up his case, he went to his brother, saying that he
wished to decline; but Oliver had been getting back his courage day by day, and
declared that it was more important than ever now that he should hold his
ground, and face his enemies—for Alice’s sake, if not for his own.
And so Montague went to the dinner, and saw deeper yet into the history of the
stolen millions.</p>
<p>It was a very beautiful affair, in the beginning. There was a large private
dining-room, elaborately decorated, with a string orchestra concealed in a
bower of plants. But there were cocktails even on the side-board at the
doorway; and by the time the guests had got to the coffee, every one was
hilariously drunk. After each toast they would hurl their glasses over their
shoulders. The purpose of a “bachelor dinner,” it appeared, was a
farewell to the old days and the boon companions; so there were sentimental and
comic songs which had been composed for the occasion, and were received with
whirlwinds of laughter.</p>
<p>By listening closely and reading between the lines, one might get quite a
history of the young host’s adventurous career. There was a house up on
the West Side; and there was a yacht, with, orgies in every part of the world.
There was the summer night in Newport harbour, when some one had hit upon the
dazzling scheme of freezing twenty-dollar gold pieces in tiny blocks of ice, to
be dropped down the girls’ backs! And there was a banquet in a studio in
New York, when a huge pie had been brought on, from which a half-nude girl had
emerged, with a flock of canary birds about her! Then there was a damsel who
had been wont to dance upon the tops of supper tables, clad in diaphanous
costume; and who had got drunk after a theatre-party, and set out to smash up a
Broadway restaurant. There was a cousin from Chicago, a wild lad, who made a
speciality of this diversion, and whose mistresses were bathed in
champagne.—Apparently there were numberless places in the city where such
orgies were carried on continually; there were private clubs, and
artists’ “studios”—there were several allusions to a
high tower, which Montague did not comprehend. Many such matters, however, were
explained to him by an elderly gentleman who sat on his right, and who seemed
to stay sober, no matter how much he drank. Incidentally he gravely advised
Montague to meet one of the young host’s mistresses, who was a
“stunning” girl, and was in the market.</p>
<p>Toward morning the festivities changed to a series of wrestling-bouts; the
young men stripped off their clothing and tore the table to pieces, and piled
it out of the way in a corner, smashing most of the crockery in the process.
Between the matches, champagne would be opened by knocking off the heads of the
bottles; and this went on until four o’clock in the morning, when many of
the guests were lying in heaps upon the floor.</p>
<p>Montague rode home in a cab with the elderly gentleman who had sat next to him;
and on the way he asked if such affairs as this were common. And his companion,
who was a “steel man” from the West, replied by telling him of some
which he had witnessed at home. At Siegfried Harvey’s theatre-party
Montague had seen a popular actress in a musical comedy, which was then the
most successful play running in New York. The house was sold out weeks ahead,
and after the matinée you might observe the street in front of the
stage-entrance blocked by people waiting to see the woman come out. She was
lithe and supple, like a panther, and wore close-fitting gowns to reveal her
form. It seemed that her play must have been built with one purpose in mind, to
see how much lewdness could be put upon a stage without interference by the
police.—And now his companion told him how this woman had been invited to
sing at a banquet given by the magnates of a mighty Trust, and had gone after
midnight to the most exclusive club in the town, and sung her popular ditty,
“Won’t you come and play with me?” The merry magnates had
taken the invitation literally—with the result that the actress had
escaped from the room with half her clothing torn off her. And a little while
later an official of this trust had wished to get rid of his wife and marry a
chorus-girl; and when public clamour had forced the directors to ask him to
resign, he had replied by threatening to tell about this banquet!</p>
<p class="p2">
The next day—or rather, to be precise, that same morning—Montague
and Alice attended the gorgeous wedding. It was declared by the newspapers to
be the most “important” social event of the week; and it took half
a dozen policemen to hold back the crowds which filled the street. The ceremony
took place at St. Cecilia’s, with the stately bishop officiating, in his
purple and scarlet robes. Inside the doors were all the elect, exquisitely
groomed and gowned, and such a medley of delicious perfumes as not all the
vales in Arcady could equal. The groom had been polished and scrubbed, and
looked very handsome, though somewhat pale; and Montague could not but smile as
he observed the best man, looking so very solemn, and recollected the drunken
wrestler of a few hours before, staggering about in a pale blue undershirt
ripped up the back.</p>
<p>The Montagues knew by this time whom they were to avoid. They were graciously
taken under the wing of Mrs. Eldridge Devon—whose real estate was not
affected by insurance suits; and the next morning they had the satisfaction of
seeing their names in the list of those present—and even a couple of
lines about Alice’s costume. (Alice was always referred to as “Miss
Montague”; it was very pleasant to be <i>the</i> “Miss
Montague,” and to think of all the other would-be Miss Montagues in the
city, who were thereby haughtily rebuked!) In the “yellow” papers
there were also accounts of the trousseau of the bride, and of the wonderful
gifts which she had received, and of the long honeymoon which she was to spend
in the Mediterranean upon her husband’s yacht. Montague found himself
wondering if the ghosts of its former occupants would not haunt her, and
whether she would have been as happy, had she known as much as he knew.</p>
<p class="p2">
He found food for a good deal of thought in the memory of this banquet. Among
the things which he had gathered from the songs was a hint that Oliver, also,
had some secrets, which he had not seen fit to tell his brother. The keeping of
young girls was apparently one of the established customs of the “little
brothers of the rich”—and, for that matter, of many of the big
brothers, also.</p>
<p>A little later Montague had a curious glimpse into the life of this
“half-world.” He had occasion one evening to call up a certain
financier whom he had come to know quite well—a man of family and a
member of the church. There were some important papers to be signed and sent
off by a steamer; and the great man’s secretary said that he would try to
find him. A minute or two later he called up Montague and asked him if he would
be good enough to go to an address uptown. It was a house not far from
Riverside Drive; and Montague went there and found his acquaintance, with
several other prominent men of affairs whom he knew, conversing in a
drawing-room with one of the most charming ladies he had ever met. She was
exquisite to look at, and one of the few people in New York whom he had found
worth listening to. He spent such an enjoyable evening, that when he was
leaving, he remarked to the lady that he would like his cousin Alice to meet
her; and then he noticed that she flushed slightly, and was embarrassed. Later
on he learned to his dismay that the charming and beautiful lady did not go
into Society.</p>
<p>Nor was this at all rare; on the contrary, if one took the trouble to make
inquiries, he would find that such establishments were everywhere taken for
granted. Montague talked about it with Major Venable; and out of his gossip
storehouse the old gentleman drew forth a string of anecdotes that made
one’s hair stand on end. There was one all-powerful magnate, who had a
passion for the wife of a great physician; and he had given a million dollars
or so to build a hospital, and had provided that it should be the finest in the
world, and that this physician should go abroad for three years to study the
institutions of Europe! No conventions counted with this old man—if he
saw a woman whom he wanted, he would ask for her; and women in Society felt
that it was an honour to be his mistress. Not long after this a man who voiced
the anguish of a mighty nation was turned out of several hotels in New York
because he was not married according to the laws of South Dakota; but this
other man would take a woman to any hotel in the city, and no one would dare
oppose him!</p>
<p>And there was another, a great traction king, who kept mistresses in Chicago
and Paris and London, as well as in New York; he had one just around the corner
from his palatial home, and had an underground passage leading to it. And the
Major told with glee how he had shown this to a friend, and the latter had
remarked, “I’m too stout to get through
there.”—“I know it,” replied the other, “else I
shouldn’t have told you!”</p>
<p>And so it went. One of the richest men in New York was a sexual degenerate,
with half a dozen women on his hands all the time; he would send them cheques,
and they would use these to blackmail him. This man’s young wife had been
shut up in a closet for twenty-four hours by her mother to compel her to marry
him.—And then there was the charming tale of how he had gone away upon a
mission of state, and had written long messages full of tender protestations,
and given them to a newspaper correspondent to cable home “to his
wife.” The correspondent had thought it such a touching example of
conjugal devotion that he told about it at a dinner-party when he came back;
and he was struck by the sudden silence that fell. “The messages had been
sent to a code address!” chuckled the Major. “And every one at the
table knew who had got them!”</p>
<p class="p2">
A few days after this, Montague received a telephone message from Siegfried
Harvey, who said that he wanted to see him about a matter of business. He asked
him to lunch at the Noonday Club; and Montague went—though not without a
qualm. For it was in the Fidelity Building, the enemy’s bailiwick: a
magnificent structure with halls of white marble, and a lavish display of
bronze. It occurred to Montague that somewhere in this structure people were at
work preparing an answer to his charges; he wondered what they were saying.</p>
<p>The two had lunch, talking meanwhile about the coming events in Society, and
about politics and wars; and when the coffee was served and they were alone in
the room, Harvey settled his big frame back in his chair, and began:—</p>
<p>“In the first place,” he said, “I must explain that
I’ve something to say that is devilish hard to get into. I’m so
much afraid of your jumping to a wrong conclusion in the middle of
it—I’d like you to agree to listen for a minute or two before you
think at all.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said Montague, with a smile. “Fire away.”</p>
<p>And at once the other became grave. “You’ve taken a case against
this company,” he said. “And Ollie has talked enough to me to make
me understand that you’ve done a plucky thing, and that you must be
everlastingly sick of hearing from cowardly people who want you to drop it.
I’d be very sorry to be classed with them, for even a moment; and you
must understand at the outset that I haven’t a particle of interest in
the company, and that it wouldn’t matter to me if I had. I don’t
try to use my friends in business, and I don’t let money count with me in
my social life. I made up my mind to take the risk of speaking to you about
this case, simply because I happen to know one or two things about it that I
thought you didn’t know. And if that’s so, you are at a great
disadvantage; but in any case, please understand that I have no motive but
friendship, and so if I am butting in, excuse me.”</p>
<p>When Siegfried Harvey talked, he looked straight at one with his clear blue
eyes, and there was no doubting his honesty. “I am very much obliged to
you,” said Montague. “Pray tell me what you have to say.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said the other. “It can be done very quickly.
You have taken a case which involves a great many sacrifices upon your part.
And I wondered if it had ever occurred to you to ask whether you might not be
taken advantage of?”</p>
<p>“How do you mean?” asked Montague.</p>
<p>“Do you know the people who are behind you?” inquired the other.
“Do you know them well enough to be sure what are their motives in the
case?”</p>
<p>Montague hesitated, and thought. “No,” he said, “I
couldn’t say that I do.”</p>
<p>“Then it’s just as I thought,” replied Harvey.
“I’ve been watching you—you are an honest man, and
you’re putting yourself to no end of trouble from the best of motives.
And unless I’m mistaken, you’re being used by men who are not
honest, and whom you wouldn’t work with if you knew their
purposes.”</p>
<p>“What purposes could they have?”</p>
<p>“There are several possibilities. In the first place, it might be a
‘strike’ suit—somebody who is hoping to be bought off for a
big price. That is what nearly every one thinks is the case. But I don’t;
I think it’s more likely some one within the company who is trying to put
the administration in a hole.”</p>
<p>“Who could that be?” exclaimed Montague, amazed.</p>
<p>“I don’t know that. I’m not familiar enough with the
situation in the Fidelity—it’s changing all the time. I simply know
that there are factions struggling for the control of it, and hating each other
furiously, and ready to do anything in the world to cripple each other. You
know that their forty millions of surplus gives an enormous power; I’d
rather be able to swing forty millions in the Street than to have ten millions
in my own right. And so the giants are fighting for the control of those
companies; and you can’t tell who’s in and who’s
out—you can never know the real meaning of anything that happens in the
struggle. All that you can be sure of is that the game is crooked from end to
end, and that nothing that happens in it is what it pretends to be.”</p>
<p>Montague listened, half dazed, and feeling as if the ground he stood on were
caving beneath his feet.</p>
<p>“What do you know about those who brought you this case?” asked his
companion, suddenly.</p>
<p>“Not much,” he said weakly.</p>
<p>Harvey hesitated a moment. “Understand me, please,” he said.
“I’ve no wish to pry into your affairs, and if you don’t care
to say any more, I’ll understand it perfectly. But I’ve heard it
said that the man who started the thing was Ellis.”</p>
<p>Montague, in his turn, hesitated; then he said, “That is
correct—between you and me.”</p>
<p>“Very good,” said Harvey, “and that is what made me
suspicious. Do you know anything about Ellis?”</p>
<p>“I didn’t,” said the other. “I’ve heard a little
since.”</p>
<p>“I can fancy so,” said Harvey. “And I can tell you that Ellis
is mixed up in life-insurance matters in all sorts of dubious ways. It seems to
me that you have reason to be most careful where you follow him.”</p>
<p>Montague sat with his hands clenched and his brows knitted. His friend’s
talk had been like a flash of lightning; it revealed huge menacing forms in the
darkness about him. All the structure of his hopes seemed to be tottering; his
case, that he had worked so hard over—his fifty thousand dollars that he
had been so proud of! Could it be that he had been tricked, and had made a fool
of himself?</p>
<p>“How in the world am I to know?” he cried.</p>
<p>“That is more than I can tell,” said his friend. “And for
that matter, I’m not sure that you could do anything now. All that I
could do was to warn you what sort of ground you were treading on, so that you
could watch out for yourself in future.”</p>
<p>Montague thanked him heartily for that service; and then he went back to his
office, and spent the rest of the day pondering the matter.</p>
<p>What he had heard had made a vast change in things. Before it everything had
seemed simple; and now nothing was clear. He was overwhelmed with a sense of
the utter futility of his efforts; he was trying to build a house upon
quicksands. There was nowhere a solid spot upon which he could set his foot.
There was nowhere any truth—there were only contending powers who used
the phrases of truth for their own purposes! And now he saw himself as the
world saw him,—a party to a piece of trickery,—a knave like all the
rest. He felt that he had been tripped up at the first step in his career.</p>
<p>The conclusion of the whole matter was that he took an afternoon train for
Albany; and the next morning he talked the matter out with the Judge. Montague
had realized the need of going slowly, for, after all, he had no definite
ground for suspicion; and so, very tactfully and cautiously he explained, that
it had come to his ears that many people believed there were interested parties
behind the suit of Mr. Hasbrook; and that this had made him uncomfortable, as
he knew nothing whatever about his client. He had come to ask the Judge’s
advice in the matter.</p>
<p>No one could have taken the thing more graciously than did the great man; he
was all kindness and tact. In the first place, he said, he had warned him in
advance that enemies would attack him and slander him, and that all kinds of
subtle means would be used to influence him. And he must understand that these
rumours were part of such a campaign; it made no difference how good a friend
had brought them to him—how could he know who had brought them to that
friend?</p>
<p>The Judge ventured to hope that nothing that anyone might say could influence
him to believe that he, the Judge, would have advised him to do anything
improper.</p>
<p>“No,” said Montague, “but can you assure me that there are no
interested parties behind Mr. Hasbrook?”</p>
<p>“Interested parties?” asked the other.</p>
<p>“I mean people connected with the Fidelity or other insurance
companies.”</p>
<p>“Why, no,” said the Judge; “I certainly couldn’t assure
you of that.”</p>
<p>Montague looked surprised. “You mean you don’t know?”</p>
<p>“I mean,” was the answer, “that I wouldn’t feel at
liberty to tell, even if I did know.”</p>
<p>And Montague stared at him; he had not been prepared for this frankness.</p>
<p>“It never occurred to me,” the other continued, “that that
was a matter which could make any difference to you.”</p>
<p>“Why—” began Montague.</p>
<p>“Pray understand me, Mr. Montague,” said the Judge. “It
seemed to me that this was obviously a just case, and it seemed so to you. And
the only other matter that I thought you had a right to be assured of was that
it was seriously meant. Of that I felt assured. It did not seem to me of any
importance that there might be interested individuals behind Mr. Hasbrook. Let
us suppose, for instance, that there were some parties who had been offended by
the administration of the Fidelity, and were anxious to punish it. Could a
lawyer be justified in refusing to take a just case, simply because he knew of
such private motives? Or, let us assume an extreme case—a factional fight
within the company, as you say has been suggested to you. Well, that would be a
case of thieves falling out; and is there any reason why the public should not
reap the advantage of such a situation? The men inside the company are the ones
who would know first what is going on; and if you saw a chance to use such an
advantage in a just fight—would you not do it?”</p>
<p>So the Judge went on, gracious and plausible—and so subtly and
exquisitely corrupting! Underneath his smoothly flowing sentences Montague
could feel the presence of one fundamental thought; it was unuttered and even
unhinted, but it pervaded the Judge’s discourse as a mood pervades a
melody. The young lawyer had got a big fee, and he had a nice easy case; and as
a man of the world, he could not really wish to pry into it too closely. He had
heard gossip, and felt that his reputation required him to be disturbed; but he
had come, simply to be smoothed down the back and made at ease, and enabled to
keep his fee without losing his good opinion of himself.</p>
<p>Montague quit, because he concluded that it was not worth while to try to make
himself understood. After all, he was in the case now, and there was nothing to
be gained by a breach. Two things he felt that he had made certain by the
interview—first, that his client was a “dummy,” and that it
was really a case of thieves falling out; and second, that he had no guarantee
that he might not be left in the lurch at any moment—except the touching
confidence of the Judge in some parties unknown.</p>
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