Part 7 (1/2)
”You never can tell,” he rejoined. ”Things are a bit slack now, because of this infernal drought; but a good sousing rain, or a few smart thunder showers, would fill all the dams and set the batteries working again harder than ever. It's the rainy time of year, too.”
It was the morning after Laurence's arrival in Johannesburg, and, while sallying forth to find Rainsford, the two had met on Commissioner Street. The brand-new gold-town looked anything but what it was. It did not look new. In spite of the general unfinishedness of the streets and sidewalks, the latter largely conspicuous by their absence; in spite of the predominance of scaffolding poles and half-reared structures of red brick; in spite of the countless tenements of corrugated iron, and the tall chimneys of mining works which came in here where steeples would have arisen in an ordinary town; in spite of all this there was a battered and weather-beaten aspect about the place which made it look centuries old. Great pillars of dust towered skywards, then dispersing, whirled in mighty wreaths over the s.h.i.+ning iron roofs, to fall hissing back into the red-powdery streets whence they arose, choking with pungent particles the throats, eyes, and ears of the eager, busy, speculative, acquisitive crowd, who had flocked hither like wasps to a jar of beer and honey. And to many, indeed, it was destined to prove just such a trap.
”Well, what do you advise, Rainsford?” said Laurence, after some more talk about the Rand and its prospects.
”Wait a day or two. You don't want to buy in a falling market. There are several good companies to put into, but things haven't touched bottom yet. When they do and just begin to rise, then buy in. Meanwhile lie low.”
”You speak like a book, Rainsford,” said one of two men who joined them at that moment. ”There's a capital company now whose shares are on the rise again. Couldn't do better than take two or three hundred of them.
What do you say?”
”Name?”
”Bai-praatfonteins.”
”I'll watch it!” said Rainsford, with an emphatic and negative shake of the head.
”I say, you don't want a couple of building stands? They'll treble their value in as many weeks. Going cheap as dirt now.”
”Not taking any, Rankin,” was the uncompromising reply, for Rainsford knew something about those building stands.
”You're making a mistake. Bless my soul, if only I had the money to spare, I'd take them at double myself. I'm only agent in the matter, though. I can't do any business at all with you fellows this morning.”
All this was said in the most genial and good-humoured tone imaginable.
The speaker was a spare, straight, neatly dressed individual of middle age. His face was of a dark bronze hue, lit up by a pair of keen black eyes, and his beard was prematurely gray, almost white. The expression of keenness on a deal was not characteristic of him alone. Everyone wore it in those days.
”That was a great old shot you did on me, Rainsford, with those Verneuk Draais,” cut in the other man, in a jolly, hail-the-maintop sort of voice. He was a tall, fair-haired, athletic fellow, whose condition looked as hard as nails. ”_Ja_, it just was.”
”Well, I'll buy them back if you like, Wheeler.”
”How much?”
”Sixteen and a half.”
A roar of good-humoured derision went up from the other.
”Sixteen and a half? And I took them over from you at twenty-eight.
Sixteen and a half?”
”Well, are you taking?” said Rainsford.
”Dead off,” returned the other.
”What do you say, you fellows?” cut in the first who had spoken. ”A little 'smile' of something before lunch won't do us any harm. Eh? what do you say?”
”_Ja_, that's so. Come along,” sung out the tall man, spinning round upon one heel and heading for the Exchange bar.
”There's nothing like an Angostura to give one an appet.i.te,” said the dark man to Laurence as they walked along. ”It gives tone to the system.
Angostura--with a little drop of gin in it.”