Part 17 (2/2)
”We have let civilization make us what we are,” the banker said shrewdly, ”and now we complain of her handiwork. Write what you like about it, money and love are the only two things left in the world to-day. The story has always been the same, but people did not read it so often formerly. There have always been ambition, strife, struggle, suffering--why should the historians trouble to tell of them? You yourself, Alban, would be a worker if the opportunity came to you. I have foreseen that from the first moment I met you. If you were interested, you would outdo the Germans and beat them both with your head and your hands. But it will be very difficult to interest you. You would need some great stimulus, and in your case it would be ambition rather than its rewards.”
Alban replied that a love of power was probably the strongest influence in the world.
”We all hate work,” he said, repeating his favorite dictum, ”I don't suppose there is one man in a thousand who would do another day's work unless he were compelled. The success of Socialism in our time is the belief that it will glorify idleness and make it real. The agitators themselves never work. They have learned the rich men's secret--I have heard them preaching the dignity of labor a hundred times, but I never yet saw one wheeling a barrow. The poor fellows who listen to them think that you have only got to pa.s.s a few acts of Parliament to be happy forever after. I pity them, but how are you to teach them that the present state of things is just--and if it is not just, why should you wish it to last?”
Gessner could answer that. A rich man himself, all that concerned the new doctrines was of the profoundest interest to him.
”The present state of things is the only state of things--in the bulk,”
he said; ”it is as old as the world and will go on as long as the world.
We grumble at our rich men, but those who have ama.s.sed their own fortunes are properly the nation's bankers. Consider what a sudden gift of money would mean to the working-men of England to-day--drunkenness, crime, debauchery. You can legislate to improve the conditions of their lives, but to give them creative brains is beyond all legislation. And I will tell you this--that once you have pa.s.sed any considerable socialistic legislation for this kingdom of Great Britain, you have decided her destiny. She will in twenty years be in the position of Holland--a country that was but never will be again.”
No one disputed the proposition, for no one thoroughly understood it.
Alban had not the courage to debate his pet theorems at such a time, and the parson was too intent upon denouncing the national want of seriousness to enter upon such abstruse questions as the banker would willingly have discussed. So they fell back upon athletics again, and were busy with football and cricket until the time came for Anna to withdraw and leave them to their cigars. Silas Geary, quickly imitating her, waited but for a gla.s.s of port before he made his excuses and departed, as he said, upon a ”parochial necessity.”
”We will go to the Winter Garden,” Gessner said to Alban when they were alone--”I will see that Fellows takes our coffee there. Bring some cigarettes, Alban--I wish to have a little private talk with you.”
Alban a.s.sented willingly, for he was glad of this opportunity to say much that he had desired to say for some days past. The night had turned very hot and close, but the gla.s.s roof of the Winter Garden stood open and they sat there almost as in the open air, the great palms and shrubs all about them and many lights glowing cunningly amid the giant leaves.
As earlier in the evening, so now Gessner was in the best of spirits, laughing at every trivial circ.u.mstance and compelling his guest to see how kindly was his desposition toward him.
”We shall be comfortable here,” he said, ”and far enough away from the port wine to save me self-reproach to-morrow. I see that you drink little, Alban. It is wise--all those who have the gout will speak of your wisdom. We drink because the wine is there, not because we want it.
And then in the morning, we say, how foolish. Come now, light another cigarette and listen to me. I have great things to talk about, great questions to ask you. You must listen patiently, for this concerns your happiness--as closely perhaps as anything will concern it as long as you live.”
He did not continue immediately, seeing the footman at his elbow with the coffee. Alban, upon his part, lighted a cigarette as he had been commanded, and waited patiently. He thought that he knew what was coming and yet was afraid of the thought. Anna's sudden pa.s.sion for him had been too patent to all the world that he should lightly escape its consequences. Indeed, he had never waited for any one to speak with the anxiety which attended this interval of service. He thought that the footman would never leave them alone.
”Now,” said Gessner at last, ”now that those fellows are gone we can make ourselves comfortable. I shall be very plain, my lad--I shall not deceive you again. When you first came to my house, I did not tell you the truth--I am going to tell it to you to-night, for it is only right that you should know it.”
He stirred his coffee vigorously and puffed at his cigar until it glowed red again. When he resumed he spoke in brief decisive sentences as though forbidding question or contradiction until he had finished.
”There is a fellow-countryman of mine--you know him and know his daughter. He believes that I am under some obligation to him and I do not contradict him. When we met in London, many years after the business transaction of which he complains, I asked him in what way I could be of service to him or to his family, as the case might be. He answered that he wanted nothing for himself, but that any favor I might be disposed to show should be toward his daughter and to you. I took it that you were in love with the girl and would marry her. That was what I was given to believe. At the same time, this fellow Boriskoff a.s.sured me that you were well educated, of a singularly independent character, and well worthy of being received into this house. I will not deny that the fellow made very much of this request, and that it was put to me with certain alternatives which I considered impertinent. You, however, had no part in that. You came here because the whole truth was not told to you--and you remained because my daughter wished it. There I do not fear contradiction. You know yourself that it is true and will not contradict me. As the time went on, I perceived that you had established a claim to my generosity such as did not exist when first you came here--the claim of my affection and of my daughter's. This, I will confess, has given me more pleasure than anything which has happened here for a long time. I have no son and I take it as the beneficent work of Providence that one should be sent to me as you were sent. My daughter would possibly have married a scoundrel if the circ.u.mstances had been otherwise. So, you see, that while you are now established here by right of our affection, I am rewarded twofold for anything I may have done for you. Henceforth this happy state of things must become still happier. I have spoken to Anna to-night, and I should be very foolish if I could not construe her answer rightly. She loves you, my lad, and will take you for her husband. It remains for you to say that your happiness shall not be delayed any longer than may be reasonable.”
It need scarcely be said with what surprise Alban listened to this lengthy recital. Some part of the truth had already been made known to him--but this fuller account could not but flatter his vanity while it left him silent in his amazement and perplexity. Richard Gessner, he understood, had always desired a brilliant match for Anna, and had sought an alliance with some of the foremost English families. If he abandoned these ambitions, a shrewd belief in the impossibility lay at the root of his determination. Anna would never marry as he wished. Her birthright and her Eastern blood forbade it. She would be the child of whim and of pa.s.sion always, and it lay upon him to avert the greater evil by the lesser. Alban in a vague way understood this, but of his own case he could make little. What a world of ease and luxury and delight these few simple words opened up to him. He had but to say ”yes” to become the ultimate master of this man's fortune, the possessor of a heritage which would have been considered fabulous but fifty years ago.
And yet he would not say ”yes.” It was as though some unknown power restrained him, almost as though his own brain tricked him. Of Anna's sudden pa.s.sion for him he had no doubt whatever. She was ready and willing to yield her whole self to him and would, it might be, make him a devoted wife. None the less, the temptation found him vacillating and incapable even of a clear decision. Some voice of the past called to him and would not be silenced. Maladroitly, he gave no direct reply, but answered the question by another.
”Did Paul Boriskoff tell you that I was about to marry his daughter, Mr.
Gessner?”
”My dear lad, what Paul Boriskoff said or did can be of little interest to you or me to-night. He is no longer in England, let me tell you. He left for Poland three days ago.”
”Then you saw him or heard from him before he left?”
”Not at all. The less one sees or hears from that kind of person the better. You know the fellow and will understand me. He is a firebrand we can well do without. I recommended him to go to Poland and he has gone.
His daughter, I understand, is being educated at Warsaw. Let me advise you to forget such acquaintances--they are no longer of any concern to either of us.”
He waved his hand as though to dismiss the subject finally; but his words left Alban strangely ill at ease.
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