“Oh, Curtis is well,” she answered. “He gets very tired at times.”
“Well, I can understand it. Lands alive, child whatever are you going to do with all your money? They tell me that J. has made millions in the last three or four months. A man I was talking to last week said his corner was the greatest thing ever known on the Chicago Board of Trade. Well, goodbye, Laura, come up whenever you’re ready. I’ll see you at lunch. Charlie is right here. He says to give you his love.” An hour later Laura’s victoria stopped in front of the Cressler’s house, and the little footman descended with the agility of a monkey, to stand, soldier-like, at the steps, the lap robe over his arm.
Laura gave orders to have the victoria call for her at three, and ran quickly up the front steps. The front entrance was open, the screen door on the latch, and she entered without ceremony.
“Mrs. Cressler!” she called, as she stood in the hallway drawing off her gloves. “Mrs. Cressler! Carrie, have you gone yet?”
But the maid, Annie, appeared at the head of the stairs, on the landing of the second floor, a towel bound about her head, her duster in her hand.
“Mrs. Cressler has gone out, Mrs. Jadwin,” she said. “She said you was to make yourself at home, and she’d be back by noon.”
Laura nodded, and standing before the hatrack in the hall, took off her hat and gloves, and folded her veil into her purse. The house was old-fashioned, very homelike and spacious, cool, with broad halls and wide windows. In the “front library,” where Laura entered first, were steel engravings of the style of the seventies, “whatnots” crowded with shells, Chinese coins, lacquer boxes, and the inevitable sawfish bill. The mantel was mottled white marble, and its shelf bore the usual bronze and gilt clock, decorated by a female figure in classic draperies, reclining against a globe. An oil painting of a mountain landscape hung against one wall; and on a table of black walnut, with a red marble slab, that stood between the front windows, were a stereoscope and a rosewood music box.
The piano, an old style Chickering, stood diagonally across the far corner of the room, by the closed sliding doors, and Laura sat down here and began to play the “Mephisto Walzer,” which she had been at pains to learn since the night Corthell had rendered it on her great organ in the art gallery.
But when she had played as much as she could remember of the music, she rose and closed the piano, and pushed back the folding doors between the room she was in and the “back library,” a small room where Mrs. Cressler kept her books of poetry.
As Laura entered the room she was surprised to see Mr. Cressler there, seated in his armchair, his back turned toward her.
“Why, I didn’t know you were here, Mr. Cressler,” she said, as she came up to him.
She laid her hand upon his arm. But Cressler was dead; and as Laura touched him the head dropped upon the shoulder and showed the bullet hole in the temple, just in front of the ear.
X
The suicide of Charles Cressler had occurred on the tenth of June, and the report of it, together with the wretched story of his friend’s final surrender to a temptation he had never outlived, reached Curtis Jadwin early on the morning of the eleventh.
He and Gretry were at their accustomed places in the latter’s office, and the news seemed to shut out all the sunshine that had been flooding in through the broad plate-glass windows. After their first incoherent horror, the two sat staring at each other, speechless.
“My God, my God,” groaned Jadwin, as if in the throes of a deadly sickness. “He was in the Crookes’ ring, and we never knew it—I’ve killed him, Sam. I might as well have held that pistol myself.” He stamped his foot, striking his fist across his forehead, “Great God—my best friend—Charlie—Charlie Cressler! Sam, I shall go mad if this—if this—”
“Steady, steady does it, J.,” warned the broker, his hand upon his shoulder, “we got to keep a grip on ourselves today. We’ve got a lot to think of. We’ll think about Charlie, later. Just now … well it’s business now. Mathewson & Knight have called on us for margins—twenty thousand dollars.”
He laid the slip down in front of Jadwin, as he sat at his desk.
“Oh, this can wait?” exclaimed Jadwin. “Let it go till this afternoon. I can’t talk business now. Think of Carrie—Mrs. Cressler, I—”
“No,” answered Gretry, reflectively and slowly, looking anywhere but in Jadwin’s face. “N—no, I don’t think we’d better wait. I think we’d better meet these margin calls promptly. It’s always better to keep our trades margined up.”
Jadwin faced around.
“Why,” he cried, “one would think, to hear you talk, as though there was danger of me busting here at any hour.”
Gretry did not answer. There was a moment’s silence Then the broker caught his principal’s eye and held it a second.
“Well,” he answered, “you saw how freely they sold to us in the Pit yesterday. We’ve got to buy, and buy and buy, to keep our price up; and look here, look at these reports from our correspondents—everything points to a banner crop.
