the first of this month, but this French and German news has coloured the cat different. I’ve been figuring that I would get out of this market around the seventies, but she’s going higher. I’m going to hold on yet awhile.”

“You do it on your own responsibility, then,” said the broker. “I warn you the price is top heavy.”

“Not much. Seventy-two cents is too cheap. Now I’m going into this hard; and I want to have my own lines out⁠—to be independent of the trade papers that Crookes could buy up any time he wants to. I want you to get me some good, reliable correspondents in Europe; smart, bright fellows that we can depend on. I want one in Liverpool, one in Paris, and one in Odessa, and I want them to cable us about the situation every day.”

Gretry thought a while.

“Well,” he said, at length, “… yes. I guess I can arrange it. I can get you a good man in Liverpool⁠—Traynard is his name⁠—and there’s two or three in Paris we could pick up. Odessa⁠—I don’t know. I couldn’t say just this minute. But I’ll fix it.”

These correspondents began to report at the end of July. All over Europe the demand for wheat was active. Grain handlers were not only buying freely, but were contracting for future delivery. In August came the first demands for American wheat, scattered and sporadic at first, then later, a little, a very little more insistent.

Thus the summer wore to its end. The fall “situation” began slowly to define itself, with eastern Europe⁠—densely populated, overcrowded⁠—commencing to show uneasiness as to its supply of food for the winter; and with but a moderate crop in America to meet foreign demands. Russia, the United States, and Argentine would have to feed the world during the next twelve months.

Over the Chicago Wheat Pit the hand of the great indicator stood at seventy-five cents. Jadwin sold out his September wheat at this figure, and then in a single vast clutch bought three million bushels of the December option.

Never before had he ventured so deeply into the Pit. Never before had he committed himself so irrevocably to the send of the current. But something was preparing. Something indefinite and huge. He guessed it, felt it, knew it. On all sides of him he felt a quickening movement. Lethargy, inertia were breaking up. There was buoyancy to the current. In its ever-increasing swiftness there was exhilaration and exuberance.

And he was upon the crest of the wave. Now the forethought, the shrewdness, and the prompt action of those early spring days were beginning to tell. Confident, secure, unassailable, Jadwin plunged in. Every week the swirl of the Pit increased in speed, every week the demands of Europe for American wheat grew more frequent; and at the end of the month the price⁠—which had fluctuated between seventy-five and seventy-eight⁠—in a sudden flurry rushed to seventy-nine, to seventy-nine and a half, and closed, strong, at the even eighty cents.

On the day when the latter figure was reached Jadwin bought a seat upon the Board of Trade.

He was now no longer an “outsider.”

VII

One morning in November of the same year Laura joined her husband at breakfast, preoccupied and a little grave, her mind full of a subject about which, she told herself, she could no longer keep from speaking. So soon as an opportunity presented itself, which was when Jadwin laid down his paper and drew his coffee-cup towards him, Laura exclaimed:

“Curtis.”

“Well, old girl?”

“Curtis, dear,⁠ ⁠… when is it all going to end⁠—your speculating? You never used to be this way. It seems as though, nowadays, I never had you to myself. Even when you are not going over papers and reports and that, or talking by the hour to Mr. Gretry in the library⁠—even when you are not doing all that, your mind seems to be away from me⁠—down there in La Salle Street or the Board of Trade Building. Dearest, you don’t know. I don’t mean to complain, and I don’t want to be exacting or selfish, but⁠—sometimes I⁠—I am lonesome. Don’t interrupt,” she said, hastily. “I want to say it all at once, and then never speak of it again. Last night, when Mr. Gretry was here, you said, just after dinner, that you would be all through your talk in an hour. And I waited.⁠ ⁠… I waited till eleven, and then I went to bed. Dear I⁠—I⁠—I was lonesome. The evening was so long. I had put on my very prettiest gown, the one you said you liked so much, and you never seemed to notice. You told me Mr. Gretry was going by nine, and I had it all planned how we would spend the evening together.”

But she got no further. Her husband had taken her in his arms, and had interrupted her words with blustering exclamations of self-reproach and self-condemnation. He was a brute, he cried, a senseless, selfish ass, who had no right to such a wife, who was not worth a single one of the tears that by now were trembling on Laura’s lashes.

“Now we won’t speak of it again,” she began. “I suppose I am selfish⁠—”

“Selfish, nothing!” he exclaimed. “Don’t talk that way. I’m the one⁠—”

“But,” Laura persisted, “some time you will⁠—get out of this speculating for good? Oh, I do look forward to it so! And, Curtis, what is the use? We’re so rich now we can’t spend our money. What do you want to make more for?”

“Oh, it’s not the money,” he answered. “It’s the fun of the thing; the excitement⁠—”

“That’s just it, the ‘excitement.’ You don’t know, Curtis. It is changing you. You are so nervous sometimes, and sometimes you don’t listen to me when I talk to you. I can just see what’s in your mind. It’s wheat⁠—wheat⁠—wheat, wheat⁠—wheat⁠—wheat, all the time. Oh, if you knew how I hated and feared it!”

“Well, old girl, that settles it. I wouldn’t make you unhappy a single minute

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