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"Sergeant Ellison, sir."
"Then I'll see him first, and the Committee afterwards. But let them all wait until I ring. I wish to speak with my son."
He waved his hand and the secretary, knowing well from experience that this was a sign that there must be no further discussion, bowed respectfully and left the room. Jefferson turned and advanced towards his father, who held out his hand.
"Well, Jefferson," he said kindly, "did you have a good time abroad?"
"Yes, sir, thank you. Such a trip is a liberal education in itself."
"Ready for work again, eh? I'm glad you're back, Jefferson. I'm busy now, but one of these days I want to have a serious talk with you in regard to your future. This artist business is all very well--for a pastime. But it's not a career--surely you can appreciate that--for a young man with such prospects as yours.
Have you ever stopped to think of that?"
Jefferson was silent. He did not want to displease his father; on the other hand, it was impossible to let things drift as they had been doing. There must be an understanding sooner or later. Why not now?
"The truth is, sir," he began timidly, "I'd like a little talk with you now, if you can spare the time."
Ryder, Sr., looked first at his watch and then at his son, who, ill at ease, sat nervously on the extreme edge of a chair. Then he said with a smile:
"Well, my boy, to be perfectly frank, I can't--but--I will.
Come, what is it?" Then, as if to apologize for his previous abruptness, he added, "I've had a very busy day, Jeff. What with Trans-Continental and Trans-Atlantic and Southern Pacific, and Wall Street, and Rate Bills, and Washington I feel like Atlas shouldering the world."
"The world wasn't intended for one pair of shoulders to carry, sir," rejoined Jefferson calmly.
His father looked at him in amazement. It was something new to hear anyone venturing to question or comment upon anything he said.
"Why not?" he demanded, when he had recovered from his surprise.
"Julius Caesar carried it. Napoleon carried it--to a certain extent. However, that's neither here nor there. What is it, boy?"
Unable to remain a moment inactive, he commenced to pick among the ma.s.s of papers on his desk, while Jefferson was thinking what to say. The last word his father uttered gave him a cue, and he blurted out protestingly:
"That's just it, sir. You forget that I'm no longer a boy. It's time to treat me as if I were a man."
Ryder, Sr., leaned back in his chair and laughed heartily.
"A man at twenty-eight? That's an excellent joke. Do you know that a man doesn't get his horse sense till he's forty?"
"I want you to take me seriously," persisted Jefferson.
Ryder, Sr., was not a patient man. His moments of good humour were of brief duration. Anything that savoured of questioning his authority always angered him. The smile went out of his face and he retorted explosively:
"Go on--d.a.m.n it all! Be serious if you want, only don't take so long about it. But understand one thing. I want no preaching, no philosophical or socialistic twaddle. No Tolstoi--he's a great thinker, and you're not. No Bernard Shaw--he's funny, and you're not. Now go ahead."
This beginning was not very encouraging, and Jefferson felt somewhat intimidated. But he realized that he might not have another such opportunity, so he plunged right in.
"I should have spoken to you before if you had let me," he said.
"I often--"
"If I let you?" interrupted his father. "Do you expect me to sit and listen patiently to your wild theories of social reform? You asked me one day why the wages of the idle rich was wealth and the wages of hard work was poverty, and I told you that I worked harder in one day than a tunnel digger works in a life-time.
Thinking is a harder game than any. You must think or you won't know. Napoleon knew more about war than all his generals put together. I know more about money than any man living to-day. The man who knows is the man who wins. The man who takes advice isn't fit to give it. That's why I never take yours. Come, don't be a fool, Jeff--give up this art nonsense. Come back to the Trading Company. I'll make you vice-president, and I'll teach you the business of making millions."
Jefferson shook his head. It was hard to have to tell his own father that he did not think the million-making business quite a respectable one, so he only murmured:
"It's impossible, father. I am devoted to my work. I even intend to go away and travel a few years and see the world. It will help me considerably."
Ryder, Sr., eyed his son in silence for a few moments; then he said gently:
"Don't be obstinate, Jeff. Listen to me. I know the world better than you do. You mustn't go away. You are the only flesh and blood I have."
He stopped speaking for a moment, as if overcome by a sudden emotion over which he had no control. Jefferson remained silent, nervously toying with a paper cutter. Seeing that his words had made no effect, Ryder thumped his desk with his fist and cried:
"You see my weakness. You see that I want you with me, and now you take advantage--you take advantage--"
"No, father, I don't," protested Jefferson; "but I want to go away. Although I have my studio and am practically independent, I want to go where I shall be perfectly free--where my every move will not be watched--where I can meet my fellow-man heart to heart on an equal basis, where I shall not be pointed out as the son of Ready Money Ryder. I want to make a reputation of my own as an artist."
"Why not study theology and become a preacher?" sneered Ryder.
Then, more amiably, he said: "No, my lad, you stay here. Study my interests--study the interests that will be yours some day."
"No," said Jefferson doggedly, "I'd rather go--my work and my self-respect demand it."
"Then go, d.a.m.n it, go!" cried his father in a burst of anger. "I'm a fool for wasting my time with an ungrateful son." He rose from his seat and began to pace the room.
"Father," exclaimed Jefferson starting forward, "you do me an injustice."
"An injustice?" echoed Mr. Ryder turning round. "Ye G.o.ds! I've given you the biggest name in the commercial world; the most colossal fortune ever acc.u.mulated by one man is waiting for you, and you say I've done you an injustice!"
"Yes--we are rich," said Jefferson bitterly. "But at what a cost!
You do not go into the world and hear the sneers that I get everywhere. You may succeed in muzzling the newspapers and magazines, but you cannot silence public opinion. People laugh when they hear the name Ryder--when they do not weep. All your millions cannot purchase the world's respect. You try to throw millions to the public as a bone to a dog, and they decline the money on the ground that it is tainted. Doesn't that tell you what the world thinks of your methods?"
Ryder laughed cynically. He went back to his desk, and, sitting facing his son, he replied:
"Jefferson, you are young. It is one of the symptoms of youth to worry about public opinion. When you are as old as I am you will understand that there is only one thing which counts in this world--money. The man who has it possesses power over the man who has it not, and power is what the ambitious man loves most."
He stopped to pick up a book. It was "The American Octopus."
Turning again to his son, he went on:
"Do you see this book? It is the literary sensation of the year.
Why? Because it attacks me--the richest man in the world. It holds me up as a monster, a tyrant, a man without soul, honour or conscience, caring only for one thing--money; having but one pa.s.sion--the love of power, and halting at nothing, not even at crime, to secure it. That is the portrait they draw of your father."
Jefferson said nothing. He was wondering if his sire had a suspicion who wrote it and was leading up to that. But Ryder, Sr., continued:
"Do I care? The more they attack me the more I like it. Their puny pen p.r.i.c.ks have about the same effect as mosquito bites on the pachyderm. What I am, the conditions of my time made me. When I started in business a humble clerk, forty years ago, I had but one goal--success; I had but one aim--to get rich. I was lucky. I made a little money, and I soon discovered that I could make more money by outwitting my compet.i.tors in the oil fields. Railroad conditions helped me. The whole country was money mad. A wave of commercial prosperity swept over the land and I was carried along on its crest. I grew enormously rich, my millions increasing by leaps and bounds. I branched out into other interests, successful always, until my holdings grew to what they are to-day--the wonder of the twentieth century. What do I care for the world's respect when my money makes the world my slave? What respect can I have for a people that cringe before money and let it rule them? Are you aware that not a factory wheel turns, not a vote is counted, not a judge is appointed, not a legislator seated, not a president elected without my consent? I am the real ruler of the United States--not the so-called government at Washington. They are my puppets and this is my executive chamber. This power will be yours one day, boy, but you must know how to use it when it comes."
"I never want it, father," said Jefferson firmly. "To me your words savour of treason. I couldn't imagine that American talking that way." He pointed to the mantel, at the picture of George Washington.
Ryder, Sr., laughed. He could not help it if his son was an idealist. There was no use getting angry, so he merely shrugged his shoulders and said:
"All right, Jeff. We'll discuss the matter later, when you've cut your wisdom teeth. Just at present you're in the clouds. But you spoke of my doing you an injustice. How can my love of power do you an injustice?"
"Because," replied Jefferson, "you exert that power over your family as well as over your business a.s.sociates. You think and will for everybody in the house, for everyone who comes in contact with you. Yours is an influence no one seems able to resist. You robbed me of my right to think. Ever since I was old enough to think, you have thought for me; ever since I was old enough to choose, you have chosen for me. You have chosen that I should marry Kate Roberts. That is the one thing I wished to speak to you about. The marriage is impossible."