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"Because they know what's in the country now and how to get it out--and they never knew that before."
"And the immediate future--what do you see that depends on?"
"Steel rails," said Brewster with conviction. "Will you come up?"
Thorpe did go up, and Clark, who knew that Brewster had been in Toronto and conceived why, met them both at the works with a genuine welcome.
He felt, nevertheless, that his undertakings were to be a.n.a.lyzed with cold deliberation.
At the end of two days Thorpe had seen them all--had peered into the gray black bowels of the iron mine, watched Baudette denuding the slopes of a mult.i.tude of hills--seen the stamps in the gold mill hammering out the precious particles that were caught by great quicksilver plates,--seen booms and train loads of pulp on their way to St. Marys--seen the white spruce shaven of its brown bark and ground and sheeted and loaded into the gaping holds of Clark's steamships--seen the blast furnaces vomit their molten metal--seen the rhythmic pumps and dynamos send water and light through every artery of the young city--seen the veneer mills ripping out flexible miles of their satiny wood--seen the power house on the American side making carbide to the low rumble of thousands of horsepower, and seen the electric railway that linked Ironville with St. Marys. And all the time Clark had put forward neither arguments in his own favor nor any request for credit, but only allowed these things to speak for themselves, till, as the aggregate became more and more rounded and the picture more complete, Thorpe perceived that here was something which initiated by an extraordinary brain had now grown to such vast proportions that it supplied its own momentum, and must of necessity move on to its appointed and final result.
But Clark did not distinguish in either Thorpe or Brewster any determining factor of his future. They would do what they were meant to do, and play the game as the master of the game decided. They might modify, but they would never create. His mind was pitched so far ahead that it was beside the mark to attempt to influence men who, he conceived, were not themselves endowed with any prophetic vision. He had to deal with them and he dealt with them, and though he wondered mutely at their abiding sense of the present and their apparent lack of faith in the inevitable future, he descended from the heights of his own imagination and parleyed in the bald and merciless language of strictly commercial affairs.
It was at the end of his visit that Thorpe asked about the sulphur plant.
Clark glanced at him curiously. The sulphur plant was so small a fraction of the whole.
"There's a certain step in the process we have not perfected--that's all. You don't believe in economic waste, do you?"
"No, certainly not--if avoidable."
"Well, I'm satisfied that this is avoidable. It is just as much a mistake to allow water to run away when it might be grinding pulp, as it is to drive sulphur into the air instead of catching and selling it.
You pollute the air, you kill the trees, you spend a lot of money, and you waste the sulphur. Nature has a lot of processes up her sleeve we've not realized as yet. This is one of them."
"Then this plant is a mistake?" Thorpe got it out with some hesitation.
Clark laughed. "Some of it--so far. I make plenty of mistakes, don't you? It seems to me it's the proportion his mistakes bear to the things that succeed which determines a man's usefulness. I don't believe in the one who doesn't make them."
Thorpe grinned in spite of himself. "Perhaps you're right--but I'll be glad to know as soon as you're rolling rails. When do you expect that?"
"In six months at the latest. I'll send you a section of the first one."
The banker drove toward the station in unaccustomed silence. Presently he turned to Brewster. "You were right and, by George! Clark is right too, but we must not get our mutual rect.i.tude mixed up. He's got to go ahead, come what may, and we've got to help him all we reasonably can, but with us our shareholders come before his. That's the point. He may turn out to be a private liability, but in any case he's a national a.s.set. I want a bit of that first rail. Good-by!"
And Clark, after waving farewell at the big gates of the works, had gone into the rail mill and stood in the shadow in deep contemplation.
He glanced at the ma.s.sive flywheel, the great dominant dynamo and the huge, inflexible rolls. At one end were the heating furnaces, their doors open, and gentle fires glowing softly within to slowly raise the temperature of newly set brick. Around him was the swing of work directed by skilled brains, and machinery moved slowly into its appointed place of service. It was a good mill, he reflected, for a second hand mill. For all of this the place was dead--awaiting the pulse of power and the unremitting supply of incandescent metal.
Glancing keenly about, he experienced again that strange sound as though between his temples, and suddenly he felt tired. The thing was good, very good. But he too wanted to see the lambent metal spewed from between the shining rolls.
It was a notable day in St. Marys when the first rail was actually rolled, and symbolical to many people of many different things.
Infection spread from the words to the town, till all morning there was a trickling stream of humanity that filed in at the big gates and moved on toward the dull roar of the mill. Even though the ma.s.s of folk in St. Marys still failed to grasp the full significance of the event, they saw in it that which put their one time Arcadia beside Pittsburg, and invested their own persons with a new sense of importance.
Clark, watching the fruition of a seven year dream, felt thrilled as never before. Here, in this heat and mechanical tumult, was being forged the last link in the chain into which he had hammered his entire strength and spirit. It was a good thing, he reflected, to make pulp and ship it on his own steamships, but this was the biggest, deepest and most enduring thing of all. Some men at such a moment would have felt humble, but he recognized only the unfolding of an elemental drama in which he played his own particular role. A few weeks later he closed a contract with a great railway company for a million dollars'
worth of his new product, which he unhesitatingly guaranteed would live up to the most exacting specifications.
The new plant had settled down to the steady drive of work when the mayor of St. Marys, walking up the street in a mood of peculiar satisfaction, saw just ahead of him the bulky form of the chief constable. He stepped a little faster and laid a detaining hand on the broad shoulder.
"Arrest yourself for a minute," he chuckled. "How's our town pessimist feeling this fine morning?"
Manson glanced sideways. "I suppose you want to rub it in. Well, I don't know that my opinions have changed very much."
"Takes more than a few thousand tons of rails to move you, eh? But isn't Mahomet going to come to the mountain at last?"
Manson shook his head.
"If he doesn't the mountain will come to Mahomet--and crush him,"
continued Filmer gayly, then, his mood changing, "but honestly, old man, why don't you drop your gloomy views? You've an excellent chance right now, and, besides, they're getting rather amusing."
"I've a right to my own opinions."
"Naturally, we all have, but you don't act up to them--at least you didn't."
Manson glowered at him with quick suspicion. "What's that?"
"Your left hand knows what your right hand doeth--every time,--at least it's so in St. Marys. You're too big to get under a bushel basket.
Every one saw that you were dabbling in real estate for years, and made a good clean up, but you seemed so darned ashamed of it that no one cared to discuss it with you. And all the time you were our prize package disbeliever. What's the use? It's your own affair, but why don't you make a lightning change like the man in the circus last week?
Your friends would welcome it. You're not the man we used to know."
"If it's my own affair," came back Manson with growing resentment, "why not leave it at that? Did you never make any money out of a thing you didn't believe in?"
"Yes," said Filmer slowly, "I have, but after that I believed in it, and said so. It was only fair to the fellow behind it."
Manson went stolidly back to his square stone office, where he took out his broker's statement for the previous month and stared at it silently. Already he knew the figures by heart. Another two point rise in Consolidated stock and he would realize his net profit of one hundred thousand dollars. He ran over his own scribbled figures on the back of the statement, as he had gone over them many times before.
They were quite right. For weeks past his selling order had been in, been acknowledged, and now at any moment the thing might be done. It might even have already been done. The blood rushed to his head at the thought. How many other chief constables, he wondered, had ama.s.sed fortunes from behind their forbidding gray stone walls? Then he thought of his wife and children, and his eyes softened, while the broker's statement in his big hand trembled ever so slightly. He smiled at that, and it came to his mind that perhaps statements in other men's hands sometimes trembled at the thought of their wives and children and the fortunes that--and here Manson felt vaguely uncomfortable and, getting up, slowly locked his desk.
Just at that moment, Filmer, who had returned to his office, was sitting staring at a half-section of steel rail that lay in his hand.
It was smooth and highly polished, a thin slice of the very first product of Clark's last and greatest undertaking. He experienced a quite extraordinary sensation at feeling the thing, and it s.n.a.t.c.hed his mind back seven years till again in the Town Hall he heard a magnetic voice a.s.suring the citizens that the town lacked just three essentials--experience, money and imagination, and that the speaker would supply them all. It was a far cry from that evening to the deep drone of the rail mill, and Filmer, detaching himself from the picture in which he formed a part, began now to perceive its dramatic vitality.
Were Clark taken out the whole thing seemed to fall to pieces.
And up at the See House, the bishop was examining just such another section of rail, while the gold of his episcopal ring shone beside the gray of steel. To him it meant many things, but chiefly it was prophetic of that which would soon put an end to the detachment and loneliness of the scattered communities to which he ministered.
Holding the thing thus, his heart went out to Clark, and he yearned with a great longing over the spirit of this man who so reveled in the joy of creation. His eyes wandered to the Evangeline. She lay at anchor just off sh.o.r.e. A thin film of smoke slid from her funnel, and he could see the Indian pilot swabbing down her smooth teak decks.
Then, in sudden impulse, he smiled and, laying the rail section on top of a half finished sermon, wrote a short note, and, calling his man servant, instructed him to wait for an answer.
A little later the note reached Clark in his office, where he sat motionless under the sway of a slight reaction. At the moment he did not want to work. He was continuously conscious of ribbons of red hot rails that streamed like fluted snakes from under the gigantic rolls, and they seemed to be boring their way into his brain. He had shipped thousands of tons to the railway company and there were thousands more to go. In a week or so he would get a formal acceptance of his product, and then-- He stretched himself a little wearily and pressed his eyes till a red and compelling blur brought its transient solace.
And just then his secretary came in with the bishop's note.
Dear Mr. Clark:
I am off this afternoon for a five day cruise of visits amongst the islands of Lake Huron. Won't you come with me? I know it would be good for me and think it might give you what I'm sure is a much needed rest. My Mercury, I mean the hired man, awaits your answer.
Yours faithfully, JAMES, ALGOMA.
P. S. I never attempt to proselytize my guests.
For a moment he puzzled over the signature, and finally made out that it was the bishop's Christian name followed by that of his diocese, for this was the first letter he had received from the prelate. Then he felt a sudden throb of impulse. He had a natural liking for the bishop and this, with his insatiable appet.i.te for new experiences, prompted an acceptance. He touched the bell, and his secretary reappeared.
"I am going away for five days," he paused, adding with a smile--"on missionary work. I haven't any idea where we are going and don't want to be disturbed. I'll be back before we receive the results of the United Railway Company's tests. That's all."