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"You'll find he's a long way from that," James denied.
"Whatever he is, buy him," ordered Powers curtly.
The young man shook his head. "Can't be done. He doesn't want the things you have to offer."
"Every man has his price. Find his, and buy him."
James shook his head decisively. "Absolutely impossible. He's an idealist and an altruist."
Powers snorted impatiently. "Talk English, young man, and I'll understand you."
Farnum had heard Joe Powers was a man who would stand plain talk from those who had the courage to give it him. His cool eyes hardened. Why not? For once the old gray pirate, chief of the robber buccaneers who rode on their predatory way superior to law, should see himself as Jeff Farnum saw him.
"What I mean is that the things he holds most important can't be bought with dollars and cents. He believes in justice and fair play. He thinks the strong ought to bear the burdens of the weak.
"He has a pa.s.sion to uplift humanity. You can't understand him because it isn't possible for you to conceive of a man whose first thought is always for what is equitable."
"Just as I thought, a Socialist dreamer and demagogue," p.r.o.nounced Powers scornfully.
"Merrill and Frome have been thinking of him just as you do." James waved his hand toward the newspaper in front of the railroad king. "With what result our election shows."
"Well, where does his power lie? How can you break it?" the old man asked.
"He is a kind of brother to the lame and the halt all over the state.
Among the poor and the working cla.s.ses he has friends without number.
They believe in him as a patriot fighting for them against the foes of the country."
"Do you call me a foe of the country, young man?" Powers wanted to know grimly.
"Not I," laughed James. "Why should I quarrel with my bread and jam? If you had ever done me the honor to read any of my speeches you would see that I refer to you as a Pioneer of Civilization and a Builder for the Future. But my view doesn't happen to be universal. I was trying to show you how the man with the dinner pail feels."
"Who fills his dinner pails?"
James met his frown with a genial eye. "There's a difference of opinion about that, sir. According to the economics of Verden University you fill them. According to the _World_ editorials it's the other way. They fill yours."
"Hmp! And what's your personal opinion? Am I a robber of labor?"
"I think that the price of any success worth while is paid for in the failure of others. You win because you're strong, sir. That's the law of the game. It's according to the survival of the fittest that you're where you are. If you had hesitated some other man would have trampled you down. It's a case of wolf eat wolf."
The old railroad builder laughed harshly. This was the first time in his experience that a subordinate had so a.n.a.lyzed him to his face.
"So I'm a wolf, am I?"
"In one sense of the word you're not that at all, sir. You're a great builder. You've done more for the Northwest than any man living.
You couldn't have done it if you had been squeamish. I hold the end justifies the means. What you've got is yours because you've won it. Men who do a great work for the public are ent.i.tled to great rewards."
"Glad to know you've got more sense than that fool cousin of yours. Now go home and beat him. I don't care how you do it, just so that you get results. Spend what money you need, but make good, young man--make good."
"I'll do my best," James promised.
"All I demand is that you win. I'm not interested in the method you use.
But put that cousin of yours out of the demagogue business if you have to shanghai him."
James laughed. "That might not be a bad way to get rid of him till after the election. The word would leak out that he had been bought off."
The old buccaneer's eyes gleamed. He was as daring a lawbreaker as ever built or wrecked a railroad. "Have you the nerve, young man?"
"When I'm working for you, sir," retorted James coolly.
"What do you mean by that?"
"If I've studied your career to any purpose, sir, one thing stands out pretty clear. You haven't the slightest respect for law merely as law.
When it's on your side you're a stickler for it; when it isn't you say nothing, but brush it aside as if it did not exist. In either case you get what you want."
"I'm glad you've noticed that last point. Now we'll have luncheon." He smiled grimly. "I daresay you'll enjoy it no less because I stole it from the h.o.r.n.y hand of labor, by your mad cousin's way of it."
"Not a bit," answered James cheerfully.
CHAPTER 13
"Must it be? Must we then Render back to G.o.d again This, His broken work, this thing For His man that once did sing?"
--Josephine Prestor Peabody.
"And listen! I declare to you that if all is as you say--and I do not doubt it--you have never ceased to be virtuous in the sight of G.o.d!"--Victor Hugo.
THE REBEL PROVES THAT HE IS LOST TO GOOD FORM AND RESPECTABILITY BY STEPPING BETWEEN A SINNER AND THE WAGES OF SIN, THUS EVIDENCING TO THE PILLARS OF SOCIETY HIS COMPLETE DEGENERATION
Part 1
Sam Miller came into Jeff's office one night as he was looking over the editorials. Farnum nodded abstractedly to him.
"Take a chair, Sam. Be through in a minute."
Presently Jeff pushed the galley proof to one side and looked at his friend. "Well, Sam?" Almost at once he added: "What's the matter?"
There were queer white patches on Miller's fat face. He looked like a man in h.e.l.l. A lump rose in his throat. Two or three times he swallowed hard.
"It's--it's Nellie."
"Nellie Anderson?"
He nodded.
Jeff felt as if his heart had been drenched in icy water. "What about her?"