Theboomerangworkedlikeacharm。Themenhadbeengrumblingatanapparentlypeacefulyieldingofthepointatissue,andwouldhavesackedoutmanyoftheblazedlogsifOrdehadnotheldthemrigidlytoit。Nowtheirspiritsflamedintojoyagain。Thesortingwentlikeclockwork。Orde,inpersonalcharge,watchedthatthroughthedifferentopeningsinhis"boomerang"the"H"logswereshuntedintotheriver。Shortlythechannelwasfulloflogsfloatingmerrilyawaydownthelittlebluewavelets。AfterawhileOrdehandedoverhisjobtoTomNorth。
"Can’tstanditanylonger,boys,"saidhe。"I’vegottogodownandseehowtheDutchmanismakingit。"
"Comebackandtellus!"yelledoneofthecrew。
"YoubetIwill!"Ordeshoutedback。
HedrovetheteamandbuckboarddownthemarshroadtoHeinzman’smill。Therehefoundevidencesofthewildestexcitement。Themillhadbeencloseddown,andallthementurnedintorescuelogs。
Boatspliedinalldirections。Atugdartedbackandforth。
Constantlythenumberoffloatinglogsaugmented,however。Manyhadalreadygoneby。
"Ifyouthinkyou’rebusynow,"saidOrdetohimselfwithachuckle,"justwaituntilyoubegintogetLOGS。"
Hewatchedforafewmomentsinsilence。
"What’shedoingwiththattug?"thoughthe。"O—ho!He’sstringingboomsacrosstherivertoholdthewholeoutfit。"
Helaughedaloud,turnedhisteamabout,anddrovefranticallybacktothebooms。Everyfewmomentshechuckled。Hiseyesdanced。
Hardlycouldhewaittogetthere。Onceatthecamp,heleapedfromthebuckboard,withashouttothestableman,andranrapidlyoutovertheboomstowherethesortingof"H"logswasgoingmerrilyforward。
"He’sshutdownhismill,"shoutedOrde,"andhe’sgotallthatgangofhighbankersout,andeveryoldrum—blossominMonrovia,andIbetifyousay’logs’tohim,he’dchasehistailincircles。"
"Wantthisjob?"Northaskedhim。
"No,"saidOrde,suddenlyfallensolemn,"haven’ttime。I’mgoingtotakeMarshandtheSPRITEandgototown。OldHeinzman,"headdedasanafterthought,"isstringingboomsacrosstheriver——
obstructingnavigation。"
Herandownthelengthofthewholeboomtowherelaythetwotugs。
"Marsh,"hecalledwhenstillsomedistanceaway,"gotupsteam?"
Thereappearedashort,square,blue—cladman,withhardbrowncheeks,aheavybleachedflaxenmoustache,andeyessteady,unwavering,andasblueasthesky。
"Upintwominutes,"heanswered,anddescendedfromthepilothousetoshoutdownalowdoorleadingfromthedeckintotheengineroom。
"Harvey,"hecommanded,"fireherup!"
Atall,good—naturednegroreachedtheupperhalfofhisbodyfromthelowdoortoseizeanarmfuloftheslabspiledalongthenarrowdeck。TenminuteslatertheSPRITE,acloudofwhitesmokepouringfromherfunnel,wascareeningdownthestretchoftheriver。
CaptainMarshguidedhisenergeticchargeamongthelogsfloatinginthestreamwiththemarvelloussecondinstinctoftheexperttugboatman。Awhirlofthewheeltotheright,aturntotheleft——thecraftheeledstronglyundertheforcingofherpowerfulruddertoavoidbyanarm’s—lengthsometimbersfairlyflungasidebythewash。Thedisplacementoftherapidrunningseemedalmosttopressthewaterabovethelevelofthedeckoneithersideandabouttenfeetfromthegunwale。Asthelowmarshesandcat—tailsflewpast,Ordenotedwithsatisfactionthatmanyofthelogs,urgedonesidebythebreeze,hadfoundlodgmentamongthereedsandinthebayousandinlets。Oneatatime,andpainfully,thesewouldhavetobesalvaged。
Inashorttimethemills’tallsmokestacksloomedinsight。ThelogsthickeneduntilitwaswithdifficultythatCaptainMarshcouldthreadhiswayamongthematall。ShortlyOrde,standingbythewheelinthepilot—house,couldseedownthestretchesoftheriveracrowdofmenworkingantlike。
"They’vegot’emstopped,"commentedOrde。"Lookatthatgangworkingfromboats!Theyhaven’tadozen’corkboots’among’em。"
"Whatdoyouwantmetodo?"askedCaptainMarsh。
"Thisisanavigableriver,isn’tit?"repliedOrde。"Runthrough!"
Marshrangforhalf—speedandbegantonosehiswaygentlythroughthelooselyfloatinglogs。Soonthetughadreachedthesceneofactivity,andheadedstraightfortheslenderlineofboomshitchedendtoendandstretchingquiteacrosstheriver。
"I’mafraidwe’lljustrideoverthemifwehitthemtooslow,"
suggestedMarsh。
Ordelookedathiswatch。
"We’llbelateforthemailunlesswehurry,"saidhe。Marshwhirledthespokesofhiswheeloverandrangtheengine—roombell。
Thewaterchurnedwhitebehind,thetugcareened。
"Vatyoudo!Stop!"criedHeinzmanfromoneoftheboatse,hisheadstilloutthedoor,lookedback。"Slowdown,Marsh,"
saidhe。"Let’sseetheshow。"Alreadythelogscaughtbytheboomshadtakentheirmotionandhadsweptpasttheopening。
AlthoughthelonesometugHeinzmanhadontheworkimmediatelypickeduponeendofthebrokenboom,andwithitstartedoutintotheriver,shefounddifficultyinmakingheadwayagainstthesweepofthelogs。Afteralongstruggleshereachedthemiddleoftheriver,whereshewasabletoholdherown。
"Wonderwhatnext?"speculatedOrde。"Howaretheygoingtogettheotherendoftheboomsoutfromtheotherbank?"
CaptainMarshhadreversedtheSPRITE。Thetuglaynearlymotionlessamidstream,herpropellerslowlyrevolving。
Upriverallthesmallboatsgatheredinaline,connectedonetotheotherbyarope。Thetugpassedovertothemthecableattachedtotheboom。Evidentlythecombinedeffortsoftherowboatswerecou。
Ordestuckhisheadfromthepilot—housedoor。
"You’reobstructingnavigation!"heyelled。"I’vegottogototowntobuyapostage—stamp。"
Theprowofthetug,accuratelyaimedbyMarsh,hitsquareinthejunctionoftwoofthebooms。Immediatelythewaterwasagitatedonbothsidesandforahundredfeetorsobythepressureofthelongpolessidewise。Thereensuedamomentofstrain;thenthelinkssnapped,andtheSPRITEplungedjoyouslythroughtheopening。Thebooms,sweptasidebythecurrent,floatedtoeithershore。Theriverwasopen。
Ordntedontoholdthehalf—boomacrossthecurrentwhilethetugbroughtouttheotherhalf。Whenthetugdroppedthecable,Ordelaughed。
"NobodybutaDutchmanwouldhavethoughtofthat!"hecried。"Nowforthefun!"
Immediatelytheweightfellonthesmallboats,theyweredraggedirresistiblybackward。EvenfromadistancethethreemenontheSPRITEcouldmakeoutthewhite—waterastheoarssplashedandchurnedandfranticallycaughtcrabsinavainefforttoholdtheirown。Marshloweredhistelescope,thetearsstreamingdownhisface。
"It’sbetterthanagoatfight,"saidhe。
Futilelyprotesting,therowboatsweredraggedbackward,turnedasawhipissnapped,andstrungoutalongthebankbelow。
"They’llhavetohavetwotugsbeforetheycanclosethebreakthatway,"commentedOrde。
"Surething,"repliedCaptainMarsh。
Butatthatmomentablacksmokerolledupoverthemarshes,andshortlyaroundthebendfromabovecametheLUCYBELLE。
TheLUCYBELLEwasthemainexcuseforcallingtherivernavigable。
ShemadetripsasoftenasshecouldbetweenReddingandMonrovia。
Inluck,shecouldcoverthefortymilesinaday。Itwasnounusualthing,however,fortheLUCYBELLEtohangupindefinitelyonsomeoneofthenumerousshiftingsandbars。Forthatreasonshecarriedmoreimperishablefreightthanpassengers。Inappearanceshewastwo—storied,withtwinsmokestacks,anironIndianonhertop,anda"splutter—bmysteriousheralwaysfathomlesseyes。ToOrdesheseemedfragile,aloof,enshrinedamongherlacesanddaintyribbons。
Hardlydaredhetouchherwhensheheldherhandouttohimweakly,butfellonhiskneesbesidethebedandburiedhisfaceintheclothes。Sheplacedagentlehandcaressioappreciatesyou!"shecried,possessingherselfoftheinfant。"He’sabeautifulbaby;oneofthebest—lookingnew—bornbabiesIeversaw!"
Ordeescapedtotheopenair。Hehadtogototheofficetoattendtosomedetailsofthebusiness。Witheverystephiselationincreased。Attheofficehethrewopenhisdeskwithaslam。
Newmarkjumpednervouslyandfrowned。Orde’sbig,open,andbrusquemannersbotheredhimastheywouldhavebotheredacat。
"Gotasonandheiroveratmyplace,"calledOrdeinhisbigvoice。
"Thisoldfirm’sgottorustlenow,Itellyou。"
"Congratulateyou,I’msure,"saidNewmarkehind"paddle—wheel。
"Therecomeshishelp,"saidOrde。"OldSimpsonwouldstoptopickupabogusthree—centpiece。"
Sureenough,onhailfromoneoftherowboats,theLUCYBELLEsloweddownandstopped。Afterashortconference,shesteamedclumsilyovertogetholdofoneendofthebooms。Thetugtooktheother。
Intime,andbydintofmuchsplashing,somecollisions,andseveralattempts,theendsoftheboomswereunited。
Bythistime,however,nearlyallthelogshadescaped。Thetug,towingastringofrowboats,setoutinpursuit。
TheSPRITEcontinuedonherwayuntilbeyondsight。Thenshesloweddownagain。TheLUCYBELLEchurnedaroundthebend,andturnedintowardthetug。
"She’sgoingtospeakus,"marvelledOrde。"Iwonderwhatthedickensshewants。"
"Tugahoy!"bellowedared—facedindividualfromtheupperdeck。Hewasdressedinblueandbrassbuttons,carriedatelescopeinonehand,andwasliberallyfestoonedwithgoldbraidandembroideredanchors。
"Answerhim,"OrdecommandedMarsh。
"Hullothere,commodore!whatisit?"repliedthetugcaptain。
Thered—facedfigureglareddownforamoment。
"TheywantatugupthereatHeinzman’s。Canyougo?"
"Sure!"criedMarsh,choking。
TheLUCYBELLEsheeredoffmagnificently。
"Whatdoyouthinkofthat?"MarshaskedOrde。
"Thecommodorealwaysactsasifthatoldraftwasasixty—gunfrigate,"wasOrde’snon—committalanswer。"Headupstreamagain。"
HeinzmansawtheSPRITEcoming,androwedoutfrantically,splashingateverystrokeandyellingwitheverybreath。
"Don’tyougothroughthere!Vaitaminute!Stop,Itellyou!"
"Holdup!"saidOrdetoMarsh。
Heinzmanrowedalongside,droppedhisoarsandmoppedhisbrow。
"Vatyoudo?"hedemandedheatedly。
"Iforgotthemoneytobuymystampwith,"saidOrdesweetly。"I’mgoingbacktogetit。"
"Notthroughmypooms!"criedHeinzman。
"Mr。Heinzman,"saidOrdeseverely,"youareobstructinganavigablestream。Iamdoingbusiness,andIcannotbeinterferedwith。"
"Butmylogs!"criedtheunhappymillman。
"Ihavenothingtodowithyourlogs。Youaredrivingyourownlogs,"Orderemindedhim。
Heinzmanvituperatedandpoundedthegunwale。
"Goahead,Marsh!"saidOrde。
Thetuggatheredway。SoonHeinzmanwasforcedtoletgo。Forasecondtimethechainsweresnapped。OrdeandMarshlookedbackoverthechurningwakeleftbytheSPRITE。Theseveredendsoftheboomswereswingingbacktowardeithershore。Betweenthemfloatedarowboat。Intherowboatgesticulatedapudgyman。Theriverwaswellsprinkledwithlogs。Evidentlythesortingwasgoingonwell。
"Mayaswellgobacktotheworks,"saidOrde。"Hewon’tstringthemtogetheragainto—day——notifhewaitsforthattughesentSimpsonfor。"
Accordingly,theyreturnedtothebooms,whereworkwassuspendedwhileOrdedetailedtoanappreciativeaudiencethehappeningsbelow。Thistickledthemenimmensely。
"Why,wehain’tsortedoutmore’namillionfeetofhislogs,"criedRollwayCharlie。"Hehain’tSEENnologsyet!"
Theyturnedwithnewenthusiasmtotheworkofshunting"H"logsintothechannel。
Intenminutes,however,thestablemanpickedhiswayoutovertheboomswithamessageforOrde。
Mr。Heinzman’sashore,andwantstoseeyou,"saidhe。
OrdeandJimDenningexchangedglances。
"’Coon’scomedown,"saidthelatter。
Ordefoundthemillmanpacingrestlesslyupanddownbeforeasteamingpairofhorses。Newmark,perchedonastump,wassurveyinghimsardonicallyandchewingtheendofanunlightedcigar。
"Hereyoupothare!"burstoutHeinzman,whenOrdesteppedashore。
"Now,thismuststop。Imustnotlosemylogs!Vatisyourprobosition?"
NewmarkbrokeinquicklybeforeOrdecouldspeak。
"I’vetoldMr。Heinzman,"saidhe,"thatwewouldsortanddelivertherestofhislogsfortwodollarsathousand。"
"Thatwillbeaboutit,"agreedOrde。
"But,"explodedHeinzman,"thatisasmuchasyouagreettodriveanddeliffermywholecut!"
"Precisely,"saidNewmark。
"PutIhafalltheeggspenceofdrivingthelogsmyself。WhyshoultIpayyoufordoingwhatIhafalrettypaidtohafdone?"
Ordechuckled。
"Heinzman,"saidhe,"ItoldyouI’dmakeyouscratchgravel。Nowit’stimetotalkbusiness。Youthoughtyouwereboringwithamightyauger,butit’stimetorevise。Wearen’tforcedtobotherwithyourlogs,andyou’reluckytogetoutsoeasy。IfIturnyourwholedriveintotheriver,you’lllosemorethanhalfofitoutright,andit’llcostyouaheaptosalvagetherest。Andwhat’smore,I’llturn’eminbeforeyoucangetholdofapile—driver。
I’llsortnightandday,"hebluffed,"andbyto—morrowmorningyouwon’thaveastickoftimberabovemybooms。"Helaughedagain。
"Youwanttogetdowntobusinessalmightysudden。"
WhenfinallyHeinzmanhaddrivensadlyaway,andthewholedrive,"H"logsincluded,waspouringintothemainboom,Ordestretchedhisarmsoverhisheadinaluxuryofsatisfaction。
"Thatjustaboutsettlesthatcampaign,"hesaidtoNewmark。
"Oh,no,itdoesn’t,"repliedthelatterdecidedly。
"Why?"askedOrde,surprised。"Youdon’timaginehe’lldoanythingmore?"
"No,butIwill,"saidNewmark。
XXVII
Earlyinthefallthebabywasborn。Itprovedtobeaboy。Orde,nervousasacataftertheordealofdoingnothing,tiptoedintothedarkenedroom。Hefoundhiswifeweakandpale,herdarkhairframingherface,anewlookofraptinnercontemplationrenderingevenmorenglyonhishead。
Sotheyremainedforsometime。Finallyheraisedhiseyes。Sheheldherlipstohim。Hekissedthem。
"Itseemssortofmake—believeevenyet,sweetheart,"shesmiledathimwhimsically,"thatwehaveareal,livebabyallofourown。"
"Likeotherpeople,"saidOrde。
"Notlikeotherpeopleatall!"shedisclaimed,withashowofindignation。
GrandmaOrdebroughtthenewcomerinforOrde’sinspection。Helookedgravelydownonthepuckered,discolouredbitofhumanitywithsomefeelingofdisappointment,andperhapsafaintuneasiness。
Afteramomenthevoicedthelatter。
"Is——doyouthink——thatis——"hehesitated,"doesthedoctorsayhe’sgoingtobeallright?"
"Allright!"criedGrandmaOrdeindignantly。"I’dliketoknowifheisn’tallrightnow!Whatintheworlddoyouexpectofanew—
bornbaby?"
ButCarrollwaslaughingsoftlytoherselfonthebed。Sheheldoutherarmsforthebaby,andcuddleditclosetoherbreast。
"He’salittledarling,"shecrooned,"andhe’sgoingtogrowupbigandstrong,justlikehisdaddy。"Sheputhercheekagainstthesleepingbabe’sandlookedupsidewiseatthetwostandingaboveher。"ButIknowhowyoufeel,"shesaidtoherhusband。"Whentheyfirstshowedhimtome,Ithoughthelookedlikeapeanutathousandyearsold。"
GrandmaOrdefairlysnortedwithindignation。
"Cometoyouroldgrandmother,whrathershortly。"Mrs。
Ordeisdoingwell,Ihope?"
"Fine,fine!"criedOrde。
Newmarkdroppedthesubjectandplungedintoabusinessmatter。
Orde’sattention,however,wasflighty。Afteralittlewhileheclosedhisdeskwithanotherbang。
"Nouse!"saidhe。"Gottomakeitavacation。I’mgoingtorunovertoseehowthefamilyis。"
Strangelyenough,theyoungcouplehadnotdiscussedbeforethequestionofaname。Oneeveningattwilight,whenOrdewasperchedatthefootofthebed,Carrollbroughtupthesubject。
"Heoughttobenamedforyou,"shebegantimidly。"Iknowthat,Jack,andI’dlovetohaveanotherJackOrdeinthefamily;but,dear,I’vebeenthinkingaboutfather。He’sapoor,forlornoldman,whodoesn’tgetmuchoutoflife。Anditwouldpleasehimso——
oh,morethanyoucanimaginesuchathingcouldpleaseanybody!"
Shelookedupathimdoubtfully。Ordesaidnothing,butwalkedaroundthebedtowherethebabylayinhislittlecradle。Heleanedoverandtooktheinfantupinhisgingerlyawkwardfashion。
"Howareyouto—day,BobbyOrde?"heinquiredoftheblinkingmite。
XXVIII
ThefirstseasonoftheBoomCompanywasmostsuccessful。Itsprospectsforthefuturewerebright。Thedrivehadbeendeliveredtoitsvariousownersatapricebelowwhatithadcostthemseverally,andwithoutthenecessaryattendantbother。Therefore,theloggerswereonlytoowillingtorenewtheircontractsforanotheryear。ThisdidnotsatisfyNewmark,however。
"Whatwewant,"hetoldOrde,"isachartergivingusexclusiverightsontheriver,andauthorisingustoasktoll。I’mgoingtotryandgetoneoutofthelegislature。"
HedepartedforLansingassoonastheAssemblyopened,andalmostimmediatelybecamelostinoneofthosefiercestrugglesofpoliticsnotlessbitterbecauseconcealed。Heinzmanwasalreadyontheground。
Newmarkhadtheshadowofrightonhisside,forheappliedforthecharteronthebasisoftheriverimprovementsalreadyputinbyhisfirm。Heinzman,however,possessedmuchpoliticalinfluence,adeepknowledgeofthesubterraneanworkingsofplotandcounterplot,anda"barrel。"Althougharmedwithanapparentlyincontestablelegalright,Newmarksoonfoundhimselffightingonthedefensive。
Heinzmanwantedtheimprovementsalreadyexistingcondemnedandsoldasapublicutilitytothehighestbidder。Heofferedfurtherguaranteesastofutureimprovements。Inadditionwereotherandmorepotentargumentsprofferedbehindcloseddoors。Manycasesresolvedthemselvesintoabaldquestionofcash。Othersdemandeddiplomacy。Jobs,fatcontracts,businessfavours,influencewereallflungoutfreely——bribesasabsoluteasthoughstampedwiththedollarmark。NewspapersallovertheStatewerepressedintoservice。These,boughtupbyHeinzmanandhisprospectivepartnersinalucrativebusiness,spokevirtuouslyofprivatepiracyofwhatarenowcalledpublicutilities,theexploitingofthepeople’snaturalwealths,andalltherestofaspeciousreasoningthemoreconvincinginthatitwasinmanyothercasesonlytootrue。Theindependentjournals,uninformedoftherightsofthecase,eitherremainedsilentonthematter,orgropedinapuzzledandundecidedmanneronbothsides。
AgainstthissecretbuteffectiveorganisationNewmarkmostunexpectedlyfoundhimselfpitted。Hehadanticipatedbeingabsentbutaweek;hebecameinvolvedinanaffairofmonths。
Withdecisionheappliedhimselftotheproblem。Hetookroomsatthehotel,sentforOrde,andbeganatoncetosetinmotionthemachineryofopposition。Therefreshedresourcesofthecompanywerestrainedtothebreakingpointinordertoraisemoneyforthisnewcampaignopeningbeforeit。Orde,returningtoLansingafteratripdevotedtothecarryingoutofNewmark’sdirectionsastofinances,wasdismayedatthetangleofstrategyandcross—strategy,innuendo,vagueandformlesscobwebforcesbywhichhewassurrounded。Hecouldmakenothingofthem。Theybrushedhisface,hefelttheirinfluence,yethecouldplacehisfingeronnotangibleandcomprehensiblesolidity。Amongthesedelicateandcomplicatedcross—currentsNewmarkmovedsilent,cold,secret。Heseemedtounderstandthem,toplaywiththem,tomanipulatethemaselementsofthegame。Abovethemwasthehollowshockoftheostensiblebattle——thespeeches,theloudtalkinlobbies,thenewspapervirtue,indignation,accusations;buttherealstrugglewashereinthefurtiveways,inwhisperedwordsdeliveredhastilyaside,inhotelhallsonthewaytoandfromthestairs,behindcloseddoorsofroomswithoutopentransoms。
Ordeincomicdespairacknowledgedthatitwasall"toodeepforhim。"Nevertheless,itwassoonborneinonhimthatthenewcompanywasstrugglingforitsveryrighttoexistence。Ithadbeendoingthatfromthefirst;butnow,toOrdethefight,theexistence,hadanewimportance。Thecompanyuptothispointhadbeenaschememerely,anexperimentthatmightwinorlose。Now,withthehistoryofadrivebehindit,ithadbecomealivingentity。Ordewouldhavefoughtagainstitsdissolutionashewouldhavefoughtagainstamurder。Yethehadpracticallytostandoneside,watchingNewmark’sslender,gray—clad,tensefigureglidinghereandthere,moresilent,morereserved,morewatchfuleveryday。
Thefightenduredthroughmostofthefirsthalfofthesession。
WhenfinallyitbecameevidenttoHeinzmanthatNewmarkwouldwin,hemadetheissueoftollratestheditchofhislastresistance,tryingtoforcelegalchargessolowastoeatuptheprofits。Atthelast,however,thebillpassedtheboard。Thecompanyhaditscharter。
AtwhatpriceonlyNewmarkcouldhavetold。Hehadfoughtwiththetenseearnestnessofthenervoustemperamentthatfightstowinwithoutcountofthecost。Thefirmwasestablished,butitwasasheavilyindebtasitscreditwouldstand。Newmarkhimself,thoughascalmandreservedandpreciseasever,seemedtohaveturnedgray,andoneofhiseyelidshadacquiredaslightnervoustwitchwhichpersistedforsomemonths。Hetookhisseatatthedesk,however,ascalmlyasever。Inthreedaysthescandalisedhowlsofbriberyandcorruptionhadgivenplaceinthenewspaperstosomeothersensation。
"Joe,"saidOrdetohispartner,"howaboutallthistalk?Istherereallyanythinginit?Youhaven’tgoneinforthatbusiness,haveyou?"
Newmarkstretchedhisarmswearily。
"Pressboughtup,"hereplied。"IknowforafactthatoldStanfordgotfivehundreddollarsfromsomeoftheHeinzmaninterests。I
couldhaveswunghimbackforanextrahundred,butitwasn’tworthwhile。Theyhowlbriberyatustodistractattentionfromtheirownperformances。"
WiththisevasivereplyOrdecontentedhimself。Whetheritsatisfiedhimorwhetherhewasloathtopursuethesubjectfurtheritwouldbeimpossibletosay。
"It’scostusplenty,anyway,"hesaid,afteramoment。"Theproposition’sgotaloadonit。Itwilltakeusalongtimetogetoutofdebt。Theriverdrivingwon’tpayquitesobigaswethoughtitwould,"heconcluded,witharuefullittlelaugh。
"Itwillpayplentywellenough,"repliedNewmarkdecidedly,"anditgivesusavantagepointtoworkfrom。Youdon’tsupposewearegoingtoquitatriverdriving,doyou?Wewanttolookaroundforsometimberofourown;there’swherethebigmoneyis。Andperhapswecanbuyaschoonerortwoandgointothecarryingtrade——thecountry’salivewithopportunity。NewmarkandOrdemeanssomethingtothesefellowsnow。Wecanhaveanythingwewant,ifwejustreachoutforit。"
Histhinfigure,ordinarilyslightlyaskew,hadstraightened;hissteel—gray,impersonaleyeshadlitupbehindthebowedglassesandwereseeingthingsbeyondthewallatwhichtheygazed。Ordelookedupathimwithasuddenadmiration。
"You’rethebrainsofthisconcern,"saidhe。
"We’llgeton,"repliedNewmark,thefiredyingfromhiseyes。
XXIX
InthecourseofthenexteightyearsNewmarkandOrdefloatedhighonthatfloodofapparentprosperitythatattendsabusinesswellconceivedandpassablywellmanaged。TheBoomandDrivingCompanymademoney,ofcourse,forwiththemarginoffiftypercentorthereaboutsnecessitatedbythetemporaryvalueoftheimprovements,goodyearscouldhardlyfailtobringgoodreturns。This,itwillberemembered,wasastockcompany。Withtheprofitsfromthatbusinessthetwomenembarkedonaseparatecopartnership。Theymademoneyatthis,too,buttheburdenofdebtnecessitatedbynewventures,constantlyweightedbytheheavyinterestdemandedatthattime,keptaffairsontheraggededge。
Inaddition,bothOrdeandNewmarkweremoreinclinedtoextensionofintereststhanto"playingsafe。"Theassetsgainedinoneventurewerepromptlypledgedtoanother。Theramificationsofdebt,property,mortgages,andexpectationsoverlappedeachotherinacobwebofinterests。
Ordelivedateaseinanewhouseofsomesizesurroundedbygrounds。Hekepttwoservants:abloodedteamofhorsesdrewthesuccessortotheoriginalbuckboard。Newmarkownedasailyachtoffiveorsixtons,inwhich,quitesolitary,hetookhisonlypleasure。Bothwereconsideredmenofsubstanceandproperty,asindeedtheywere。Only,theyriskeddollarstogainthousands。A
successionofbadyears,apanic—contractionofmoneymarkets,anyoneofadozenpossible,thoughnotprobable,contingencieswouldrenderitdifficulttomeettheobligationswhichconstantlycamedue,andwhichNewmarkkeptbusydevisingwaysandmeansofmeeting。
Ifthingswentwell——anditmayberemarkedthatlegitimatelytheyshould——NewmarkandOrdewouldsomedayberatedamongthemillionairefirms。Ifthingswentill,bankruptcycouldnotbeavoided。Therewasnomiddleground。NorwereOrdeandhispartneruniqueinthis;practicallyeveryfirmthendevelopingorexploitingthenaturalresourcesofthecountryfounditselfinthesamecase。
ImmediatelyafterthegrantingofthechartertodrivetheriverthepartnershadofferedthemanopportunityofacquiringaboutthirtymillionfeetoftimberremainingfromMorrisonandDaly’soriginalholdings。ThatfirmwasveryanxioustobegindevelopmentonalargescaleofitsBeesonLakepropertiesintheSaginawwaters。
DalyproposedtoOrdethathetakeovertheremnant,andhavingconfidenceintheyoungman’sabilities,agreedtolethimhaveitonlong—timenotes。AfterseveralconsultationswithNewmark,Ordefinallycompletedthepurchase。Belowtheboomstheyerectedamill,themachineryforwhichtheyhadalsoboughtofDaly,atRedding。ThefollowingwinterOrdespentinthewoods。Byspringhehadbanked,readytodrive,aboutsixmillionfeet。