""Properly" is better than "honestly." You know, Lawson, there is much cant in these times of which "honesty" is the refrain."
"You and I will make no headway discussing moral ethics, Mr. Rogers, although we may in discussing business practices," I said, and I chalked up on my mental black-board: "Test One." Then I went on:
"I agree that $4,500,000, in anything we can pay in, is as fair a price as $3,500,000 cash, provided we find a credit guarantee satisfactory to you; unless indeed you are willing to allow us the $500,000 you just offered me."
"What I offered you was part of my profit. I will not allow any of it.
My price is the same whether I pay you anything or not."
"Very well, Mr. Rogers, then the situation is this: In any trade that is made it will first be necessary for you to turn your property over to us to manage in conjunction with our own. When the public see it in our hands, our securities will advance and we can, by issuing additional Bay State stock, sell it and secure whatever sum it will be necessary for us to have beyond what we can borrow on your securities. Do you agree with me?"
He saw it as I did.
"I imagine you will never consent to turn your property over to us on our say-so that we will later pay you for it?"
"You are right there. I would not take J. Edward Add.i.c.ks" guarantee in any form he could possibly put it. Once he got his hands on my company, for even thirty days, he would so far misuse it that he would deliberately default for the purpose of returning it to me in a damaged condition, and, in addition, would play some of those tricks which are second nature to him."
"It will be necessary for us then," I went on, "to give you some forfeit bond so large that, even if we misuse your property while it is in our hands, you will be repaid for the damage done, and it must be at the same time something of such value to us that even Add.i.c.ks will be compelled to play fair."
"Well, what can you put up?" Mr. Rogers asked.
"Add.i.c.ks has a right, through the Bay State Company of Delaware, to issue, through the Bay State Company of New Jersey, a million and a half new bonds for the purpose of acquiring new property. He and I have discussed the scheme as a last resort should any settlement seem possible."
"Do you mean to tell me there is anything Add.i.c.ks can get his hands on which he has not yet used for his companies nor stolen for himself?"
replied Mr. Rogers incredulously.
"Yes, he has time and again a.s.sured me of this, and he would not dare to lie to me under existing conditions."
He arose from his chair and stood directly in front of me and straightened up for what I could see was to be an unusual effort. Then with the force and the fire which in all his supreme moments make Henry H. Rogers wellnigh irresistible he said:
"Lawson, I have listened to you. Now listen to me. I have taken you at your word, and have talked frankly and shown you my hand as I have seldom shown it to a stranger. To do the business I want to do, I see I must talk even more frankly than I already have, and I want you to weigh carefully what I shall say to you, for it may have a great bearing on your after-life. How old are you?"
"Thirty-seven," I replied.
"I thought you were about thirty-seven," he said. "Well, I am fifty-six and in experience am old enough to be your grandfather, so you can afford to give weight to what I am about to say, especially as I give you my word that I speak for your benefit first and my own afterward. I watched you before you hitched up with Add.i.c.ks, and always thought that if the opportunity arose, we might do business together. We, or as you and others like to call us, "Standard Oil," have money enough to carry through whatever business we embark on and we know where there is all the business to be had that we care to engage in. We have everything, in fact, but men. We are always short of men to carry out our projects--young men, who are honest, therefore loyal; men to whom work is a pleasure; above all, men who have no price but our price. To such men we can afford to give the only things they have not got, or, if they have already got them, to give them in greater quant.i.ties--I mean power and money. You made a great mistake when you joined forces with Add.i.c.ks, because no man can afford to be a.s.sociated with the kind of a rascal Add.i.c.ks is, the lowest I have yet come across. He is the type of man who cuts his best friend"s throat with as much ease and satisfaction as he does his worst enemy"s, if not with more. I fully expected that by this time he would have sold you out. If he had, where would you have been?
Now, here you are from sheer desperation driven to me to avoid utter failure. Suppose you can do all you hope to--get the bonds, put them up and secure my property--do you not suppose that by that time Add.i.c.ks will have some mine dug under you which will blow you to destruction?
But grant even that he plays fair, and you bring the Boston situation up to a paying place, what good will it do you? You surely have more sense than to believe a man of Add.i.c.ks" make-up can be permanently successful?"
Mr. Rogers halted. I had risen, and we stood facing each other. I felt that I was right here playing for that greatest of all stakes, my self-respect, the loss of which to any man, I had long before discovered, means ebon failure.
"What do you want me to do?" I asked.
"Say you"ll come with us, and we"ll fix up the Boston situation in some way that will forever eliminate Add.i.c.ks from our affairs--your and my affairs. I would not insult you by asking you to sell Add.i.c.ks out. It is unnecessary. He has no real rights in Boston. You and I can figure out a scheme that will take care of every other interest, and we"ll give Add.i.c.ks a lot more money than he can secure in any other way and show him the door. As for you and me, we"ll make a lot of money and make it fairly and above board. But I am not thinking so much of the immediate situation as I am of the possibility of you joining us and working on some of the deals we have on hand. I shall put you in a position to make more money and secure more real power than you could possibly obtain in a like time under any other conditions. You know corporations and the stock-market, and you can readily see what the combination of our money and prestige and your knowledge of the market and investors will mean."
Heaven knows I could see what it all meant. I had even at that time in a chrysalis state those plans for destroying the "System" which now in a rounded out and matured form I intend to be the superstructure of my story of "Frenzied Finance." I had, a year before in Paris, outlined those plans to some of the brightest financial minds of Europe, and while they had marvelled at their radicalness, they had p.r.o.nounced them sound, and had offered to furnish the hundred million of dollars required for their execution. Then I realized that to take this money from bankers would hamper me in the execution of my plans, and I postponed putting the project in force until I could furnish the necessary money through my own connections. Again, I had big ideas as to the copper situation--ideas that only awaited unlimited capital to be brought before the people, and which, if carried out, would do for them what had as yet never been done--give them tremendous profits upon their savings. And here were the unlimited capital and unlimited business prestige right at hand, but----
"Mr. Rogers," I said, "don"t! Please don"t! I appreciate your proposition, and I thank you, but I can"t accept. I agree with you about Add.i.c.ks, the position I am in, and the mistake or foolish recklessness I was guilty of when I linked up with this Boston mess, but that doesn"t alter the case an iota. I am enlisted with this man. I knew what he was when I consented to take charge of his affairs, and I should hate myself if I sold him out, even though I knew he would without hesitation sell me out. I must be true to myself."
Mr. Rogers remained silent. I went on:
"This, if I accepted your proposal, I could no longer be, even were Add.i.c.ks and Boston Gas out of it. The man who is "Standard Oil" wears a collar, and if I did what you ask I should expect to wear a collar and--and--I can"t do it." I stopped; I was not excited; it was impossible to be so with that calm figure, apparently cut from crystal ice, so near me, but I was very much in earnest. I wondered what would come next. Mr. Rogers raised his hand and held it out to me, mine grasped it, and without a word thus we stood long enough to put that seal on our friendship which none of the many financial h.e.l.ls we jointly pa.s.sed through in the after-nine years was hot enough to melt.
But that friendship is ended now. Henry H. Rogers" evidence in the Boston "Gas Trial" was the spark that kindled the dead leaves of the past into the conflagration which, now spread beyond the control of man, has brought to light the hidden skeletons of forgotten misdeeds and exposed them for all the world to see.
He at last broke the spell. "Lawson, you"re a queer chap; but we are all queer, for that matter, and we must work along those lines we each think best. I once stood, just as you do now, in front of a man whom I looked up to as all that was wisest and best. He made an earnest effort to induce me to choose the ministry for my life-work, but I chose dollars instead, and I sometimes wonder if I chose wisely; but, as I said, we all must select our pack and, as we are the ones who must carry it, I suppose no one else should complain."
After a moment"s pause I shot ahead into business again as though we had never left it. It took me but a short time to arrange the details of our trade. The Bay State of Delaware was to buy all of Mr. Rogers" Boston investments and to pay for the same $4,500,000--$1,500,000 in six months, $1,000,000 in a year, the balance in a year and a half, with interest at five per cent.; the Bay State was to put up, as a pledge of good faith, $1,500,000 new Boston bonds; and as soon as such deposit was made, Mr. Rogers was to transfer his securities and corporation to us. I was to go to Philadelphia that night and arrange all details with Add.i.c.ks and report the following day.
It was 10.30 o"clock when I left 26 East 57th Street. I hurried down to the Brunswick, where I had time only to shift my clothes and catch the "midnight" for Philadelphia. After breakfast next morning I tackled Add.i.c.ks. It goes without saying that I was a cyclone of enthusiasm as I minutely ran through what I had done, beginning with my letter to Rogers and finishing up with my visit of the night before. I omitted not the slightest detail, and when I wound up with my request that Add.i.c.ks get the lawyers together and prepare the necessary doc.u.ments for the turnover of the bonds and acceptance of Rogers" properties, I felt that my share in the Boston gas war was almost ended.
CHAPTER XVIII
THE DUPLICITY OF ADd.i.c.kS
Add.i.c.ks looked at me in a cool, aggravating way, as though my enthusiasm was a joke.
"Lawson, you have done a big thing, a big thing, but you put up too many bonds, altogether too many. It looks to me as though that old trickster had got the best of us at last."
By this time I had learned all the moods of this man and knew that when he a.s.sumed that air of cold, saturnine jocularity it was safe to look for the uncovering of some vaporized trickery. My enthusiasm oozed. I hastened to ask:
"What do you mean by "too many bonds," Add.i.c.ks? I gave him all we had.
Sorry it was not more. We are to pay him four and a half million dollars, and the sooner we do it the better. Now out with what you"ve got in your mind; I won"t stand any trifling."
Add.i.c.ks continued to look at me with the same insolent, critical air. He said slowly:
"The reason I say you"ve given too many bonds is that we haven"t a million and a half to put up. Where in the world did you get the idea we had?"
In an instant I realized that this sharper had tricked me into apparently tricking Rogers. I was boiling with rage.
"You have told me over and over again that you retained the right to issue a million and a half bonds, that you had never parted with it, and relying on your a.s.surances, I have done business with Rogers. Let"s have the truth now at once."
Add.i.c.ks is a master in the management of just such tangles as had developed here. I had expected him to give way before my indignation.
He looked me square in the eye and turned the tables on me. He got mad first.
"You have taken too much on yourself," he began vehemently. "You had no right to go ahead without consulting me. Because I"ve given you full swing you think you are the whole thing, but you"re not. And as for your rushing in on me without warning and expecting me to let you turn all the a.s.sets of this corporation over to your new "Standard Oil" friend, I won"t stand for it. You can"t do this corporation"s business that way."
He poured on for five minutes without giving me a chance to interpose a word. He seemed to be consumed with anger and paced up and down the office. Then suddenly he stopped:
"We cannot afford to have any trouble, you and I, Lawson. I"m sure you did only what you thought best, but the fact is, I pledged some of those bonds for our war supplies a few months ago, and though I"m not going to dispute it with you, I"d swear I told you at the time."
As Add.i.c.ks talked I had been mentally reviewing the situation in which I found myself. I saw myself dropped out of Rogers" consideration as the same kind of a financial trickster that Add.i.c.ks was. For the moment, I had no fight left; I was knocked out.
"Don"t feel bad, Lawson. You got as far with Rogers as it is possible to get, and you are dead right when you say that once we get hold of his corporation so that every one knows we"ve licked him, we can easily sell stock enough to pay him in a few weeks." As he talked he was again the master financial trickster, full of device and strategy. Finally I answered:
"Don"t say any more, Add.i.c.ks. Words won"t help us. I"ve got to face Rogers as soon as a train can take me back to New York, and after that--then I"ll have something to say to you." I started to go.