I feel rather badly hit; you won"t mind if I go out and walk about a little?"
Mrs. Lansing was glad to let him go; the sight of his hard-set face hurt her. In another minute he was walking up and down the terrace, but he stopped presently and leaned on the low wall. Hitherto he had believed in Sylvia with an unshaken faith, but now a flood of suspicion poured in on him; above all, there was the telling fact that as soon as he had gone, she had begun to lead on his rival. The shock he had suffered had brought George illumination. Sylvia could never have had an atom of affection for him; she had merely made his loyalty serve her turn. She had done so even before she married d.i.c.k Marston; though he had somehow retained his confidence in her then. He had been a fool from the beginning!
The intense bitterness of which he was conscious was wholly new to him, but it was comprehensible. Just in all his dealings, he expected honesty from others, and, though generous in many ways, he had not Bland"s tolerant nature; he looked for more than the latter and had less charity. There was a vein of hardness in the man who had loved Sylvia largely because he believed in her. Trickery and falseness were abhorrent to him, and now the woman he had worshiped stood revealed in her deterrent reality.
After a while he pulled himself together, and, going back to the house, entered Herbert"s library where, less because of his interest in the matter than as a relief from painful thoughts, he opened the envelope given him and took out the statement. For a few moments the figures puzzled him, and then he broke into a bitter laugh. The money that he had entrusted to his cousin"s care had melted away.
During the next two or three minutes he leaned back, motionless, in his chair; then he took up a pencil and lighted a cigar. Since he was ruined, he might as well ascertain how it had happened, and two facts became obvious from his study of the doc.u.ment: Herbert had sold sound securities, and had mortgaged land; and then placed the proceeds in rubber shares. This was perhaps permissible, but it did not explain what had induced an astute business man to hold the shares until they had fallen to their remarkably low value. There was a mystery here, and George in his present mood was keenly suspicious. He had no doubt that Herbert had left the statement because it would save him the unpleasantness of giving a personal explanation; moreover, George believed that he had left home with that purpose. Then he made a few rough calculations, which seemed to prove that enough remained to buy and stock a farm in western Canada. This was something, though it did not strike him as a matter of much consequence, and he listlessly smoked out his cigar. Then he rose and rejoined Mrs. Lansing.
"If you don"t mind, I"ll go over to Wests" to-morrow," he said. "They pressed me to spend some time with them, and there are arrangements to be made on which they want my opinion. Edgar is taking up land in Canada."
Mrs. Lansing looked troubled.
"Was there anything disturbing in the paper Herbert gave me for you?
He doesn"t tell me much about his business, but I gathered that he was vexed about some shares he bought on your account. I should be sorry if they have gone down."
"You would hardly understand; the thing"s a little complicated," George said with rea.s.suring gentleness. "I"m afraid I have lost some money; but, after all, it isn"t my worst misfortune. I"ll have a talk with Herbert as soon as he comes home."
He left Brantholme the next morning and was received by Ethel when he arrived at Wests".
"We have been expecting you," she said cordially.
"Then you know?"
"Yes. I"m very sorry; but I suppose it will hardly bear talking about.
Stephen is waiting for you; he"s taking a day off and Edgar"s friend, Singleton, arrives to-night."
Singleton duly made his appearance, but he was not present when George and Stephen West sat down for a talk after dinner in the latter"s smoking-room. Presently George took out the statement and handed it to his host.
"I want advice badly and I can"t go to an outsider for it," he said.
"I feel quite safe in confiding in you."
West studied the doc.u.ment for a while before he looked up.
"The main point to be decided is--whether you should sell these shares at once for what they will bring, or wait a little? With your permission, we"ll ask Singleton; he knows more about the matter than anybody else."
Singleton came in and lighted a cigar, and then listened carefully, with a curious little smile, while West supplied a few explanations.
"Hold on to these shares, even if you have to make a sacrifice to do so," he advised.
"But they seem to be almost worthless," George objected.
"Perhaps I had better go into the matter fully," said Singleton. "I"ll do so on the understanding that what I"m about to tell you reaches n.o.body else."
George looked at West, who nodded.
"Well," explained Singleton, "I"ve come over on a flying visit about this rubber business. The original company--the one in which you hold shares--was got up mainly with the idea of profiting by the rather reckless general buying of such stock. Its tropical possessions were badly managed, though a little good rubber was shipped, and when prices reached their highest point Mr. Lansing sold out."
"If he had sold my shares at the same time, there should have been a satisfactory margin?"
"Undoubtedly. Extensive selling, however, shakes the confidence of speculators, and a man desirous of unloading would accordingly prefer everybody else to hold on."
"I think I am beginning to understand now," George said grimly.
"Then," Singleton went on, "a new company was projected by the promoters of the first one, and I was sent out to report on its prospects. At the last moment Mr. Lansing withdrew, but his a.s.sociates sent me south again. The slump he had foreseen came; n.o.body wanted rubber shares in any but firmly established and prosperous companies.
Lansing had cleared out in time and left his colleagues to face a crushing loss."
"I don"t see how all this bears upon the subject," George interrupted.
"Wait. You may be thankful Lansing didn"t sell your shares. I found that the company could be placed upon a paying basis, and, what is more, that the older one possessed resources its promoters had never suspected. In fact, I discovered how its output could be greatly increased at an insignificant cost. I came home at once with a scheme which has been adopted, and I"ve every reason to believe that there will be marked rise in the shares before long. Anyway, there"s no doubt that the company will be able to place high-cla.s.s rubber on the market at a cost which will leave a very satisfactory margin."
George was conscious of strong relief. It looked as if his loss would be small, and there was a chance of his stock becoming valuable; but another thought struck him.
"When was it that Herbert sold his shares?"
"At the beginning of last winter."
"Shortly before we mentioned that you might come home," West interposed pointedly.
This confirmed George"s suspicions; he could readily understand Herbert"s preferring that he should stay away, but he remembered that it was Sylvia"s letter which had decided him to remain in Canada. In the statement left him, he had been charged with half of certain loans Herbert had made to her, and he wondered whether this pointed to some collusion between them. He thought it by no means improbable.
"I understand that Herbert knows nothing about these new developments, and has no idea that the future of the two undertakings is promising?"
he said.
Singleton laughed.
"Not the slightest notion. If he suspected it, there would be nothing to prevent his buying shares; nothing will transpire until the shareholders" meeting, which will not be held for some time. Lansing retired and sold out, because he was convinced that both companies were worthless." He paused and added dryly: "I can"t see why we should enlighten him."
"Nor can I," responded George; and West nodded.
"Then," said Singleton, "when Lansing learns the truth, it will be too late for him to profit by the knowledge. I believe he has thrown away the best chance he ever had."
Shortly afterward Edgar came in and they talked of something else; but two days later Herbert returned and George went over to Brantholme. He was shown into the library where Herbert was sitting, and the latter was on his guard when he saw his cousin"s face. He greeted him affably, however, and made a few inquiries about his farming.
George stood looking at him with a fixed expression.
"I think," he said shortly, "we had better talk business."
"Oh, well," replied Herbert. "I suppose you have studied my statement.
I needn"t say that I regret the way matters have turned out; but one can"t foresee every turn of the market, or avoid a miscalculation now and then. It would hurt me if I thought this thing had anything to do with your going to Stephen"s."
"We won"t discuss that. I gave you authority to look after my affairs; I want it back."
Herbert took a doc.u.ment from a drawer and laid it on the table.
"Here it is. But won"t you let me try to straighten matters out?"
"Can they be straightened out?"