usual assurance, I now
became ill at ease. I longed for them to be gone; at the same time I
hated to let her go--for, when and how would I see her again, would I
get the chance to remove her bad impression? It irritated me thus to be
concerned about the sister of a man into my liking for whom there was
mixed much pity and some contempt. But I am of the disposition that,
whenever I see an obstacle of whatever kind, I can not restrain myself
from trying to jump it. Here was an obstacle--a dislike. To clear it was
of the smallest importance in the world, was a silly waste of time. Yet I
felt I could not maintain with myself my boast that there were no
obstacles I couldn't get over, if I turned aside from this.
Sam--not without hesitation, as I recalled afterward--left me with her,
when I sent him to bring her brougham up to the Broadway entrance.
As she and I were standing there alone, waiting in silence, I turned on
her suddenly, and blurted out, "You don't like me."
She reddened a little, smiled slightly. "What a quaint remark!" said she.
I looked straight at her. "But you shall."
Our eyes met. Her chin came out a little, her eyebrows lifted. Then, in
scorn of herself as well as of me, she locked herself in behind a frozen
haughtiness that ignored me. "Ah, here is the carriage," she said. I
followed her to the curb; she just touched my hand, just nodded her
fascinating little head.
"See you Saturday, old man," called her brother friendlily. My lowering
face had alarmed him.
"That party is off," said I curtly. And I lifted my hat and strode away.
As I had formed the habit of dismissing the disagreeable, I soon put her
out of my mind. But she took with her my joy in the taste of things. I
couldn't get back my former keen satisfaction in all I had done and was
doing. The luxury, the tangible evidences of my achievement, no
longer gave me pleasure; they seemed to add to my irritation.
That's the way it is in life. We load ourselves down with toys like so
many greedy children; then we see another toy and drop everything to
be free to seize it; and if we can not, we're wretched.
I worked myself up, or rather, down, to such a mood that when my
office boy told me Mr. Langdon would like me to come to his office as
soon as it was convenient, I snapped out: "The hell he does! Tell Mr.
Langdon I'll be glad to see him here whenever he calls." That was
stupidity, a premature assertion of my right to be treated as an equal. I
had always gone to Langdon, and to any other of the rulers of finance,
whenever I had got a summons. For, while I was rich and powerful, I
held both wealth and power, in a sense, on sufferance; I knew that, so
long as I had no absolute control of any great department of industry,
these rulers could destroy me should they decide that they needed my
holdings or were not satisfied with my use of my power. There were a
good many people who did not realize that property rights had ceased
to exist, that property had become a revocable grant from the
"plutocrats." I was not of those misguided ones who had failed to
discover the new fact concealed in the old form. So I used to go when I
was summoned.
But not that day. However, no sooner was my boy gone than I repented
the imprudence, "But what of it?" said I to myself. "No matter how the
thing turns out, I shall be able to get some advantage." For it was part
of my philosophy that a proper boat with proper sails and a proper
steersman can gain in any wind. I was surprised when Langdon
appeared in my office a few minutes later.
He was a tallish, slim man, carefully dressed, with a bored, weary look
and a slow, bored way of talking. I had always said that if I had not
been myself I should have wished to be Langdon. Men liked and
admired him; women loved and ran after him. Yet he exerted not the
slightest effort to please any one; on the contrary, he made it distinct
and clear that he didn't care a rap what any one thought of him or, for
that matter, of anybody or anything. He knew how to get, without
sweat or snatching, all the good there was in whatever fate threw in his
way--and he was one of those men into whose way fate seems to strive
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