登陆注册
5442500000072

第72章 CHAPTER XVI(1)

THE week following the August Bank Holiday is very rarely indeed a busy or anxious time in the City. In the ordinary course of things, it serves as the easy-going prelude--with but casual and inattentive visits eastward, and with only the most careless glances through the financial papers--to the halcyon period of the real vacation.

Men come to the City during this week, it is true, but their thoughts are elsewhere--on the moors, on the blue sea, on the glacier or the fiord, or the pleasant German pine forests.

To the great mass of City people; this August in question began in a normal enough fashion. To one little group of operators, however, and to the widening circle of brokers, bankers, and other men of affairs whose interests were more or less involved with those of this group, it was a season of keen perturbation.

A combat of an extraordinary character was going on--a combat which threatened to develop into a massacre.

Even to the operators who, unhappily for themselves, were principals in this fight, it was a struggle in the dark.

They knew little about it, beyond the grimly-patent fact that they were battling for their very lives. The outer ring of their friends and supporters and dependents knew still less, though their rage and fears were perhaps greater.

The "press" seemed to know nothing at all. This unnatural silence of the City's mouthpieces, usually so resoundingly clamorous upon the one side and the other when a duel is in progress, gave a sinister aspect to the thing.

The papers had been gagged and blindfolded for the occasion.

This in itself was of baleful significance. It was not a duel which they had been bribed to ignore.

It was an assassination.

Outwardly there was nothing to see, save the unofficial, bald statement that on August 1st, the latest of twelve fortnightly settlements in this stock, Rubber Consols had been bid for, and carried over, at 15 pounds for one-pound shares.

The information concerned the public at large not at all.

Nobody knew of any friend or neighbour who was fortunate enough to possess some of these shares. Readers here and there, noting the figures, must have said to themselves that certain lucky people were coining money, but very little happened to be printed as to the identity of these people.

Stray notes were beginning to appear in the personal columns of the afternoon papers about a "Rubber King"of the name of Thorpe, but the modern exploitation of the world's four corners makes so many "kings" that the name had not, as yet, familiarized itself to the popular eye.

City men, who hear more than they read, knew in a general way about this "Rubber King." He was an outsider who had come in, and was obviously filling his pockets; but it was a comforting rule that outsiders who did this always got their pockets emptied for them again in the long run.

There seemed nothing about Thorpe to suggest that he would prove an exception to the rule. He was investing his winnings with great freedom, so the City understood, and his office was besieged daily by promoters and touts.

They could clean out his strong-box faster than the profits of his Rubber corner could fill it.

To know such a man, however, could not but be useful, and they made furtive notes of his number in Austin Friars on their cuffs, after conversation had drifted from him to other topics.

As to the Rubber corner itself, the Stock Exchange as a whole was apathetic. When some of the sufferers ventured cautious hints about the possibility of official intervention on their behalf, they were laughed at by those who did not turn away in cold silence.

Of the fourteen men who had originally been caught in the net drawn tight by Thorpe and Semple, all the conspicuous ones belonged to the class of "wreckers,"a class which does not endear itself to Capel Court.

Both Rostocker and Aronson, who, it was said, were worst hit, were men of great wealth, but they had systematically amassed these fortunes by strangling in their cradles weak enterprises, and by undermining and toppling over other enterprises which would not have been weak if they had been given a legitimate chance to live.

Their system was legal enough, in the eyes alike of the law and of the Stock Exchange rules. They had an undoubted right to mark out their prey and pursue it, and bring it down, and feed to the bone upon it. But the exercise of this right did not make them beloved by the begetters and sponsors of their victims. When word first went round, on the last day of February, that a lamb had unexpectedly turned upon these two practised and confident wolves, and had torn an ear from each of them, and driven them pell-mell into a "corner," it was received on all sides with a gratified smile.

Later, by fortnightly stages, the story grew at once more tragic and more satisfactory. Not only Rostocker and Aronson, but a dozen others were in the cul de sac guarded by this surprising and bloody-minded lamb.

Most of the names were well-known as those of "wreckers."In this category belonged Blaustein, Ganz, Rothfoere, Lewis, Ascher, and Mendel, and if Harding, Carpenter, and Vesey could not be so confidently classified, at least their misfortune excited no particular sympathy.

Two other names mentioned, those of Norfell and Pinney, were practically unknown.

There was some surprise, however, at the statement that the old and respected and extremely conservative firm of Fromentin Bros. was entangled in the thing. Egyptian bonds, minor Levantine loans, discounts in the Arabian and Persian trades--these had been specialties of the Fromentins for many years. Who could have expected to find them caught among the "shorts" in Mexican rubber? It was Mexico, wasn't it, that these Rubber Consols purported to be connected with?

同类推荐
  • 根本说一切有部苾刍尼戒经

    根本说一切有部苾刍尼戒经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 察舌辨症新法

    察舌辨症新法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说阿难问事佛吉凶经

    佛说阿难问事佛吉凶经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • CLIGES

    CLIGES

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 文王官人

    文王官人

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 快穿大佬威武雄壮

    快穿大佬威武雄壮

    系统:我家大佬,虐渣、打脸、杀人放火,英俊潇洒,无所不能。文殊无语,夸人是这样夸的,随后阴森森到,少拍马屁,说好的度假区呢?你不是说你是度假系统吗?特么的在鬼窟度假、末世度假、在荒岛也叫度假,在一切不是安全的地方度假。系统你出来我保证不打死你。。。。。本文无cp
  • 掌政公主

    掌政公主

    作为一个权势滔天的摄政王,他一手遮天,冷血狠心。谁知小皇帝却是个戏精,不仅深谙乌龟之道,还总在他面前演得一派天真,能不要脸,绝不拼命。原以为傻白甜小皇帝,被卖了还要帮忙数银子。后来却发现这只小不点,不仅凶残,还能咬人。某位假皇帝真公主摸了摸下巴:“摄政王如此秀色可餐,你若躺平,此前恩怨便一笔勾销。”外表软萌内心暗黑Loli VS 面冷心黑大叔,到底谁算计了谁?
  • 土拨鼠拨土

    土拨鼠拨土

    “白思渊,我告诉你,我呀,很难喜欢上别人,所以一遇到喜欢的人,就像一个久贫乍富的暴发户一样喜形于色,明知道财不可外露,情不该尽吐,可我也总是兜不住,说到底,还不是因为太喜欢你。”
  • 我本妖孽:美人在侧

    我本妖孽:美人在侧

    她庄周梦蝶般而来,却已有了两个月的身孕,这是,谁的孩子?向晚:这位公子,若你要劫财,我没有,若你要劫色,我更没有,我们无怨无仇,为什么你要……西临锦:真啰嗦。向晚:你是不是有个胞胎兄弟?西绮玉:这又是你新的勾引手段?装疯卖傻,欲拒还迎?向晚:我想要的,不是被折断的羽翼。莲陌:你若敢飞,我便让这天下,都是我的!
  • 奥特曼秘匙

    奥特曼秘匙

    未知,神秘,希望……阿姆拉所潜藏的这些东西,到底会为世界带来什么?是完美?还是残缺?是创造?还是毁灭?对此,星宫飒说出这样的话。“我现在想做的只有一个,那就是去寻找阿姆拉隐藏的答案。”书友群号:627770197「浪客の旅途:迪迦——SSSS.古利特」
  • 末日自闭患者

    末日自闭患者

    一个自闭逃课的问题少女,因为一顿夜宵邂逅了一场终身难忘的噩梦。一个无业孤僻的单身宅男,被一个电话从美梦中堕入地狱。如果不是那天晚上的灾难,可能他们的生活轨迹永远不会改变。生于光明之中,我们总是认为善意是世界的主色。然而当阴云浸透世界,扒开失去文明保护的道义,真正的人性才暴露于世。或许真正改变这个世界的不是丧尸,也不是地震,而是人心。吵闹前行的不是末日,悄然来临的才是。当末世的脚步逐步逼近,当丧尸如潮涌进家园,当各种灾难轮番肆虐。你会选择放弃认命,还是拿起武器对抗这个世界。一开始,我只是想救我自己;后来我变强了,我想救那些和我一起斗争的同伴们;再后来,我知道了这一切的真相,我想帮这个世界。无异能无系统无金手指分线剧情。女主不圣母。
  • 全球示爱慕太太

    全球示爱慕太太

    别人眼中的慕总裁:超有钱,超有颜,神秘高贵豪门阔少!薄欢眼中的慕总裁:超忠犬,超会黏,爱妻如命顶级好男。震惊!神秘总裁竟是资深偏执病人。戒不掉,治不好,60秒看不到小娇妻就会发狂?慕太太表示这日子没法过了,三十六计跑为上计。慕总裁带着宝宝堵在机场,一脸冷笑。“慕太太,感不感动?”薄欢:“不敢动,不敢动!”请看总裁强势宠,娇妻逃跑节目!
  • 风雨三世

    风雨三世

    第一世现代医学博士第二世习得顶级古典中医知识第三世是血腥是风雨飘摇是未知
  • 时光会把最好的留在最后

    时光会把最好的留在最后

    《时光会把最好的留在最后》是15位人气作者的暖心合集。《时光会把最好的留在最后》精心收录了15位作者近年来创作的32篇精品故事。《时光会把最好的留在最后》一书中有亲情、爱情与友情,有小说、励志与感悟,总有一款能够打动你的心!最好的,时光总会把它留在最后。在此之前,所有的等待与伤痛,只是让我们更加懂得珍惜!
  • 三国之阿斗雄起

    三国之阿斗雄起

    “男人就要雄起”,看谁以后还敢叫哥“扶不起的阿斗”。在我刘阿斗面前,你们都是土鸡瓦狗,不好意思二叔,阿斗抢你台词了,略略略……