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<h3>CHAPTER XCII. Hamilton K. Fisker Again</h3>
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<br/>Ten days had passed since the meeting narrated in the last
chapter,—ten days, during which Hetta's letter had been sent to
her lover, but in which she had received no reply,—when two
gentlemen met each other in a certain room in Liverpool, who were
seen together in the same room in the early part of this
chronicle. These were our young friend Paul Montague, and our
not much older friend Hamilton K. Fisker. Melmotte had died
on the 18th of July, and tidings of the event had been at once sent
by telegraph to San Francisco. Some weeks before this
Montague had written to his partner, giving his account of the
South Central Pacific and Mexican Railway Company,—describing its
condition in England as he then believed it to be,—and urging
Fisker to come over to London. On receipt of a message from
his American correspondent he had gone down to Liverpool, and had
there awaited Fisker's arrival, taking counsel with his friend Mr
Ramsbottom. In the meantime Hetta's letter was lying at the
Beargarden, Paul having written from his club and having omitted to
desire that the answer should be sent to his lodgings. Just
at this moment things at the Beargarden were not well
managed. They were indeed so ill managed that Paul never
received that letter,—which would have had for him charms greater
than those of any letter ever before written.
<br/>"This is a terrible business," said Fisker, immediately on
entering the room in which Montague was waiting him. "He was
the last man I'd have thought would be cut up in that way."
<br/>"He was utterly ruined."
<br/>"He wouldn't have been ruined,—and couldn't have thought so if
he'd known all he ought to have known. The South Central
would have pulled him through almost anything if he'd have
understood how to play it."
<br/>"We don't think much of the South Central here now," said Paul.
<br/>"Ah;—that's because you've never above half spirit enough for
a big thing. You nibble at it instead of swallowing it
whole,—and then, of course, folks see that you're only
nibbling. I thought that Melmotte would have had spirit."
<br/>"There is, I fear, no doubt that he had committed forgery.
It was the dread of detection as to that which drove him to destroy
himself."
<br/>"I call it dam clumsy from beginning to end;—dam clumsy.
I took him to be a different man, and I feel more than half ashamed
of myself because I trusted such a fellow. That chap
Cohenlupe has got off with a lot of swag. Only think of
Melmotte allowing Cohenlupe to get the better of him!"
<br/>"I suppose the thing will be broken up now at San Francisco,"
suggested Paul.
<br/>"Bu'st up at Frisco! Not if I know it. Why should it
be bu'st up? D'you think we're all going to smash there
because a fool like Melmotte blows his brains out in London?"
<br/>"He took poison."
<br/>"Or p'ison either. That's not just our way. I'll
tell you what I'm going to do; and why I'm over here so uncommon
sharp. These shares are at a'most nothing now in
London. I'll buy every share in the market. I wired for
as many as I dar'd, so as not to spoil our own game, and I'll make
a clean sweep of every one of them. Bu'st up! I'm sorry
for him because I thought him a biggish man;—but what he's done'll
just be the making of us over there. Will you get out of it,
or will you come back to Frisco with me?"
<br/>In answer to this Paul asserted most strenuously that he would
not return to San Francisco, and, perhaps too ingenuously, gave his
partner to understand that he was altogether sick of the great
railway, and would under no circumstances have anything more to do
with it. Fisker shrugged his shoulders, and was not
displeased at the proposed rupture. He was prepared to deal
fairly,—nay, generously,—by his partner, having recognized the
wisdom of that great commercial rule which teaches us that honour
should prevail among associates of a certain class; but he had
fully convinced himself that Paul Montague was not a fit partner
for Hamilton K. Fisker. Fisker was not only unscrupulous
himself, but he had a thorough contempt for scruples in
others. According to his theory of life, nine hundred and
ninety-nine men were obscure because of their scruples, whilst the
thousandth man predominated and cropped up into the splendour of
commercial wealth because he was free from such bondage. He
had his own theories, too, as to commercial honesty. That
which he had promised to do he would do, if it was within his
power. He was anxious that his bond should be good, and his
word equally so. But the work of robbing mankind in gross by
magnificently false representations, was not only the duty, but
also the delight and the ambition of his life. How could a
man so great endure a partnership with one so small as Paul
Montague? "And now what about Winifred Hurtle?" asked Fisker.
<br/>"What makes you ask? She's in London."
<br/>"Oh yes, I know she's in London, and Hurdle's at Frisco,
swearing that he'll come after her. He would, only he hasn't
got the dollars."
<br/>"He's not dead then?" muttered Paul.
<br/>"Dead!—no, nor likely to die. She'll have a bad time of
it with him yet."
<br/>"But she divorced him."
<br/>"She got a Kansas lawyer to say so, and he's got a Frisco lawyer
to say that there's nothing of the kind. She hasn't played
her game badly neither, for she's had the handling of her own
money, and has put it so that he can't get hold of a dollar.
Even if it suited other ways, you know, I wouldn't marry her myself
till I saw my way clearer out of the wood."
<br/>"I'm not thinking of marrying her,—if you mean that."
<br/>"There was a talk about it in Frisco;—that's all. And I
have heard Hurtle say when he was a little farther gone than usual
that she was here with you, and that he meant to drop in on you
some of these days." To this Paul made no answer, thinking
that he had now both heard enough and said enough about Mrs Hurtle.
<br/>On the following day the two men, who were still partners, went
together to London, and Fisker immediately became immersed in the
arrangement of Melmotte's affairs. He put himself into
communication with Mr Brehgert, went in and out of the offices in
Abchurch Lane and the rooms which had belonged to the Railway
Company, cross-examined Croll, mastered the books of the Company as
far as they were to be mastered, and actually summoned both the
Grendalls, father and son, up to London. Lord Alfred, and
Miles with him, had left London a day or two before Melmotte's
death,—having probably perceived that there was no further
occasion for their services. To Fisker's appeal Lord Alfred
was proudly indifferent. Who was this American that he should
call upon a director of the London Company to appear? Does
not every one know that a director of a company need not direct
unless he pleases? Lord Alfred, therefore, did not even
condescend to answer Fisker's letter;—but he advised his son to
run up to town. "I should just go, because I'd taken a salary
from the d–––– Company," said the careful
father, "but when there I wouldn't say a word." So Miles
Grendall, obeying his parent, reappeared upon the scene.
<br/>But Fisker's attention was perhaps most usefully and most
sedulously paid to Madame Melmotte and her daughter. Till
Fisker arrived no one had visited them in their solitude at
Hampstead, except Croll, the clerk. Mr Brehgert had
abstained, thinking that a widow, who had become a widow under such
terrible circumstances, would prefer to be alone. Lord
Nidderdale had made his adieux, and felt that he could do no
more. It need hardly be said that Lord Alfred had too much
good taste to interfere at such a time, although for some months he
had been domestically intimate with the poor woman, or that Sir
Felix would not be prompted by the father's death to renew his suit
to the daughter. But Fisker had not been two days in London
before he went out to Hampstead, and was admitted to Madame
Melmotte's presence,—and he had not been there four days before he
was aware that in spite of all misfortunes, Marie Melmotte was
still the undoubted possessor of a large fortune.
<br/>In regard to Melmotte's effects generally the Crown had been
induced to abstain from interfering,—giving up the right to all
the man's plate and chairs and tables which it had acquired by the
finding of the coroner's verdict,—not from tenderness to Madame
Melmotte, for whom no great commiseration was felt, but on behalf
of such creditors as poor Mr Longestaffe and his son. But
Marie's money was quite distinct from this. She had been
right in her own belief as to this property, and had been right,
too, in refusing to sign those papers,—unless it may be that that
refusal led to her father's act. She herself was sure that it
was not so, because she had withdrawn her refusal, and had offered
to sign the papers before her father's death. What might have
been the ultimate result had she done so when he first made the
request, no one could now say. That the money would have gone
there could be no doubt. The money was now hers,—a fact
which Fisker soon learned with that peculiar cleverness which
belonged to him.
<br/>Poor Madame Melmotte felt the visits of the American to be a
relief to her in her misery. The world makes great mistakes
as to that which is and is not beneficial to those whom Death has
bereaved of a companion. It may be, no doubt sometimes it is
the case, that grief shall be so heavy, so absolutely crushing, as
to make any interference with it an additional trouble, and this is
felt also in acute bodily pain, and in periods of terrible mental
suffering. It may also be, and, no doubt, often is the case,
that the bereaved one chooses to affect such overbearing sorrow,
and that friends abstain, because even such affectation has its own
rights and privileges. But Madame Melmotte was neither
crushed by grief nor did she affect to be so crushed. She had
been numbed by the suddenness and by the awe of the
catastrophe. The man who had been her merciless tyrant for
years, who had seemed to her to be a very incarnation of cruel
power, had succumbed, and shown himself to be powerless against his
own misfortunes. She was a woman of very few words, and had
spoken almost none on this occasion even to her own daughter; but
when Fisker came to her, and told her more than she had ever known
before of her husband's affairs, and spoke to her of her future
life, and mixed for her a small glass of brandy-and-water warm, and
told her that Frisco would be the fittest place for her future
residence, she certainly did not find him to be intrusive.
<br/>And even Marie liked Fisker, though she had been wooed and
almost won both by a lord and a baronet, and had understood, if not
much, at least more than her mother, of the life to which she had
been introduced. There was something of real sorrow in her
heart for her father. She was prone to love,—though, perhaps,
not prone to deep affection. Melmotte had certainly been
often cruel to her, but he had also been very indulgent. And
as she had never been specially grateful for the one, so neither
had she ever specially resented the other. Tenderness, care,
real solicitude for her well-being, she had never known, and had
come to regard the unevenness of her life, vacillating between
knocks and knick-knacks, with a blow one day and a jewel the next,
as the condition of things which was natural to her. When her
father was dead she remembered for a while the jewels and the
knickknacks, and forgot the knocks and blows. But she was not
beyond consolation, and she also found consolation in Mr Fisker's
visits.
<br/>"I used to sign a paper every quarter," she said to Fisker, as
they were walking together one evening in the lanes round
Hampstead.
<br/>"You'll have to do the same now, only instead of giving the
paper to any one you'll have to leave it in a banker's hands to
draw the money for yourself."
<br/>"And can that be done over in California?"
<br/>"Just the same as here. Your bankers will manage it all
for you without the slightest trouble. For the matter of that
I'll do it, if you'll trust me. There's only one thing
against it all, Miss Melmotte."
<br/>"And what's that?"
<br/>"After the sort of society you've been used to here, I don't
know how you'll get on among us Americans. We're a pretty
rough lot, I guess. Though, perhaps, what you lose in the
look of the fruit, you'll make up in the flavour." This
Fisker said in a somewhat plaintive tone, as though fearing that
the manifest substantial advantages of Frisco would not suffice to
atone for the loss of that fashion to which Miss Melmotte had been
used.
<br/>"I hate swells," said Marie, flashing round upon him.
<br/>"Do you now?"
<br/>"Like poison. What's the use of 'em? They never mean
a word that they say,—and they don't say so many words either.
They're never more than half awake, and don't care the least about
anybody. I hate London."
<br/>"Do you now?"
<br/>"Oh, don't I?"
<br/>"I wonder whether you'd hate Frisco?"
<br/>"I rather think it would be a jolly sort of place."
<br/>"Very jolly I find it. And I wonder whether you'd
hate—me?"
<br/>"Mr Fisker, that's nonsense. Why should I hate anybody?"
<br/>"But you do. I've found out one or two that you don't
love. If you do come to Frisco, I hope you won't just hate
me, you know." Then he took her gently by the arm;—but she,
whisking herself away rapidly, bade him behave himself. Then
they returned to their lodgings, and Mr Fisker, before he went back
to London, mixed a little warm brandy-and-water for Madame
Melmotte. I think that upon the whole Madame Melmotte was
more comfortable at Hampstead than she had been either in Grosvenor
Square or Bruton Street, although she was certainly not a thing
beautiful to look at in her widow's weeds.
<br/>"I don't think much of you as a book-keeper, you know," Fisker
said to Miles Grendall in the now almost deserted Board-room of the
South Central Pacific and Mexican Railway. Miles, remembering
his father's advice, answered not a word, but merely looked with
assumed amazement at the impertinent stranger who dared thus to
censure his performances. Fisker had made three or four
remarks previous to this, and had appealed both to Paul Montague
and to Croll, who were present. He had invited also the
attendance of Sir Felix Carbury, Lord Nidderdale, and Mr
Longestaffe, who were all Directors;—but none of them had
come. Sir Felix had paid no attention to Fisker's
letter. Lord Nidderdale had written a short but
characteristic reply. "Dear Mr Fisker,—I really don't know
anything about it. Yours, Nidderdale." Mr Longestaffe,
with laborious zeal, had closely covered four pages with his
reasons for non-attendance, with which the reader shall not be
troubled, and which it may be doubted whether even Fisker perused
to the end. "Upon my word," continued Fisker, "it's
astonishing to me that Melmotte should have put up with this kind
of thing. I suppose you understand something of business, Mr
Croll?"
<br/>"It vas not my department, Mr Fisker," said the German.
<br/>"Nor anybody else's either," said the domineering
American. "Of course it's on the cards, Mr Grendall, that we
shall have to put you into a witness-box, because there are certain
things we must get at." Miles was silent as the grave, but at
once made up his mind that he would pass his autumn at some
pleasant but economical German retreat, and that his autumnal
retirement should be commenced within a very few days;—or perhaps
hours might suffice.
<br/>But Fisker was not in earnest in his threat. In truth the
greater the confusion in the London office, the better, he thought,
were the prospects of the Company at San Francisco. Miles
underwent purgatory on this occasion for three or four hours, and
when dismissed had certainly revealed none of Melmotte's
secrets. He did, however, go to Germany, finding that a
temporary absence from England would be comfortable to him in more
respects than one,—and need not be heard of again in these pages.
<br/>When Melmotte's affairs were ultimately wound up there was found
to be nearly enough of property to satisfy all his proved
liabilities. Very many men started up with huge claims,
asserting that they had been robbed, and in the confusion it was
hard to ascertain who had been robbed, or who had simply been
unsuccessful in their attempts to rob others. Some, no doubt,
as was the case with poor Mr Brehgert, had speculated in dependence
on Melmotte's sagacity, and had lost heavily without
dishonesty. But of those who, like the Longestaffes, were
able to prove direct debts, the condition at last was not very
sad. Our excellent friend Dolly got his money early in the
day, and was able, under Mr Squercum's guidance, to start himself
on a new career. Having paid his debts, and with still a
large balance at his bankers, he assured his friend Nidderdale that
he meant to turn over an entirely new leaf. "I shall just
make Squercum allow me so much a month, and I shall have all the
bills and that kind of thing sent to him, and he will do
everything, and pull me up if I'm getting wrong. I like
Squercum."
<br/>"Won't he rob you, old fellow?" suggested Nidderdale,
<br/>"Of course he will;—but he won't let any one else do it.
One has to be plucked, but it's everything to have it done on a
system. If he'll only let me have ten shillings out of every
sovereign I think I can get along." Let us hope that Mr
Squercum was merciful, and that Dolly was enabled to live in
accordance with his virtuous resolutions.
<br/>But these things did not arrange themselves till late in the
winter,—long after Mr Fisker's departure for California.
That, however, was protracted till a day much later than he
anticipated before he had become intimate with Madame Melmotte and
Marie. Madame Melmotte's affairs occupied him for a while
almost exclusively. The furniture and plate were of course
sold for the creditors, but Madame Melmotte was allowed to take
whatever she declared to be specially her own property;—and,
though much was said about the jewels, no attempt was made to
recover them. Marie advised Madame Melmotte to give them up,
assuring the old woman that she should have whatever she wanted for
her maintenance. But it was not likely that Melmotte's widow
would willingly abandon any property, and she did not abandon her
jewels. It was agreed between her and Fisker that they were
to be taken to New York. "You'll get as much there as in
London, if you like to part with them; and nobody'll say anything
about it there. You couldn't sell a locket or chain here
without all the world talking about it."
<br/>In all these things Madame Melmotte put herself into Fisker's
hands with the most absolute confidence,—and, indeed, with a
confidence that was justified by its results. It was not by
robbing an old woman that Fisker intended to make himself
great. To Madame Melmotte's thinking, Fisker was the finest
gentleman she had ever met,—so infinitely pleasanter in his manner
than Lord Alfred even when Lord Alfred had been most gracious, with
so much more to say for himself than Miles Grendall, understanding
her so much better than any man had ever done,—especially when he
supplied her with those small warm beakers of sweet
brandy-and-water. "I shall do whatever he tells me," she said
to Marie. "I'm sure I've nothing to keep me here in this
country."
<br/>"I'm willing to go," said Marie. "I don't want to stay in
London."
<br/>"I suppose you'll take him if he asks you?"
<br/>"I don't know anything about that," said Marie. "A man may
be very well without one's wanting to marry him. I don't
think I'll marry anybody. What's the use? It's only
money. Nobody cares for anything else. Fisker's all
very well; but he only wants the money. Do you think Fisker'd
ask me to marry him if I hadn't got anything? Not he!
He ain't slow enough for that."
<br/>"I think he's a very nice young man," said Madame Melmotte.
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