JC1 The Carpetbaggers

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by Robbins, Harold


  "Nineteen next month," she said quickly.

  "You've grown a little since I saw you." Then his face turned serious as he placed the cigar carefully in the ash tray. "I know why you've come to see me," he said in his resonant voice. "And I'd like to express my sympathy for the predicament your father is in."

  "Have you studied the charges that are being made against him?" Rina asked quickly.

  "I've looked over the papers," he admitted.

  "Do you think he's guilty?"

  The Governor looked at her. "Banking is like politics," he said. "There are many things which are morally right and legally wrong. That they may be one and the same thing doesn't matter. Judgment is rendered only on the end result."

  "You mean," she said quickly, "the trick is — not to get caught!"

  He felt a glow of satisfaction. He liked quick, bright people, he liked the free exchange of ideas that came from them. Too bad that politics attracted so few of that kind. "I wouldn't be cynical," he said quietly. "It isn't as simple as that. The law is not an inflexible thing. It is alive and reflects the hopes and desires of the people. That's why laws are so often changed or amended. In the long run, we trust that eventually the legal and the moral will come together like parallel lines which meet in infinity."

  "Infinity is a long time for a man my father's age to wait," she said. "No one has that much time. Not even you if you live to the hundred and twenty-five."

  "Unfortunately, decision will always remain the greatest hazard of leadership," he answered. "Your father assumed that hazard when he authorized those loans. He justified it to himself because without them, certain mills might be forced to close, throwing many people out of work, and causing others to lose their investment or principal means of support. So your father was completely right morally in what he did.

  "But legally, it's another story. A bank's principal obligation is to its depositors. The law takes this into account and the state has rules governing such loans. Under the law, your father should never have made those loans because they were inadequately collateralized. Of course, if the mills hadn't closed and the loans had been repaid, he'd have been called a public benefactor, a farseeing businessman. But the opposite happened and now these same people who might have praised him are screaming for his head."

  "Doesn't it make any difference that he lost his entire fortune trying to save the bank?" Rina asked.

  The Governor shook his head. "Unfortunately, no."

  "Then, is there nothing you can do for him?" she asked desperately.

  "A good politician doesn't go against the tide of public opinion," he said slowly. "And right now the public is yelling for a scapegoat. If your father puts up a defense, he'll lose and get ten to fifteen years. In that case, I'd be long out of office before he was eligible for parole."

  He picked up the cigar from the ash tray and rolled it gently between his strong white fingers. "If you could convince your father to plead guilty and waive jury trial, I’ll arrange for a judge to give him one to three years. In fifteen months, I’ll grant him a pardon."

  She stared at him. "But what if something happens to you?"

  He smiled. "I’m going to live to be a hundred and twenty-five, remember? But even if I weren't around, your father couldn't lose. He'd still be eligible for parole in twenty months."

  Rina got to her feet and held out her hand. "Thank you very much for seeing me," she said, meeting his eyes squarely. "No matter what happens, I hope you live to be a hundred and twenty-five."

  * * *

  From her side of the wire partition, she watched her father walk toward her. His eyes were dull, his hair had gone gray, even his face seemed to have taken on a grayish hue that blended softly into the drab gray prison uniform.

  "Hello, Father," she said softly as he slipped into the chair opposite her.

  He forced a smile. "Hello, Rina."

  "Is it all right, Father?" she asked anxiously. "Are they— "

  "They're treating me fine," he said quickly. "I have a job in the library. I'm in charge of setting up a new inventory control. They have been losing too many books."

  She glanced at him. Surely he was joking.

  An awkward silence came over them. "I received a letter from Stan White," he said finally. "They have an offer of sixty thousand dollars for the house."

  Stan White was her father's lawyer. "That's good," she said. "From what they told me, I didn't think we'd get that much. Big houses are a glut on the market."

  "Some Jews want it," he said without rancor. "That's why they'll pay that much."

  "It was much too big for us and we wouldn't live there when you come home, anyway."

  He looked at her. "There won't be very much left. Perhaps ten thousand after we take care of the creditors and Stan."

  "We won't need very much," she said. "We'll manage until you're active again."

  This time his voice was bitter. "Who would take a chance on me? I'm not a banker any more, I'm a convict."

  "Don't talk like that!" she said sharply. "Everyone knows that what happened wasn't your fault. They know you took nothing for yourself."

  "That makes it even worse," he said wryly. "It's one thing to be condemned for a thief, quite another for being a fool."

  "I shouldn't have gone to Europe. I should have stayed at home with you. Then perhaps none of this would have happened."

  "It was I who failed in my obligation to you."

  "You never did that, Father."

  "I've had a lot of time to think up here. I lay awake nights wondering what you're going to do now."

  "I’ll manage, Father," she said. "I'll get a job."

  "Doing what?"

  "I don't know," she replied quickly. "I’ll find something."

  "It's not as easy as that. You're not trained for anything." He looked down at his hands. "I've even spoiled your chances for a good marriage."

  She laughed. "I wasn't thinking of getting married. All the young men in Boston are just that — young men. They seem like boys to me; I haven't the patience for them. When I get married, it will be to a mature man, like you."

  "What you need is a vacation," he said. "You look tired and drawn."

  "We'll both take a vacation when you come home," she said. "We'll go to Europe. I know a place on the Riviera where we could live a whole year on less than two thousand dollars."

  "That's still a long way off," he said. "You need a vacation now."

  "What are you getting at, Father?" she asked.

  "I wrote to my cousin Foster," he said. "He and his wife, Betty, want you to come out and stay with them. They say it's beautiful out there and you could stay with them until I could come out to join you."

  "But then I wouldn't be able to visit you," she said quickly, reaching for his hands in the narrow space beneath the bars.

  He pressed her fingers. "It will be better that way. Both of us will have less painful things to remember."

  "But, Father— " she began to protest.

  The guard started over and her father got to his feet. "I’ve already given Stan White instructions," he said. "Now, you do as I say and go out there."

  He turned away and she watched him walk off through eyes that were beginning to mist over with tears. She didn't see him again until many months later, when she was on her way to Europe again on her honeymoon. She brought her husband out to the prison.

  "Father," she said, almost shyly, "this is Jonas Cord."

  What Harrison Marlowe saw was a man his own age, perhaps even older, but with a height and youthful vitality that seemed characteristic of the Westerner.

  "Is there anything we can get you, Father?" she asked.

  "Anything we can do at all, Mr. Marlowe?" Jonas Cord added.

  "No. No, thank you."

  Cord looked at him and Harrison Marlowe caught a glimpse of deep-set, penetrating blue eyes. "My business is expanding, Mr. Marlowe," he said. "Before you make any plans after leaving here, I'd appreciate your speaking w
ith me. I need a man with just your experience to help me in refinancing my expansion."

  "You're very kind, Mr. Cord."

  Jonas Cord turned to Rina. "If you'll excuse me," he said, "I know you want some time alone with your father. I'll be waiting outside."

  Rina nodded and the two men said good-by. For a short time, father and daughter looked at each other, then Rina spoke. "What do you think of him, Father?"

  "Why, he's as old as I am!"

  Rina smiled. "I told you I'd marry a mature man, Father. I never could stand boys."

  "But— but— " her father stammered. "You're a young woman. You have your whole life ahead of you. Why did you marry him?"

  Rina smiled gently. "He's an extremely wealthy man, Father," she said softly. "And very lonely."

  "You mean you married him for that?" Then suddenly he understood the reason for her husband's offer. "Or so he could take care of me?" he asked.

  "No, Father," she said quickly. "That isn't why I married him at all."

  "Then why?" he asked. "Why?"

  "To take care of me, Father," she said simply.

  "But, Rina— " he began to protest.

  She cut him off quickly. "After all, Father," she said, "you yourself said there wasn't anything I could do to take care of myself. Wasn't that why you sent me out there?"

  He didn't answer. There wasn't anything left for him to say. After a few more awkward moments, they parted. He stretched out on the narrow cot in his cell and stared up at the ceiling. He felt a cold chill creeping through him. He shivered slightly and pulled the thin blanket across his legs. How had he failed her? Where had he gone wrong?

  He turned his face into the hard straw pillow and the hot tears began to course down his cheeks. He began to shiver as the chill grew deeper within him. Later that night, they came and took him to the prison hospital, with a fever of a hundred and two. He died of bronchial pneumonia three days later, while Rina and Jonas Cord were still on the high seas.

  14

  The pain began to echo in her temples, cutting like a sharp knife into the dream. She felt it begin to slip away from her, and then the terrible loneliness of awakening. She stirred restlessly. Everyone was fading away, everyone except her. She held her breath for a moment, fighting the return to reality. But it was no use. The last warm traces of the dream were gone. She was awake.

  She opened her eyes and stared unrecognizingly for a moment around the hospital room, then she remembered where she was. There were new flowers on the dresser opposite the foot of the bed. They must have brought them in while she slept.

  She moved her head slowly. Ilene was dozing in the big easy chair near the window. It was night outside. She must have dozed the afternoon away.

  "I have a terrible headache," she whispered softly. "May I have some aspirin, please?"

  Ilene's head snapped forward. She looked at Rina questioningly.

  Rina smiled. "I’ve slept away the whole afternoon."

  "The whole afternoon?" It was the first time in almost a week that Rina had been conscious. "The whole afternoon," Ilene repeated. "Yes."

  "I was so tired," Rina said. "And I always get a headache when I nap during the day. I'd like some aspirin."

  "I’ll call the nurse."

  "Never mind, I’ll call her," Rina said quickly. She started to raise her hand to the call button over her head. But she couldn't lift her arm.

  She looked down at it. It was strapped to the side of the bed. There was a needle inserted into a vein on her forearm, attached to a long tube which led up to an inverted bottle suspended from a stand. "What's that for?"

  "The doctor thought it would be better it they didn't disturb your rest to feed you," Ilene said quickly. She leaned across the bed and pressed the buzzer.

  The nurse appeared almost instantly in the doorway. She walked quickly to the bed and stood next to Ilene, looking down at Rina. "Are we awake?" she asked with professional brightness.

  Rina smiled slowly. "We're awake," she said faintly. "You're a new one, aren't you? I don't remember you."

  The nurse flashed a quick look at Ilene. She had been on duty ever since Rina was checked into the hospital. "I’m the night nurse," she answered calmly. "I've just come on."

  "I always get a headache when I sleep in the afternoon," Rina said. "I was wondering if I could have some aspirin?"

  "I'll call the doctor," the nurse said.

  Rina turned her head. "You must be exhausted," she said to Ilene. "Why don't you go home and get some rest? You've been here all day."

  "I'm really not tired. I grabbed forty winks myself this afternoon."

  The doctor came into the room just then and Rina turned toward the door. He stood there blinking his eyes behind his shining glasses. "Good evening, Miss Marlowe. Did you have a good rest?"

  Rina smiled. "Too much, doctor. It's left me with a headache." Her brows knit. "It's a peculiar kind of a headache, though."

  He came over to the side of the bed and put his fingers on her wrist, finding her pulse. "Peculiar?" he asked, looking down at his watch. "How do you mean peculiar?"

  "It seems to hurt most when I try to remember names. I know you and I know my friend here" — she gestured to Ilene — "but when I try to say your name, the headache comes and I can't remember."

  The doctor laughed as he let go of her wrist. "That's not at all unusual. There are some types of migraine headaches which make people forget their own name. Yours isn't that bad, is it?"

  "No, it's not," Rina answered.

  The doctor took an ophthalmoscope from his pocket and leaned over. "I'm going to look into your eyes with this," he said. "This makes it possible for me to see behind them and we may find out that your headache is due to nothing but simple eyestrain. Don't be frightened."

  "I’m not frightened, doctor," Rina answered. "A doctor in Paris once looked at me with one of those. He thought I was in shock. But I wasn't. I was only hypnotized."

  He placed his thumb in a corner of her eye and raised the eyelid. He pressed a button on the instrument and a bright light reflected through the pin-point hole. "What's your name?" he asked casually.

  "Katrina Osterlaag," she answered quickly. Then she laughed. "See, doctor, I told you my headache wasn't that bad. I still know my name."

  "What's your father's name?" he asked, moving the instrument to the other eye.

  "Harrison Marlowe. See, I know that, too."

  "What's your name?" he asked again, the light making a half circle in the upper corner of her eye.

  "Rina Marlowe," she answered. She laughed aloud. "You can't trick me, doctor."

  He turned off the light and straightened up. "No, I can't," he said, smiling down at her.

  There was a movement at the door and two attendants wheeled in a large, square machine. They pushed it over to the side of the bed next to the doctor.

  "This is an electroencephalograph," the doctor explained quietly. "It's used to measure the electrical impulses emanating from the brain. It's very helpful sometimes in locating the source of headaches so we can treat them."

  "It looks very complicated," Rina said.

  "It's not," he answered. "It's very simple, really. I'll explain it to you as we go along."

  "And I thought all you had to do was take a few aspirins for a headache."

  He laughed with her. "Well, you know how we doctors are," he said. "How can we ever justify our fees if all we do is recommend a few pills?"

  She laughed again and the doctor turned toward Ilene. He nodded silently at her, his eyes gesturing to the door. He had already turned back to Rina by the time she had opened it.

  "You'll come back later, won't you?" Rina asked.

  Ilene turned around. The attendants were already plugging in the machine and the nurse was helping the doctor prepare Rina. "I’ll be back," Ilene promised. She walked out and closed the door gently behind her.

  It was almost an hour later when the doctor came out of the room. He dropped into a chair
opposite Ilene, his hand fishing in his pocket. It came out with a crumpled package of cigarettes, which he held out to her. She took one and he struck a match, holding it first for her, then for himself.

  'Well?" she asked through stiff lips.

  "We'll be able to tell more when we study the electroencephalogram," he said, dragging on his cigarette. "But there are already definite signs of deterioration in certain neural areas."

  "Please, doctor," she said. "In words that I can understand."

  "Of course," he said. He took a deep breath. "The brain already shows signs of damage in certain nerve areas. It is this damage that makes it difficult for her to remember things — simple, everyday things like names, places, time. Everything in her memory is present, there is no past, perhaps no today. It is an unconscious effort to recall these little things that causes the strain and brings on the headache."

  "But isn't that a good sign?" she asked hopefully. "This is the first time in almost a week that she seems partly normal."

  "I know how concerned you are," he said cautiously. "And I don't want to appear unduly pessimistic, but the human mechanism is a peculiar machine. It is a tribute to her physical stamina that she's holding up as well as she is. She's going through recurrent waves of extremely high fever, a fever that destroys everything in its path. It's almost a miracle that when it abates slightly, even for a moment, as it just has, she can return to a semblance of lucidity."

  "You mean she's slipping back into delirium?"

  "I mean that her temperature is beginning to climb again," he answered.

  Ilene got to her feet quickly and crossed to the door. "Do you think I can speak to her again before she slips back?"

  "I'm sorry," he said, shaking his head. He got to his feet. "Her temperature began to rise about twenty minutes after you left the room. I put her in sedation to ease the pain."

  She stared at the doctor. "Oh, my God!" she said in a low voice. "How long, doctor? How long must she suffer like this?"

  "I don't know," he said slowly. He took her arm. "Why don't you let me drive you home? There's nothing you can do tonight, believe me. She's asleep."

 

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