The Trespassers

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The Trespassers Page 6

by Laura Z. Hobson


  The two estimates of the implacable thing in Jasper Crown were both true. The two overlapped, interwove, intermarried. If you responded to him, trusted him, you called the thing by one set of names; if you disliked him, mistrusted him, you used the other set. It was fairly easy to make a case for either.

  Now, staring silently with cold brown eyes at Timothy Grosvenor, the implacable thing drove him on to his decision.

  Grosvenor was a Westerner by birth, the son of a well-to-do Nevada lawyer with stock in silver mines and a large divorce practice as well. Timothy had gone into radio in the early days and managed quite a success on his own. There was something hearty in his plump and ruddy face that people responded to, though Crown himself was irritated by it. But he admitted that Tim had worked hard, incessantly, to raise money, to produce ideas. He had been effective, more so than half the cohorts and supporters of the new project. Crown had felt sure of his loyalties; so sure that he had encouraged Tim virtually to retire from the active management of his own station, until the time came when the newly formed company bought it. The purchase deal was generous—Tim and his stockholders were delighted with it. It was clear that this was the greatest opportunity for Tim himself. He was to be Executive Vice-President of the new Jasper Crown Network.

  In early March had come the first trouble.

  Mandreth, Drake, and Niles, Investments, was considering an investment of five hundred thousand dollars. Jacques Mandreth had written Tim a letter in which he spoke of “your venture,” “your plans,” “your company,” “your personal assurance.” It was clearly an almost-dotted-line letter. With pleasure and a gleam of triumph, Tim had turned it over to Jasper, watched his face as he read.

  “Swell, Tim. Oh, good boy. This is the business, all right,” Jasper had said immediately. Already, though, as he spoke the warm words, the question was forming in his mind.

  “It’s the plan for splitting the foreign coverage, I think, Jas,” Tim said with satisfaction, “that got to him. He could see that—he could imagine Ford or Du Pont or General Foods paying millions to ‘own’ London, say.”

  “That’s the honey of an idea, Tim.”

  “Old Jacques sat there, almost rubbing his hands. ‘You mean you’re going to have regular sponsored news programs from all over Europe every single day?’ That took a while to sink in.”

  “Sure, it always staggers them. They can’t see ahead.”

  “But that was only the first part. The real thing that got them was the splitting up. ‘And you mean you’re going to split up those programs and sell sponsorship of all the news for a year, let’s say, out of Berlin?’ He kept asking that over and over.” Grosvenor slapped his knee with delight.

  Jasper nodded, smiled. He listened to every word. But he was thinking, too.

  “They couldn’t visualize my idea at all, Jas. Just because it’s different,” the happy, chubby man went on. “The idea that maybe an international crisis might ‘belong’ to just one advertiser on the newest network—”

  Jasper listened. He seemed to be all listening. But the question. was prowling around his mind, like some furtive marauder.

  “Let’s see the whole file on Mandreth sometime, will you, Tim?” he finally said. So casually he said it, so easily, in his deep, throaty voice, with all the pleasant, well-bred deference to a colleague and partner. “I ought to get up to date on Mandreth.”

  Tim had nodded his promise, and then had been out of town almost constantly since giving it. Jasper himself was gone when he returned to New York, gone, his secretary merely said, “for a few days’ rest down south.” He had returned only that morning and Timothy had pleaded for an immediate meeting. The documents for purchase of stock by Mandreth were being drawn. They would be signed tomorrow or the next day. Jasper agreed that there was no time to be lost.

  The complete file of Timothy’s correspondence with Mandreth now lay on Jasper’s desk. Idly he glanced through it, as they talked. Only when he came to the most recent exchange of letters did Jasper fall into silence and give his whole mind to reading.

  Phrase after phrase leaped out to him from the laconic lines of typewriting. He reached for a pencil, in an impulse to underline each one, then thought better of it, and sat drumming a tiny tap-tap-tap accompaniment on the desk. Tap-tap-tap; tick-tick-tick.

  “I have given my most pointed attention to your proposal,” was one such phrase of Timothy’s. “I can assure you without hesitation that you will always have the opportunity, indeed the right, to…” “My plan is simple here…” “You will be glad to hear, I hope, of an idea I am developing…”

  As he read, Jasper Crown felt something tighten and square off in his mind, his feelings. His suspicion had been intuitive, but now it was documented. Why, this fat, pink Tim Grosvenor was getting ahead of himself. The file itself showed the gradual abandonment of the tone of his early letters—they had carefully and consistently related every idea, every suggestion, every implication of the future to Crown himself. “Mr. Crown’s plans are…” “I talked with Jasper Crown at length since yesterday, and his decision is…” “Jasper Crown is in Washington, so I shall have to wait until Friday to answer…”

  Those phrases had discreetly salted all the early correspondence. Then they had begun to fall away. A sentimentalist might feel that it was a natural transition, since Timothy Grosvenor had been seeing Mandreth so constantly that it was inevitable he should wish to stand more and more on his own. A sentimentalist would yield to Timothy the innocence of his human wish to appear on an equal footing with Jasper Crown.

  But sentimentalists were hateful, frightened little men, afraid of seeming bold and hard. They were guileless, trusting everybody’s goodness until they were trapped by enemies who wanted to emasculate them. Then they whined, too late, that they had been betrayed by their friends.

  “Look here, Tim,” Crown said finally. “This won’t do. These letters reveal bad things.”

  “Wha—why, how do you mean, Jas?”

  “They show me clearly—you’ll deny it, but it’s too clear—that you resent having me the real head of this company. You’re trying already—oh, unconsciously of course—to wrest control from me. The dates on these letters show you’ve been trying it for quite a while. I didn’t suspect it.”

  “Why, you’re mad. I—”

  Timothy sprang to his feet, his features working in sudden outrage. Crown remained motionless, except for the tiny tap-tap-tap of the pencil point.

  “I said it was unconscious,” Crown said quietly. “But I can’t run risks, even with your unconscious. I’ve seen too many companies wrecked on disloyalty.”

  “Disloyalty? Disloy—” His voice rose shrill and oddly helpless. “I’ve worked like a dog, day and night, on this—I’ve stayed here in New York for weeks on end—haven’t seen my family or home—I’ve sold you my station, because I—”

  “Because you recognized that this could make a great public figure of you, Tim, and a millionaire to boot.”

  “Sure. Yes, sure, that too. But you can’t ascribe all—”

  “I’m not ascribing. I’m just putting two and two together. And I say—” He paused. He laid down the pencil. He looked at Tim and his eyes were motionless, stripped of all warmth. Not even anger flickered in their flat, dead quiet. “And I say I cannot and will not have any associate who’s in conflict about whether his first loyalty is to his own interests or to mine. We’d better call it quits now.”

  There was anger in the other’s eyes; rage in them, in his clamped jaws, his hand clenching on the edge of the desk. Tim leaned forward; when he spoke his voice strangled with shock and fury.

  “Why, you wouldn’t dare to give me the brush-off now. Mandreth would—why, if I explained to him, he’d withdraw his whole—there’d be a stink all over the Street—”

  “Mandreth wouldn’t do one damn thing, Tim.” Crown stared at him patiently. “He’s in this now, for his own interests, not for the love of Tim. Go and try it. The papers will
be signed, anyway.”

  For one moment there was silence, as their glances held firm to each other.

  “You—you bastard,” Tim shouted. “You double-crossing bastard. You bought my station—you’ve signed a year’s contract with me—”

  “You’ll get a year’s salary. I never break a contract. I simply know I cannot and will not have an active associate—”

  “You never break a contract, don’t you! Why you—you—I sold you my station only because—”

  Jasper reached for a cigarette.

  “You sold it—you and your stockholders—because I offered you the biggest dough you and they had ever seen. I acted in perfectly good faith.”

  Timothy Grosvenor began to laugh. It was ugly. “Good faith. Oh, my God. Oh, Jesus. Good faith.”

  Jasper Crown’s face did not change.

  “And after acting in good faith,” he said deliberately, “I began very slowly to discover what you’ve been doing since”—he picked up the file of letters, riffled through them patiently, competently—“since about the first of the year. Today for the first time I checked back on my hunch. I see I was dead right. So I protect myself at once.”

  For long seconds there was bleak and dying silence between them. Then Timothy Grosvenor turned and left the room. Behind the softly, carefully closed door, Jasper shrugged. It was unpleasant. But only the network mattered. In war, only the result mattered. This was a war. A war with the companies that owned the field, a war with the ones in power.

  He lit the cigarette. There was something deeply, primitively good about spotting an enemy and having the guts to kill him.

  It was always pleasant to return to the office from a vacation, Vera Marriner was thinking, but today, her first day back after a month’s holiday, wasn’t running true to the usual lazy, talkative pattern.

  Since twelve, when she had got in, she had been shoving aside everything but the new problem Ann had handed her during the morning. She didn’t suppose there was this much rush about it, but she wanted to get it under way before she got snowed under by the daily routine.

  In a few moments now Larry Meany would be here, at her office. He was lunching uptown; he phoned to suggest coming there instead of asking her down to 120 Wall Street. He sounded very pleasant.

  She liked his face, when she saw him. He was young and blond, not yet thirty, and his topcoat was slightly shabby. She liked the sure way he shook hands, smiled. She liked the direct, frank look of surprised appraisal he gave the entire office, as though its size and obvious rank impressed him.

  “I’ve never done an affidavit,” Vee began after a moment. “Mrs. Willis said you’d ask me a lot of personal questions.”

  “Yes. They’re routine. Confidential too, except for the State Department. Nothing worse than your income-tax statement.”

  He started with the Vederles, the name, the age, the birthplace of each. Vera kept consulting Vederle’s letter to Ann. It was all there. Meany made rapid notes as she answered his questions, and she saw his pencil pause uncertainly for a moment when she told him that Christa Vederle was not born in Austria but in Budapest.

  “In 1903, Budapest was Austria-Hungary.”

  “Why, does that mean anything?” she asked.

  “No.” The slight hesitation of pencil and voice vanished. “Oh, no. She goes under the same quota as her husband. Now let’s get on to you.”

  He jotted down his rapid notes on the vital statistics she gave him.

  “That’s that,” he said. “Now—your income?”

  “The bigger it is, the better for the Vederles?”

  “Sure.”

  “Twenty thousand,” Vera said.

  “That ought to satisfy the Visa Department, all right,” he said to his notebook. “That’s salary and dividends and all income?”

  “No. Just my salary here.”

  His busy pencil stopped. He smiled.

  “Career women are wonderful,” he offered pleasantly. But it touched off an anger spot in her. “Career woman” was such a stupid, obvious badge, thrust upon any woman who worked for a living—and did well at it. Not the countless women and girls who slaved eight hours a day for twenty to thirty dollars a week—they were simply people who had to work. But let one of them do well in that same eight hours—

  “I don’t work because I’m mad about a Career,” she said quietly. “But since I don’t take alimony, I have to support myself.” The moment she said it, she was surprised that she had needed to refute him. He looked up quickly.

  “Rebuke,” he said, “if you think I need it. I didn’t mean to write an editorial about career women. I admire them—or people like you, anyway.”

  “Sure. Skip it. I’m sorry if I sounded—anything.”

  The unexpected small clash bothered him. He sat silent, thinking, then gave up his search for the right thing to say.

  “Well, anyway,” he said, “what with your salary and the Swiss francs, there won’t be any trouble on this case.”

  “Good. That’s what Mrs. Willis said.”

  “I’ll draw up the affidavits. You sign them before a notary. Then you send the original to Vienna. Dr. Vederle will take it to our Consul there.”

  “Is that all?” The simplicity of it again seemed incredible.

  “Not quite. Will you make some notes now?”

  Vera stretched out her hand to the side of the table. A concealed buzzer sounded softly, and instantly a lanky, leggy girl came in with a notebook opened and held by a rubber band.

  “You must have met by now. Miss Benson, Mr. Meany,” Vera introduced. They both nodded, with the overbriskness of embarrassment. “Benny, take down some instructions from Mr. Meany, will you?”

  Larry Meany dictated directly to the secretary.

  “Miss Marriner must get a letter from her bank, saying she’s had an account there for so many years, that it’s sizable, that they think highly of her financial responsibility.”

  “Yes.”

  “Then you have to dig out income-tax vouchers. All of them paid during 1937.”

  “Just Federal?” Vera asked.

  “Federal and state. There’ll be seven altogether—that is if you paid in installments.” Miss Benson nodded. “Four Federal and three state. Then you paste those upon a big sheet and get two sets of photostats made. Got that?”

  Miss Benson nodded again.

  “Then you send one photostat of the seven checks, the letter from the bank, the affidavit original—send all that to Dr. Vederle.”

  “Oh, thanks; that seems simple, even yet,” Vera said. She smiled at him confidently, and the secretary left the room.

  “Just a couple of things more,” Meany said. “How long have you been here?”

  “Since 1930—that’s eight years.”

  “I’ll have to be rather specific about your exact position here. Can you tell me something about what your work is?”

  In her years at Ralsey’s, Vera Marriner had developed as the store had grown. She was still responsible for the accessory departments, though each one had its own head buyer now, and she served more as head stylist or merchandise manager for the staff of buyers in the group. She planned special “promotions” of a new color or fabric or style, and often set trends by following some instinctive sense of what new fashion would appeal to most women. She was also charged with management duties as well; many matters of store policy on labor relations had become a special domain for her, because Mr. Ralsey felt that the employees liked and trusted her.

  Meany’s question was not easy to answer, but she did it as rapidly and simply as she could. This time he listened to her without showing any reaction to what she said.

  “Right, I think I get it,” he remarked when she ended. “And you’d be willing to support the Vederle family for three years. I mean, you’d be willing to sign an affidavit that you would? I’m sure it will be a nominal pledge—”

  “That’s what Mrs. Willis kept pointing out,” Vera said, her voice tinged
with heat. “Nominal? I’d really be glad to. People who could shut up and stay there—I think they must be terrific people—”

  She broke off suddenly.

  “I didn’t mean to make a speech,” she added, and looked at him, as if asking him not to smile at her naïve ardor. He wasn’t smiling. He was looking at her as if she and the office and the income and the things she had just said simply did not belong together.

  “You’re swell,” he said, and rose to go. “I’ll get this stuff ready for you, as soon as possible. They’re always worried on the other side, no matter how you hurry over here.”

  He was gone, and Vera walked to one of the windows looking over New York to the south. The sun was beginning to go down and the long, slanting light shone behind and between all the reaching, thrusting buildings. To the right, the Hudson gleamed its way to the Battery and the open sea beyond. Soon the four Vederles would be on a liner coming toward this city, this lovely, silly, mixed-up city, with its thousand devious moods and values.

  She felt like the city itself for a moment. She too had a thousand shifting moods and values, overlaid, intermeshed. But now one mood stood apart from all the others, clear and independent and unshakable. There was something good about coming to the side of a human being who was fighting evil—coming freely and voluntarily and gladly to his side and helping him to fight. It sent a warm, alive surge of happiness through you. It oriented you better to the world you lived in and would have to, before the next decade was done, fight for. Yes, there was something good in all this, something deeply and primitively good in recognizing an ally and helping him.

  Four days later, at breakfast, Vee read the morning papers with their load of nervous, crisis-laden news. Her eyes fell on a different kind of headline, and at once they lit with an odd, personal gratification.

  That very day, she read, on the twenty-fourth of March, less than a fortnight after Anschluss, invitations were going forth from President Roosevelt himself to twenty South American republics and nine European countries. The President was asking if each “would be willing to co-operate in setting up a special committee for the purpose of facilitating the emigration from Austria and presumably from Germany of political refugees.”

 

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