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Titan, The
chapter XII - A New Retainer
Theodore Dreiser
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       _ Cowperwood, who had rebuffed Schryhart so courteously but firmly,
       was to learn that he who takes the sword may well perish by the
       sword. His own watchful attorney, on guard at the state capitol,
       where certificates of incorporation were issued in the city and
       village councils, in the courts and so forth, was not long in
       learning that a counter-movement of significance was under way.
       Old General Van Sickle was the first to report that something was
       in the wind in connection with the North Side company. He came
       in late one afternoon, his dusty greatcoat thrown loosely about
       his shoulders, his small, soft hat low over his shaggy eyes, and
       in response to Cowperwood's "Evening, General, what can I do for
       you?" seated himself portentously.
       "I think you'll have to prepare for real rough weather in the
       future, Captain," he remarked, addressing the financier with a
       courtesy title that he had fallen in the habit of using.
       "What's the trouble now?" asked Cowperwood.
       "No real trouble as yet, but there may be. Some one--I don't
       know who--is getting these three old companies together in one.
       There's a certificate of incorporation been applied for at Springfield
       for the United Gas and Fuel Company of Chicago, and there are some
       directors' meetings now going on at the Douglas Trust Company. I
       got this from Duniway, who seems to have friends somewhere that
       know."
       Cowperwood put the ends of his fingers together in his customary
       way and began to tap them lightly and rhythmically.
       "Let me see--the Douglas Trust Company. Mr. Simms is president
       of that. He isn't shrewd enough to organize a thing of that kind.
       Who are the incorporators?"
       The General produced a list of four names, none of them officers
       or directors of the old companies.
       "Dummies, every one," said Cowperwood, succinctly. "I think I
       know," he said, after a few moments' reflection, "who is behind
       it, General; but don't let that worry you. They can't harm us if
       they do unite. They're bound to sell out to us or buy us out
       eventually."
       Still it irritated him to think that Schryhart had succeeded in
       persuading the old companies to combine on any basis; he had meant
       to have Addison go shortly, posing as an outside party, and propose
       this very thing. Schryhart, he was sure, had acted swiftly following
       their interview. He hurried to Addison's office in the Lake
       National.
       "Have you heard the news?" exclaimed that individual, the moment
       Cowperwood appeared. "They're planning to combine. It's Schryhart.
       I was afraid of that. Simms of the Douglas Trust is going to act
       as the fiscal agent. I had the information not ten minutes
       ago."
       "So did I," replied Cowperwood, calmly. "We should have acted a
       little sooner. Still, it isn't our fault exactly. Do you know
       the terms of agreement?"
       "They're going to pool their stock on a basis of three to one,
       with about thirty per cent. of the holding company left for
       Schryhart to sell or keep, as he wants to. He guarantees the
       interest. We did that for him--drove the game right into his bag."
       "Nevertheless," replied Cowperwood, "he still has us to deal with.
       I propose now that we go into the city council and ask for a
       blanket franchise. It can be had. If we should get it, it will
       bring them to their knees. We will really be in a better position
       than they are with these smaller companies as feeders. We can
       unite with ourselves."
       "That will take considerable money, won't it?"
       "Not so much. We may never need to lay a pipe or build a plant.
       They will offer to sell out, buy, or combine before that. We can
       fix the terms. Leave it to me. You don't happen to know by
       any chance this Mr. McKenty, who has so much say in local affairs
       here--John J. McKenty?"
       Cowperwood was referring to a man who was at once gambler, rumored
       owner or controller of a series of houses of prostitution, rumored
       maker of mayors and aldermen, rumored financial backer of many
       saloons and contracting companies--in short, the patron saint of
       the political and social underworld of Chicago, and who was naturally
       to be reckoned with in matters which related to the city and state
       legislative programme.
       "I don't," said Addison; "but I can get you a letter. Why?"
       "Don't trouble to ask me that now. Get me as strong an introduction
       as you can."
       "I'll have one for you to-day some time," replied Addison,
       efficiently. "I'll send it over to you."
       Cowperwood went out while Addison speculated as to this newest
       move. Trust Cowperwood to dig a pit into which the enemy might
       fall. He marveled sometimes at the man's resourcefulness. He
       never quarreled with the directness and incisiveness of Cowperwood's
       action.
       The man, McKenty, whom Cowperwood had in mind in this rather
       disturbing hour, was as interesting and forceful an individual as
       one would care to meet anywhere, a typical figure of Chicago and
       the West at the time. He was a pleasant, smiling, bland, affable
       person, not unlike Cowperwood in magnetism and subtlety, but
       different by a degree of animal coarseness (not visible on the
       surface) which Cowperwood would scarcely have understood, and in
       a kind of temperamental pull drawing to him that vast pathetic
       life of the underworld in which his soul found its solution. There
       is a kind of nature, not artistic, not spiritual, in no way
       emotional, nor yet unduly philosophical, that is nevertheless a
       sphered content of life; not crystalline, perhaps, and yet not
       utterly dark--an agate temperament, cloudy and strange. As a
       three-year-old child McKenty had been brought from Ireland by his
       emigrant parents during a period of famine. He had been raised
       on the far South Side in a shanty which stood near a maze of
       railroad-tracks, and as a naked baby he had crawled on its earthen
       floor. His father had been promoted to a section boss after working
       for years as a day-laborer on the adjoining railroad, and John,
       junior, one of eight other children, had been sent out early to
       do many things--to be an errand-boy in a store, a messenger-boy
       for a telegraph company, an emergency sweep about a saloon, and
       finally a bartender. This last was his true beginning, for he
       was discovered by a keen-minded politician and encouraged to run
       for the state legislature and to study law. Even as a stripling
       what things had he not learned--robbery, ballot-box stuffing, the
       sale of votes, the appointive power of leaders, graft, nepotism,
       vice exploitation--all the things that go to make up (or did) the
       American world of politics and financial and social strife. There
       is a strong assumption in the upper walks of life that there is
       nothing to be learned at the bottom. If you could have looked
       into the capacious but balanced temperament of John J. McKenty you
       would have seen a strange wisdom there and stranger memories--whole
       worlds of brutalities, tendernesses, errors, immoralities suffered,
       endured, even rejoiced in--the hardy, eager life of the animal
       that has nothing but its perceptions, instincts, appetites to guide
       it. Yet the man had the air and the poise of a gentleman.
       To-day, at forty-eight, McKenty was an exceedingly important
       personage. His roomy house on the West Side, at Harrison Street
       and Ashland Avenue, was visited at sundry times by financiers,
       business men, office-holders, priests, saloon-keepers--in short,
       the whole range and gamut of active, subtle, political life. From
       McKenty they could obtain that counsel, wisdom, surety, solution
       which all of them on occasion were anxious to have, and which in
       one deft way and another--often by no more than gratitude and an
       acknowledgment of his leadership--they were willing to pay for.
       To police captains and officers whose places he occasionally saved,
       when they should justly have been discharged; to mothers whose
       erring boys or girls he took out of prison and sent home again;
       to keepers of bawdy houses whom he protected from a too harsh
       invasion of the grafting propensities of the local police; to
       politicians and saloon-keepers who were in danger of being destroyed
       by public upheavals of one kind and another, he seemed, in hours
       of stress, when his smooth, genial, almost artistic face beamed on
       them, like a heaven-sent son of light, a kind of Western god,
       all-powerful, all-merciful, perfect. On the other hand, there
       were ingrates, uncompromising or pharasaical religionists and
       reformers, plotting, scheming rivals, who found him deadly to
       contend with. There were many henchmen--runners from an almost
       imperial throne--to do his bidding. He was simple in dress and
       taste, married and (apparently) very happy, a professing though
       virtually non-practising Catholic, a suave, genial Buddha-like
       man, powerful and enigmatic.
       When Cowperwood and McKenty first met, it was on a spring evening
       at the latter's home. The windows of the large house were pleasantly
       open, though screened, and the curtains were blowing faintly in a
       light air. Along with a sense of the new green life everywhere
       came a breath of stock-yards.
       On the presentation of Addison's letter and of another, secured
       through Van Sickle from a well-known political judge, Cowperwood
       had been invited to call. On his arrival he was offered a drink,
       a cigar, introduced to Mrs. McKenty--who, lacking an organized
       social life of any kind, was always pleased to meet these celebrities
       of the upper world, if only for a moment--and shown eventually
       into the library. Mrs. McKenty, as he might have observed if he
       had had the eye for it, was plump and fifty, a sort of superannuated
       Aileen, but still showing traces of a former hardy beauty, and
       concealing pretty well the evidences that she had once been a
       prostitute. It so happened that on this particular evening McKenty
       was in a most genial frame of mind. There were no immediate
       political troubles bothering him just now. It was early in May.
       Outside the trees were budding, the sparrows and robins were voicing
       their several moods. A delicious haze was in the air, and some
       early mosquitoes were reconnoitering the screens which protected
       the windows and doors. Cowperwood, in spite of his various troubles,
       was in a complacent state of mind himself. He liked life--even
       its very difficult complications--perhaps its complications best
       of all. Nature was beautiful, tender at times, but difficulties,
       plans, plots, schemes to unravel and make smooth--these things
       were what made existence worth while.
       "Well now, Mr. Cowperwood," McKenty began, when they finally entered
       the cool, pleasant library, "what can I do for you?"
       "Well, Mr. McKenty," said Cowperwood, choosing his words and
       bringing the finest resources of his temperament into play, "it
       isn't so much, and yet it is. I want a franchise from the Chicago
       city council, and I want you to help me get it if you will. I
       know you may say to me why not go to the councilmen direct. I
       would do that, except that there are certain other elements
       --individuals--who might come to you. It won't offend you, I know,
       when I say that I have always understood that you are a sort of
       clearing-house for political troubles in Chicago."
       Mr. McKenty smiled. "That's flattering," he replied, dryly.
       "Now, I am rather new myself to Chicago," went on Cowperwood,
       softly. "I have been here only a year or two. I come from
       Philadelphia. I have been interested as a fiscal agent and an
       investor in several gas companies that have been organized in Lake
       View, Hyde Park, and elsewhere outside the city limits, as you may
       possibly have seen by the papers lately. I am not their owner,
       in the sense that I have provided all or even a good part of the
       money invested in them. I am not even their manager, except in a
       very general way. I might better be called their promoter and
       guardian; but I am that for other people and myself."
       Mr. McKenty nodded.
       "Now, Mr. McKenty, it was not very long after I started out to get
       franchises to do business in Lake View and Hyde Park before I found
       myself confronted by the interests which control the three old
       city gas companies. They were very much opposed to our entering
       the field in Cook County anywhere, as you may imagine, although
       we were not really crowding in on their field. Since then they
       have fought me with lawsuits, injunctions, and charges of bribery
       and conspiracy."
       "I know," put in Mr. McKenty. "I have heard something of it."
       "Quite so," replied Cowperwood. "Because of their opposition I
       made them an offer to combine these three companies and the three
       new ones into one, take out a new charter, and give the city a
       uniform gas service. They would not do that--largely because I
       was an outsider, I think. Since then another person, Mr.
       Schryhart"--McKenty nodded--"who has never had anything to do with
       the gas business here, has stepped in and offered to combine them.
       His plan is to do exactly what I wanted to do; only his further
       proposition is, once he has the three old companies united, to
       invade this new gas field of ours and hold us up, or force us to
       sell by obtaining rival franchises in these outlying places. There
       is talk of combining these suburbs with Chicago, as you know, which
       would allow these three down-town franchises to become mutually
       operative with our own. This makes it essential for us to do one
       of several things, as you may see--either to sell out on the best
       terms we can now, or to continue the fight at a rather heavy expense
       without making any attempt to strike back, or to get into the city
       council and ask for a franchise to do business in the down-town
       section--a general blanket franchise to sell gas in Chicago alongside
       of the old companies--with the sole intention of protecting ourselves,
       as one of my officers is fond of saying," added Cowperwood, humorously.
       McKenty smiled again. "I see," he said. "Isn't that a rather
       large order, though, Mr. Cowperwood, seeking a new franchise? Do
       you suppose the general public would agree that the city needs an
       extra gas company? It's true the old companies haven't been any
       too generous. My own gas isn't of the best." He smiled vaguely,
       prepared to listen further.
       "Now, Mr. McKenty, I know that you are a practical man," went on
       Cowperwood, ignoring this interruption, "and so am I. I am not
       coming to you with any vague story concerning my troubles and
       expecting you to be interested as a matter of sympathy. I realize
       that to go into the city council of Chicago with a legitimate
       proposition is one thing. To get it passed and approved by the
       city authorities is another. I need advice and assistance, and I
       am not begging it. If I could get a general franchise, such as I
       have described, it would be worth a very great deal of money to
       me. It would help me to close up and realize on these new companies
       which are entirely sound and needed. It would help me to prevent
       the old companies from eating me up. As a matter of fact, I must
       have such a franchise to protect my interests and give me a running
       fighting chance. Now, I know that none of us are in politics or
       finance for our health. If I could get such a franchise it would
       be worth from one-fourth to one-half of all I personally would
       make out of it, providing my plan of combining these new companies
       with the old ones should go through--say, from three to four hundred
       thousand dollars." (Here again Cowperwood was not quite frank, but
       safe.) "It is needless to say to you that I can command ample
       capital. This franchise would do that. Briefly, I want to know
       if you won't give me your political support in this matter and join
       in with me on the basis that I propose? I will make it perfectly
       clear to you beforehand who my associates are. I will put all the
       data and details on the table before you so that you can see for
       yourself how things are. If you should find at any time that I
       have misrepresented anything you are at full liberty, of course,
       to withdraw. As I said before," he concluded, "I am not a beggar.
       I am not coming here to conceal any facts or to hide anything which
       might deceive you as to the worth of all this to us. I want you
       to know the facts. I want you to give me your aid on such terms
       as you think are fair and equitable. Really the only trouble with
       me in this situation is that I am not a silk stocking. If I were
       this gas war would have been adjusted long ago. These gentlemen
       who are so willing to reorganize through Mr. Schryhart are largely
       opposed to me because I am--comparatively--a stranger in Chicago
       and not in their set. If I were"--he moved his hand slightly--"I
       don't suppose I would be here this evening asking for your favor,
       although that does not say that I am not glad to be here, or that
       I would not be glad to work with you in any way that I might.
       Circumstances simply have not thrown me across your path before."
       As he talked his eye fixed McKenty steadily, almost innocently;
       and the latter, following him clearly, felt all the while that he
       was listening to a strange, able, dark, and very forceful man.
       There was no beating about the bush here, no squeamishness of
       spirit, and yet there was subtlety--the kind McKenty liked. While
       he was amused by Cowperwood's casual reference to the silk stockings
       who were keeping him out, it appealed to him. He caught the point
       of view as well as the intention of it. Cowperwood represented a
       new and rather pleasing type of financier to him. Evidently, he
       was traveling in able company if one could believe the men who had
       introduced him so warmly. McKenty, as Cowperwood was well aware,
       had personally no interest in the old companies and also--though
       this he did not say--no particular sympathy with them. They were
       just remote financial corporations to him, paying political tribute
       on demand, expecting political favors in return. Every few weeks
       now they were in council, asking for one gas-main franchise after
       another (special privileges in certain streets), asking for better
       (more profitable) light-contracts, asking for dock privileges in
       the river, a lower tax rate, and so forth and so on. McKenty did
       not pay much attention to these things personally. He had a
       subordinate in council, a very powerful henchman by the name of
       Patrick Dowling, a meaty, vigorous Irishman and a true watch-dog
       of graft for the machine, who worked with the mayor, the city
       treasurer, the city tax receiver--in fact, all the officers of the
       current administration--and saw that such minor matters were properly
       equalized. Mr. McKenty had only met two or three of the officers
       of the South Side Gas Company, and that quite casually. He did
       not like them very well. The truth was that the old companies were
       officered by men who considered politicians of the McKenty and
       Dowling stripe as very evil men; if they paid them and did other
       such wicked things it was because they were forced to do so.
       "Well," McKenty replied, lingering his thin gold watch-chain in a
       thoughtful manner, "that's an interesting scheme you have. Of
       course the old companies wouldn't like your asking for a rival
       franchise, but once you had it they couldn't object very well,
       could they?" He smiled. Mr. McKenty spoke with no suggestion of
       a brogue. "From one point of view it might be looked upon as bad
       business, but not entirely. They would be sure to make a great
       cry, though they haven't been any too kind to the public themselves.
       But if you offered to combine with them I see no objection. It's
       certain to be as good for them in the long run as it is for you.
       This merely permits you to make a better bargain."
       "Exactly," said Cowperwood.
       "And you have the means, you tell me, to lay mains in every part
       of the city, and fight with them for business if they won't give
       in?"
       "I have the means," said Cowperwood, "or if I haven't I can get
       them."
       Mr. McKenty looked at Mr. Cowperwood very solemnly. There was a
       kind of mutual sympathy, understanding, and admiration between the
       two men, but it was still heavily veiled by self-interest. To Mr.
       McKenty Cowperwood was interesting because he was one of the few
       business men he had met who were not ponderous, pharasaical, even
       hypocritical when they were dealing with him.
       "Well, I'll tell you what I'll do, Mr. Cowperwood," he said,
       finally. "I'll take it all under consideration. Let me think it
       over until Monday, anyhow. There is more of an excuse now for the
       introduction of a general gas ordinance than there would be a
       little later--I can see that. Why don't you draw up your proposed
       franchise and let me see it? Then we might find out what some of
       the other gentlemen of the city council think."
       Cowperwood almost smiled at the word "gentlemen."
       "I have already done that," he said. "Here it is."
       McKenty took it, surprised and yet pleased at this evidence of
       business proficiency. He liked a strong manipulator of this kind
       --the more since he was not one himself, and most of those that
       he did know were thin-blooded and squeamish.
       "Let me take this," he said. "I'll see you next Monday again if
       you wish. Come Monday."
       Cowperwood got up. "I thought I'd come and talk to you direct,
       Mr. McKenty," he said, "and now I'm glad that I did. You will
       find, if you will take the trouble to look into this matter, that
       it is just as I represent it. There is a very great deal of money
       here in one way and another, though it will take some little time
       to work it out."
       Mr. McKenty saw the point. "Yes," he said, sweetly, "to be sure."
       They looked into each other's eyes as they shook hands.
       "I'm not sure but you haven't hit upon a very good idea here,"
       concluded McKenty, sympathetically. "A very good idea, indeed.
       Come and see me again next Monday, or about that time, and I'll
       let you know what I think. Come any time you have anything else
       you want of me. I'll always be glad to see you. It's a fine
       night, isn't it?" he added, looking out as they neared the door.
       "A nice moon that!" he added. A sickle moon was in the sky. "Good
       night." _
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本书目录

Chapter I - The New City
chapter II - A Reconnoiter
chapter III - A Chicago Evening
chapter IV - Peter Laughlin & Co-
chapter V - Concerning A Wife And Family
chapter VI - The New Queen of the Home
chapter VII - Chicago Gas
chapter VIII - Now This is Fighting
chapter IX - In Search of Victory
chapter X - A Test
chapter XI - The Fruits of Daring
chapter XII - A New Retainer
chapter XIII - The Die is Cast
chapter XIV - Undercurrents
chapter XV - A New Affection
chapter XVI - A Fateful Interlude
chapter XVII - An Overture to Conflict
chapter XVIII - The Clash
chapter XIX - "Hell Hath No Fury--"
chapter XX - "Man and Superman"
chapter XXI - A Matter of Tunnels
chapter XXII - Street-railways at Last
chapter XXIII - The Power of the Press
chapter XXIV - The Coming of Stephanie Platow
chapter XXV - Airs from the Orient
chapter XXVI - Love and War
chapter XXVII - A Financier Bewitched
chapter XXVIII - The Exposure of Stephanie
chapter XXIX - A Family Quarrel
chapter XXX - Obstacles
chapter XXXI - Untoward Disclosures
chapter XXXII - A Supper Party
chapter XXXIII - Mr. Lynde to the Rescue
chapter XXXIV - Enter Hosmer
chapter XXXV - A Political Agreement
chapter XXXVI - An Election Draws Near
chapter XXXVII - Aileen's Revenge
chapter XXXVIII - An Hour of Defeat
chapter XXXIX - The New Administration
chapter XL - A Trip to Louisville
chapter XLI - The Daughter of Mrs Fleming Berenice
chapter XLII - F. A. Cowperwood, Guardian
chapter XLIII - The Planet Mars
chapter XLIV - A Franchise Obtained
chapter XLV - Changing Horizons
chapter XLVI - Depths and Heights
chapter XLVII - American Match
chapter XLVIII - Panicr
chapter XLIX - Mount Olympus
chapter L - A New York Mansion
chapter LI - The Revival of Hattie Starr
chapter LII - Behind the Arras
chapter LIII - A Declaration of Love
chapter LIV - Wanted--Fifty-year Franchises
chapter LV - Cowperwood and the Governor
chapter LVI - The Ordeal of Berenice
chapter LVII - Aileen's Last Card
chapter LVIII - A Marauder
chapter LIX - Capital and Public Rights
chapter LX - The Net
chapter LXI - The Cataclysm
chapter LXII - The Recompense