Destiny eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 466 pages of information about Destiny.

Destiny eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 466 pages of information about Destiny.

The visitor nodded, but no words of enthusiastic congratulation came to his tongue.  “It means,” he replied slowly, “that you hold a mightier financial power than any other business man in New York.”

“And now that you have all that,” Mary put the question slowly and gravely, “to what use will you put it?”

Hamilton bent upon her a gaze of tense visioning and his answer came in rapt eagerness:  “To build a greater structure of power than any man before me has ever reared.”

After a moment’s pause he went on:  “Edwardes, have you no word of congratulation?  It was you who first kindled my dreams into a blaze, you know.”

The visitor spoke with his eyes fixed on those of the man who had outgrown him in financial stature and become a Colossus.

“I was thinking of that,” he responded, “and I was wondering at what cost you had won this victory.”

“Conquest,” retorted Hamilton Burton shortly, “can take no thought of cost.”

“I wonder!” Edwardes spoke reflectively; then with a straightforward honesty he went on:  “It rather seems to me that once in a great while there rises in the world a marvel-man.  To such a spirit the impossible is possible and opportunity is pliant.  He may become the greatest boon or the greatest scourge of his generation.  Such a man uses or prostitutes his great gifts in just so far as he uses, or fails to use, a conscience.”

For an instant Hamilton’s cheeks flamed, then he laughed: 

“A very pretty golden rule of finance, Edwardes,” he observed quietly, “and since I suppose you feel in a way responsible for me it’s a homily you have the right to read.  Does it carry a personal implication?”

Edwardes smiled and held out his hand.  “You are the best judge of that,” he replied.  “Good-night.”

But as the door closed upon him the smile died on the guest’s lips, and a premonition of evil settled upon his mind.  No one had ever defied this man and come through unscathed.  His power held leashed lightnings that might destroy, and Edwardes had been frank to a point which might stir that wrath.  To his direct manner of thinking his answer had been unavoidable, yet to put Hamilton Burton among his enemies was a dangerous thing.  His love for Mary and the very endurance of the business which had stood so long in honor and prosperity might have to suffer for the over-frankness of his words.  For a moment before entering his car he stood on the curb and looked back at the house he had just left.

“The man is a tyrant—­and conscienceless,” he exclaimed.  “He is as destructive as a sawed-off shotgun!”

CHAPTER XVII

If Hamilton Burton had been one of the most picturesque figures in finance before, he was now a flaming meteor of public interest.  He had come out of the dark and raided the directorate of a giant corporation, gathering into his strong hands reins that the world believed to be held beyond the possibility of filching.  Moreover, this corporation was the keystone and crowning pride in the firmly cemented arch of Consolidated’s power.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Destiny from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.