The Reign of Greed eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 419 pages of information about The Reign of Greed.
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The Reign of Greed eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 419 pages of information about The Reign of Greed.

Three diamond bracelets that he had secured from Simoun on pretense of showing them to his wife were not for her, a poor native shut up in her room like a Chinese woman, but for a beautiful and charming lady, the friend of a powerful man, whose influence was needed by him in a certain deal in which he could clear some six thousand pesos.  As he did not understand feminine tastes and wished to be gallant, the Chinese had asked for the three finest bracelets the jeweler had, each priced at three to four thousand pesos.  With affected simplicity and his most caressing smile, Quiroga had begged the lady to select the one she liked best, and the lady, more simple and caressing still, had declared that she liked all three, and had kept them.

Simoun burst out into laughter.

“Ah, sir, I’m lost, I’m ruined!” cried the Chinese, slapping himself lightly with his delicate hands; but the jeweler continued his laughter.

“Ugh, bad people, surely not a real lady,” went on the Chinaman, shaking his head in disgust.  “What!  She has no decency, while me, a Chinaman, me always polite!  Ah, surely she not a real lady—­a cigarrera has more decency!”

“They’ve caught you, they’ve caught you!” exclaimed Simoun, poking him in the chest.

“And everybody’s asking for loans and never pays—­what about that?  Clerks, officials, lieutenants, soldiers—­” he checked them off on his long-nailed fingers—­“ah, Senor Simoun, I’m lost, I’m busted!”

“Get out with your complaints,” said Simoun.  “I’ve saved you from many officials that wanted money from you.  I’ve lent it to them so that they wouldn’t bother you, even when I knew that they couldn’t pay.”

“But, Senor Simoun, you lend to officials; I lend to women, sailors, everybody.”

“I bet you get your money back.”

“Me, money back?  Ah, surely you don’t understand!  When it’s lost in gambling they never pay.  Besides, you have a consul, you can force them, but I haven’t.”

Simoun became thoughtful.  “Listen, Quiroga,” he said, somewhat abstractedly, “I’ll undertake to collect what the officers and sailors owe you.  Give me their notes.”

Quiroga again fell to whining:  they had never given him any notes.

“When they come to you asking for money, send them to me.  I want to help you.”

The grateful Quiroga thanked him, but soon fell to lamenting again about the bracelets.  “A cigarrera wouldn’t be so shameless!” he repeated.

“The devil!” exclaimed Simoun, looking askance at the Chinese, as though studying him.  “Exactly when I need the money and thought that you could pay me!  But it can all be arranged, as I don’t want you to fail for such a small amount.  Come, a favor, and I’ll reduce to seven the nine thousand pesos you owe me.  You can get anything you wish through the Customs—­boxes of lamps, iron, copper, glassware, Mexican pesos—­you furnish arms to the conventos, don’t you?”

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The Reign of Greed from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.