登陆注册
26292300000189

第189章 Chapter LIV(1)

Those who by any pleasing courtesy of fortune, accident of birth, inheritance, or the wisdom of parents or friends, have succeeded in avoiding ****** that anathema of the prosperous and comfortable, "a mess of their lives," will scarcely understand the mood of Cowperwood, sitting rather gloomily in his cell these first days, wondering what, in spite of his great ingenuity, was to become of him. The strongest have their hours of depression. There are times when life to those endowed with the greatest intelligence--perhaps mostly to those--takes on a somber hue. They see so many phases of its dreary subtleties. It is only when the soul of man has been built up into some strange self-confidence, some curious faith in its own powers, based, no doubt, on the actual presence of these same powers subtly involved in the body, that it fronts life unflinchingly. It would be too much to say that Cowperwood's mind was of the first order. It was subtle enough in all conscience--and involved, as is common with the executively great, with a strong sense of personal advancement. It was a powerful mind, turning, like a vast searchlight, a glittering ray into many a dark corner; but it was not sufficiently disinterested to search the ultimate dark. He realized, in a way, what the great astronomers, sociologists, philosophers, chemists, physicists, and physiologists were meditating; but he could not be sure in his own mind that, whatever it was, it was important for him. No doubt life held many strange secrets. Perhaps it was essential that somebody should investigate them. However that might be, the call of his own soul was in another direction. His business was to make money--to organize something which would make him much money, or, better yet, save the organization he had begun.

But this, as he now looked upon it, was almost impossible. It had been too disarranged and complicated by unfortunate circumstances.

He might, as Steger pointed out to him, string out these bankruptcy proceedings for years, tiring out one creditor and another, but in the meantime the properties involved were being seriously damaged.

Interest charges on his unsatisfied loans were ****** heavy inroads; court costs were mounting up; and, to cap it all, he had discovered with Steger that there were a number of creditors--those who had sold out to Butler, and incidentally to Mollenhauer--who would never accept anything except the full value of their claims. His one hope now was to save what he could by compromise a little later, and to build up some sort of profitable business through Stephen Wingate. The latter was coming in a day or two, as soon as Steger had made some working arrangement for him with Warden Michael Desmas who came the second day to have a look at the new prisoner.

Desmas was a large man physically--Irish by birth, a politician by training--who had been one thing and another in Philadelphia from a policeman in his early days and a corporal in the Civil War to a ward captain under Mollenhauer. He was a canny man, tall, raw-boned, singularly muscular-looking, who for all his fifty-seven years looked as though he could give a splendid account of himself in a physical contest. His hands were large and bony, his face more square than either round or long, and his forehead high. He had a vigorous growth of short-clipped, iron-gray hair, and a bristly iron-gray mustache, very short, keen, intelligent blue-gray eyes; a florid complexion; and even-edged, savage-looking teeth, which showed the least bit in a slightly wolfish way when he smiled.

However, he was not as cruel a person as he looked to be; temperamental, to a certain extent hard, and on occasions savage, but with kindly hours also. His greatest weakness was that he was not quite mentally able to recognize that there were mental and social differences between prisoners, and that now and then one was apt to appear here who, with or without political influences, was eminently worthy of special consideration. What he could recognize was the differences pointed out to him by the politicians in special cases, such as that of Stener--not Cowperwood. However, seeing that the prison was a public institution apt to be visited at any time by lawyers, detectives, doctors, preachers, propagandists, and the public generally, and that certain rules and regulations had to be enforced (if for no other reason than to keep a moral and administrative control over his own help), it was necessary to maintain--and that even in the face of the politician--a certain amount of discipline, system, and order, and it was not possible to be too liberal with any one. There were, however, exceptional cases--men of wealth and refinement, victims of those occasional uprisings which so shocked the political leaders generally--who had to be looked after in a friendly way.

Desmas was quite aware, of course, of the history of Cowperwood and Stener. The politicians had already given him warning that Stener, because of his past services to the community, was to be treated with special consideration. Not so much was said about Cowperwood, although they did admit that his lot was rather hard.

Perhaps he might do a little something for him but at his own risk.

"Butler is down on him," Strobik said to Desmas, on one occasion.

"It's that girl of his that's at the bottom of it all. If you listened to Butler you'd feed him on bread and water, but he isn't a bad fellow. As a matter of fact, if George had had any sense Cowperwood wouldn't be where he is to-day. But the big fellows wouldn't let Stener alone. They wouldn't let him give Cowperwood any money."

Although Strobik had been one of those who, under pressure from Mollenhauer, had advised Stener not to let Cowperwood have any more money, yet here he was pointing out the folly of the victim's course. The thought of the inconsistency involved did not trouble him in the least.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 都市无敌医仙

    都市无敌医仙

    当秦萧蓦然的醒来之后,才发现整个世界都变了——沦落卑微,他要以王者的姿态重回巅峰。一双铁拳,专治各种不服。一枚银针,包治世间百病。惹我者,死!惹我女人者,纵是神也得死!待到他日桃花开,我骑青牛归来!
  • 婚然心动:前妻再嫁我一次

    婚然心动:前妻再嫁我一次

    离婚的那天,她骗他怀着孩子离开他的世界。再遇后,却因他支配人员调动,必须回国留在他的身边!只是这次留在他身边不同的是,多加了两个宝宝。一个,是她和他的孩子。还有一个,是他和别的女人的孩子……那行!她退出离开,偷偷带着私藏五年的孩子远走他乡。那一刻,他却四面楚歌包围了整座机场,“孩子都有了,老婆,我们复婚吧!”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 末世之绝色空间

    末世之绝色空间

    末世降临,陈勇得到神奇空间,于是传奇的人生就这样开始了。食物?空间里的瓜果蔬菜吃都吃不完我还会缺食物吗?实力?我是这个世界上第一个进化的人。美女?只要我把空间打开,那些美女还不哭着喊着要进来?有人说这个世界是地狱,我却说这个世界是天堂。ps1:新人新书,点击,收藏,推荐,一切都求。ps2:第一卷话柄颇多,大家将就着看吧,如果实在受不了的,就直接看第二卷吧
  • 隐藏女孩

    隐藏女孩

    女主角和男主经过一些苦难,在一起后,可万万没想到的是,女主角身份暴露,两人以仇人的身份开始...........
  • 月光小萝莉

    月光小萝莉

    “千里姻缘一线牵”说的正是红线姻缘。红线用于系夫妻两人之手足,即便是仇敌之家,贫富悬殊,丑美不等,相隔万里,最终也必成夫妻。手挽红丝,一手携杖悬婚姻簿,童颜鹤发,奔驰在非烟非雾中。NONONO你要是认为这就是月老的形象,那你就就错了。事实上她其实就是一个十一二岁的小屁孩一枚。经常顶着一副我很可爱,我很善良的样子,干的净是些坑蒙拐骗的勾当。这不,突然有一天小萝莉踢到了铁板,惨遭追杀,掉落凡间。人间的花花世界彻底激发了她多年的贪玩之心,从此就一去不复返。凭着她多年坑蒙拐骗的经验,成功发展了一个凡人下线,至此以后就步入了甩手掌柜的生活。
  • 玄牝之门赋

    玄牝之门赋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 玫瑰荆棘

    玫瑰荆棘

    即便是片刻也留恋片刻的永恒最好的花朵请让它开在最美的青春凋零在永远的片刻
  • 重生之误入豪门

    重生之误入豪门

    温暖万万没有想象到在自己的新婚之夜,林浩却像是变了一个人对自己残忍至此!一夜情仇,一世陪伴!当她怀孕的同时,迎接她的却是一张离婚协议,上一世他爱她如命,这一世却恨她如殇。转眼间他继承家业,迎娶贵族千金,郎才女貌,三年之后,就在她快要走出阴霾的时候,一场悄无声息的阴谋又再开始浮现,上一世他的话,这一世他的话到底能够相信?在他的身世背后到底隐藏着什么?那个人又是否真的是林浩……
  • 焚仙

    焚仙

    没有理由,他的兄弟背叛了他。莫名其妙,他重生了,所闻所见不再是自己的世界!一个神秘的炉鼎,一个诡异的老人,带着他成长踏入了修真界,也踏入了回去的路,在这路上,由修士的尸体铺垫,由仙人的身躯点缀!是天意使然,还是一切皆有“定数”!
  • 我爱的少年之千总,我一直都在

    我爱的少年之千总,我一直都在

    现红明星tfboys,因家族势力,竟然从小就拿到了一本红本本,且两方相亲相爱。那天,他们走了,去了重庆,组了一个组合叫TFBOYS,十几年后,她们去韩国SM组成了CherryBlossom,一起的还有她们的闺蜜,王源的妹妹——王若溪,她们却不相识。一次巧合,她们来到了重庆,他们不认识她们了,她们想起来也是因为结婚证。后来,他们想起来了,六人又过上了美满幸福的生活。(本故事纯属虚构,请勿当真,上升到真人)