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The secretive financier and Press baron Warren Rand is working to bring about Global Peace and Disarmament, against the plotting of England, France, Germany, and Russia. The story expands to include the chief characters in Rands life: his security chief a British officer Tellesom who falls in love with Rand’s estranged daughter, the financier John Glynde and a large cast of evil Russian and German spies. His machinations of the gold market and international sabotage bring the major players to the table. The book shows the interesting attitudes of Europeans towards America, the failure of the Revolution in Russia, the plotting of Germany for a second war and how millionaire corners the gold market and tries bribing the most powerful nations to maintain peace for forty years.
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Contents
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
CHAPTER XVI
CHAPTER XVII
CHAPTER XVIII
CHAPTER XIX
CHAPTER XX
CHAPTER XXI
CHAPTER XXII
CHAPTER XXIII
CHAPTER XXIV
CHAPTER XXV
CHAPTER XXVI
CHAPTER XXVII
CHAPTER XXVIII
CHAPTER XXIX
CHAPTER XXX
CHAPTER XXXI
CHAPTER XXXII
CHAPTER XXXIII
CHAPTER XXXIV
CHAPTER XXXV
CHAPTER XXXVI
CHAPTER XXXVII
CHAPTER I
The two men–Warren Rand, the human riddle of two hemispheres, and John Glynde, his scarcely less famous secretary–leaned across the green baize-covered table until their heads almost met. They both wore the new headpieces and receivers designed to lessen the roar of the great engine which drove the plane. The sheet of paper in front of the latter was covered with figures and calculations, which he had apparently just brought to an end. He thrust a drawing pin through it for security and steadied himself by gripping at the side of the table as the powerful machine ploughed its way through an unexpected air pocket. He peered steadily into his companion’s face, and, notwithstanding his own insignificant appearance and thin, reedy voice, there was something curiously impressive in his solemnly spoken words.
“You are the richest man in the world, Warren Rand,” he announced.
“I always expected to be,” was the cool reply. “The only question is whether I am rich enough for my purpose.”
“With your holdings of newspapers, you practically control the Press of the world,” John Glynde continued. Warren Rand, the man with the roughly hewn, brooding face of an intellectual satyr, frowned gloomily.
“Not yet,” he grunted. “You don’t know as much about newspapers, John, as you do about money. That will come, though–it must come.”
“What do you expect to get out of it all?” the smaller man asked curiously, taking off his thin, gold-rimmed spectacles and wiping them with meticulous care. “So far, you don’t seem to get as much from life as other men. You are probably the most hated individual in the world. Every one with whom you permit yourself to exchange a word fawns upon you, and no one tells you the truth if they can help it. You haven’t a single friend, it costs us a small fortune every year to save you from being assassinated. Where does your pull come?”
Warren Rand made no immediate reply, but steadying himself carefully, leaned back in his chair. Obliquely through the window, he could see in front a dull, red haze, which might have been the rolling torrent of some huge conflagration. The glow of it mounted upwards, gaining in clarity and substance at every moment. Opposite to him, John Glynde gathered his papers together with the mechanical exactitude of a trained man of affairs.
“Power!” the latter muttered, half soliloquising, half addressing his vis-a-vis. “What’s the use of that except to pander to your vanity, to breed hate? Which of your senses can you gratify by knowing that you could drive your crowbar into the flywheel of the world if it pleased you? What’s it all about, Warren Rand–the urge and the sweat, and the clamorous strain of it all?”
Warren Rand turned away from the window and looked at his secretary. The latter, diminutive alike in physique and features, met his employer’s fierce but passive scrutiny without flinching. He was a man of insignificant appearance, with flaxen hair streaked with grey, shrewd eyes rather deeply set, a negligible chin, and a mouth whose lips were generally a little thrust outwards.
“I wonder,” Warren Rand speculated, “whether any employer in the world ever permitted himself the luxury of such a secretary as you?”
John Glynde ignored the satire and elected to take the question seriously.
“Not many men could afford one,” he observed. “You are paying me a hundred thousand dollars a year, at which price I am extraordinarily cheap. If you had left me alone where I was, I should have been president of my bank before now, chairman of the Country Club, and commodore of the West Bay Sailing Club. Instead of serving a corporation, I chose to serve you. You may dispute it as often as you like, but the task I set myself out to accomplish I have accomplished. I have put you in the most dangerous position any human being could occupy. You are the richest man in the world.”
The mighty machine throbbed and rushed onwards into the darkness–onward toward the wall of misty fire. Once again they were caught in an air pocket, and the whole structure shook with convulsions, whilst it seemed that the mahogany panels of the saloon were being torn asunder. Filmy wisps of the cloud through which they mounted stole mysteriously into the interior. They were enveloped in it as though in a fog.
“I made only one condition when I gave up my own career to boost yours,” John Glynde continued. “You know what it was. I insisted that when the time came for me to ask you the question, towards what goal we were driving, what was behind all this huge, dynamic force, you should answer me as man to man. Already you can neither use your money nor wield your power; yet the piston rods are still beating.”
“Wait for a few more months before you ask your question,” the other demanded. “All that I can tell you at this moment is that we are not beating the air. The organisation which you have helped me to build up has its purpose and its future. Both will be clear enough to you when the time comes to strike the first blow.”
The door of the saloon was suddenly opened and closed. A young man entered with a despatch.
“In Number Three code, sir, from London,” he announced.
Warren Rand waved it towards his companion, who opened a despatch box by his side and drew out a long, Morocco-bound volume. In something under a minute, he wrote out a transcription of the message in a clear, clerkly hand and passed it across the table:
Our agent, occupying responsible position in premier London newspaper, Daily Sun, reports editorial by Harold Nickols now going into type disapproving transference Disarmament Conference to Geneva and adopting hostile tone towards discussion of Peace Pact stop article further supports reception of Postinoff and Vitznow if discussions prove of practical value.
Warren Rand waved the messenger away. He pointed to a small locked ledger which lay upon the table.
“This man Harold Nickols?”
“I can tell you from memory,” Glynde replied. “Fifty-three years old, club man, widower, opinionated, inaccessible.”
His Chief glanced at his watch.
“What time shall we be in Croydon?” he enquired of an official who was passing through.
“Half-past-seven, sir,” the latter answered. “Barely twenty minutes, that is.”
Warren Rand gazed for a moment or two thoughtfully at the great carpet of lights which seemed moving upwards. Then he drew a cigar from his pocket and, regardless of the strenuous rules of every airship line in the world, lit it. His action was arbitrary, but usual. The plane was his; the two pilots, the mechanics, and very much John Glynde were the bondsmen of his will.
CHAPTER II
Shop was very seldom talked at the Sheridan Club, but on the evening when Warren Rand’s great plane sloped downwards from the clouds and left him at Croydon, Harold Nickols, who was dining there with three or four of his intimate friends and associates, departed from the usual custom. Over his second glass of port he leaned forward in his chair at the end of the table–a place which he usually occupied by reason of his constant attendance and seniority–and addressed his friend Andrews, the editor of a famous monthly.
“So the Sphinx of New York is on his way over, I hear,” he remarked. “Coming to set Europe right about something or other, I suppose.”
“Who is the Sphinx of New York?” Herbert Dring, the playwright, enquired, moving from a lower place at the table into the charmed circle.
“Who is he? What is he driving at? How have we deserved him?” Harold Nickols rejoined. “There are a hundred questions one could ask about Warren Rand–which is his name in real life, if you want to know it.”
“To begin with, then,“Dring continued, “why ‘Sphinx’?”
“Well, I’ll tell you,” Nickols went on. “He is one of the richest men in the world. He owns more newspaper interests than any one else. He could do almost more mischief than any other breathing man, and yet I’ll wager there isn’t a soul in this room who’s ever seen his photograph or could tell you what he looks like. Why, you don’t even read about him! He seems to use his tremendous Press influence to avoid publicity instead of courting it.”
“That sounds like the Sphinx, all right,” Dring agreed. “What’s the idea of all this super-modesty? I never associated it with the giants of your profession.”
“You are without the powers of observation, my dear Herbert.”
“Which is why you write such damned good plays,” the man on Harold Nickol’s right remarked.
“What’s he coming to Europe for?” one of the others queried.
“No idea,” Nickols confessed carelessly. “He owns some shares in our show, but I’ve never seen him in my life and don’t expect to this time. He launches his thunderbolts from the clouds or sends up his poison gases from the caverns of the world. No one ever sees him. He never attends any public meeting, never signs an article, never allows his movements to be chronicled. The compositor who sets up in type the name of ‘Warren Rand’ knows about it afterwards, I can promise you, or rather his employers do.”
“How does he manage all that?” Dring persisted.
“He controls more newspapers than you’ve ever written plays,” Harold Nickols explained. “He travels with a staff who go about bullying the world. That sort of thing’s all very well in America, where multi-millionaires rule the roost. but even over here there’s scarcely a paper issued that doesn’t somehow or other understand his wishes and which isn’t damned sorry for it afterwards if they don’t respect them. The man’s a sphinx, all right. He’s after something in life, and something definite, but there’s no one I know of who’s been clever enough yet to find out what it is.”
“Sounds interesting. Any chance of meeting the fellow?”
“Not the slightest,” was the uncompromising reply.
“What about sending him a card for the Club?”
“His secretary would throw it into the waste-paper basket. I don’t believe he’s ever crossed the threshold of a club in his life.”
“Rather an inhuman person,” Dring observed, dealing lightly with the port.
“He is inhuman,” Nickols agreed–“to judge by his actions, that is to say. No one knows anything about him personally. We used to call that fellow who lived down in Monte Carlo ‘The Mystery Man of Finance and Politics.’ Warren Rand is the ‘Mystery Man’ of our profession.”
“And you mean to say,” Andrews demanded, leaning across the table, “that, although he owns a share of the Sun, you have never met him and aren’t likely to meet him?”
“Perfectly certain I sha’n’t. If, at any time, he has anything to say to me, it will come through a third person. I don’t suppose Harrison himself will see him. He’ll sit behind those great windows of his enormous flat over the offices in Kingsway, which Teddy Gage called the ‘Spider Eyes of London,’ and he’ll just look out, and what he wants to see he’ll see, and what he wants to do he’ll do, curse the fellow! I always hate talking about him. Think I must have a complex that way. What about a rubber of bridge?”
The little party broke up and, after a brief delay at the cashier’s desk, they made scattered procession for the card room. The porter, however, detained Nickols in the hall.
“There’s a gentleman enquiring for you, sir,” he announced.
“A gentleman? Who is he? What name?” Nickols asked, pausing to light a cigar.
“He wouldn’t give his name, sir–said he wouldn’t detain you more than a minute. He’s in the strangers’ room.”
“Sha’n’t be long, you fellows. Cut me in,” Nickols enjoined, swinging round to the right. “I must just see who this chap is and what he wants. Some one from the office, I suppose, only I should have thought they would have telephoned.”
He opened the door of the strangers’ room and found, to his surprise, that the apartment was almost in darkness. A man was standing by the electric switches, dimly visible in the light from the single lamp left burning. Nevertheless, from the first moment, Nickols felt that there was something sinister in the solid, motionless figure with which he was confronted. He leaned forward to get a better view of the stranger’s features. Without further light, however, this was impossible.
“I was told you wished to speak to me,” he began. “My name is Harold Nickols. Who are you and what do you want? Do you mind turning on another light?” The stranger ignored the request.
“I want you,” he said, “to go back at once to the offices of your newspaper and substitute some other editorial, on whatever subject you choose, in place of the leader you have written for to-morrow’s issue.”
Nickols was for a moment dumbfounded. The colossal impertinence of the unknown visitor’s request, and the crisp, unhesitating speech, nearly took his breath away. Besides, so far as he knew, no one’s eyes save his own and the proof reader’s had even glanced at his production.
“Who the devil are you and what do you know about anything I have written?” he demanded, advancing a little farther into the room. “Turn that light up and let’s have a look at you.”
“The lights will do very well as they are,” was the impatient response. “My name is Warren Rand, and however impossible you may think it, I have seen a proof of your article on the situation in Geneva, advocating the reception of those murderous swine Postinoff and Vitznow. That article must not appear in the Sun.”
In later days, when men discussed the real greatness of Warren Rand, there were critics who, amongst other so-called weaknesses, found fault with his lack of tact. There were others who argued that this was a deliberately acquired gesture, a proof of the man’s real genius; that he struck at the root of all vital matters, regardless of his victim’s feelings or prejudices, and that, by this method, he achieved success more quickly. Certainly, in the present instance, he shortened discussion by bringing matters to a crisis. Harold Nickols had Irish blood in his veins and he lost his temper completely and irrevocably.
“I don’t care whether you’re God Almighty,” he shouted. “You’re not going to interfere with the Sun so long as I’m editor. My leader is in type by this time and by five o’clock a hundred thousand copies of the newspaper will be on their way north.”
“That is your considered reply to my injunction then?” Warren Rand asked coldly.
“That is my considered and my only reply,” was the swift retort. “You may be the greatest newspaper man in the world, Warren Rand, on your side of the ocean, but you don’t own the Sun yet.”
The room was suddenly in complete darkness.
“What the devil are you meddling with those switches for?” Harold Nickols exclaimed angrily.
There was no reply. The somewhat squat, yet not undignified figure of this unexpected visitor was already near the door. Nickols stumbled across to the switches and flooded the room with light. The place was empty. He stepped quickly out into the hall.
“What’s become of that gentleman who came to see me and who was here a minute ago?” he asked the hall porter.
The man looked up from his desk in surprise.
“The gentleman has just driven off in a motor car, sir.”
Harold Nickols stood at the top of the steps, indulging in a few moments of brief but confused reflection. He could scarcely realise that he had actually been in conversation with the man who had been the subject of their discussion at dinner time–the Sphinx of New York. Perhaps he ought to have been a little more tactful. The man had irritated him, though, with his melodramatic desire for obscurity and his absurd request. He turned away and relit his cigar. Some curious impulse prompted him, when he reached the card room, to keep this visitation to himself. The whole episode, he decided, had better pass out of his mind as a thing that had never happened. Nevertheless, although a careful player, he revoked twice in the first rubber he played.
As the hours wore on, Harold Nickols became more and more oppressed with the consciousness that there was something wrong about the atmosphere of the Club that night. He failed entirely to concentrate upon his bridge. His whisky and soda tasted flat. The friendly chaff of his pals lacked savour. He left earlier than usual, and instead of taking a taxi at once to his modest little home in Ebury Street, he strolled down the Strand and turned eastward. In about ten minutes he reached a fine stone building, from the roof of which a great sky sign announced in the best Broadway manner the morning rising of the Sun. He was not, under ordinary circumstances, an emotional man, but his heart beat a little faster as he listened to the roar of the machinery. Lights flared from nearly every window. The shutters in front of the low plate-glass windows were purposely lifted to display to the passer-by a section of the marvellous plant–great wheels roaring their way through space; iron arms reaching out in every direction; news, the happenings of the world, flung on to that endless roll of virgin paper, happenings from the far corners of the universe, the written and spoken thoughts of men in their studies, advice to the world, deliberate, profound advice. He thought of those suites of private rooms upstairs, each presided over by a master in his own line of thought, men whose names were household words, giving of their best to their fellow citizens. His own–as he honestly believed–inspired message, which had taken him many hours to clothe in living, vital words, proclaiming to the world the studied and deliberate policy of a great newspaper, lingered still in his memory. To-morrow, the whole world would know what the Sun thought of this tangled and over-elaborate scheme of bringing peace into a world where there was no peace.
He crossed the road and looked with a great pride at the immense building. There were lights burning in most of the editors’ offices. His sub, whose duty it was to see the paper through, would be there until daybreak. He felt a curious disinclination to cross the portals, but he could see it all, the panting energy, the pulsating waves of thought and mental vigour, driving into concrete form all that his brain had brought together–his brain and the brain of others. Then, in those sensitive moments, he seemed suddenly to realise what had brought him here, the nature of that vague disquietude that had haunted him all the evening. There was a traitor in that organisation somewhere if Warren Rand spoke the truth, and, curiously enough, he never disbelieved him for a single moment. He thought over the names of his immediate assistants one by one. To steal and disclose the policy of a great newspaper at this time of momentous crisis was akin to the theft of a secret treaty or the suborning of an ambassador in the diplomatic world. This thing had happened. Warren Rand knew twelve hours before any human being should have known the jealously guarded secret of his editorial room. With his hands thrust deep into his overcoat pockets he gazed almost savagely up at the flaming windows. It was as though a great, defacing fissure had sprung like a streak of lightning from basement to attic of that magnificent edifice, tearing its way through brick and masonry, leaving a hideous scar. He even fancied that the music of the machinery was failing, that there was something lacking in its solemn and portentous rhythm… .
A man passed him and turned round in the act of entering the building. He was one of the night reporters on his way back from a profitless commission.
“Anything I can do for you, Mr. Nickols?” he asked, a little curiously.
The editor came down to earth with an effort.
“Nothing at all, thank you, Jackson,” he answered. “I just paused to have a look at the old shop from outside. Great show, isn’t it?”
“Marvellous, sir,” the man assented. “Sure there’s nothing I can do for you?”
“Nothing whatever, thanks,” Nickols replied. “I was just hanging around for a taxi. Here it comes. Good night!”
“A lot of talk in the Press Club, sir,” the young man confided, as he hailed the vehicle, “as to what your pronouncement about Geneva will be in the Sun to-morrow morning.”
Nickols smiled as he stepped into the taxi.
“And a lot of abuse waiting for me when they know, I expect… . Good night!”
“Where shall I tell the driver, sir?”
Nickols hesitated. If he went back to the Club, he was in the humour to drink.
“I’m for an early night,” he decided. “Number seven, Ebury Street.”
The reporter transmitted the address, slammed the door, and went off. Harold Nickols was driven away westward, with the thunder and storm of his disquieting evening still hanging over him like a cloud of depression.
CHAPTER III
Harold Nickols, in the very comfortable bedroom of his flat in Ebury Street, permitted himself the not unusual luxury of a telephone by his side. He had just dropped off to sleep for the first time, at about a quarter past three, when the bell rang. He sat up with a shock. His movement towards the receiver was purely mechanical.
“Hullo,” he exclaimed, “who’s that?”
“Is that Mr. Nickols speaking?” a familiar voice asked.
“Yes, this is Nickols,” was the startled reply, for, sleepy though he was, he had already recognised the voice of his sub. “What’s wrong, Scriven?”
“I can’t exactly tell you, sir,” was the cautious answer. “I am telephoning from the basement. I think you had better come down, though, as quick as you can… . Yes. Do you hear me, sir? … Come down?”
“What, to the offices?” Nickols demanded.
“Yes, sir. There’s something queer going on. You ought to be here. I’ve sent a taxi. It will be outside your door by the time you’ve got into some clothes. I’d rather not answer any questions over the ‘phone. I’m a little confused myself.”
Harold Nickols sprang out of bed, dressed with amazing swiftness, made one or two ineffectual passes with the brush at his tousled hair, dashed some cold water into his eyes, stuffed his pipe and tobacco pouch into his pocket, and let himself down by the small, automatic lift. There was a queer, ghostly darkness about the place and about the street outside, but even as he opened the front door, a taxicab, with brightly burning lights, came round the corner. The driver pulled up and touched his hat.
“Are you the gentleman I was told to fetch, sir?” he enquired. “I come from the Sun office in Fleet Street.”
“That’s right,” Nickols acknowledged. “Nothing wrong there, I hope–no fire, or anything?”
“Nothing that I could see, sir. Seemed to be a good many people going in and out for this time of the morning. That was all I noticed.”
“Get there as quickly as you can then,” Nickols enjoined.
They drove swiftly off through the half-empty streets. Something wrong at the office! He knew now, as though by inspiration, whence had come his fit of depression. He saw one face, and one face only, as he sped on his way –the face of the man who had stood in the purposely darkened room only an hour or so ago. He realised in those few minutes the source of all the uneasiness of the evening, the restlessness which had driven him into the streets. He was afraid–afraid as many others had been before him–of that strange, portentous figure of a man, afraid because he had crossed his will, afraid of what retaliation he might be planning. He filled his pipe and smoked savagely, until he was obliged to let the windows down to get rid of the smoke. What could this sphinx of the great world, what could God or the devil do, to throw out of gear at a second’s notice the immense energy of the world’s greatest newspaper? In time–yes, he might work mischief in time–but in those few hours what was there that was possible? Then he suddenly remembered that this man whom he dreaded must have spies inside the place. Perhaps they had throttled the machinery. What was the use of that? Warren Rand might be a terrible man to deal with, but human effort must have its limitations. He, Harold Nickols, had absolute and unquestioned power at the Sun buildings. At a word from him, all would be well again… .
Everything seemed normal as they turned the corner of the street, except that there was a little more commotion than usual about the entrance to the building. Then, during that last hundred yards, came a hideous shock.
A strange impression of unaccustomed silence thrust its sinister way into Nickols’ consciousness. He leaned halfway out of the window, listening with strained senses. It was a startling realisation, but an undeniable one: there was silence in the street I The mighty machinery, which should have been flinging out in its thousands copies of London’s great newspaper, was motionless. A fury seized upon the man. He sprang from the taxi before it had reached the pavement, sprinted into the marble hall, and ran up the stairs. People whom he met gave way to him. There were one or two little exclamations; one person tried to stop ‘him. He went straight on. His private office was on the first floor «and in a room leading from that Scriven, his sub-editor, would be at work. He flung open the door of his private entrance and stared in, amazed. Everything was incredible. The world was upside down. His own particular chair, behind his own much-photographed table, was occupied, and occupied by the man who had paid him that strange visit at the Sheridan Club an hour or so before. By his side sat a small person with flaxen grey hair, insignificant features and snub nose– a stranger to him. In an easy-chair, wan and scared, and showing signs of having been dragged from his bed, was Gervoise Harrison, the proprietor of the paper. Seated at the next desk, sometimes used by his secretary, were two men of professional appearance, also strangers. There was a tense atmosphere about the place, but a sense also of action. Harold Nickols looked around him with amazed apprehension. His hair seemed to be more tousled than ever. There was a wicked light in his eye. When at lase t he found words, it seemed to him that his voice, which hi. » controlled with difficulty, was reedy. It left every one unimpressed.
“What the hell’s the meaning of this?” he demanded. “What are you all doing in my room? What’s happened to the machinery?”
Warren Rand looked across at him–a level, direct stare.
“Nickols,” he said, “you had your chance a few hours ago. You refused to take it. You are no longer editor of the paper. You no longer have a position here. The lawyers in charge will decide as to the compensation to which you are entitled. You will receive that–nothing else. Get out, please. We are busy.”
“What the hell have you got to do with it?” Nickols cried fiercely.
“I am the owner of the Sun newspaper, as I should have thought you would have gathered by this time,” Warren Rand announced. “I exercised an option which I have held for some time, at five minutes before midnight.”
There came upon Harold Nickols a terrible premonition. The old simile of the Sphinx flashed into his mind. He felt that he was listening to a man who seldom spoke, but who spoke nothing but the truth. He looked
helplessly across towards Harrison and read his doom. “Warren Rand is quite right,” the latter admitted, “although of course I never expected anything of this sort. I sold him an option on the whole of my shares months ago, after the last slump on the Stock Exchange.”
Harold Nickols was dazed. One of the two strangers stood up. He was so obviously a man of law that he had no need to introduce himself.
“Perhaps a word from me might save time,” he suggested. “I am one of the attorneys who look after Mr. Rand’s affairs. What he has just said is perfectly true. He has owned for more than a year fifty per cent of the shares in the Sun Newspaper Trust. Lately, he has purchased from Mr. Gervoise Harrison here an option on the remaining shares, and he paid a specially high price on the understanding that the shares should be transferred, and his control established, at any time he chose, with half an hour’s notice. On arriving in England this evening, my client seems to have become aware of the fact that an editorial was being issued from this paper to-morrow morning with regard to the present Geneva Conference which was diametrically opposed to his own views. He therefore put into force his option, and the Sun newspaper belongs no longer to a company but to one man, my client.”
“And,” Warren Rand remarked, in expressionless voice and without the slightest sign of any interest in the discussion, “the editorial which I have written myself, and which is now being put into type will outline the policy of the Sun on this and all future occasions.”
A singular clarity of mind seemed to come to Harold Nickols. There was something behind, a raging storm driving the heart’s blood through his veins, playing strange tricks with his swelling muscles. For those few minutes, however, the mind triumphed. He saw the path Warren Rand was treading, the grim inevitability of the man’s progress. He kept back the other things. He spoke distinctly and without haste.
“So the Sun,” he said, “is to be added to the chain of Warren Rand’s peace-prating newspapers.”
“It is already added,” was the grim amendment. “By to-morrow morning the million of your readers will have had the boundary of their mental horizon rolled back. They will see the things which lie beyond as the whole world will see them, when you and I are dead and gone, Harold Nickols. You are one of those who have cumbered the way. That is why it is my will to sweep you and your type of thinker into the dust heap. In your blatant jingoism you would make a term of opprobrium of the greatest word in the Saxon vocabulary. You are right. The Sun has joined the chain of my pacifist papers, and however loudly you may blow your little tin trumpets in other quarters and preach the prehistoric doctrine of force as the final appeal between differing men, the things I have written and the doctrine I preach will live in the days when the Punch-and-Judy show remains the sole theatre for your antics.”
Nickols had the air of listening to every word and weighing it carefully. His brow was furrowed, his tousled hair seemed rougher than ever. Those thick lips of his protruded. The eyes behind his spectacles were half closed.
“Does this great message of yours to the readers of the Sun, Warren Rand,” he asked, “tell them how you propose to bring together into common accord all those heterogeneous atoms of humanity of which the Conference is composed?”
“The expenditure of one small copper coin will enable you to answer that question for yourself in a few hours’ time,” was the icy retort.
Harold Nickols ignored the sarcastic reply. The passion in his voice grew thicker.
“Does it tell them,” he demanded, “how you propose to prevent war, how you can justify yourself in encouraging them to believe that you, or any other person, is capable of building a new world, and filling it with a race of human beings devoid of passion, devoid of martial instinct, devoid of every natural competitive impulse? Does your leader tell them that?”
“It avoids all artificial rhetoric,” Warren Rand declared. “Common sense–basic common sense–is all that is necessary to impress upon mankind the truth. You and your fellows, Harold Nickols, are my enemies, and the enemies of the great change which I am seeking to bring into the world. Crow yourselves hoarse on your dung hills if you like. You will fail and I will win.” There was a curious change in the atmosphere of the room. Every one seemed to be aware of a growing tension. Suddenly they realised what it was. The soft hum of the machinery from below had recommenced. The sound swelled, gained depth and volume, until that unholy silence existed no longer. The heart of the great building was beating once again. The increasing roar seemed to madden Nickols. Warren Rand listened, and the faint parting of his lips at any rate resembled a smile.
“You hear, Nickols,” he said. “There goes the tearing to pieces of all your false jingoism. We’re letting the light in. We are preaching the new doctrine.”
“Are you preaching it for your own country, or are you trying to shove it down our throats?” Nickols demanded savagely.
“I have no country,” was the cold reply, “nor any nationality, except for my passport. Get rid of the idea of boundaries and frontiers, Nickols. Tear your atlas into pieces if you ever want to think like a free man.”
The storm burst, when it came, without warning. A fire of fierce hatred blazed up in the dispossessed man. The thought that every turn of the mighty wheels below was hammering into type these alien views on his beloved pages, worked like madness in his brain. He sprang forward and literally flung himself across the desk. A figure who had been sitting in the shadows, having the air of a guardian over Warren Rand, leaped to his feet, and the lights above glittered upon the automatic grasped in his hand. Every one shrunk back, expecting the roar and the flash. A different thing happened, however. Nickols’ spring seemed to have brought him into contact with no human being, to have met instead the dynamic force of a piston rod. Warren Rand never left his seat. His long arm shot out in front of him, and Nickols came no nearer to his enemy than the end of the fist crashing into his jaw. He swayed for a moment and crumpled up on the floor. There was a little murmur among the bystanders. Gervoise Harrison staggered to his feet. One of the lawyers poured out a glass of water from the table in front of him and approached the prostrate figure, over which the young man with the automatic in his hand was already bending. Warren Rand looked coolly over the edge of the desk. Harold Nickols heard no longer the thunder of the machinery which had maddened him.
CHAPTER IV
It was very seldom that Mr. John Glynde smiled. When he did, it was usually in connection with some twist in the affairs of his patron- reflecting, if only indirectly, upon himself. There was, however, what seemed to be almost an imbecile grin on his face late in the afternoon of the next day, when he ushered a young lady into Warren Rand’s somewhat unique reception room, situated on the top floor of Kingsway Buildings.
“This is Miss Stanley Erdish,” he announced. “You sent for her to see you at four o’clock.”
Warren Rand pushed his easy-chair away from the window out of which he had been gazing, and swung around. He frowned at the slim, very attractive-looking young woman who was making her way composedly across the room towards him, and he remained seated in his easychair, with the stump of an extinct cigar between his fingers.
“I don’t want to see Miss Stanley Erdish,” he said. “I want to see her father, or her brother, or whoever it is.”
She smiled at him disarmingly.
“You don’t,” she assured him. “You want to see me.”
He looked her up and down. She would have found favour in the sight of most men, for her hair and eyes were of a pleasant shade of brown, her complexion of a creamy pallor, which made cosmetics seem a futile aid to beauty, and her mouth had that pleasant curve which in a man means humour and in a woman tenderness. She apparently failed, however, to please Warren Rand. He threw his cigar end into the fireplace, but he still remained seated, and his tone was morose.
“I don’t do business with women,” he said harshly. “My secretary here knows that well enough. I’m afraid he’s only wasted your time bringing you up.”
“The trouble of it is,” Glynde pointed out apologetically, “that we have been doing business with a woman without knowing it. This undoubtedly is the ‘Stanley Erdish’ who has been our publicity agent in this country for over six months, and who obtained the post, if you remember, by very pertinent letters, and kept it through excellent service.”
“Nice little man,” the girl murmured. “It’s the truth too.”
“My God!” Warren Rand groaned. “So my affairs have been in the hands of a woman all this time! I wish I had read the correspondence myself.”
“I’d like you to know that it wouldn’t have made any difference,” Glynde assured him. “I was completely deceived, and I am more acute in such matters of detail than you are.”
“You flatter yourself,” Warren Rand rejoined. “I can smell a woman out from the first three words in her letter. She’s humbugged you, Glynde. Why don’t you sit down, young lady? Now that you’re here, I expect that I shall have to talk to you.”
“I was waiting,” she replied, smiling sweetly, “to see if you stood up.”
Something happened to the muscles of Warren Rand’s face, but it would have taken a very clever physiognomist to have decided whether or not it was a smile.
“No need to tire yourself out waiting for manners from me,” he warned her bluntly. “I haven’t got any. Besides, women have knocked all that sort of thing on the head by insisting upon the equality of the sexes. I wouldn’t have employed you for a thousand pounds if I’d known you were a woman–especially a young and apparently a good-looking one–but since you’ve tumbled into the thing, you’ve done your work well. I sent for you to tell you so, and to give you instructions for the next few months. As it is, you had better give Miss Stanley Erdish a cheque for what we owe her, Glynde, and wish her good afternoon.”
“Does that mean that my engagement is ended?” the young woman asked.
“That’s just what it does mean,” was the curt reply. “My scheme of life doesn’t include employing women in confidential positions.”
“What a pity you didn’t know about my sex,” she sighed. “You see, it’s too late now.” Very many men in assured positions of life had quailed before such a look and such a frown. Miss Stanley Erdish suffered them gladly.
“What do you mean by ‘too late’?” he demanded.
“You see,” she explained, selecting the most comfortable chair within reach, “you employed me as a press agent in an entirely new and unique capacity. It almost took my breath away when I really had mastered your secretary’s letter. Every other commission I have ever had in my life has been to keep my client in the limelight. Yours, as I accepted it from Mr. Glynde, was to keep your name out of every newspaper, to see, in fact, that the name of ‘Warren Rand’ never appeared in print; to let the world think, whenever a financial deal was successfully accomplished, a newspaper bought, or control of it acquired, that some one else was concerned, but never Warren Rand. I’ll admit the commission intrigued me. I never had anything like it before. I have never enjoyed work so much in my life.”
“That’s lucky,” was Warren Rand’s dry comment, “because you’re through with it.”
“Not at all,” she protested; “I’m only just beginning.”
“Don’t you understand that you’re fired?”
She shook her head gently.
“Oh, no,” she objected, “you couldn’t do that. That wouldn’t be possible, Mr. Ran3.”
“Take her into the cashier’s office and give her a cheque for what’s owing to her,” the latter enjoined.
John Glynde rose to his feet, but she caught him by the wrist and detained him.
“Don’t trouble about that,” she begged. “I am in no need of money for the moment. Now, with regard to that question of being fired. You simply couldn’t do it. You perhaps don’t know that when I took up this publicity profession, I very nearly went in for blackmailing instead–even more lucrative, I believe, but difficult as regards one’s subjects. There are not many people like you in the world, you know, Mr. Rand.”
“Blackmailing?” he repeated. “What have you got against me, young lady? It’s been tried on before. There’s one man in Holy Cross Cemetery, another at the bottom of the Hudson, and two others doing fourteen years each. No one has succeeded yet.”
Miss Stanley Erdish was unmoved.
“They didn’t go the right way about it,” she confided, “and they didn’t know as much as I know. Now, just think, Mr. Rand, think of the things I’ve kept secret on your behalf during the last twelve months. Who knows that you are the mysterious syndicate who bought the Daily Clarion? Who has the slightest idea that you are the unknown financier who lent six million pounds to Turkey just when Greece was going to declare war against her? Who knows that St. Clair Dent, who owns that northern syndicate of newspapers, is receiving a matter of ten thousand a year from you in return for permission to edit his weekly notes? Who knows the name of the secret buyer of gold during the last few weeks?”
“Stop!” Warren Rand interrupted. “Well?”
“It is I who have thrown dust in the eyes of the world upon all these points,” she reminded him. “It is I who might supply the eye lotion.”
Warren Rand sat quite still, looking at his very charming visitor. She returned his scrutiny, an engaging light in her eyes. John Glynde, who was afraid because he knew that his Chief was angry, intervened after his own fashion.
“The young lady is quite right,” he insisted. “She has worked well for us. To send her away just because of this matter of sex would be foolish. Anything else,” he concluded, blinking into his Chief’s steely eyes, “would be worse than foolish.”
“Such an intelligent little man I have always said that you were, Mr. Glynde,” she sighed. “Besides, there’s last night’s affair, you know. I am probably the only person who could succeed in keeping the whole world from knowing that Mr. Warren Rand has bought out Gervoise Harrison and is the sole owner of the Daily Sun, or the truth about that article on the Peace Conference in Geneva in this morning’s paper. I am sure you are too sensible to try to do without me. The only thing is,” she concluded reflectively, “that now you’re in England, the work is going to be very much harder for me, and I think you ought to consider the matter of a rise in salary.”
“Are you married?” Warren Rand enquired.
She held up her ringless hand.
“Not yet. I am hoping to be some day, of course, but just the right man hasn’t come along yet. I should like an American, if possible. Every one says they make such good husbands.”
“Any brothers?”
“No brothers or sisters.”
“So you are the only one of the family?” Warren Rand meditated.
“The only one,” she acknowledged. “Why? Did you think you might find places for my relatives if I had any?”