登陆注册
37885700000150

第150章 Chapter XLIV A Franchise Obtained(1)

The money requisite for the construction of elevated roads having been thus pyrotechnically obtained, the acquisition of franchises remained no easy matter. It involved, among other problems, the taming of Chaffee Thayer Sluss, who, quite unconscious of the evidence stored up against him, had begun to fulminate the moment it was suggested in various secret political quarters that a new ordinance was about to be introduced, and that Cowperwood was to be the beneficiary. "Don't you let them do that, Mr. Sluss," observed Mr. Hand, who for purposes of conference had courteously but firmly bidden his hireling, the mayor, to lunch. "Don't you let them pass that if you can help it." (As chairman or president of the city council Mr. Sluss held considerable manipulative power over the machinery of procedure.) "Raise such a row that they won't try to pass it over your head. Your political future really depends on it--your standing with the people of Chicago. The newspapers and the respectable financial and social elements will fully support you in this. Otherwise they will wholly desert you. Things have come to a handsome pass when men sworn and elected to perform given services turn on their backers and betray them in this way!"

Mr. Hand was very wroth.

Mr. Sluss, immaculate in black broadcloth and white linen, was very sure that he would fulfil to the letter all of Mr. Hand's suggestions. The proposed ordinance should be denounced by him; its legislative progress heartily opposed in council.

"They shall get no quarter from me!" he declared, emphatically.

"I know what the scheme is. They know that I know it."

He looked at Mr. Hand quite as one advocate of righteousness should look at another, and the rich promoter went away satisfied that the reins of government were in safe hands. Immediately afterward Mr. Sluss gave out an interview in which he served warning on all aldermen and councilmen that no such ordinance as the one in question would ever be signed by him as mayor.

At half past ten on the same morning on which the interview appeared --the hour at which Mr. Sluss usually reached his office--his private telephone bell rang, and an assistant inquired if he would be willing to speak with Mr. Frank A. Cowperwood. Mr. Sluss, somehow anticipating fresh laurels of victory, gratified by the front-page display given his announcement in the morning papers, and swelling internally with civic pride, announced, solemnly:

"Yes; connect me."

"Mr. Sluss," began Cowperwood, at the other end, "this is Frank A. Cowperwood."

"Yes. What can I do for you, Mr. Cowperwood?"

"I see by the morning papers that you state that you will have nothing to do with any proposed ordinance which looks to giving me a franchise for any elevated road on the North or West Side?"

"That is quite true," replied Mr. Sluss, loftily. "I will not."

"Don't you think it is rather premature, Mr. Sluss, to denounce something which has only a rumored existence?" (Cowperwood, smiling sweetly to himself, was quite like a cat playing with an unsuspicious mouse.) "I should like very much to talk this whole matter over with you personally before you take an irrevocable attitude. It is just possible that after you have heard my side you may not be so completely opposed to me. From time to time I have sent to you several of my personal friends, but apparently you do not care to receive them."

"Quite true," replied Mr. Sluss, loftily; "but you must remember that I am a very busy man, Mr. Cowperwood, and, besides, I do not see how I can serve any of your purposes. You are working for a set of conditions to which I am morally and temperamentally opposed.

I am working for another. I do not see that we have any common ground on which to meet. In fact, I do not see how I can be of any service to you whatsoever."

"Just a moment, please, Mr. Mayor," replied Cowperwood, still very sweetly, and fearing that Sluss might choose to hang up the receiver, so superior was his tone. "There may be some common ground of which you do not know. Wouldn't you like to come to lunch at my residence or receive me at yours? Or let me come to your office and talk this matter over. I believe you will find it the part of wisdom as well as of courtesy to do this."

"I cannot possibly lunch with you to-day," replied Sluss, "and I cannot see you, either. There are a number of things pressing for my attention. I must say also that I cannot hold any back-room conferences with you or your emissaries. If you come you must submit to the presence of others."

"Very well, Mr. Sluss," replied Cowperwood, cheerfully. "I will not come to your office. But unless you come to mine before five o'clock this afternoon you will face by noon to-morrow a suit for breach of promise, and your letters to Mrs. Brandon will be given to the public. I wish to remind you that an election is coming on, and that Chicago favors a mayor who is privately moral as well as publicly so. Good morning."

Mr. Cowperwood hung up his telephone receiver with a click, and Mr. Sluss sensibly and visibly stiffened and paled. Mrs. Brandon!

The charming, lovable, discreet Mrs. Brandon who had so ungenerously left him! Why should she be thinking of suing him for breach of promise, and how did his letter to her come to be in Cowperwood's hands? Good heavens--those mushy letters! His wife! His children!

His church and the owlish pastor thereof! Chicago! And its conventional, moral, religious atmosphere! Come to think of it, Mrs. Brandon had scarcely if ever written him a note of any kind.

He did not even know her history.

At the thought of Mrs. Sluss--her hard, cold, blue eyes--Mr. Sluss arose, tall and distrait, and ran his hand through his hair. He walked to the window, snapping his thumb and middle finger and looking eagerly at the floor. He thought of the telephone switchboard just outside his private office, and wondered whether his secretary, a handsome young Presbyterian girl, had been listening, as usual.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 足球因为热爱

    足球因为热爱

    直到2307年,华夏足球才成为世界第一。绝对的世界第一。看着无数已故华夏球迷的墓志铭。戚风决定冒险回到过去。改变华夏足球的命运……因为喜欢才写的一部小说,只是自己的一个梦想。
  • 玛法大陆之魔法师的炼狱

    玛法大陆之魔法师的炼狱

    玛法大陆魔法城域。一个斗气的时代,一个属于魔法师的世界。在这里魔法师不断地气息修炼是成为强者的唯一道路,练气是打败噬云兽的法宝。无止境的修炼是对最强魔法的追求,终极的修炼却成了魔法城域的地狱。至高无上的气息修炼,对噬云兽的控制,魔法之气,邪灵之气的修炼却也成为了魔法师的炼狱!
  • 不灭战神系统

    不灭战神系统

    方云携带《不灭战神系统》重生,从此风云涌动,与当世无数天才争锋,重启传奇之路,败帝王,斗苍天,豪情万丈天地间,续写另类帝王篇!
  • 花千骨之唯爱骨

    花千骨之唯爱骨

    本书是接小骨死后回归了久违的家~神界,在神界里小骨名叫若颖上神(原谅作者大大不会取名)有位姐姐若雨上神和哥哥若轩上神(都非常疼爱若颖)还有位前世今生都爱她的她所爱的白黎。(想必大家都应该知道他是谁吧!当然是我们的主角白子画啦)
  • 唯一掌握通用语言的被选召的大叔

    唯一掌握通用语言的被选召的大叔

    因手术失误染上绝症的“年轻”牙科医生,绝望间放弃了自己“年轻”的生命,在人生的最后一刻被天神的游戏选中。这是一个脱宅五年后被神拉回二次元的“年轻”人的故事。开局(魔女之泉)下一个世界(夏洛特)、(弑神者)、(素晴)…………
  • 倾国女相师

    倾国女相师

    她是权倾天下的女相,邪魅妖娆,女扮男装妖言惑众;他是来自二十三世纪by.系统第四代宿主,高冷腹黑一句话噎死系统。攻略乎?“情劫?攻略?男的??老子怎么就信了你的邪?!!”话说“叶羡其人”,金玉其外,败絮其中。可谁知她背负血海深仇,玩弄权谋于指掌之间?众人捶胸顿足:白浪费了一张好皮囊!!!(男穿,欢迎入坑!女主叶羡,男主楼夜熙。)
  • 狂龙圣手

    狂龙圣手

    他,国际最强特种兵,却总是被情事烦扰,他眼神如冰,心却狂热赤焰般,代号血羽,因为三年前与国际最强雇佣兵狂蟹狭路相逢,那一战,他几乎失去全部,就像他说的,他为特种兵而生,也为特种兵而死,神秘人最终浮出水面,迷雾终将真相大白,而缘由起落,都是那一滩波起微澜的死水。
  • 独家传说

    独家传说

    为了不被同境界的存在恶心自己的跟脚,郑柯广撒渔网,开始着手炮制自己的过去,不过画面怎么和自己想得不太一样……咸鱼流,习得水之大道……龙傲天流,习得……幕后boss流,习得…………开启量子成神道路……废材逆天流,习得……端坐无尽诸天之上的郑柯以手扶脸,原来自己有那么多恶趣味的吗?看着在不同时间线上不停蹦跶的自己,郑柯突然觉得一切都索然无味,还搞什么证道超脱啊,浪就完事。
  • 品格的力量(Mbook随身读)

    品格的力量(Mbook随身读)

    高尚品格是—个人成功的必备素养。本书从女性的品格力量、人类的英雄气概、个性的力量等方面,提供了塑造青年—代高贵心灵素养的途径,并论述了勇气、自律、职业操守、性格等精神品质的作用,是青年品格养成的必备教科书。财富与品格的高尚与否是没有必然联系的,相反,财富往往是品德败坏和使人堕落的根源。
  • 幻夜学院异能争霸

    幻夜学院异能争霸

    穿越异能世界,安凌夜一行人来到这里,却发现这里如此熟悉。小说里的人物,在这里变的真实,结局会如何....