登陆注册
37858500000074

第74章 CHAPTER XVI(3)

No hint of a recollection that there were such things as the Company and the Board, or that he was nominally the head of both, expressed itself in his Lordship's demeanour as he advanced, his hand a little extended.

The noble Chairman was white of beard and hair, and extremely courteous of manner--a small, carefully-clad, gracious old gentleman, whose mild pink countenance had, with years of anxiety about ways and means, disposed itself in lines which produced a chronic expression of solicitude.

A nervous affection of the eyelids lent to this look, at intervals, a beseeching quality which embarrassed the beholder. All men had liked him, and spoken well of him throughout his long and hard-worked career.

Thorpe was very fond of him indeed, and put a respectful cordiality into his grasp of the proffered hand.

Then he looked, with a certain thinly-veiled bluntness of enquiry, past the Marquis to his companion.

"You were very kind to give me the appointment,"said Lord Chaldon, with a little purring gloss of affability upon the earnestness of his tone. "I wish very much to introduce to you my friend, my old friend I may say, Monsieur Alexandre Fromentin. We slept together under the same tent, in the Persian country beyond Bagdad--oh, it must have been quite forty years ago. We were youngsters looking to win our first spurs then--I in my line, he in his.

And often since we have renewed that old friendship--at many different places--India, and Constantinople, and Egypt.

I wish heartily to commend him to your--your kindness."Thorpe had perfunctorily shaken hands with the stranger--a tall, slender, sharp-faced, clean-shaven, narrow-shouldered man, who by these accounts of his years ought not to have such excessively black hair. He bowed in a foreign fashion, and uttered some words which Thorpe, though he recognized them as English in intent, failed to follow. The voice was that of an elderly man, and at a second glance there were plenty of proofs that he might have been older than the Marquis, out there in Persia, forty years ago.

But Thorpe did not like old men who dyed their hair, and he offered his visitors chairs, drawn up from the table toward his desk, with a certain reserve of manner.

Seating himself in the revolving chair at the desk itself, he put the tips of his fingers together, and looked this gentleman with the Continental name and experience in the face.

"Is there something you wish me to do?" he asked, passively facilitating the opening of conversation.

"Ah, my God! 'Something'!"--repeated the other, with a fluttering gesture of his hands over his thin, pointed knees--"everything, Mr. Thorpe!""That's a tolerably large order, isn't it?"

Thorpe asked, calmly, moving a slow, inscrutable glance from one to the other of his callers.

"I could ask for nothing that would be a greater personal favour--and kindness"--Lord Chaldon interposed.

His tone bore the stress of sincerity.

"That means a great deal to me, as you know, my Lord,"replied Thorpe, "but I don't in the least understand--what is it that your friend wants?"

"Only that I shall not be buried in a bankrupt's grave,"the suppliant answered, with a kind of embittered eagerness of utterance. "That I shall not see disgraced the honoured name that my father and his father bequeathed to my care!"Thorpe's large, composed countenance betrayed a certain perplexity. "There must be a mistake,"he observed. "I don't even know this name of yours.

I never heard it before."

The other's mobile face twisted itself in a grimace of incredulity. He had a conspicuously wide mouth, and its trick of sidelong extension at this moment was very unpleasant. "Ah, Herr Je! He never heard it,"he ejaculated, turning nervously to the Marquis.

"Would to the good God you never had!" he told Thorpe, with suppressed excitement.

Lord Chaldon, his own voice shaken a little, interposed with an explanation. "My friend is the head--the respected head--of the firm of Fromentin Brothers.

I think you have--have dealings with them."

Thorpe, after a furtive instant of bewilderment, opened his mouth. "Oh! I see," he said. "I know what you mean now. With the French pronunciation, I didn't recognize the name. I've always heard it called 'Fromen'-tin' here in London. Oh, yes, of course--Fromen'tin Brothers."His lips shut tight again at this. The listeners had caught no helpful clue from the tone of his words.

They exchanged a glance, and then M. Fromentin spoke.

"Mr. Thorpe," he began, slowly, with an obvious effort at self-repression. "It is a very ****** story. Our house is an old one. My father's grandfather organized the finance of the commissariat of General Bonaparte in Egypt.

He created the small beginnings of the carpet and rug importation from Asia Minor. His son, and in turn his son, followed him. They became bankers as well as importers.

They helped very greatly to develop the trade of the Levant. They were not avaricious men, or usurers.

It is not in our blood. Your Chairman, Lord Chaldon, who honours me so highly by calling me his friend--he will assure you that we have a good name in the East.

Our banks have befriended the people, and never oppressed or injured them. For that reason--I will say perhaps for that reason--we have never become a very rich house.

It is possible to name bankers who have made large fortunes out of Egypt. It was different with us. Lord Chaldon will tell you that of our own free will--my two brothers and I--of our own choice we consented to lose a fifth of all our possessions, rather than coin into gold by force the tears and blood of the wretched fellaheen.""Yes--I have never known a more honourable or humane action,"put in the Marquis, fervently.

"And then my brothers die--Polydor, who lived mostly at Smyrna, and whose estate was withdrawn from the business by his widow, and Augustin, who lived here in London after 1870, and died--it is now six years ago.

He left a son, Robert, who is my nephew, and my partner.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 投胎是门儿技术活

    投胎是门儿技术活

    得到了功德册的徐飞,拥有了可以积攒功德的能力!“救助落水的小孩,功德值+1”“蹲点英雄救美,功德值+2”于是,徐飞踏上了积德行善的道路;行善使我快乐,助人让我开心。当人们提起徐飞名字时,往往会热泪盈眶的说:嘿,这小子,是个好人,我都被感动了。
  • 浪漫一世冷面总裁的腹黑娇妻

    浪漫一世冷面总裁的腹黑娇妻

    他,迷倒万千少女的“哲理王子”,几乎神一般的人物。她,初入学门的豆腐渣渣。两个世界的人却意外的走到了一起,是劫是缘?她叫他大师兄,但是真的只当他为哥哥吗?他叫她小心心,却是真的将心给她了...两人的爱如荆棘路上的刺,分分的痛,寸寸滴血。......“原来自始至终都是我自作多情罢了...”他心宛如刀割,呵呵,她还是选择他了。“不!不是的,我...”“你走吧...”他唇角牵起一抹讽刺,什么时候他变得如此了?就连他自己都不知道。“你说得对,我没了你依旧能活。我们...好聚好散吧...”心底已然痛得麻木。......这场爱,谁都输了,只输给了一个字---情。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 九世轮回寻爱记

    九世轮回寻爱记

    一位修行千年的少年,一次入仙前的凡尘历练,一段刻苦铭心的真情痛别,一个逆天改命的惊人想法,开始了一段漫长的千年为爱之旅……千年修行为情断,九世相随为她醒。九天之上若无她,愿做孤魂把她寻。
  • 我又捡到了魔尊

    我又捡到了魔尊

    九重天,云阮捡到一条傲娇黑蛇,带回去悉心照顾(百般使唤)。秘境中,云阮捡回一条差点被踩死的火红色的死蛇。后在魔界中,云阮与魔尊大眼瞪小眼,看着魔尊身后略显熟悉的尾巴,开口道“我们是不是在那见过。”一个内心软萌的女汉子不停捡回傲娇男主的故事本文轻松愉悦,勿深究
  • 眼中有鬼

    眼中有鬼

    他只是个普通人,原本应该普普通通过完一生,却是因为一个女孩,改变了她的一生!恶鬼,厉鬼,接踵而来,他又该何去何从!这是一个半真半假的故事!新人发布希望大家能喜欢!!
  • 我和你,一起成长

    我和你,一起成长

    这是一个没有经过雕琢的故事。白描出来就带着小说的韵味。这是一个人真实的成长过程。一个在生活的悬崖边上求学,希望能够出人头地的念想。这是一面反映这个社会一类人的镜子。在书写时,最大限度地再现了一名学生眼中的真实。文章应该是一面反映真实的镜子,文章应该是作者自我感情的真实流露。说他是一种现实主义,显得附庸风雅;说他是先锋派,只是不爱一些白话,幻想的网文,希望写一写真正的生活罢了。也许这篇文章中很多的镜头他是不和谐的,既然他是镜子,也许这个和谐社会确实有着一些不和谐的音符呢。但他的思想是积极的,即便如履薄冰,我也要成为一名真正的读书人。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 篱笆女人

    篱笆女人

    生活很是窘迫,无宿可居的我只能借住在朋友十平不到的出租房里,还好我有两床床垫和一床已经泛黄的被子,我在地上打了一个铺,还好朋友一台看视频能卡出翔的电脑供我看几眼世界杯。这几天的日子我有很多闲暇的时光,我不知我在等待什么就像初中的时候教语文的老女人说过诺贝尔文学奖史上有个《等待戈多》的故事,她说那是个荒诞的故事,主人公一直在等待一个连他都不知道的东西。而我也未曾读过那个故事,只是觉得我仿佛也在等待一个“戈多”。我把自己关在十平不到的房子里,开始写一个篱笆女人的故事,我从未有过一个这样的女人,仅凭着潜意识里的对于女人的想象来描述这个我未曾谋面的女人。
  • 我的异界生活日记

    我的异界生活日记

    咦,这里有个奇怪的灵,各位观众不要急,我慢慢靠近,看这个灵肥美的后腰,碳烤味道一定不错!