During the five or six following years,
a number of events occurred bearing more or less seriously
upon some of the actors in our story. With Edward
Claire and his family, life had flowed on in an even
current; and, but for the fact that his health never
fairly recovered from the shock it received in consequence
of his having taxed his physical system beyond its
capability of endurance, the sunshine would never
have been a moment from his threshold.
The important addition made to his
income through the new arrangement volunteered by
Fanny’s guardian, gave to his external condition
a more favourable aspect. He was no longer troubled
about the ways and means of providing for his needful
expenses. A much better situation, so far as
a higher salary was concerned, had, during this time
offered; but, as it required an amount of confinement
and labour which he could not give, without endangering
his health, he wisely declined the offer.
Far less smoothly had the current
of Leonard Jasper’s life flowed on. Twice
during this period had he received visits from his
old acquaintance, Martin, and each time he was made
poorer by five thousand dollars. It was all in
vain that he struggled and resisted. The man
had no compassion in him. He cared not who suffered
loss, so he was the gainer.
There were other miners at work sapping
the foundations of Jasper’s fortune, besides
this less concealed operator. Parker, the young
man who succeeded to the place of Claire, and who
was afterward raised to the condition of partner,
with a limited interest, was far from being satisfied
with his dividend in the business. The great bulk
of Jasper’s means were used in outside speculations;
and as the result of these became successively known
to Parker, his thoughts began to run in a new channel.
“If I only had money to go into this,”
and, “If I only had money to go into that,”
were words frequently on his tongue. He regarded
himself as exceedingly shrewd; and confidently believed
that, if he had capital to work with, he could soon
amass an independent fortune.
“Money makes money,” was his favourite
motto.
Unscrupulous as his partner, it is
not surprising that Parker, ere long, felt himself
perfectly authorized to use the credit of the house
in private schemes of profit. To do this safely,
it was necessary to have a friend outside of the firm.
Such a friend he did not find it very hard to obtain;
and as nearly the whole burden of the business fell
upon his shoulders, it was not at all difficult to
hide every thing from Jasper.
Confident as Parker was in his great
shrewdness, his speculations outside of the business
did not turn out very favourably. His first essay
was in the purchase of stocks, on which he lost, in
a week, two thousand dollars.
Like the gamester who loses, he only
played deeper, in the hope of recovering his losses;
and as it often happens with the gamester, in similar
circumstances, the deeper he played, the more he lost.
And so it went on. Sometimes
the young man had a turn of good fortune, and sometimes
all the chances went against him. But he was too
far committed to recede without a discovery.
There was no standing still; and so newer and bolder
operations were tried, involving larger and larger
sums of money, until the responsibilities of the firm,
added to the large cash drafts made without the cognizance
of Jasper, were enormous.
To all such mad schemes the end must
come; and the end came in this instance. Failing
to procure, by outside operations, sufficient money
to meet several large notes, he was forced to divulge
a part of his iniquity to Jasper, in order to save
the credit of the firm. Suspicion of a deeper
fraud being thereby aroused in the mind of his partner,
time, and a sifting investigation of the affairs of
the house, revealed the astounding fact that Parker
had abstracted in money, and given the notes of the
firm for his own use, to the enormous amount of fifty
thousand dollars.
A dissolution of co-partnership took
place in consequence. Parker, blasted in reputation,
was dragged before a court of justice, in order to
make him disgorge property alleged to be in his possession.
But nothing could be found; and he was finally discharged
from custody. The whole loss fell upon Jasper.
He had nursed a serpent in his bosom, warming it with
the warmth of his own life; and the serpent had stung
him. Is it any wonder?
This circumstance, the discovery of
Parker’s fraudulent doings, took place about
two years prior to the time when Fanny Elder attained
her legal age.
The first thought of Jasper, after
his separation from Parker, which took place immediately
on discovering that he had used the credit of the
firm improperly, was to send for Claire, and offer
him a salary of a thousand dollars a year, to come
in and fill the responsible position as clerk, from
which Parker had just been ejected as partner.
“I can trust him fully,”
said Jasper to himself; “and I don’t know
anybody else that I can trust. He is honest; I
will give him credit for that; too honest, it may
be, for his own good. But, I don’t know.
Who would not rather be in his shoes than in Parker’s?”
For some time Jasper’s mind
was favourable to making Claire the offer proposed,
and he was about writing him a note, when a new view
of the case struck him, dependent on the young man’s
relation to his ward, Fanny Elder.
“Oh no, no, no!” said
he emphatically, speaking to himself—“that,
I fear me, will not do. It would give him too
open an access to my books, papers, and private accounts,
in which are entries and memoranda that it might be
dangerous for him to see.”
Jasper sighed deeply as he finished
this sentence, and then fell into a musing state.
His thoughts, while this lasted, were not of the most
self-satisfying character. Some serious doubts
as to his having, in the main, pursued the wisest
course in life, were injected into his mind; and,
remarkable as it may seem for one so absorbed in the
love of gain, there were moments when he almost envied
the poor, but honest clerk, who had an approving conscience,
and feared no man’s scrutiny.
It was with no slight reluctance that
he finally came to the conclusion that it would be
altogether unsafe to take Claire into his employment.
And so he cast about for some one to supply the place
left vacant by Parker’s withdrawal from the business.
In his final selection he was not over-fortunate,
as the result proved. The new clerk was shrewd,
and capable enough, and apparently as much devoted
to his employer’s interests as Jasper could wish.
Had not his own interests been regarded as paramount
to those of the merchant, Jasper would have possessed
in him a valuable assistant. But the clerk did
not rise superior to temptations which came in his
way. Jasper continued to trade on the close-cutting,
overreaching, and unscrupulous system; and under such
a teacher his clerk proved an apt learner.
“He cuts right and left,”
said he to himself, “and why may not I cut left
and right when a good opportunity offers?”
Soon he began to “cut left and
right,” as he termed it, and it was not remarkable
that, in his cutting operations, his employer occasionally
suffered. The upshot was, after holding his situation
a year, that several false entries, in his hand-writing,
were discovered in the books of Mr. Jasper. To
what extent he robbed his employer, the latter never
accurately knew; but he was worse off by at least three
or four thousand dollars through his peculations.
Again the question of taking Claire
once more into his employment came up in the mind
of Jasper. After viewing it on every side, the
decision was adverse. He felt that too great
a risk was involved. And so he employed one in
whom he could confide with less certainty.
Several years had now passed since
the merchant began to feel the shock of adverse winds.
All before was a summer sea, and the ship of his fortune
had bent her sails alone to favouring breezes.
But this was to be no longer. His ship had suffered
not only by stress of weather, but also by the sacrifice
of a portion of cargo to save what remained.
And, at last, she was driving on toward the breakers,
and her safety from destruction only hoped for through
the activity, skill, and tireless vigilance of her
helmsman.
A few years before, Mr. Jasper considered
himself worth between two and three hundred thousand
dollars; now, he passed sleepless nights in fear of
impending ruin. He had trusted in riches; he had
called them, in his heart, the greatest good.
At his word they had poured in upon him from all sides,
until he was half bewildered at sight of the glittering
treasures; but, just as he began to feel secure in
his possessions, they began to take themselves wings
and fly away.
And, alas for him! he had laid up
no other treasures. None in heaven; none in the
hearts of his wife and children; none in his own mind.
The staff upon which he had leaned was now a splintering
reed, wounding as it bent under him.