登陆注册
4708000000065

第65章

"My dear Mrs. Lee, "This letter will only come into your hands in case there should be a necessity for your knowing its contents.

Nothing short of necessity would excuse my writing it. I have to ask your pardon for intruding again upon your private affairs. In this case, if I did not intrude, you would have cause for serious complaint against me.

"You asked me the other day whether I knew anything against Mr. Ratcliffe which the world did not know, to account for my low opinion of his character. I evaded your question then. I was bound by professional rules not to disclose facts that came to me under a pledge of confidence. I am going to violate these rules now, only because I owe you a duty which seems to me to override all others.

"I do know facts in regard to Mr. Ratcliffe, which have seemed to me to warrant a very low opinion of his character, and to mark him as unfit to be, I will not say your husband, but even your acquaintance.

"You know that I am executor to Samuel Baker's will. You know who Samuel Baker was. You have seen his wife. She has told you herself that I assisted her in the examination and destruction of all her husband's private papers according to his special death-bed request. One of the first facts I learned from these papers and her explanations, was the following.

"Just eight years ago, the great 'Inter-Oceanic Mail Steamship Company,' wished to extend its service round the world, and, in order to do so, it applied to Congress for a heavy subsidy. The management of this affair was put into the hands of Mr. Baker, and all his private letters to the President of the Company, in press copies, as well as the President's replies, came into my possession.

Baker's letters were, of course, written in a sort of cypher, several kinds of which he was in the habit of using. He left among his papers a key to this cypher, but Mrs. Baker could have explained it without that help.

"It appeared from this correspondence that the bill was carried successfully through the House, and, on reaching the Senate, was referred to the appropriate Committee. Its ultimate passage was very doubtful; the end of the session was close at hand; the Senate was very evenly divided, and the Chairman of the Committee was decidedly hostile.

"The Chairman of that Committee was Senator Ratcliffe, always mentioned by Mr. Baker in cypher, and with every precaution. If you care, however, to verify the fact, and to trace the history of the Subsidy Bill through all its stages, together with Mr. Ratcliffe's report, remarks, and votes upon it, you have only to look into the journals and debates for that year.

"At last Mr. Baker wrote that Senator Ratcliffe had put the bill in his pocket, and unless some means could be found of overcoming his opposition, there would be no report, and the bill would never come to a vote. All ordinary kinds of argument and influence had been employed upon him, and were exhausted. In this exigency Baker suggested that the Company should give him authority to see what money would do, but he added that it would be worse than useless to deal with small sums. Unless at least one hundred thousand dollars could be employed, it was better to leave the thing alone.

"The next mail authorized him to use any required amount of money not exceeding one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Two days later he wrote that the bill was reported, and would pass the Senate within forty-eight hours; and he congratulated the Company on the fact that he had used only one hundred thousand dollars out of its last credit.

"The bill was actually reported, passed, and became law as he foretold, and the Company has enjoyed its subsidy ever since. Mrs.

Baker also informed me that to her knowledge her husband gave the sum mentioned, in United States Coupon Bonds, to Senator Ratcliffe.

"This transaction, taken in connection with the tortuousness of his public course, explains the distrust I have always expressed for him. You will, however, understand that all these papers have been destroyed. Mrs. Baker could never be induced to hazard her own comfort by revealing the facts to the public. The officers of the Company in their own interests would never betray the transaction, and their books were undoubtedly so kept as to show no trace of it.

If I made this charge against Mr. Ratcliffe, I should be the only sufferer. He would deny and laugh at it. I could prove nothing. I am therefore more directly interested than he is in keeping silence.

"In trusting this secret to you, I rely firmly upon your mentioning it to no one else--not even to your sister. You are at liberty, if you wish, to show this letter to one person only-- to Mr. Ratcliffe himself. That done, you will, I beg, burn it immediately.

"With the warmest good wishes, I am, "Ever most truly yours, "John Carrington."

When Mrs. Lee had finished reading this letter, she remained for some time quite silent, looking out into the square below. The morning had come, and the sky was bright with the fresh April sunlight. She threw open her window, and drew in the soft spring air. She needed all the purity and quiet that nature could give, for her whole soul was in revolt, wounded, mortified, exasperated.

Against the sentiment of all her friends she had insisted upon believing in this man; she had wrought herself up to the point of accepting him for her husband; a man who, if law were the same thing as justice, ought to be in a felon's cell; a man who could take money to betray his trust. Her anger at first swept away all bounds.

She was impatient for the moment when she should see him again, and tear off his mask. For once she would express all the loathing she felt for the whole pack of political hounds. She would see whether the animal was made like other beings; whether he had a sense of honour; a single clean spot in his mind.

同类推荐
  • 利州北佛龛前重于去

    利州北佛龛前重于去

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 夕堂永日绪论

    夕堂永日绪论

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 真武灵应真君增上佑圣尊号册文

    真武灵应真君增上佑圣尊号册文

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 昆腔原始

    昆腔原始

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 谥法

    谥法

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 法国童话20篇(世界传世童话宝库)

    法国童话20篇(世界传世童话宝库)

    推开世界经典童话的大门,走进奇幻瑰丽的童话世界,这里飞翔着奇思妙想,上演着惊奇冒险,流淌着纯净美好……世界经典童话带给孩子的不仅仅是温馨、欢乐和启迪,更多的是思考和悠远的人生体味。
  • 无敌逆天修改系统

    无敌逆天修改系统

    本书又名《大唐皇朝》。你是世界首富,好,我把你的人生修改成我的奴仆。你是国际巨星,好,我把你的人生修改成我的女侍。你是修仙大能,好,我把你的人生修改成我的剑奴。修改系统在手,我的人生,为所欲为!读者群:567230272
  • 饥荒进行曲

    饥荒进行曲

    甄梓,女,原本是xx大学准备毕业的学生一枚。没有男朋友,喜欢玩游戏。可是,就在一个阳光明媚的早上,她穿越了!像很多小说情节里的那样,她穿越到了一个完全架空的时代。没有什么主角玛丽苏光环,她只有她穿越时玩的一个游戏系统……
  • 献花岩志

    献花岩志

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 内丹秘诀

    内丹秘诀

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 英云梦三生姻缘

    英云梦三生姻缘

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 开禧德安守城录

    开禧德安守城录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 修真之药武扬威

    修真之药武扬威

    都说穿越必有金手指,乔拉丹作为穿越者,自然也是福缘不浅,开启了金手指。只是……小师妹:“师兄,我想嗑药。”爱徒:“师父,请赐徒儿一枚圣药。”道友:“拉丹道友,还请卖俺一枚灵丹。”……面对这诸多请求,乔拉丹横眉以对:“修真讲究循序渐进,嗑药乃是舍本逐末,不足取也,不足取也!”而后。偷摸的。乔拉丹给自己磕了一罐子药。嗯,药不能停。
  • 大莫纳

    大莫纳

    法国二十世纪十大必读书,法国有史以来最经典的成长小说。《大莫纳》讲述了:倔强、憨厚的十七岁少年莫纳来到乡村学校,成为班上的领袖,人称“大莫纳”。一次偶然迷途中,他来到一个神秘庄园,这里有穿戴奇怪的男女,古老的房子,五花八门的马车,简直是童话中的世界!更令他惊奇的是,这儿是孩子们称王称霸的天下!在庄园,他见到美貌绝伦的少女伊冯娜,一见倾心。她弟弟弗朗茨正准备举行婚礼,新娘却突然不见,随后,弗朗茨也失踪了。第二天夜里,莫纳离开了庄园。
  • 乾隆皇帝:日落长河

    乾隆皇帝:日落长河

    《日落长河》是系列长篇小说《乾隆皇帝》的第三卷。 乾隆一面撤将换相,倾其国力,企图在继续惩讨大小金川的战事中,以重惩莎罗奔的全胜结局,来挽回体面;一面派刘统勋、刘墉父子企图在珍灭女教主“一枝花”的斗争中,安定国内局面。他根据孔子的仁政思想,重用傅恒、刘统勋、阿桂、纪昀等人,继续推行以宽为政繁荣经济的政策,以此努力开创封建社会的鼎盛局面。可是由于他战略指导思想错误,加之讷相无能,金川战事一败再败,以高恒为代表的宫廷内外朝野上下的腐败势力,同土地兼并,贫富不均等封建社会的内部矛盾助澜推波,愈演愈烈。乾隆虽宵吁勤政,严厉惩腐,可无力挽救乾隆盛世落人江河日下的尴尬局面。