โWell, thatโs the situation.โ Wendle Foulkesโ keen old eyes narrowed as they gazed into the turbulent ones of his client across the wide desk. โThis last batch of securities is absolutely all that you have left of your inheritance from your father. Leave them alone where they are and you are sure of three thousand a year for yourself and for Leila after you.โ
Norman Storm struck the desk impatiently, and his lean, aristocratic face darkened.
โThree thousand a year! It wouldnโt cover the running expenses of the car and our country club bills alone!โ he exclaimed. โI tell you, Foulkes, this investment is a sure thing; it will pay over thirty per cent in dividends in less than four years. I have straight inside information on itโโ
โSo you had on all the other impulsive, ill-judged ventures that have wiped out your capital, Norman.โ The attorney sighed wearily. โI donโt want to rub it in, but do you realize that you have squandered nearly four hundred thousand dollars in the past ten years on wildcat schemes and speculations? Youโve come to the end now; think it over. Your salary with the Mammoth Trust Company is fifteen thousand a yearโon eighteen you and your wife ought to be living fairly comfortably. I grant you that three thousand income per annum isnโt much to leave Leila in the event of your death, but it is better than the risk of utter insolvency, and sheโs been spending her own money pretty fast lately.โ
โIt is hers, to do with as she pleases!โ Storm retorted sulkily and then flushed as the school-boyishness of his own attitude was borne in upon his consciousness. โYou cannot make big money unless you take a chance. Iโve been unlucky, thatโs all. My father made all his in Wall Street, and his father before himโโโ
โIn solid investments, not speculations; and they were on the inside themselves. They had the capital to take a gamblerโs chance and the acumen to play the game.โ Foulkes rose and laid his hand paternally upon the younger manโs shoulder. โForgive me, my boy, but you havenโt the temperament, the knowledge of when to stop and the strength to do it. Of course, this money is yours unreservedly; you may have it if you want to risk this last venture, but it will take some time for me to convert the securities into cash. Remember, you have reached the bottom of the basket; I only want you to stop and consider, and not to jeopardize the last few thousand you have in the world.โ
Outside in the bright May sunshine once more, Storm shouldered his way through the noon-tide throng on the busy pavement with scant ceremony, his resentment hot against the man he had just left. Confound old Foulkes! Why didnโt he keep his smug counsels for those who came sniveling to him for them? As if he, an official of a huge and noted corporation, were a mere lad once more, to be lectured for over-spending his allowance!