Read Money (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Émile Zola
But two o’clock had just struck, and Mazaud, who was bearing the brunt of the attack, was again weakening. He was more and more surprised at the delay of the entry into battle of the reinforcements. It was high time for them to arrive, so what were they waiting for, to release him from the untenable position which was draining him? Although, out of professional pride, he kept his face impassive, he could feel a great chill rising to his cheeks, and feared he might be turning pale. Jacoby, thundering on, went on throwing offers at him
in bundles, one after another, but he was no longer picking them up. And it was no longer at Jacoby that he was looking; his eyes were turned now in the direction of Delarocque, Daigremont’s broker, whose silence he could not understand. Stout and stocky, with his russet beard, smiling beatifically after some festivity of the night before, Delarocque seemed quite calm, while waiting so inexplicably. Wasn’t he going to pick up all these orders, and save everything through the purchase orders with which the order-books he was holding must be bulging?
Suddenly, in his guttural, slightly hoarse voice, Delarocque threw himself into the fight.
‘I have Universals… I have Universals…’
And in a few minutes he offered several millions’ worth. Some voices responded. The share-price was collapsing.
‘I have at two thousand four hundred… I have at two thousand three hundred… How many? Five hundred, six hundred… Deliver!’
What was he saying? What was happening? Instead of the expected help, was this a new enemy army, suddenly appearing out of nearby woods? Just like Waterloo, when Grouchy did not arrive;
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and it was treachery that completed the rout. In the face of these deep and new masses of sellers, coming in at the gallop, a fearful panic set in.
At that moment, Mazaud felt death pass over his face. He had carried over Saccard for too large an amount, and he had the distinct sensation that the Universal, in its collapse, was breaking his back. But his handsome, dark face, with its small moustache, remained stolid and impenetrable. He bought some more, exhausting the orders he had received, with his young-cockerel voice crowing just as shrilly as it had in success. And facing him, his opposite numbers, Jacoby bellowing and Delarocque apoplectic, despite their effort at indifference, showed some signs of anxiety; for they could see that he was now in great danger, and if he went bust, would he pay them? Their hands gripped the velvet of the balustrade, while their voices kept on shouting, as if mechanically, out of professional habit, while their fixed stares reflected all the dreadful anguish of this drama of money.
Then, during the last half-hour, it was disaster, the rout steadily worsening, and carrying people away in a gallop of confusion. After extreme confidence and blind infatuation came the reaction of fear, all now rushing to sell, if there was still time. A hail of orders to sell
beat upon the trading-floor, all one could see was order-slips raining down; and these huge blocks of shares, scattered pell-mell like this, accelerated the fall, made it a real collapse. The prices, going down and down, fell to one thousand five hundred, to one thousand two hundred, to nine hundred. There were no more buyers, nothing was left, the ground was strewn with corpses. High above the dark swarm of frock-coats, the three quoters seemed like mortuary clerks, registering deaths. By a singular effect of the wind of disaster blowing through the room, all agitation had come to a stop and the noise had died down, as in the stupor of a great catastrophe. A frightening silence reigned when, after the ringing of the closing bell, the closing price of eight hundred and thirty francs became known. And the rain went on stubbornly streaming down the windows, which now let in only a sort of sickly twilight; the hall, under the dripping umbrellas and trampling of feet, had become a cesspit, like the muddy floor of an ill-kept stable, littered with all sorts of torn papers; while the trading-floor displayed the bright, multicoloured slips, the green, the red, the blue, thrown away in handfuls, in such quantities that day that the vast basin was overflowing.
Mazaud had gone back to the brokers’ room at the same time as Jacoby and Delarocque. He went up to the bar and, consumed with a raging thirst, drank a glass of beer, and gazed at the huge room, with its cloakroom, its long central table with the chairs of the sixty brokers ranged around it, the red-velvet hangings, all the banal and faded luxury which made it look like the first-class waiting-room of a large railway-station; he looked at it with an astonished air, as a man might, who had never really seen it before. Then, as he was leaving, without a word, he shook hands with Jacoby and Delarocque in the usual way, but all three were pale beneath their appearance of everyday normality. He had told Flory to wait for him at the door, and he found him there, along with Gustave, who, having definitively left the office a week ago, had come along simply out of curiosity, always smiling and leading a life of pleasure, without ever wondering whether his father, on the morrow, would still be able to pay his debts; while Flory, looking very wan, was struggling to talk, and making idiotic grimaces, under the impact of the fearful loss he had just made, of about a hundred thousand francs, with no idea where to find the first sou of it. Mazaud and his clerk disappeared into the rain.
But in the hall, panic had raged above all around Saccard—this
was where the war had done most damage. Without at first understanding, he had faced up to the danger and watched the whole rout. Where did that noise come from? Wasn’t that Daigremont’s troops arriving? Then, when he had heard the prices collapsing, still unable to grasp the cause of the disaster, he had stiffened himself, ready to die on his feet. An icy chill rose up from the ground to his skull, he sensed something irreparable, this was his defeat for ever; and no base regret for money, or anger about pleasures lost, had any part in his pain; he bled only for his humiliation at being vanquished, and for the dazzling, definitive victory of Gundermann, consolidating once more the omnipotence of that king of money. At this moment Saccard was really superb, his whole slight figure braving destiny with unblinking eyes, his face stubbornly set, standing alone against the flood of despair and resentment that he could already feel rising against him. The whole room was seething, surging towards his pillar; fists were clenched, mouths were muttering curses; and he had kept on his lips an unconscious smile, that could easily seem a provocation.
First, in a sort of mist, he made out Maugendre, with a face of mortal pallor, as Captain Chave led him away on his arm, saying over and over that he had told him how it would be, with the cruelty of a minimal gambler, delighted to see the big players come a cropper. Then there was Sédille, with drawn face and the mad look of a merchant whose business is crumbling, who came like a good fellow, though with trembling hands, to shake Saccard’s hand, as if to say he bore him no grudge. At the first sign of danger, the Marquis de Bohain had moved away, going over to the triumphant army of short-sellers, telling Kolb, who was also prudently keeping his distance, about the worrying doubts he had had about Saccard ever since the last shareholders’ meeting. Jantrou, quite distraught, had disappeared again, running as fast as he could to take the closing price to Baroness Sandorff, who would surely have a hysterical fit in her carriage, as she was apt to do on days when she lost heavily.
There too, facing the still silent and enigmatic Salmon, were Moser the short-seller and the bullish Pillerault;, the latter, in spite of his ruin, remained provocative, with his proud face, while the former, having made a fortune, was spoiling his victory with worries about the future.
‘You’ll see, in the spring, we’ll be at war with Germany. All this has a bad smell, and Bismarck is watching and waiting.’
‘Oh, do stop all that! Once again I made the mistake of giving things too much thought… Too bad! I just need to start all over again, and all will be well.’
So far, Saccard had not weakened. But hearing someone behind him mention Fayeux, the collector of revenues in Vendôme, with whom he had had dealings for a number of petty shareholders, the name had caused him some distress, reminding him of the enormous mass of humble folk, wretched little investors who would be crushed to pieces under the wreckage of the Universal. Then, suddenly, the sight of Dejoie, distraught and deathly pale, sharpened that distress, with this one poor man whom he knew, seeming to personify all the rest of the humble folk now ruined. At the same time, in a sort of hallucination, the pale and desolate faces of the Countess de Beauvilliers and her daughter arose before him, gazing at him in despair with their wide eyes full of tears. And at that moment, Saccard, the pirate, with a heart toughened by twenty years of banditry, Saccard, who took pride in never having felt his legs give way and who had never once sat down on the bench right there beside the pillar, this same Saccard experienced a moment of real weakness, and had to let himself sink down upon it for a moment. Crowds still surged around, almost suffocating him. He raised his head to get some air, and was at once on his feet, for he recognized, up in the telegraph gallery, looking down on the hall, La Méchain, towering over the battlefield with her enormous fat person. Her old black-leather bag lay beside her on the stone balustrade. Waiting to fill it up with worthless shares, she was watching out for the dead, like the voracious crow that follows armies until the day of massacre.
Saccard then, with a firm step, went away. His entire being seemed to him empty; but by an extraordinary effort of will, he went forward, erect and steady. But his senses seemed to have been blunted, he could no longer feel the ground, he seemed to be walking on a thick woollen carpet. His eyes too were clouded by mist, and his ears buzzing with noise. As he went out of the Bourse and down the steps, he no longer recognized people, they were just phantoms floating around him, vague shapes and stray sounds. Did he not see the broad grimacing face of Busch go by? Did he not pause for a moment to chat with Nathansohn, who was very much at ease, and whose weakened voice seemed to come from far away? Were not Sabatani and Massias walking with him, amid the general consternation? He seemed to see himself
once more with a large group around him, perhaps Sédille and Maugendre again, all sorts of faces that faded away, and kept changing. And as he was about to go away, and disappear into the rain and the liquid mud submerging Paris, he repeated in a shrill voice to all that phantom throng, making it a last point of honour to show his freedom of spirit:
‘Ah! How very upset I am about that camellia that got left out in my courtyard, and died of the cold!’
M
ADAME
C
AROLINE
, horrified, sent a telegram that very evening to her brother, who still had one more week in Rome; and three days later, rushing to the scene of danger, Hamelin arrived in Paris.
There was a fierce encounter between Saccard and the engineer, right there in the workroom where formerly their venture had been discussed and decided on with so much enthusiasm. During those three days, the collapse at the Bourse had horribly worsened, and Universal shares had gone down, fall after fall, even to below par, to four hundred and forty francs; and the fall was continuing, the whole edifice was crumbling hour by hour.
Madame Caroline listened in silence, not wanting to intervene. She was full of remorse, accusing herself of complicity, for it was she who, after promising to watch over things, had let it all happen. Instead of contenting herself with merely selling her shares to try to hamper the rise, shouldn’t she have found some other recourse, like warning people, taking some action, in short? Adoring her brother as she did, her heart bled for him, seeing him compromised in this way, with his great ventures undermined and his whole life’s work called in question; she suffered all the more in that she felt she had no right to judge Saccard: hadn’t she loved him? Was she not his, through that secret bond, the shame of which she now felt more than ever? Placed as she was between these two men, she was being torn apart in a violent struggle. On the evening of the catastrophe, she had launched out at Saccard in a great fit of frankness, emptying her heart of all the reproaches and fears it had been gathering for so long. Then, seeing him smiling, still tenacious and unvanquished, and thinking of how much strength he needed to keep standing up, she had felt she had no right, when she had been so weak with him, to finish him off by hitting him when he was down. And taking refuge in silence, showing blame only by her attitude, she wanted to be merely a witness.
But Hamelin, he who was normally so conciliatory, so detached from everything other than his work, this time grew angry. He made an extremely violent attack on speculation; the Universal had succumbed to the madness of speculation in a frenzy of sheer lunacy. Of course he was not one of those who claimed that a bank can simply let
its shares go down, as, for instance, a railway company can: railway companies have their mass of equipment, equipment that makes money, whereas the bank’s real equipment is its credit, so it is in dire trouble the moment its credit wobbles. But there was a question of proportion. If it was necessary, even wise, to keep the share-price at two thousand francs, it was crazy and completely criminal, to push it up, to try to put it up to three thousand and even beyond. As soon as he arrived, Hamelin had insisted on the truth, the whole truth. It was now impossible to lie to him, to tell him what he had allowed them to announce in his presence at the last shareholders’ meeting, that the company did not possess a single one of its own shares. The books were there and he easily saw through the lies they held. For instance, Count Sabatani; he knew that this frontman concealed the activities of the bank itself, and he was able to follow month by month Saccard’s mounting fever over the last two years, starting timidly, buying only with moderation, then driven on to larger and larger purchases, reaching the enormous figure of twenty-seven thousand shares costing nearly forty-eight milllion francs. Wasn’t that mad, a madness of such impudence it seemed to take people for fools, with such enormous transactions attributed to Sabatani? And Sabatani was not the only one, there were other men of straw, bank employees, even directors, whose purchases, entered as carried over, exceeded twenty thousand shares, these too representing nearly forty-eight million francs. Indeed, that was just the completed purchases; to these must be added the fixed-term purchases,
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made in the course of the last January settlement, representing a sum of sixty-seven-and-a-half million for more than twenty thousand shares, of which the Universal would have to take delivery; in addition, ten thousand other shares at the Lyons Stock Exchange, which made another twenty-four million. All of this, when added up, showed that the bank was holding nearly a quarter of the shares it had issued, and had paid for those shares the appalling sum of two hundred million francs. That was the abyss into which it had sunk.