<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II" />CHAPTER II</h2>
<p>Livingstone closed his books. He had put everything in such shape that
Clark, his confidential clerk, would not have the least trouble this
year in transferring everything and starting the new books that would
now be necessary.</p>
<p>Last year Clark had been at his house a good many nights writing up
these private books; but that was because Clark had been in a sort of
muddle last winter,—his wife was sick, or one of his dozen children had
met with an accident,—or something,—Livingstone vaguely remembered.</p>
<p>This year there would be no such trouble. Livingstone was pleased at the
thought; for Clark was a good fellow, and a capable bookkeeper, even
though he was a trifle slow.</p>
<p>Livingstone felt that he had, in a way, a high regard for Clark. He was
attentive to his duties, beyond words. He was a gentleman, too,—of a
first-rate family—a man of principle. How he could ever have been
content to remain a simple clerk all these years, Livingstone could not
understand. It gave him a certain contempt for him. That came, he
reflected, of a man's marrying indiscreetly and having a houseful of
children on his back.</p>
<p>Clark would be pleased at the showing on the books. He was always
delighted when the balances showed a marked increase.</p>
<p>Livingstone was glad now that he had not only paid the old clerk extra
for his night-work last year, but had given him fifty dollars
additional, partly because of the trouble in his family, and partly
because Livingstone had been unusually irritated when Clark got the two
accounts confused.</p>
<p>Livingstone prided himself on his manner to his employees. He prided
himself on being a gentleman, and it was a mark of a gentleman always
to treat subordinates with civility. He knew men in the city who were
absolute bears to their employees; but they were blackguards.</p>
<p>He, perhaps, ought to have discharged Clark without a word; that would
have been "business;" but really he ought not to have spoken to him as
he did. Clark undoubtedly acted with dignity. Livingstone had had to
apologize to him and ask him to remain, and had made the amend (to
himself) by giving him fifty dollars extra for the ten nights' work. He
could only justify the act now by reflecting that Clark had more than
once suggested investments which had turned out most fortunately.</p>
<p>Livingstone determined to give Clark this year a hundred dollars—no,
fifty—he must not spoil him, and it really was not "business."</p>
<p>The thought of his liberality brought to Livingstone's mind the
donations that he always made at the close of the year. He might as well
send off the cheques now.</p>
<p>He took from a locked drawer his private cheque-book and turned the
stubs thoughtfully. He had had that cheque-book for a good many years.
He used to give away a tenth of his income. His father before him used
to do that. He remembered, with a smile, how large the sums used to seem
to him. He turned back the stubs only to see how small a tenth used to
be. He no longer gave a tenth or a twentieth or even a—he had no
difficulty in deciding the exact percentage he gave; for whenever he
thought now of the sum he was worth, the figures themselves, in
clean-cut lines, popped before his eyes. It was very curious. He could
actually see them in his own handwriting. He rubbed his eyes, and the
figures disappeared.</p>
<p>Well, he gave a good deal, anyhow—a good deal more than most men, he
reflected. He looked at the later stubs and was gratified to find how
large the amounts were,—they showed how rich he was,—and what a
diversified list of charities he contributed to: hospitals, seminaries,
asylums, churches, soup-kitchens, training schools of one kind or
another. The stubs all bore the names of those through whom he
contributed—they were mostly fashionable women of his acquaintance, who
either for diversion or from real charity were interested in these
institutions.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wright's name appeared oftenest. Mrs. Wright was a woman of fortune
and very prominent, he reflected, but she was really kind; she was just
a crank, and, somehow, she appeared really to believe in him. Her
husband, Livingstone did not like: a cold, selfish man, who cared for
nothing but money-making and his own family.</p>
<p>There was one name down on the book for a small amount which
Livingstone could not recall.—Oh yes, he was an assistant preacher at
Livingstone's church: the donation was for a Christmas-tree in a
Children's Hospital, or something of the kind. This was one of Mrs.
Wright's charities too. Livingstone remembered the note the preacher had
written him afterwards—it had rather jarred on him, it was so grateful.
He hated "gush," he said to himself; he did not want to be bothered with
details of yarn-gloves, flannel petticoats, and toys. He took out his
pencil and wrote Mrs. Wright's name on the stub. That also should be
charged to Mrs. Wright. He carried in his mind the total amount of the
contributions, and as he came to the end a half-frown rested on his brow
as he thought of having to give to all these objects again.</p>
<p>That was the trouble with charities,—they were as regular as coupons.
Confound Mrs. Wright! Why did she not let him alone! However, she was
an important woman—the leader in the best set in the city. Livingstone
sat forward and began to fill out his cheques. Certain cheques he always
filled out himself. He could not bear to let even Clark know what he
gave to certain objects.</p>
<p>The thought of how commendable this was crossed his face and lit it up
like a glint of transient sunshine. It vanished suddenly as he began to
calculate, leaving the place where it had rested colder than before. He
really could not spend as much this year as last—why, there was—for
pictures, so much; charities, so much, etc. It would quite cut into the
amount he had already decided to lay by. He must draw in somewhere: he
was worth only—the line of figures slipped in before his eyes with its
lantern-slide coldness.</p>
<p>He reflected. He must cut down on his charities. He could not reduce the
sum for the General Hospital Fund; he had been giving to that a number
of years.—Nor that for the asylum; Mrs. Wright was the president of
that board, and had told him she counted on him.—Hang Mrs. Wright! It
was positive blackmail!—Nor the pew-rent; that was respectable—nor the
Associated Charities; every one gave to that. He must cut out the
smaller charities.</p>
<p>So he left off the Children's Hospital Christmas-tree Fund, and the
soup-kitchen, and a few insignificant things like them into which he had
been worried by Mrs. Wright and other troublesome women. The only regret
he had was that taken together these sums did not amount to a great
deal. To bring the saving up he came near cutting out the hospital.
However, he decided not to do so. Mrs. Wright believed in him. He would
leave out one of the pictures he had intended to buy; he would deny
himself, and not cut out the big charity. This would save him the
trouble of refusing Mrs. Wright and would also save him a good deal more
money.</p>
<p>Once more, at the thought of his self-denial, that ray of wintry
sunshine passed across Livingstone's cold face and gave it a look of
distinction—almost like that of a marble statue.</p>
<p>Again he relapsed into reflection. His eyes were resting on the pane
outside of which the fine snow was filling the chilly afternoon air in
flurries and scurries that rose and fell and seemed to be blowing every
way at once. But Livingstone's eyes were not on the snow. It had been so
long since Livingstone had given a thought to the weather, except as it
might affect the net earnings of railways in which he was interested,
that he never knew what the weather was, and so far as he was concerned
there need not have been any weather. Spring was to him but the season
when certain work could be done which in time would yield a crop of
dividends; and Autumn was but the time when crops would be moved and
stocks sent up or down.</p>
<p>So, though Livingstone's eyes rested on the pane, outside of which the
flurrying snow was driving that meant so much to so many people, and his
face was thoughtful—very thoughtful—he was not thinking of the snow,
he was calculating profits.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />