them and shade it for himself. He said that where
his advantage was not concerned, there was ever so
much good in Dryfoos, and that if in some things he
had grown inflexible, he had expanded in others to
the full measure of the vast scale on which he did
business. It had seemed a little odd to March
that a man should put money into such an enterprise
as ‘Every Other Week’ and go off about
other affairs, not only without any sign of anxiety,
but without any sort of interest. But Fulkerson
said that was the splendid side of Dryfoos. He
had a courage, a magnanimity, that was equal to the
strain of any such uncertainty. He had faced
the music once for all, when he asked Fulkerson what
the thing would cost in the different degrees of potential
failure; and then he had gone off, leaving everything
to Fulkerson and the younger Dryfoos, with the instruction
simply to go ahead and not bother him about it.
Fulkerson called that pretty tall for an old fellow
who used to bewail the want of pigs and chickens to
occupy his mind. He alleged it as another proof
of the versatility of the American mind, and of the
grandeur of institutions and opportunities that let
every man grow to his full size, so that any man in
America could run the concern if necessary. He
believed that old Dryfoos could step into Bismarck’s
shoes and run the German Empire at ten days’
notice, or about as long as it would take him to go
from New York to Berlin. But Bismarck would not
know anything about Dryfoos’s plans till Dryfoos
got ready to show his hand. Fulkerson himself
did not pretend to say what the old man had been up
to since he went West. He was at Moffitt first,
and then he was at Chicago, and then he had gone out
to Denver to look after some mines he had out there,
and a railroad or two; and now he was at Moffitt again.
He was supposed to be closing up his affairs there,
but nobody could say.
Fulkerson told March the morning after Dryfoos returned
that he had not only not pulled out at Moffitt, but
had gone in deeper, ten times deeper than ever.
He was in a royal good-humor, Fulkerson reported, and
was going to drop into the office on his way up from
the Street (March understood Wall Street) that afternoon.
He was tickled to death with ‘Every Other Week’
so far as it had gone, and was anxious to pay his
respects to the editor.
March accounted for some rhetoric in this, but let
it flatter him, and prepared himself for a meeting
about which he could see that Fulkerson was only less
nervous than he had shown himself about the public
reception of the first number. It gave March a
disagreeable feeling of being owned and of being about
to be inspected by his proprietor; but he fell back
upon such independence as he could find in the thought
of those two thousand dollars of income beyond the
caprice of his owner, and maintained an outward serenity.