đ The Absolute at Large (day 1)
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joi, 16 mai, 01:53 (acum 3 zile)
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The Absolute at Large
I
The Advertisement
On New Yearâs Day, 1943, G. H. Bondy, head of the great Metallo-Electrical Company, was sitting as usual reading his paper. He skipped the news from the theatre of war rather disrespectfully, avoided the Cabinet crisis, then crowded on sail (for the Peopleâs Journal, which had grown long ago to five times its ancient size, now afforded enough canvas for an ocean voyage) for the Finance and Commerce section. Here he cruised about for quite a while, then furled his sails, and abandoned himself to his thoughts.
âThe Coal Crisis!â he said to himself. âMines getting worked out; the Ostrava basin suspending work for years. Heavens above, itâs a sheer disaster! Weâll have to import Upper Silesian coal. Just work out what that will add to the cost of our manufactures, and then talk about competition. Weâre in a pretty fix. And if Germany raises her tariff, we may as well shut up shop. And the Industrial Banks going down, too! What a wretched state of affairs! What a hopeless, stupid, stifling state of affairs! Oh, damn the crisis!â
Here G. H. Bondy, Chairman of the Board of Directors, came to a pause. Something was fidgeting him and would not let him rest. He traced it back to the last page of his discarded newspaper. It was the syllable tion, only part of a word, for the fold of the paper came just in front of the t. It was this very incompleteness which had so curiously impressed itself upon him.
âWell, hang it, itâs probably iron production,â Bondy pondered vaguely, âor prevention, or, maybe, restitutionâ ââ ⌠And the Azote shares have gone down, too. The stagnationâs simply shocking. The positionâs so bad that itâs ridiculousâ ââ ⌠But thatâs nonsense: who would advertise the restitution of anything? More likely resignation. Itâs sure to be resignation.â
With a touch of annoyance, G. H. Bondy spread out the newspaper to dispose of this irritating word. It had now vanished amid the chequering of the small advertisements. He hunted for it from one column to another, but it had concealed itself with provoking ingenuity. Mr. Bondy then worked from the bottom up, and finally started again from the right-hand side of the page. The contumacious âtionâ was not to be found.
Mr. Bondy did not give in. He refolded the paper along its former creases, and behold, the detestable tion leaped forth on the very edge. Keeping his finger firmly on the spot, he swiftly spread the paper out once more, and foundâ âMr. Bondy swore under his breath. It was nothing but a very modest, very commonplace small advertisement:
Invention
Highly remunerative, suitable for any factory, for immediate sale, personal reasons. Apply R. Marek, Engineer, BĹevnov, 1651.
âSo thatâs all it was!â thought G. H. Bondy. âSome sort of patent braces; just a cheap swindle or some crazy fellowâs pet plaything. And here Iâve wasted five minutes on it! Iâm getting scatterbrained myself. What a wretched state of affairs! And not a hint of improvement anywhere!â
He settled himself in a rocking-chair to savour in more comfort the full bitterness of this wretched state of affairs. True, the M.E.C. had ten factories and 34,000 employees. The M.E.C. was the leading producer of iron. The M.E.C. had no competitor as regards boilers. The M.E.C. grates were world-famous. But after thirty yearsâ hard work, gracious Heavens, surely one would have got bigger results elsewhereâ ââ âŚ
G. H. Bondy sat up with a jerk. âR. Marek, Engineer; R. Marek, Engineer. Half a minute: mightnât that be that red-haired Marekâ âletâs see, what was his name? Rudolph, Rudy Marek, my old chum Rudy of the Technical School? Sure enough, here it is in the advertisement: âR. Marek, Engineer.â Rudy, you rascal, is it possible? Well, youâve not got on very far in the world, my poor fellow! Selling âa highly remunerative invention.â Ha! ha! ââŚÂ for personal reasons.â We know all about those âpersonal reasons.â No money, isnât that what it is? You want to catch some jay of a manufacturer on a nicely limed âpatent,â do you? Ah, well, you always had rather a notion of turning the world upside down. Ah, my lad, where are all our fine notions now! And those extravagant, romantic days when we were young!â
Bondy lay back in his chair once more.
âItâs quite likely it really is Marek,â he reflected. âStill, Marek had a head for science. He was a bit of a talker, but there was a touch of genius about the lad. He had ideas. In other respects he was a fearfully unpractical fellow. An absolute fool, in fact. Itâs very surprising that he isnât a Professor,â mused Mr. Bondy. âI havenât set eyes on him for twenty years. God knows what he has been up to; perhaps heâs come right down in the world. Yes, he must be down and out, living away over in BĹevnov, poor chapâ ââ ⌠and getting a living out of inventions! What an awful finish!â
He tried to imagine the straits of the fallen inventor. He managed to picture a horribly shaggy and dishevelled head, surrounded by dismal paper walls like those in a film. There is no furniture, only a mattress in the corner, and a pitiful model made of spools, nails, and match-ends on the table. A murky window looks out on a little yard. Upon this scene of unspeakable indigence enters a visitor in rich furs. âI have come to have a look at your invention.â The half-blind inventor fails to recognize his old schoolfellow. He humbly bows his tousled head, looks about for a seat to offer to his guest, and then, oh Heaven! with his poor, stiff, shaking fingers he tries to get his sorry invention goingâ âitâs some crazy perpetual motion deviceâ âand mumbles confusedly that it should work, and certainly would work, if only he hadâ ââ ⌠if only he could buyâ ââ ⌠The fur-coated visitor looks all round the garret, and suddenly he takes a leather wallet from his pocket and lays on the table one, two (Mr. Bondy takes fright and cries âThatâs enough!â) three thousand-crown notes. (âOne would have been quite enoughâ ââ ⌠to go on with, I mean,â protests something in Mr. Bondyâs brain.)
âThere isâ ââ ⌠something to carry on the work with, Mr. Marek. No, no, youâre not in any way indebted to me. Who am I? That doesnât matter. Just take it that I am a friend.â
Bondy found this scene very pleasant and touching.
âIâll send my secretary to Marek,â he resolved; âtomorrow without fail. And what shall I do today? Itâs a holiday; Iâm not going to the works. My timeâs my ownâ ââ ⌠a wretched state things are in! Nothing to do all day long! Suppose I went round today myself.â
G. H. Bondy hesitated. It would be a bit of an adventure to go and see for oneself how that queer fellow was struggling along in BĹevnov.
âAfter all, we were such chums! And old times have their claim on one. Yes, Iâll go!â decided Mr. Bondy. And he went.
He had rather a boring time while his car was gliding all over BĹevnov in search of a mean hovel bearing the number 1651. They had to inquire at the police-station.
âMarek, Marek,â said the inspector, searching his memory. âThat must be Marek the engineer, of Marek and Co., the electric lamp factory, 1651, Mixa Street.â
The electric lamp factory! Bondy felt disappointed, even annoyed. Rudy Marek wasnât living up in a garret, then! He was a manufacturer and wanted to sell some invention or other âfor personal reasons.â If that didnât smell of bankruptcy, his name wasnât Bondy.
âDo you happen to know how Mr. Marek is doing?â he asked the police inspector, with a casual air, as he took his seat in the car.
âOh, splendidly!â the inspector answered. âHeâs got a very fine business.â Local pride made him add, âThe firmâs very well knownâ; and he amplified this with: âA very wealthy man, and a learned one, too. He does nothing but make experiments.â
âMixa Street!â cried Bondy to his chauffeur.
âThird on the right!â the inspector called after the car.
Bondy was soon ringing at the residential part of quite a pretty little factory.
âItâs all very nice and clean here,â he remarked to himself. âFlowerbeds in the yard, creeper on the walls. Humph! There always was a touch of the philanthropist and reformer about that confounded Marek.â And at that moment Marek himself came out on the steps to meet him; Rudy Marek, awfully thin and serious-looking, up in the clouds, so to speak. It gave Bondy a queer pang to find him neither so young as he used to be nor so unkempt as that inventor; so utterly different from what Bondy had imagined that he was scarcely recognizable. But before he could fully realize his disillusionment, Marek stretched out his hand and said quietly, âWell, so youâve come at last, Bondy! Iâve been expecting you!â
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