Fabian threw out his arms. “But no! Father might live another ten years—though I don’t think so—and I couldn’t have stood it. He was lapping me in the mud.”
“He doesn’t lap Tarboe in the mud.”
“No, and he wouldn’t have lapped you in the mud, because you’ve got imagination, and you think wide and long when you want to. But I’m middle-class in business. I’ve got no genius for the game. He didn’t see my steady qualities were what was needed. He wanted me to be like himself, an eagle, and I was only a robin red-breast.”
Suddenly his eyes flashed and his teeth set. “You couldn’t stand him, wouldn’t put up with his tyranny. You wanted to live your own life, and you’re doing it. When he bought me out, what was there for me to do but go into the only business I knew, with the only big man in the business, besides John Grier. I’ve as good blood as he’s got in his veins. I do business straight.
“He didn’t want me to do it straight. That’s one of the reasons we fell out. John Grier’s a big, ruthless trickster. I wasn’t. I was for playing the straight game, and I played it.”
“Well, he’s got his own way now. He’s got a man who wouldn’t blink at throttling his own brother, if it’d do him any good. Tarboe is iron and steel; he’s the kind that succeeds. He likes to rule, and he’s going to get what he wants mostly.”
“Is that why you’re going away?” asked Fabian. “Don’t you think it’ll be just as well not to go, if Tarboe is going to get all he wants?”
“Does Tarboe come here?”
“He’s been here twice.”
“Visiting?”