on was her discontented ambition: her fatherâs wealth should have been a cushion, but to her it was a goad.
You quit private practice and you went to work for Jim Speedâfiery muckraker, stubborn digger, eminent exposer of corruption. That was where the challenge was. Doing Speedâs investigative work, unearthing the grit for the white papers on military-industrial collusion and Mafia labor corruption. It got Speed elected to Congress, and you spent those years running his home office in New York, and then the mayor tapped Speed to take over as commissioner of the scandal-staggered city Finance Department, and you, his chief assistant, helped clean it up, you with your mesomorphic curiosity and righteous indignation, and, just incidentally, with your home disrupted by a part-time wife who had a compulsion to succeed on her own and flung in your face, as an act of defiance (against you or against her father?), the art gallery she opened on Third Avenue. The senseless, brittle competition between the two of youâthe divorce; and then, still rocked by that, youâre propelled out of your job when Speed dies in the crash of a private plane and a new commissioner moves in, complete with staff.
You didnât know what you wanted to do then. You had dealt often with Quintâs SEC office. There were half a dozen good job offers, law firms and city jobs, but you didnât see any promise of action in the rest of them. Maybe with Quint â¦
And so here you are , he thought, dour. If there was going to be any action, he would have to create it himself. Take up skydiving, maybe. Rob a bank.
Around him the street was still crowded, but the rush to get to work was nearly ended. The financial districtâs working hours were earlier than those uptown; Wall Street was a city of its own, little known to midtown businessmen, bounded by Bowling Green to the south; the swift, filthy East River; Fulton Street (or perhaps Chambers Street, depending on your vintage) on the north; and on the west a mute anachronism: the cemetery of Trinity Church, where no human corpse had been buried in living memory, since Manhattan had long since run out of space for its dead.
By now the brokers, bankers, secretaries, corporation potentates and their entourages had long ago hurried into their offices. The streets still flowed with workers and late arrivals, rushing, as thick as pigeons in the Piazza San Marco. In offices looming all around, men would be swiveling toward Quotron tickers and watching their clocks, synchronizing like field generals preparing for battle. In these slow-ticking moments, all over the world, men and women would be drawing their telephones nearâwaiting, adrenalin flooding in anticipation, for the Market ( very capital âMâ) to open.
They waited keenly, in offices and homes and hotels, for the Magic Hour when they could dial their stockbrokers, ask âHowâs Motors?â, talk about yesterdayâs closing Dow-Jones, place buy or sell orders, discuss the weather or the dayâs political news with brokers who only wanted to be let alone by the lonely phone callers so they could run their businesses.
All over the United States right now they would be converging into the funeral-parlor board rooms of Stock Exchange member firms: wise investors, ignorant speculators, compulsive gamblers, ticker-tape addicts, retired bored pensioners. In the Far West, to coincide with New Yorkâs exchange hours, brokersâ offices would open as early as seven A.M. The customers would sit for the next five hours with faces studiously guarded against any show of feelings as they watched the boards tick over, watched the stock news chatter by like an endless freight train, pacing off the latest sale price, bid-and-asked, high, low, and close of all active listed stocksâ¦.
Hastings went across the street into the old mausoleumâthe New York Stock Exchange. Crowds churned through the
The Cowboy's Surprise Bride