The Taipan
by W. Somerset Maugham
No one knew better than he that he was an important person.
He was number one in not the least important branch of the most important
English firm in China. He had worked his way up through solid ability
and he looked back with a faint smile at the callow clerk who had come
out to China thirty years before. When he remembered the modest home he
had come from, a little red house in a long row of little red houses,
in Barnes, a suburb which, aiming desperately at the genteel, achieves
only a sordid melancholy, and compared it with the magnificent stone mansion,
with its wide verandas and spacious rooms, which was at once the office
of the company and his own residence, he chuckled with satisfaction. He
had come a long way since then. He thought of the high tea to which he
sat down when he came home form school (he was at St. Paul‘s), with
his father and mother and his two sisters, a slice of cold meat, a great
deal of bread and butter and plenty of milk in his tea, everyone helping
himself and then he thought of the state in which now he ate his evening
meal. He always dressed and whether he was alone or not he expected the
three boys to wait at table. His number one boy knew exactly what he liked
and he never had to bother himself with the details of housekeeping; but
he always had a set dinner with soup and fish, entré roast, sweet
and savory, so that if he wanted to ask anyone in at the last moment he
could. He liked his food and he did not see why when he was alone he should
have less good a dinner than when he had a guest.
He had indeed gone far. That was why he did not care to
go home now, he had not been to England for ten years, and he took his
leave in Japan or Vancouver, where he was sure of meeting old friends
from the China coast. He knew no one at home. His sisters had married
in their own station, their husbands were clerks and their sons were clerks;
there was nothing between him and them, they bored him. He satisfied the
claims of relationship by sending them every Christmas a piece of fine
silk, some elaborate embroidery, or a case of tea. He was not a mean man
and as long as his mother lived he had made an allowance. But when the
time came for him to retire he had no intention of going back to England,
he had seen too many men do that and he knew how often it was a failure,
what with bridge and his ponies and golf he expected to get through the
rest of his life very comfortable, But he had a good many years before
he need think of retiring. In another five or six Higgins would be going
home and then he would take charge of the head office in Shanghai. Meanwhile
he was very happy where he was, he could save money, which you couldn‘t
do in Shanghai, and have a good time into the bargain. This place had
another advantage over Shanghai: he was the most prominent
man in the community and what he said went. Even the consul took care
to keep on the right side of him. Once a consul and he had been at loggerheads
and it was not he who had gone to the wall. The taipan thrust out his
jaw pugnaciously as he thought of the incident.
|