Dean Tracy, with years of experience in dealing with irate parents, refused to rise to Pat's anger. "Well, I did graduate from Harvard, many, many years ago," he smiled. "But you know how it is with Yale and Harvard." The smile faded from his face when he noted Pat's expression. "Sorry for the pun, Mr. Marratt. But, I don't believe that I ever asked Yale how he came by such an unusual name." Pat grumbled something about it being his wife's maiden name. For the second time that day he was reminded of his youth. It seemed an eternity ago. He had finished the International Correspondence courses in Business Administration and had taken a job as assistant accountant in one of the A & P branches. Barbara was three years old. Liz was pregnant again. "If he is a boy, could we name him Yale?" she asked him. "Dad would be so pleased." In those days, Liz's father had been vice-president of the Midhaven National Bank. Since Pat had begun to have visions of the future Marratt Corporation, and would need a loan to get started, the boy was christened Yale Marratt by his grandfather, who was happy to have the family name survive in this fashion. "I wish I could help you, Mr. Marratt," Dean Tracy said, fiddling nervously with a pipe that he had taken from the pocket of his tweed jacket. How could he tell this man that in all probability if it hadn't been for Patrick Marratt's donations to Buxton Academy, the faculty would have recommended that Yale not graduate with his class. Either way it was an insult. Marratt had a right to expect that Buxton would have prepared his son for one of the better Eastern colleges. "While I have a few connections at Harvard," Tracy admitted, "there is nothing I can do. Yale only passed the College Board examinations in English . . . and that exactly reflects his work at Buxton. This shouldn't be a surprise to you, Mr. Marratt. I have written you several letters. Your son has a brilliant mind. He has probably read more widely than any student we have ever had at Buxton. Unfortunately, whatever he has learned, he could just as well have learned on his own. I believe I have brought this up before with you. Yale does just exactly what he wants to do. When he should have been applying himself to his courses in mathematics and science, we discovered that he had been spending all of his time studying Greek philosophy. That we don't happen to have courses at Buxton in Greek philosophy didn't seem to deter him. That he barely passed Chemistry and Geometry didn't disturb him in the least. I gather from several conversations with him that he has no interest in going to college. To be perfectly frank, Mr. Marratt, I have been unable to reach through to whatever it is that makes Yale tick. It seems to me he might be the type to let go his own way and see what develops. He's a very quiet boy. You've no concern on that score." "Listen," Pat fairly snarled, "I may be fairly well off, but I'm not permitting my only son to drift aimlessly through life. This is a tough world. You can get in and fight and develop a hard fibre, or end up the way Yale is heading, a long-haired intellectual. We have enough of them around, now; developing cobwebbed ideas they hope will uproot the system that supports them. Yale is a kid. I expected Buxton Academy would give him direction." Pat shook his finger in the area of Dean Tracy's nose. "Since you can't, or won't, make any effort, all I want from you is the assurance that you won't foul up my plans. I'm not a college man, but from what I have seen of academic circles," Pat sneered, "a few good American dollars properly placed will lubricate the machinery and stop the squeaks." In the bright June sunlight Dean Tracy found Pat's intense, staring eyes somewhat uncomfortable. "You may be sure, Mr. Marratt, that Buxton Academy will help you with your son's future in every way possible." He watched Pat walk away and shrugged his shoulders. Teachers today were expected to be parents, he thought. It was nice to have a whipping boy to punish for your own deficiencies. The real trouble with Yale Marratt was Pat Marratt. Some rich men's sons became drunkards. They chased around with women, or spent money wildly. This was the normal, the expected rebellion. It disturbed nothing essential. But this rebellion of Yale Marratt, if it continued, was more fundamental. Tracy lit his pipe and made a mental note to check up in a few years and see what had developed. He doubted that Yale would be successful in his attempt to undermine the foundations of a man like Pat Marratt. Yale would eventually line up. He would become the not-quite-so-successful son of a successful man. In twenty years or so, a Pat Marratt II, or a Yale Marratt, Jr. would be brought to Buxton by a more subdued Yale Marratt; the rebellion would have been finished years before. Like most rebellions, it would have accomplished little. It took Pat Marratt until late August to admit defeat. As he told his executive staff all one had to do was define one's objectives carefully and then accomplish them. During the summer, he put his secretary to work tracing the background of his personal and business friends. He discovered at least a dozen Ivy League graduates who were indebted to him in one way or another. With their help he reached the top deans and even college presidents. Just as he would feel success within his grasp, a letter would arrive on official college stationery. It would suggest that if Yale Marratt would take another year of preparation his application would be re-considered. Pat was reading one of these refusals when Liz stepped into his office on her way to her hairdresser's. "It beats me," he said. He tossed the letter to her. "These damn fool colleges are crying poverty. They are out beating the bushes looking for alumni with money. Yet, when I offer them a deal they act as if they had been stabbed. I had one of the big shots at Harvard on the phone, long distance yesterday. He talked for a half hour on my call about academic standards. I get applications from Harvard graduates every week looking for jobs. Most of them don't know their ass from their elbow." "Why don't you let Yale take another year at Buxton?" Liz suggested. "Really, Pat, I think you are making a tempest in a teapot. You didn't go to college, Yale doesn't want to go. Is that so bad? Why don't you follow Dean Tracy's advice? Don't drive Yale so hard. Let him drift for awhile. He'll probably decide later that he wants to go." Pat shook his head. "You don't get the point, Liz. I don't give a damn about a college education. I'm stalling for time. Yale is nineteen. He's too young to work for the company permanently. I'd just create a job for him, and he would continue to drift. It isn't as if Yale knows what he wants to do in life. If you asked him, he'd probably say nothing, or come up with that Europe crap again. If I could get him anchored for four years the chances are that he'd grow up a little. It's not as if he were stupid." "Why haven't you talked with Dr. Tangle?" Liz asked. "You have the one man right in Midhaven who could help you, and you won't ask him." Pat raised his eyebrows and looked at her disgustedly. "I suppose, next, you'll suggest that Yale could go to Midhaven College. Wouldn't Doctor Tangle go for that, though?" he asked sarcastically. "The son of Pat Marratt attending a Baptist theological school . . . Jesus Christ!" "It hasn't been a theological school for years, and you know it, Pat. Only last week, at the Woman's Club, Doctor Tangle was talking about the changes that have occurred at Midhaven College. Midhaven has a complete curriculum. It's recognized as equal to any college in the East. In a way, you should be proud of Doctor Tangle. He has done a lot for Midhaven." "So, I haven't done anything for Midhaven? Just because I haven't the time to monkey around in city politics and I don't go around to Women's Clubs shooting off my mouth about the glorious city of Midhaven. . . . Just you remember that if the Marratt Corporation folded up -- several thousand people in Midhaven would go hungry! What has Doctor Tangle done to put bread in their mouths?" Pat wanted to continue the discussion, but Liz interrupted him with a request for a few hundred dollars. Pat chuckled. "For Christ-sakes, Liz, you're the limit. You go to some damned meeting and listen to a smooth old bastard like Doctor Tangle; you swallow his oily ideas hook, line and sinker. But, when your husband tries to explain what he is doing, it just doesn't have 'class,' does it? It's just old Pat wound up in some sales garbage. It's the way he makes all that dirty money. Well, if it weren't for me and the Marratt Corporation, your dear Doctor Tangle would be back in China whacking the bushes in search of converts. Instead he lives a life of luxury . . . President of Midhaven College and Pastor of the Midhaven Congregational Church. Do you know that his last quarterly dividend check, courtesy of Pat Marratt, amounted to five thousand three hundred and ninety-three dollars? Brother, what a return to get every three months on an investment of two thousand dollars." "Bye, bye, Hon -- I've got to go," Liz smiled. She had heard Pat rave on the subject of Doctor Tangle's good fortune many times before. As she was about to close the door, a thought occurred to her. "Speaking of Doctor Tangle reminds me that it's been at least three months since we've had him out to dinner. It might be a nice gesture to keep in closer touch with the only other stockholder in the Marratt Corporation. If you did, you might discover that Amos gives most of his dividends to the Doctor Tangle Scholarship Fund for worthy students at Midhaven College." "Oh, shit -- next thing you'll suggest that Yale apply for a scholarship. Goodbye! Stop and see Frank Middleton on the way out. He and Marie expect us to dinner tomorrow." Pat looked closely at Liz when he mentioned Frank Middleton. Middleton was Vice President in charge of production. Although he had risen to his present job with the same rough and ready background as Pat Marratt, somewhere Middleton had acquired a gloss and polish. Frank Middleton irritated Pat, but Pat couldn't help but admire him. He knew that Middleton with his throaty, radio announcer's voice and his wavy grey hair was the cynosure of most female gatherings. Liz had betrayed no reaction, however, and Pat said to himself . . . "The hell with it . . . why worry . . . it's only sex." But he knew the worry was there. It cropped up every time he saw Liz and Frank together. His thoughts returned to Doctor Tangle . . . twenty-three years. Liz's mother had picked Amos Tangle to marry them. He had been an assistant minister, then. It made little difference to Pat. On his death bed, Pat's father had requested a priest. Pat remembered his mother, who was cockney English, shaking her head and saying, "Look at the likes of him who wants a priest." But she hurried out and came back with one in time to see that "her old man" got the last rites of the Church. Both of them were dead when Pat married Elizabeth Yale. It probably was just as well. Though they had never gone to church regularly, they wouldn't have thought very highly of their only son marrying a "dirty Protestant." A year after Liz and he were married, Amos Tangle had taken over the duties of full-time minister of the Midhaven Congregational Church. His flock, composed of prosperous businessmen and their wives, and particularly Alfred Latham of Latham Shipyards, found his sermons inspiring. "It's the kind of down to earth religion I think you'll like, Pat," Liz's father had said. "This Tangle is only five or six years older than you and Liz, but he's got a head on him. Besides, the Lathams attend church regularly. . . . They are good people to know." Tangle's appeal to the businessmen of Midhaven was a neat interpretation of the Bible based on a religious philosophy that made the pursuit of the dollar a fundamental part of militant Christianity. "Christ told you to cast your bread upon waters. For you who are forging the future of this great country, your bread is your boundless energy which comes back to you, and the people of this nation twofold . . . in profits for you and higher standards of living for those you employ." In the early twenties Doctor Tangle's advice was a pleasant balm to his congregation. While Pat couldn't particularly stomach Tangle's pompous manner, he had to admit that what Doctor Tangle said was sound enough. Liz's father told Amos Tangle about Pat's plans to start a food packing plant and when Reverend Tangle cornered Liz after church one Sunday, she had first apologized for the fact that her husband seldom went to church and then invited Doctor Tangle to supper. It was the first time that Pat had spoken to him since the wedding, six months before. Tangle's buoyant manner, and his cheery inquiries about newly-wedded bliss brought blushes to Liz's face, but Pat was surly. He couldn't believe that Tangle's enthusiasm and good fellowship were sincere. Pat had continued to feel that way through his long years of association with Doctor Tangle but he had never been able to catch him in open hypocrisy. Pat finally came to the conclusion that Amos Tangle actually believed everything he said. This made Pat even more wary. An unreserved belief in every word you uttered was a form of egotism beyond even Pat's ebullient self-confidence. Before the evening was over Amos had warmed Pat up so thoroughly on the subject of the future Marratt Corporation, that Pat revealed not only his immediate plans, but his dreams of a brand line of canned vegetables, fruits, jams, jellies and products packed under a label which would become synonymous with top quality throughout the country. Pat was starting out with five thousand dollars borrowed from the Midhaven National Bank and three thousand of his own savings. Amos revealed that he had two thousand dollars inherited some years before from his father's estate. He convinced Pat that the extra two thousand dollar capital would iron out the rough spots for the new company. With no more time than it took to withdraw the money from the savings bank, and inveigle Pat into a few conferences with his lawyers, Amos Tangle became a twenty per cent stockholder in the newly launched Marratt Corporation.
Altered America by Ingham, Martin T., Kuhl, Jackson, Gainor, Dan, Lombardi, Bruno, Wells, Edmund, Kepfield, Sam, Hafford, Brad, Wallace, Dusty, Morgan, Owen, Dorr, James S.