Claudius Barnum Grabit Read online


Claudius Barnum Grabit

  by Jera Nour

  ISBN 9781311695123

  Copyright © 2015 by Jera Nour

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

  First Edition

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  Cover Design © 2015 by Jera Nour

  Editing by Nicole Voltack

  jeranour.com

  Claudius Barnum Grabit

 

 

  Claudius Barnum was successful. Not poor-but-happy successful, but really the most plastic-definition-of-the-word successful. He was moneyed. Very moneyed.

  People wondered how he made his money. Famous moneyed people write books about their talent, but Claudius Barnum didn’t write books. He refused to even consider it. The only clue people had of his money-making method was this response to a quick-interview-question:

  “When the opportunity comes, I grab it.”

  Sure, like most moneyed people, he bought properties, stocks and companies at rock-bottom prices and sold them at mountain peaks. But unlike most moneyed people, Claudius Barnum didn’t make mistakes. Not once. He didn’t make more money than he lose it; he simply never lost.

  Before 1976.

  In the summer of that year, something gave. Claudius Barnum-watchers saw, for the first time, some with terror – some with delight – a stain on his impeccable money-making record. The terrified felt god had fallen. Who else could they copy their trades from? The delighted gloated, rubbing their greasy hands with the ghee of jealousy. Maybe Claudius Barnum had fallen due to their skepticism and evil eyes. How powerful were they!

  Students of wealth had reason to rejoice. As much as they admired him and hated for him to lose (because in him was the secret to the perfect attainment of wealth), losing for the first time in his rich life (before, he had a poor one, but that’s another story), would perhaps make Claudius Barnum write that book. The Secrets to My Wealth, they had envisioned, and How I Lost it Once. Claudius Barnum was going to reveal to them all, one-by-one, step-by-step, the path to cornucopian bliss, and of course, that one-trick pony mistake. They’d all make – those steps and that one-trick pony mistake – a full abundant circle. There’s perfection after all. Claudius Barnum would make the whole world moneyed. Their world, of course.

  So they waited. Everyone. The terrified, the delighted and the students. All in the upper-class or in its inner circle. They waited for Claudius Barnum to leave his house and say something. Make a statement. An explanation. An apology. I’ll write that book. Anything, as if they were investors in Claudius Barnum’s very private life. As if he owed them something.

  Claudius Barnum stayed indoors, unseen for months.

  In the winter of that same year, markets peaked. Everyone waited for Claudius Barnum’s perfect timing to sell. He didn’t, but they did. Everyone made money, and everyone knew the longer Claudius Barnum waited, the more money he’d lose. They waited for him to cut his losses. He didn’t. What’s wrong with him? Is he on a suicide mission? (the students). Does he know something we don’t – making a billion when we’ve just made pennies? (the terrified). Is he dead? Would someone check on his rotten corpse! (the delighted).

  The waiting reached a point of impossible return. Claudius Barnum had lost again. Bigger, this time.

  Still, Claudius Barnum did not leave his house.

  A recluse, but by no means a destitute. He still had the means to buy, and owned lots to sell. But for several years Claudius Barnum was struck by the bane of inactivity. No activity, no money, that’s how the people put it. Of course, no activity, no loses either, but everyone had bills to pay, properties to maintain, their very upper-class lives to fund. As far as everyone was concerned, Claudius Barnum kept losing and losing.

  In the autumn of 1986, more than 10 years after his first shocking lost, Claudius Barnum made a surprising move. Surprising, because he made a move at all. There was some buzz, not frenzied like before, but enough to feel in the air that Claudius Barnum still had the ability to climb back up to the pedestal of legends. He bought a million acre land in the east for many millions more. Before people could speculate why, he bought another million in the west, then another in the south and another in the north. Four consecutive purchases in a period of five days after 10 years of inertia. A plunge in still water that cost him his fortunes save the mansion that he slept in and then some to maintain himself and his thoroughbreds for the rest of their lives.

  People looked closer. Cost. Value. Asset appreciation. What did Claudius Barnum see that they didn’t? Someone had observed (likely the student) that the focal point of his new properties was not just the town centre, but his house, and those lands had nothing but swamps, marshes and bogs if not barren.

  Did he want to be the king of north, south, east and west? King of swamps and sloughs more likely! (the delighted). Had Claudius Barnum finally lost his marbles? (the students). Had anyone did a test if the lands had gold, real ones or black? (the terrified). If he had development in mind and be king of a new country, Claudius Barnum had better hidden fortunes in his attic and cellar to scrape from.

  But he did nothing. He didn’t invite investors, form partnerships or offered any insight at all to his investment decisions. Geological companies had volunteered to test for minerals, but he declined. Instead, he put up no-entry signs and barricades. This is my life, he seemed to say – stay out of it!

  No one had a clue what went on inside Claudius Barnum’s head.

  Finally, in the spring of 1995, a clue, though inconclusive, surrendered itself. A rumour, believed to be fact, circulated that Claudius Barnum spent his years, after his massive land purchase, exploring his lands, first on his own on his thoroughbred, then in the company of freelance rangers who were paid handsomely for their time and his safeguard. No prize for guessing where this rumour (fact) came from.

  They had explored the lands days and mostly nights on the rangers’ jeeps. Silently. No one was allowed to speak unless the engine was running. When it stopped, Claudius Barnum listened intently, so intently at some nights he pressed his cheek to the ground and stayed there till morning. Such dedication, the rangers were thinking, perhaps he could hear, and only he, running oil below.

  Was it running oil that he heard, or was it fortunes running away, for Claudius Barnum declared his project finished and the rangers’ employment terminated. Leathered face and toughened hands replaced the youthful appearance of Claudius Barnum. A year later, he engaged the services of a private nurse.

  In the summer of 2006, Claudius Barnum died. He was seventy-three, seated in his wheelchair by the side of his massive pond in the garden of his massive house, of which to the north, east, south and west he was king. Even in his last moments, Claudius Barnum was listening intently, his shoulders and neck bent as if by the burden of his crown, eyes lowered, then shut in concentration, then for good.

  The only witness left to Claudius Barnum’s final years was his nurse, and to the reporter of a financial magazine who interviewed her, she had this tale to tell:

  On warm nights – one of which claimed his life - he’d rather sit by the pond, sometimes for hours on end when the crickets sing, sometimes mere minutes when he thought the nights too silent. One silent night, about a month from the one in which his life ended, Claudius Barnum laid on his bed, eyes opened
, palms clasped above his belly, reflective.

  “Can I get you anything, sir, perhaps a glass of milk to help you sleep?” I asked.

  “No, Julia, just a little of your time,” he said.

  “Of course.” I took a chair and sat by his bed, hands on my lap.

  “Do you have family?” he asked.

  “Yes, sir,” I said. “A daughter, two sons; my mother helps take care of them.”

  “No husband?”

  “I’m divorced.”

  “Where is he now?”

  “He works on an oil rig, off the coast somewhere in the middle east.”

  “I’m sure an oil company I had invested in before.”

  I smiled politely.

  “I no longer make money, you know. I don’t buy or sell anything anymore.”

  “I know.”

  “Oh, do you?”

  “There are news about you from time to time.”

  “News about me I am never consulted about.”

  I smiled and lowered my head.

  “They are fools,” Mr. Barnum suddenly said, after closing his eyes. I thought he had fallen asleep. “But I am the bigger fool.” He opened his eyes and turned his head towards me. “I am leaving, Julia, and I am leaving everything I own, a fool’s treasures, to you and your daughter and two sons and mother who takes care of them.”

  I thought Mr. Barnum was joking, and he saw it in my eyes.

  “No one had the fortune as much as me, to make