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Solon Talbot would not have been so communicative if he had supposed that the banker was a friend to Mark. He had forgotten Mark's agency in protecting Mr. Rockwell from the dynamite fiend.
"The stock was probably purchased at a very low figure."
"I presume so, though I do not know what was paid for it. Indeed I never heard of it until I came to examine the items of my father-in-law's estate. He didn't have much else."
"It is fortunate for his heirs."
"Yes," answered Talbot rather nervously.
He was afraid Mr. Rockwell might inquire who were the other heirs. Had he done so, he would have evaded the question or boldly declared that there was no other heirs except himself.
After half an hour's conversation the purchase was made, and a check for one hundred and four thousand dollars was handed to Mr. Talbot.
"I hope you will not have occasion to regret your purchase, Mr.
Rockwell," said Solon.
"I think I shall not from advices I have received about increasing richness."
At the time appointed Mark called at Mr. Rockwell's office.
"Well, Mark," said the lawyer, "I made the purchase."
"At two hundred and sixty?"
"Yes. I congratulate you."
"That is, if I succeed in getting our share from my uncle."
"I will give you a letter to my lawyer, Mr. Gerrish. Obtain a letter from him, as your counsel, and call to-morrow upon your uncle with a formal demand for your mother's share of the proceeds of the mining stock."
CHAPTER x.x.xIX.
CONCLUSION.
SOLON TALBOT went home in high spirits. It was only recently that he had become aware of the great value of the Golden Hope shares. It had come to him as an agreeable surprise.
"With what I was worth before," he soliloquized, "I may now rate myself at one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. That is very good--for a beginning. I can afford to buy the house in Forty-Seventh Street, for I shall still have a hundred thousand dollars over, and in five years I mean to make it half a million."
He paced up and down his library in a state of joyous excitement. No thought of giving his sister-in-law her rightful due entered his mind.
"How can she find out?" he reflected. "Old Mr. Doane never told any of us of his mining shares. I presume he looked upon them as rather a risky investment. It has proved to be a splendid speculation, but it was rather a lucky accident than a shrewd purchase."
[Ill.u.s.tration: "'Mark!' exclaimed Talbot. What brings you here!"--Page 303.
_Mark Mason's Victory_.]
It was after breakfast on the morning succeeding the sale of stock. Mr.
Talbot was preparing to go over to the house which he proposed to purchase for a last examination before making up his mind, when the servant entered the library.
"There is a boy down-stairs wishes to see you, Mr. Talbot," he said.
"Perhaps a boy from Crane & Lawton," he reflected. "Show him up."
Directly afterwards Mark Mason entered the room.
"Mark!" exclaimed Talbot. "What brings you here!"
"A matter of business, Uncle Solon."
"Then you will have to wait, for I am just going out."
"The business is important," said Mark significantly.
"Well, what is it?"
"I understand you sold yesterday the shares in the Golden Hope Mine belonging to grandfather's estate."
"What!" exclaimed Solon Talbot, his face showing his surprise and dismay.
"There were four hundred shares, and they were sold to Luther Rockwell, the banker."
"Who told you this? Have you had any communication from Crane & Lawton?"
"No; though I know the sale was made through them."
Solon Talbot paused long enough to pull himself together. It would never do to surrender at discretion. He would brazen it out to the last.
"Your information is partly true," he said. "I did sell some shares of mining stock, but they belonged to me. You have nothing to do with them."
"Uncle Solon," said Mark composedly, "it is useless to try to deceive me. The four hundred shares were bought by my grandfather, and belonged to his estate. Half of the proceeds rightfully belongs to my mother."
Spots of perspiration stood on Solon Talbot's brow. Should he allow fifty thousand dollars to slip from his grasp?
"You audacious boy!" he exclaimed. "How dare you make such an a.s.sertion?"
"Because I happen to know that the four hundred shares stood in the name of my grandfather, Elisha Doane."
"That is a lie. May I ask where you got this information?"
"From the purchaser of the stock, Luther Rockwell."
"What do you know of Luther Rockwell?" demanded Solon Talbot, incredulous.
"He is one of my best friends. Before buying the shares of the Golden Hope Mine he asked my advice."