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"Then he will not need to occupy himself," she said triumphantly, "and all the better. Let him rent an estate and live _en gentilhomme_!"
She has promised to go back to America for the summer for two months--she can learn her _roles_ there, she says, and Roger wants to go. _Eh bien!_ We shall have to wait.
The child is beautiful--so strong and well, and so ridiculously the image of Roger. She is trying to stand now--think of it! My poor little rats were two years old before they could.
_A vous toujours_,
SUE.
[FROM MY ATTORNEYS]
SEARS, BRADLEY AND SEARS,
Attorneys and Counsellors-at-Law.
Cable Address, Valleshta.
2-- COURT STREET, BOSTON, Ma.s.s.
March 10th, 188--
WINFRED JERROLDS, Esq.,
Cf., Coutts Bros.,
Cairo, Egypt.
DEAR SIR:
Pursuant to our letters to you of six weeks ago, we had our Mr. James go to the North Carolina plantation to investigate and report on the property. He was almost at once approached with offers to buy the property on terms which surprised him. He communicated with us and we took the responsibility of sending one of our best mining experts to look over the ground. We found that Pittsburg men had been making heavy purchases of land a few miles west across the range and had also been buying tracts adjacent to your lands both north and south; they had also had a party of engineers all over your lands under the guise of a fis.h.i.+ng party.
The expert, Mr. Minton, reported that he found heavy outcroppings of coal on both sides of the valley, of excellent steaming quality. The veins apparently extend through your lands into the higher lands north and south of yours. West of you but a few miles these Pittsburg people have acquired large bodies of iron ore. But the most important fact of all is that the valley is the most practical route for a railroad across the range west of you, from the coast to the iron lands already mentioned, for many miles in either direction.
We have been negotiating for three weeks with these Pittsburg people and they have finally made us an offer which we enclose. Briefly, it amounts to $300,000 in five per cent. mortgage bonds, $250,000 in stock (this of problematic value) and a royalty of ten cents per ton on all coal mined on your lands, with an agreement to mine at least 50,000 tons annually until your coal measures are practically exhausted.
In view of your unwillingness to come here and yourself engineer a rival development company, not to speak of the difficulty of enlisting adequate capital in the face of the purchases already made by our Pittsburg friends, we think you cannot do better than accept this offer. Whether we can get as good an one later is doubtful. We have promised an answer by cable from you within three days of your receipt of this letter.
Congratulating you on these most fortunate discoveries, we remain,
Yours very respectfully,
SEARS, BRADLEY AND SEARS.
[FROM TIP ELDER]
UNIVERSITY CLUB, NEW YORK,
March 20th, 188--
DEAR JERRY:
I needn't say how hearty my congratulations are on your good luck, need I? What a hit that was! And what a fine use you are making of it, too! Of course I'll help all I can. I must hurry to catch this mail-boat, so I will just cut short and merely say that Latham and Waite, of Union Square, seem to have put in the best bid for the work and I have told them to send you the detailed budget and contracts as soon as they can get them ready. They have connections with a big brick-yard in Tennessee and say that they can put you up a very good little hospital, three wards, operating-room, six private rooms, diet kitchen, dispensary, nurses' dormitory and suite for superintendent, including one elevator, for close under $65,000, on very good terms of payment. This will include all fittings (hardware, etc.) and two fine, large piazzas, with arrangements for sun parlour, if desired. Also four bathrooms. Miss Buxton has selected the site, as I suppose she has written you, and Miss Bradley has secured another deaconess-nurse for the permanent staff.
Young Collier has done marvellously well down there, and the generous endowment you offer will take care of two more boys, Miss Buxton says. Dr. McGee says that Collier has a real gift for surgery--I think I have got a scholars.h.i.+p for him at Johns Hopkins, next year.
What a fine little woman that nurse is! She can't speak of you without her eyes filling with tears. I teased her a little by saying that if she had not begged you for the use of that deserted farm-house on your land for a convalescent home, you would never have learned about the coal and probably sold the land for a song, so the credit was really hers--you ought to have seen the sparks in her eyes!
"You have really made him a rich man," I told her.
"I wish I could," she said very soberly, "but it's not money Mr. Jerrolds needs."
What do you suppose she meant? Anyhow, you've got it, old fellow, whether you need it or not, haven't you?
The hundred you sent me (you knew I didn't need any "fee") has gone into fitting up my club gymnasium. It went a good way, too. I miss Mrs. Paynter's suggestions--she is a good business-woman. What a release, that blackguard's death!
Strong words for a minister, perhaps you think, but I tell you, my blood boils when I think what she endured. I gave up my grandfather's h.e.l.l, long ago, but some men make you long to believe in purgatory!
I heard in a round-about way from Roger's brother-in-law Carter (Yale '8--, isn't he?) that Mrs. Bradley was going on the stage. I was afraid of it last summer.
Miss Bradley is a good woman, but not much like Roger, is she? Queer, how people get into the same family.
Hoping the rheumatism is all right now, and that you'll make use of me, in any way you can, I am
Yours faithfully,
TYLER FESSENDEN ELDER.
[FROM ROGER'S SISTER]
NEWTON, Ma.s.s.,
April 2nd, 188--
DEAR JERRY:
I can't resist, in spite of your warning, letting you know how deeply we appreciate your generous offer for the children. You know, of course, that we never felt the slightest claim. It would not have been so much, anyway, if it had been divided, and father always felt that people had a right to leave their money as they chose, if they had any rights in it at all, he said. I believe he thought it ought to go to the State, or something. He and Mr. C--l S--z used to talk about it evenings, I remember.
But to provide so generously for them in your will--it was truly kind and Walter feels it very much. I hope it will be long before they get it, Jerry. Of course Roger will have a son some day and then you will be giving it to Roger Bradley, as you say, and it won't have been out of the family really--you were just like one of us for so many years. And dearer to Uncle Win than any of us, I am sure.
With deepest grat.i.tude again from Walter and myself, and hopes that you are quite well now,
Yours always,
ALICE BRADLEY CARTER.