EFFECTING A LOAN
Prince Duncan was unusually taciturn
during the railroad journey—so much so
that his wife noticed it, and inquired the reason.
“Business, my dear,” answered
the bank president. “I am rather perplexed
by a matter of business.”
“Business connected with the
bank, Mr. Duncan?” asked his wife.
“No, private business.”
“Have you heard anything yet of the stolen bonds?”
“Not yet.”
“Have you any suspicion?”
“None that I am at liberty to
mention,” answered Duncan, looking mysterious.
“I suppose you no longer suspect that boy Luke?”
“I don’t know. The
man who owns to having given him the tin box for safe-keeping
is, in my opinion, a suspicious character. I shouldn’t
be at all surprised if he were a jailbird.”
The small man already referred to,
who occupied a seat just across the aisle, here smiled
slightly, but whether at the president’s remark,
is not clear.
“What did he call himself?”
“Roland Reed—no doubt an alias.”
“It seems to me you ought to
follow him up, and see if you can’t convict
him of the theft.”
“You may be sure, Jane, that
the president and directors of the Groveton Bank will
do their duty in this matter,” said Mr. Duncan
rather grandiloquently. “By the way, I have
received this morning a letter from Mr. Armstrong,
the owner of the stolen bonds, saying that he will
be at home in a few days.”
“Does he know of the loss?”
“Not yet.”
“How will he take it?”
“Really, Jane, you are very
inquisitive this morning. I presume he will be
very much annoyed.”
The car had become quite warm, and
Mr. Duncan, who had hitherto kept on his overcoat,
rose to take it off. Unfortunately for him he
quite forgot the bonds he had in the inside pocket,
and in his careless handling of the coat the package
fell upon the floor of the car, one slipping out of
the envelope a bond for one thousand dollars.
Prince Duncan turned pale, and stooped
to pick up the package. But the small man opposite
was too quick for him. He raised the package
from the floor, and handing it to the bank president
with a polite bow, said, with a smile: “You
wouldn’t like to lose this, sir.”
“No,” answered Duncan
gruffly, angry with the other for anticipating him,
“it was awkward of me.”
Mrs. Duncan also saw the bond, and
inquired with natural curiosity. “Do they
belong to the bank, Mr. Duncan?”
“No; they are my own.”
“I am glad of that. What are you going
to do with them?”
“Hush! It is dangerous
to speak of them here. Some one might hear, and
I might be followed. I am very much annoyed that
they have been seen at all.”
This closed Mrs. Duncan’s mouth,
but she resolved to make further inquiries when they
were by themselves.
Prince Duncan looked askance at his
opposite neighbor. He was a man who had come
to Groveton recently, and had opened a billiard saloon
and bar not far from the bank. He was not regarded
as a very desirable citizen, and had already excited
the anxiety of parents by luring into the saloon some
of the boys and young men of the village. Among
them, though Squire Duncan did not know it, was his
own son Randolph, who had already developed quite a
fondness for playing pool, and even occasionally patronized
the bar. This, had he known it, would have explained
Randolph’s increased applications for money.
Whether Tony Denton—his
full name was Anthony Denton—had any special
object in visiting New York, I am unable to state.
At all events it appeared that his business lay in
the same direction as that of Prince Duncan, for on
the arrival of the train at the New York depot, he
followed the bank president at a safe distance, and
was clearly bent upon keeping him in view.
Mr. Duncan walked slowly, and appeared
to be plunged in anxious thought. His difficulties
were by no means over. He had the bonds to dispose
of, and he feared the large amount might occasion
suspicion. They were coupon bonds, and bore no
name or other evidence of ownership. Yet the
mere fact of having such a large amount might occasion
awkward inquiries.
“Here’s yer mornin’
papers!” called a negro newsboy, thrusting his
bundle in front of the country banker.
“Give me a Herald,” said
Mr. Duncan. Opening the paper, his eye ran hastily
over the columns. It lighted up as he saw a particular
advertisement.
“The very thing,” he said to himself.
This was the advertisement:
“LOAN office—We
are prepared to loan sums to suit, on first-class
security, at a fair rate of interest. Call or
address Sharp & Ketchum, No. — Wall Street.
Third floor.”
“I will go there,” Prince
Duncan suddenly decided. “I will borrow
what I can on these bonds, and being merely held on
collateral, they will be kept out of the market.
At the end of six months, say, I will redeem them,
or order them sold, and collect the balance, minus
the interest.”
Having arrived at this conclusion,
he quickened his pace, his expression became more
cheerful, and he turned his steps toward Wall Street.
“What did the old fellow see
in the paper?” thought Tony. Denton, who,
still undiscovered, followed Mr. Duncan closely.
“It is something that pleased him, evidently.”
He beckoned the same newsboy, bought
a Herald also, and turning to that part of the paper
on which the banker’s eyes had been resting,
discovered Sharp & Ketchum’s advertisement.
“That’s it, I’ll
bet a hat,” he decided. “He is going
to raise money on the bonds. I’ll follow
him.”
When Duncan turned into Wall Street,
Tony Denton felt that he had guessed correctly.
He was convinced when the bank president paused before
the number indicated in the advertisement.
“It won’t do for me to
follow him in,” he said to himself, “nor
will it be necessary—I can remember the
place and turn it to my own account by and by.”
Prince Duncan went up-stairs, and
paused before a door on which was inscribed:
Sharp & Ketchum
bankers
LOANS NEGOTIATED
He opened the door, and found the
room furnished in the style of a private banking-office.
“Is Mr. Sharp or Mr. Ketchum
in?” he inquired of a sharp-faced young clerk,
the son, as it turned out, of the senior partner.
“Yes, sir, Mr. Sharp is in.”
“Is he at leisure? I wish to see him on
business.”
“Go in there, sir,” said
the clerk, pointing to a small private room in the
corner of the office. Following the directions,
Mr. Duncan found himself in the presence of a man
of about fifty, with a hatchet face, much puckered
with wrinkles, and a very foxy expression.
“I am Mr. Sharp,” he said, in answer to
an inquiry.
Prince Duncan unfolded his business.
He wished to borrow eight or nine thousand dollars
on ten thousand dollars’ worth of United States
Government bonds.
“Why don’t you sell at once?” asked
Sharp keenly.
“Because I wish, for special
reasons, to redeem these identical bonds, say six
months hence.”
“They are your own?” asked Mr. Sharp.
“They are a part of my wife’s
estate, of which I have control. I do not, however,
wish her to know that I have raised money on them,”
answered Duncan, with a smooth falsehood.
“Of course, that makes a difference.
However, I will loan you seven thousand dollars, and
you will give me your note for seven thousand five
hundred, at the usual interest, with permission to
sell the bonds at the end of six months if the note
remains unpaid then, I to hand you the balance.”
Prince Duncan protested against these
terms as exorbitant, but was finally obliged to accede
to them. On the whole, he was fairly satisfied.
The check would relieve him from all his embarrassments
and give him a large surplus.
“So far so good!” said
Tony Denton, as he saw Mr. Duncan emerge into the
street. “If I am not greatly mistaken this
will prove a lucky morning for me.”