Sevenoaks Part 52
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"You have been unfortunate, Mr. Belcher," she said, sympathetically. "I am very sorry for you. It is not so bad as I heard, I am sure. You are looking very well."
"Oh! it is one of those things that may happen any day, to any man, operating as I do," responded Mr. Belcher, with a careless laugh. "The General never gets in too deep. He is just as rich to-day as he was when he entered the city."
"I'm so glad to hear it--gladder than I can express," said Mrs.
Dillingham, with heartiness.
Her effusiveness of good feeling and her evident relief from anxiety, were honey to him.
"Don't trouble yourself about me," said he, musingly. "The General knows what he's about, every time. He has the advantage of the rest of them, in his regular business."
"I can't understand how it is," responded Mrs. Dillingham, with fine perplexity. "You men are so different from us. I should think you would be crazy with your losses."
Now, Mr. Belcher wished to impress Mrs. Dillingham permanently with a sense of his wisdom, and to inspire in her an inextinguishable faith in his sagacity and prudence. He wanted her to believe in his power to retain all the wealth he had won. He would take her into his confidence. He had never done this with relation to his business, and under that treatment she had drifted away from him. Now that he found how thoroughly friendly she was, he would try another method, and bind her to him. The lady read him as plainly as if he had been a book, and said:
"Oh, General! I have ascertained something that may be of use to you.
Mr. Benedict is living. I had a letter from his boy this morning--dear little fellow--and he tells me how well his father is, and how pleasant it is to be with him again."
Mr. Belcher frowned.
"Do you know I can't quite stomach your whim--about that boy? What under heaven do you care for him?"
"Oh, you mustn't touch that whim, General," said Mrs. Dillingham, laughing. "I am a woman, and I have a right to it. He amuses me, and a great deal more than that. I wouldn't tell you a word about him, or what he writes to me, if I thought it would do him any harm. He's my pet.
What in the world have I to do but to pet him? How shall I fill my time?
I'm tired of society, and disgusted with men--at least, with my old acquaintances--and I'm fond of children. They do me good. Oh, you mustn't touch my whim!"
"There is no accounting for tastes!" Mr. Belcher responded, with a laugh that had a spice of scorn and vexation in it.
"Now, General, what do you care for that boy? If you are a friend to me, you ought to be glad that he interests me."
"I don't like the man who has him in charge. I believe Balfour is a villain."
"I'm sure I don't know," said the lady. "He never has the courtesy to darken my door. I once saw something of him. He is like all the rest, I suppose; he is tired of me."
Mrs. Dillingham had played her part perfectly, and the man before her was a blind believer in her loyalty to him.
"Let the boy go, and Balfour too," said the General. "They are not pleasant topics to me, and your whim will wear out. When is the boy coming back?"
"He is to be away all summer, I believe."
"Good!"
Mrs. Dillingham laughed.
"Why, I am glad of it, if you are," she said.
Mr. Belcher drew a little book from his pocket.
"What have you there?" the lady inquired.
"Women have great curiosity," said Mr. Belcher, slapping his knee with the little volume.
"And men delight to excite it," she responded.
"The General is a business man, and you want to know how he does it,"
said he.
"I do, upon my word," responded the lady.
"Very well, the General has two kinds of business, and he never mixes one with the other."
"I don't understand."
"Well, you know he's a manufacturer--got his start in that way. So he keeps that business by itself, and when he operates in Wall street, he operates outside of it. He never risks a dollar that he makes in his regular business in any outside operation."
"And you have it all in the little book?"
"Would you like to see it?"
"Yes."
"Very well, you shall, when I've told you all about it. I suppose that it must have been ten years ago that a man came to Sevenoaks who was full of all sorts of inventions. I tried some of them, and they worked well; so I went on furnis.h.i.+ng money to him, and, at last, I furnished so much that he pa.s.sed all his rights into my hands--sold everything to me.
He got into trouble, and lost his head--went into an insane hospital, where I supported him for more than two years. Then he was sent back as incurable, and, of course, had to go to the poor house. I couldn't support him always, you know. I'd paid him fairly, run all the risk, and felt that my hands were clean."
"He had sold everything to you, hadn't he?" inquired Mrs. Dillingham, sympathetically.
"Certainly, I have the contract, legally drawn, signed, and delivered."
"People couldn't blame you, of course."
"But they did."
"How could they, if you paid him all that belonged to him?"
"That's Sevenoaks. That's the thing that drove me away. Benedict escaped, and they all supposed he was dead, and fancied that because I had made money out of him, I was responsible for him in some way. But I punished them. They'll remember me."
And Mr. Belcher laughed a brutal laugh that rasped Mrs. Dillingham's sensibilities almost beyond endurance.
"And, now," said the General, resuming, "this man Balfour means to get these patents that I've owned and used for from seven to ten years out of me. Perhaps he will do it, but it will be after the biggest fight that New York ever saw."
Mrs. Dillingham eyed the little book. She was very curious about it. She was delightfully puzzled to know how these men who had the power of making money managed their affairs. Account-books were such conundrums to her!
She took a little ha.s.sock, placed it by Mr. Belcher's chair, and sat down, leaning by the weight of a feather against him. It was the first approach of the kind she had ever made, and the General appreciated it.
"Now you shall show me all about it," she said.
The General opened the book. It contained the results, in the briefest s.p.a.ce, of his profits from the Benedict inventions. It showed just how and where all those profits had been invested and re-invested. Her admiration of the General's business habits and methods was unbounded.
She asked a thousand silly questions, with one, occasionally, which touched an important point. She thanked him for the confidence he reposed in her. She was delighted to know his system, which seemed to her to guard him from the accidents so common to those engaged in great enterprises; and Mr. Belcher drank in her flatteries with supreme satisfaction. They comforted him. They were balm to his disappointments.
They soothed his wounded vanity. They a.s.sured him of perfect trust where he most tenderly wanted it.
Sevenoaks Part 52
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Sevenoaks Part 52 summary
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