Cord and Creese Part 35
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"Yes, Sir."
Brandon made no rejoinder.
"Bill Potts said they went to Liverpool, and then left for America to make their fortunes."
"What part of America?" asked Brandon, indifferently. "I never saw or heard of them."
"Didn't you, Sir?" asked the tailor, who evidently thought that America was like some English county, where every body may hear of every body else. "That's odd, too. I was going to ask you if you had."
"I wonder what s.h.i.+p they went out in?"
"That I can't say, Sir. Bill Potts kept dark about that. He said one thing, though, that set us thinking."
"What was that?"
"Why, that they went out in an emigrant s.h.i.+p as steerage pa.s.sengers."
Brandon was silent.
"Poor people!" said he at last.
By this time the tailor had finished his coat and handed it back to him.
Having obtained all the information that the man could give Brandon paid him and left.
Pa.s.sing by the inn he walked on till he came to the alms-house. Here he stood for a while and looked at it.
Brandon alms-house was small, badly planned, badly managed, and badly built; every thing done there was badly and meanly done. It was white-washed from the topmost point of every chimney down to the lowest edge of the bas.e.m.e.nt. A whited sepulchre. For there was foulness there, in the air, in the surroundings, in every thing. Squalor and dirt reigned. His heart grew sick as those hideous walls rose before his sight.
Between this and Brandon Hall there was a difference, a distance almost immeasurable; to pa.s.s from one to the other might be conceived of as incredible; and yet that pa.s.sage had been made.
To fall so far as to go the whole distance between the two; to begin in one and end in the other; to be born, brought up, and live and move and have one's being in the one, and then to die in the other; what was more incredible than this? Yet this had been the fate of his father.
Leaving the place, he walked directly toward Brandon Hall.
Brandon Hall was begun, n.o.body knows exactly when; but it is said that the foundations were laid before the time of Egbert. In all parts of the old mansion the progress of English civilization might be studied; in the Norman arches of the old chapel, the slender pointed style of the fifteenth century doorway that opened to the same, the false Grecian of the early Tudor period, and the wing added in Elizabeth's day, the days of that old Ralph Brandon who sank his s.h.i.+p and its treasure to prevent it from falling into the hands of the enemy.
Around this grand old Hall were scenes which could be found nowhere save in England. Wide fields, forever green with gra.s.s like velvet, over which rose groves of oak and elm, giving shelter to innumerable birds.
There the deer bounded and the hare found a covert. The broad avenue that led to the Hall went up through a world of rich sylvan scenery, winding through groves and meadows and over undulating ground. Before the Hall lay the open sea about three miles away; but the Hall was on an eminence and overlooked all the intervening ground. Standing there one might see the gradual decline of the country as it sloped downward toward the margin of the ocean. On the left a bold promontory jutted far out, on the nearer side of which there was an island with a light-house; on the right was another promontory, not so bold. Between these two the whole country was like a garden. A little cove gave shelter to small vessels, and around this cove was the village of Brandon.
Brandon Hall was one of the oldest and most magnificent of the great halls of England. As Brandon looked upon it it rose before him amidst the groves of six hundred years, its many-gabled roof rising out from amidst a sea of foliage, speaking of wealth, luxury, splendor, power, influence, and all that men hope for, or struggle for, or fight for; from all of which he and his had been cast out; and the one who had done this was even now occupying the old ancestral seat of his family.
Brandon entered the gate, and walked up the long avenue till he reached the Hall. Here he rang the bell, and a servant appeared. "Is Mr. Potts at home?"
"Yes," said the man, brusquely.
"I wish to see him."
"Who shall I say?"
"Mr. Hendricks, from America."
The man showed him into the drawing-room. Brandon seated himself and waited. The room was furnished in the most elegant manner, most of the furniture being old, and all familiar to him. He took a hasty glance around, and closed his eyes as if to shut it all out from sight.
In a short time a man entered.
He appeared to be between fifty and sixty years of age, of medium size, broad-shouldered and stout. He had a thoroughly plebeian air; he was dressed in black, and had a bunch of large seals dangling from beneath his waistcoat. His face was round and fleshy, his eyes were small, and his head was bald. The general expression of his face was that of good-natured simplicity. As he caught sight of Brandon a frank smile of welcome arose on his broad, fat face.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "YOU ARE, SIR. JOHN POTTS OF POTTS HALL."]
Brandon rose and bowed. "Am I addressing Mr. John Potts?"
"You are, Sir. John Potts of Potts Hall."
"Potts of Potts Hall!" repeated Brandon. Then, drawing a card from his pocket he handed it to Potts. He had procured some of these in London.
The card read as follows:
BEAMISH & HENDRICKS, FLOUR MERCHANTS & PROVISION DEALERS, 88 FRONT STREET, CINCINNATI, OHIO.
"I, Sir," said Brandon, "am Mr. Hendricks, junior partner in Beamish & Hendricks, and I hope you are quite well."
"Very well, thank you," answered Potts, smiling and sitting down. "I am happy to see you."
"Do you keep your health, Sir?"
"Thank you, I do," said Potts. "A touch of rheumatism at odd times, that's all."
Brandon's manner was stiff and formal, and his voice had a.s.sumed a slight nasal intonation. Potts had evidently looked on him as a perfect stranger.
"I hope, Sir, that I am not taking up your valuable time. You British n.o.blemen have your valuable time, I know, as well as we business men."
"No, Sir, no, Sir, not at all," said Potts, evidently greatly delighted at being considered a British n.o.bleman.
"Well, Sir John--or is it my lord?" said Brandon, interrogatively, correcting himself, and looking inquiringly at Potts.
"Sir John'll do," said Potts.
"Well, Sir John. Being in England on business, I came to ask you a few questions about a matter of some importance to us."
"Proceed, Sir!" said Potts, with great dignity.
"There's a young man that came into our employ last October whom we took a fancy to, or rather my senior did, and we have an idea of promoting him. My senior thinks the world of him, has the young man at his house, and he is even making up to his daughter. He calls himself Brandon--Frank Brandon."
At this Potts started from an easy lounging att.i.tude, in which he was trying to "do" the British n.o.ble, and with startling intensity of gaze looked Brandon full in the face.
"I think the young man is fairish," continues Brandon, "but nothing extraordinary. He is industrious and sober, but he ain't quick, and he never had any real business experience till he came to us. Now, my senior from the very first was infatuated with him, gave him a large salary, and, in spite of my warnings that he ought to be cautious, he wants to make him head-clerk, with an eye to making him partner next year. And so bent on this is he that I know he would dissolve partners.h.i.+p with me if I refused, take the young man, let him marry his daughter, and leave him all his money when he dies. That's no small sum, for old Mr. Beamish is worth in real estate round Cincinnati over two millions of dollars. So, you see, I have a right to feel anxious, more especially as I don't mind telling you, Sir John, who understand these matters, that I thought I had a very good chance myself with old Beamish's daughter."
Brandon spoke all this very rapidly, and with the air of one who was trying to conceal his feelings of dislike to the clerk of whom he was so jealous. Potts looked at him with an encouraging smile, and asked, as he stopped,
"And how did you happen to hear of me?"
Cord and Creese Part 35
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Cord and Creese Part 35 summary
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