<h2> <SPAN name="Ten" id="Ten"></SPAN><i>Ten</i> </h2>
<h2> MR. TAYLOR CALLS </h2>
<p>"Thinking the matter over," said Harry Cresswell to his father,
"I'm inclined to advise drawing this Taylor out a little
further."</p>
<p>The Colonel puffed his cigar and one eye twinkled, the lid of the
other being at the moment suggestively lowered.</p>
<p>"Was she pretty?" he asked; but his son ignored the remark, and
the father continued:</p>
<p>"I had a telegram from Taylor this morning, after you left. He'll
be passing through Montgomery the first of next month, and
proposes calling."</p>
<p>"I'll wire him to come," said Harry, promptly.</p>
<p>At this juncture the door opened and a young lady entered. Helen
Cresswell was twenty, small and pretty, with a slightly languid
air. Outside herself there was little in which she took very
great interest, and her interest in herself was not absorbing.
Yet she had a curiously sweet way. Her servants liked her and the
tenants could count on her spasmodic attentions in time of
sickness and trouble.</p>
<p>"Good-morning," she said, with a soft drawl. She sauntered over
to her father, kissed him, and hung over the back of his chair.</p>
<p>"Did you get that novel for me, Harry?"—expectantly
regarding her brother.</p>
<p>"I forgot it, Sis. But I'll be going to town again soon."</p>
<p>The young lady showed that she was annoyed.</p>
<p>"By the bye, Sis, there's a young lady over at the Negro school
whom I think you'd like."</p>
<p>"Black or white?"</p>
<p>"A young lady, I said. Don't be sarcastic."</p>
<p>"I heard you. I did not know whether you were using our language
or others'."</p>
<p>"She's really unusual, and seems to understand things. She's
planning to call some day—shall you be at home?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not, Harry; you're crazy." And she strolled out to the
porch, exchanged some remarks with a passing servant, and then
nestled comfortably into a hammock. She helped herself to a
chocolate and called out musically:</p>
<p>"Pa, are you going to town today?"</p>
<p>"Yes, honey."</p>
<p>"Can I go?"</p>
<p>"I'm going in an hour or so, and business at the bank will keep
me until after lunch."</p>
<p>"I don't care, I just must go. I'm clean out of anything to read.
And I want to shop and call on Dolly's friend—she's going
soon."</p>
<p>"All right. Can you be ready by eleven?"</p>
<p>She considered.</p>
<p>"Yes—I reckon," she drawled, prettily swinging her foot and
watching the tree-tops above the distant swamp.</p>
<p>Harry Cresswell, left alone, rang the bell for the butler.</p>
<p>"Still thinking of going, are you, Sam?" asked Cresswell,
carelessly, when the servant appeared. He was a young,
light-brown boy, his manner obsequious.</p>
<p>"Why, yes, sir—if you can spare me."</p>
<p>"Spare you, you black rascal! You're going anyhow. Well, you'll
repent it; the North is no place for niggers. See here, I want
lunch for two at one o'clock." The directions that followed were
explicit and given with a particularity that made Sam wonder.
"Order my trap," he finally directed.</p>
<p>Cresswell went out on the high-pillared porch until the trap
appeared.</p>
<p>"Oh, Harry! I wanted to go in the trap—take me?" coaxed his
sister.</p>
<p>"Sorry, Sis, but I'm going the other way."</p>
<p>"I don't believe it," said Miss Cresswell, easily, as she settled
down to another chocolate. Cresswell did not take the trouble to
reply.</p>
<p>Miss Taylor was on her morning walk when she saw him spinning
down the road, and both expressed surprise and pleasure at the
meeting.</p>
<p>"What a delightful morning!" said the school-teacher, and the
glow on her face said even more.</p>
<p>"I'm driving round through the old plantation," he explained;
"won't you join me?"</p>
<p>"The invitation is tempting," she hesitated; "but I've got just
oodles of work."</p>
<p>"What! on Saturday?"</p>
<p>"Saturday is my really busy day, don't you know. I guess I could
get off; really, though, I suspect I ought to tell Miss Smith."</p>
<p>He looked a little perplexed; but the direction in which her
inclinations lay was quite clear to him.</p>
<p>"It—it would be decidedly the proper thing," he murmured,
"and we could, of course, invite Miss—"</p>
<p>She saw the difficulty and interrupted him:</p>
<p>"It's quite unnecessary; she'll think I have simply gone for a
long walk." And soon they were speeding down the silent road,
breathing the perfume of the pines.</p>
<p>Now a ride of an early spring morning, in Alabama, over a
leisurely old plantation road and behind a spirited horse, is an
event to be enjoyed. Add to this a man bred to be agreeable and
outdoing his training, and a pretty girl gay with new-found
companionship—all this is apt to make a morning worth
remembering.</p>
<p>They turned off the highway and passed through long stretches of
ploughed and tumbled fields, and other fields brown with the dead
ghosts of past years' cotton standing straggling and
weather-worn. Long, straight, or curling rows of ploughers passed
by with steaming, struggling mules, with whips snapping and the
yodle of workers or the sharp guttural growl of overseers as a
constant accompaniment.</p>
<p>"They're beginning to plough up the land for the cotton-crop," he
explained.</p>
<p>"What a wonderful crop it is!" Mary had fallen pensive.</p>
<p>"Yes, indeed—if only we could get decent returns for it."</p>
<p>"Why, I thought it was a most valuable crop." She turned to him
inquiringly.</p>
<p>"It is—to Negroes and manufacturers, but not to planters."</p>
<p>"But why don't the planters do something?"</p>
<p>"What can be done with Negroes?" His tone was bitter. "We tried
to combine against manufacturers in the Farmers' League of last
winter. My father was president. The pastime cost him fifty
thousand dollars."</p>
<p>Miss Taylor was perplexed, but eager. "You must correspond with
my brother, Mr. Cresswell," she gravely observed. "I'm sure
he—" Before she could finish, an overseer rode up. He began
talking abruptly, with a quick side-glance at Mary, in which she
might have caught a gleam of surprised curiosity.</p>
<p>"That old nigger, Jim Sykes, over on the lower place, sir, ain't
showed up again this morning."</p>
<p>Cresswell nodded. "I'll drive by and see," he said carelessly.</p>
<p>The old man was discovered sitting before his cabin with his head
in his hands. He was tall, black, and gaunt, partly bald, with
tufted hair. One leg was swathed in rags, and his eyes, as he
raised them, wore a cowed and furtive look.</p>
<p>"Well, Uncle Jim, why aren't you at work?" called Cresswell from
the roadside. The old man rose painfully to his feet, swayed
against the cabin, and clutched off his cap.</p>
<p>"It's my leg again, Master Harry—the leg what I hurt in the
gin last fall," he answered, uneasily.</p>
<p>Cresswell frowned. "It's probably whiskey," he assured his
companion, in an undertone; then to the man:</p>
<p>"You must get to the field to-morrow,"—his habitually calm,
unfeeling positiveness left no ground for objection; "I cannot
support you in idleness, you know."</p>
<p>"Yes, Master Harry," the other returned, with conciliatory
eagerness; "I knows that—I knows it and I ain't shirking.
But, Master Harry, they ain't doing me right 'bout my
cabin—I just wants to show you." He got out some dirty
papers, and started to hobble forward, wincing with pain. Mary
Taylor stirred in her seat under an involuntary impulse to help,
but Cresswell touched the horse.</p>
<p>"All right, Uncle Jim," he said; "we'll look it over to-morrow."</p>
<p>They turned presently to where they could see the Cresswell oaks
waving lazily in the sunlight and the white gleam of the pillared
"Big House."</p>
<p>A pause at the Cresswell store, where Mr. Cresswell entered,
afforded Mary Taylor an opportunity further to extend her fund of
information.</p>
<p>"Do you go to school?" she inquired of the black boy who held the
horse, her mien sympathetic and interested.</p>
<p>"No, ma'am," he mumbled.</p>
<p>"What's your name?"</p>
<p>"Buddy—I'se one of Aunt Rachel's chilluns."</p>
<p>"And where do you live, Buddy?"</p>
<p>"I lives with granny, on de upper place."</p>
<p>"Well, I'll see Aunt Rachel and ask her to send you to school."</p>
<p>"Won't do no good—she done ast, and Mr. Cresswell, he say
he ain't going to have no more of his niggers—"</p>
<p>But Mr. Cresswell came out just then, and with him a big, fat,
and greasy black man, with little eyes and soft wheedling voice.
He was following Cresswell at the side but just a little behind,
hat in hand, head aslant, and talking deferentially. Cresswell
strode carelessly on, answering him with good-natured tolerance.</p>
<p>The black man stopped with humility before the trap and swept a
profound obeisance. Cresswell glanced up quizzically at Miss
Taylor.</p>
<p>"This," he announced, "is Jones, the Baptist
preacher—begging."</p>
<p>"Ah, lady,"—in mellow, unctuous tones—"I don't know
what we poor black folks would do without Mr. Cresswell—the
Lord bless him," said the minister, shoving his hand far down
into his pocket.</p>
<p>Shortly afterward they were approaching the Cresswell Mansion,
when the young man reined in the horse.</p>
<p>"If you wouldn't mind," he suggested, "I could introduce my
sister to you."</p>
<p>"I should be delighted," answered Miss Taylor, readily.</p>
<p>When they rolled up to the homestead under its famous oaks the
hour was past one. The house was a white oblong building of two
stories. In front was the high pillared porch, semi-circular,
extending to the roof with a balcony in the second story. On the
right was a broad verandah looking toward a wide lawn, with the
main road and the red swamp in the distance.</p>
<p>The butler met them, all obeisance.</p>
<p>"Ask Miss Helen to come down," said Mr. Cresswell.</p>
<p>Sam glanced at him.</p>
<p>"Miss Helen will be dreadful sorry, but she and the Colonel have
just gone to town—I believe her Aunty ain't well."</p>
<p>Mr. Cresswell looked annoyed.</p>
<p>"Well, well! that's too bad," he said. "But at any rate, have a
seat a moment out here on the verandah, Miss Taylor. And, Sam,
can't you find us a sandwich and something cool? I could not be
so inhospitable as to send you away hungry at this time of day."</p>
<p>Miss Taylor sat down in a comfortable low chair facing the
refreshing breeze, and feasted her eyes on the scene. Oh, this
was life: a smooth green lawn, and beds of flowers, a vista of
brown fields, and the dark line of wood beyond. The deft, quiet
butler brought out a little table, spread with the whitest of
cloths and laid with the brightest of silver, and "found" a
dainty lunch. There was a bit of fried chicken breast, some crisp
bacon, browned potatoes, little round beaten biscuit, and
rose-colored sherbet with a whiff of wine in it. Miss Taylor
wondered a little at the bounty of Southern hospitality; but she
was hungry, and she ate heartily, then leaned back dreamily and
listened to Mr. Cresswell's smooth Southern <i>r</i>'s, adding a
word here and there that kept the conversation going and brought
a grave smile to his pale lips. At last with a sigh she arose to
her feet.</p>
<p>"I must go! What shall I tell Miss Smith! No, no—no
carriage; I must walk." Of course, however, she could not refuse
to let him go at least half-way, ostensibly to tell her of the
coming of her brother. He expressed again his disappointment at
his sister's absence.</p>
<p>Somewhat to Miss Taylor's surprise Miss Smith said nothing until
they were parting for the night, then she asked:</p>
<p>"Was Miss Cresswell at home?"</p>
<p>Mary reddened.</p>
<p>"She had been called suddenly to town."</p>
<p>"Well, my dear, I wouldn't do it again."</p>
<p>The girl was angry.</p>
<p>"I'm not a school-girl, but a grown woman, and capable of caring
for myself. Moreover, in matter of propriety I do not think you
have usually found my ideas too lax—rather the opposite."</p>
<p>"There, there, dear; don't be angry. Only I think if your brother
knew—"</p>
<p>"He will know in a very few weeks; he is coming to visit the
Cresswells." And Miss Taylor sailed triumphantly up the stairs.</p>
<p>But John Taylor was not the man to wait weeks when a purpose
could be accomplished in days or hours. No sooner was Harry
Cresswell's telegram at hand than he hastened back from Savannah,
struck across country, and the week after his sister's ride found
him striding up the carriage-way of the Cresswell home.</p>
<p>John Taylor had prospered since summer. The cotton manufacturers'
combine was all but a fact; Mr. Easterly had discovered that his
chief clerk's sense and executive ability were invaluable, and
John Taylor was slated for a salary in five figures when things
should be finally settled, not to mention a generous slice of
stock—watery at present, but warranted to ripen early.</p>
<p>While Mr. Easterly still regarded Taylor's larger trust as
chimerical, some occurrences of the fall made him take a
respectful attitude toward it. Just as the final clauses of the
combine agreement were to be signed, there appeared a shortage in
the cotton-crop, and prices began to soar. The cause was
obviously the unexpected success of the new Farmers' League among
the cotton-growers. Mr. Easterly found it comparatively easy to
overthrow the corner, but the flurry made some of the
manufacturers timid, and the trust agreement was postponed until
a year later. This experience and the persistence of Mr. Taylor
induced Mr. Easterly to take a step toward the larger project: he
let in some eager outside capital to the safer manufacturing
scheme, and withdrew a corresponding amount of Mrs. Grey's money.
This he put into John Taylor's hands to invest in the South in
bank stock and industries with the idea of playing a part in the
financial situation there.</p>
<p>"It's a risk, Taylor, of course, and we'll let the old lady take
the risk. At the worst it's safer than the damned foolishness she
has in mind."</p>
<p>So it happened that John Taylor went South to look after large
investments and, as Mr. Easterly expressed it, "to bring back
facts, not dreams." His investment matters went quickly and well,
and now he turned to his wider and bigger scheme. He wrote the
Cresswells tentatively, expecting no reply, or an evasive one;
planning to circle around them, drawing his nets closer, and
trying them again later. To his surprise they responded quickly.</p>
<p>"Humph! Hard pressed," he decided, and hurried to them.</p>
<p>So it was the week after Mary Taylor's ride that found him at
Cresswell's front door, thin, eagle-eyed, fairly well dressed and
radiating confidence.</p>
<p>"John Taylor," he announced to Sam, jerkily, thrusting out a
card. "Want to see Mr. Cresswell; soon as possible."</p>
<p>Sam made him wait a half-hour, for the sake of discipline, and
then brought father and son.</p>
<p>"Good-morning, Mr. Cresswell, and Mr. Cresswell again," said Mr.
Taylor, helping himself to a straight-backed chair. "Hope you'll
pardon this unexpected visit. Found myself called through
Montgomery, just after I got your wire; thought I'd better drop
over."</p>
<p>At Harry's suggestion they moved to the verandah and sat down
over whiskey and soda, which Taylor refused, and plunged into the
subject without preliminaries.</p>
<p>"I'm assuming that you gentlemen are in the cotton business for
making money. So am I. I see a way in which you and your friends
can help me and mine, and clear up more millions than all of us
can spend; for this reason I've hunted you up. This is my scheme.</p>
<p>"See here; there are a thousand cotton-mills in this country,
half of them in the South, one-fourth in New England, and
one-fourth in the Middle States. They are capitalized at six
hundred million dollars. Now let me tell you: we control three
hundred and fifty millions of that capitalization. The trust is
going through capitalization at a billion. The only thing that
threatens it is child-labor legislation in the South, the tariff,
and the control of the supply of cotton. Pretty big hindrances,
you say. That's so, but look here: we've got the stock so placed
that nothing short of a popular upheaval can send any Child Labor
bill through Congress in six years. See? After that we don't
care. Same thing applies to the tariff. The last bill ran ten
years. The present bill will last longer, or I lose my
guess—'specially if Smith is in the Senate.</p>
<p>"Well, then, there remains raw cotton. The connection of
cotton-raising and its raw material is too close to risk a
manufacturing trust that does not include practical control of
the raw material. For that reason we're planning a trust to
include the raising and manufacturing of cotton in America. Then,
too, cornering the cotton market here means the whip-hand of the
industrial world. Gentlemen, it's the biggest idea of the
century. It beats steel."</p>
<p>Colonel Cresswell chuckled.</p>
<p>"How do you spell that?" he asked.</p>
<p>But John Taylor was not to be diverted; his thin face was pale,
but his gray eyes burned with the fire of a zealot. Harry
Cresswell only smiled dimly and looked interested.</p>
<p>"Now, again," continued John Taylor. "There are a million cotton
farms in the South, half run by colored people and half by
whites. Leave the colored out of account as long as they are
disfranchised. The half million white farms are owned or
controlled by five thousand wholesale merchants and three
thousand big landowners, of whom you, Colonel Cresswell, are
among the biggest with your fifty thousand acres. Ten banks
control these eight thousand people—one of these is the
Jefferson National of Montgomery, of which you are a silent
director."</p>
<p>Colonel Cresswell started; this man evidently had inside
information. Did he know of the mortgage, too?</p>
<p>"Don't be alarmed. I'm safe," Taylor assured him. "Now, then, if
we can get the banks, wholesale merchants, and biggest planters
into line we can control the cotton crop."</p>
<p>"But," objected Harry Cresswell, "while the banks and the large
merchants may be possibilities, do you know what it means to try
to get planters into line?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I do. And what I don't know you and your father do. Colonel
Cresswell is president of the Farmers' League. That's the reason
I'm here. Your success last year made you indispensable to our
plans."</p>
<p>"Our success?" laughed Colonel Cresswell, ruefully, thinking of
the fifty thousand dollars lost and the mortgage to cover it.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir—success! You didn't know it; we were too careful
to allow that; and I say frankly you wouldn't know it now if we
weren't convinced you were too far involved and the League too
discouraged to repeat the dose."</p>
<p>"Now, look here, sir," began Colonel Cresswell, flushing and
drawing himself erect.</p>
<p>"There, there, Colonel Cresswell, don't misunderstand me. I'm a
plain man. I'm playing a big game—a tremendous one. I need
you, and I know you need me. I find out about you, and my sources
of knowledge are wide and unerring. But the knowledge is safe,
sir; it's buried. Last year when you people curtailed cotton
acreage and warehoused a big chunk of the crop you gave the mill
men the scare of their lives. We had a hasty conference and the
result was that the bottom fell out of your credit."</p>
<p>Colonel Cresswell grew pale. There was a disquieting, relentless
element in this unimpassioned man's tone.</p>
<p>"You failed," pursued John Taylor, "because you couldn't get the
banks and the big merchants behind you. We've got 'em behind
us—with big chunks of stock and a signed iron-clad
agreement. You can wheel the planters into line—will you do
it?" John Taylor bent forward tense but cool and steel-like.
Harry Cresswell laid his hand on his father's arm and said
quietly:</p>
<p>"And where do we come in?"</p>
<p>"That's business," affirmed John Taylor. "You and two hundred and
fifty of the biggest planters come in on the ground-floor of the
two-billion-dollar All-Cotton combine. It can easily mean two
million to you in five years."</p>
<p>"And the other planters?"</p>
<p>"They come in for high-priced cotton until we get our grip."</p>
<p>"And then?"</p>
<p>The quiet question seemed to invoke a vision for John Taylor; the
gray eyes took on the faraway look of a seer; the thin, bloodless
lips formed a smile in which there was nothing pleasant.</p>
<p>"They keep their mouths shut or we squeeze 'em and buy the land.
We propose to own the cotton belt of the South."</p>
<p>Colonel Cresswell started indignantly from his seat.</p>
<p>"Do you think—by God, sir!—that I'd betray Southern
gentlemen to—"</p>
<p>But Harry's hand and impassive manner restrained him; he cooled
as suddenly as he had flared up.</p>
<p>"Thank you very much, Mr. Taylor," he concluded; "we'll consider
this matter carefully. You'll spend the night, of course."</p>
<p>"Can't possibly—must catch that next train back."</p>
<p>"But we must talk further," the Colonel insisted. "And then,
there's your sister."</p>
<p>"By Jove! Forgot all about Mary." John Taylor after a little
desultory talk, followed his host up-stairs.</p>
<p>The next afternoon John Taylor was sitting beside Helen Cresswell
on the porch which overlooked the terrace, and was, on the whole,
thinking less of cotton than he had for several years. To be
sure, he was talking cotton; but he was doing it mechanically and
from long habit, and was really thinking how charming a girl
Helen Cresswell was. She fascinated him. For his sister Taylor
had a feeling of superiority that was almost contempt. The idea
of a woman trying to understand and argue about things men knew!
He admired the dashing and handsome Miss Easterly, but she scared
him and made him angrily awkward. This girl, on the other hand,
just lounged and listened with an amused smile, or asked the most
child-like questions. She required him to wait on her quite as a
matter of course—to adjust her pillows, hand her the
bon-bons, and hunt for her lost fan. Mr. Taylor, who had not
waited on anybody since his mother died, and not much before,
found a quite inexplicable pleasure in these little
domesticities. Several times he took out his watch and frowned;
yet he managed to stay with her quite happily.</p>
<p>On her part Miss Cresswell was vastly amused. Her acquaintance
with men was not wide, but it was thorough so far as her own
class was concerned. They were all well-dressed and leisurely,
fairly good looking, and they said the same words and did the
same things in the same way. They paid her compliments which she
did not believe, and they did not expect her to believe. They
were charmingly deferential in the matter of dropped
handkerchiefs, but tyrannical of opinion. They were thoughtful
about candy and flowers, but thoughtless about feelings and
income. Altogether they were delightful, but cloying. This man
was startlingly different; ungainly and always in a desperate,
unaccountable hurry. He knew no pretty speeches, he certainly did
not measure up to her standard of breeding, and yet somehow he
was a gentleman. All this was new to Helen Cresswell, and she
liked it.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the men above-stairs lingered in the Colonel's
office—the older one perturbed and sputtering, the younger
insistent and imperturbable.</p>
<p>"The fact is, father," he was saying, "as you yourself have said,
one bad crop of cotton would almost ruin us."</p>
<p>"But the prospects are good."</p>
<p>"What are prospects in March? No, father, this is the
situation—three good crops in succession will wipe off our
indebtedness and leave us facing only low prices and a scarcity
of niggers; on the other hand—" The father interrupted
impatiently.</p>
<p>"Yes, on the other hand, if we plunge deeper in debt and betray
our friends we may come out millionaires or—paupers."</p>
<p>"Precisely," said Harry Cresswell, calmly. "Now, our plan is to
take no chances; I propose going North and looking into this
matter thoroughly. If he represents money and has money, and if
the trust has really got the grip he says it has, why, it's a
case of crush or get crushed, and we'll have to join them on
their own terms. If he's bluffing, or the thing looks weak, we'll
wait."</p>
<p>It all ended as matters usually did end, in Harry's having his
way. He came downstairs, expecting, indeed, rather hoping, to
find Taylor impatiently striding to and fro, watch in hand; but
here he was, ungainly, it might be, but quite docile, drawing the
picture of a power-loom for Miss Cresswell, who seemed really
interested. Harry silently surveyed them from the door, and his
face lighted with a new thought.</p>
<p>Taylor, espying him, leapt to his feet and hauled out his watch.</p>
<p>"Well—I—" he began lamely.</p>
<p>"No, you weren't either," interrupted Harry, with a laugh that
was unmistakably cordial and friendly. "You had quite forgotten
what you were waiting for—isn't that so, Sis?"</p>
<p>Helen regarded her brother through her veiling lashes: what meant
this sudden assumption of warmth and amiability?</p>
<p>"No, indeed; he was raging with impatience," she returned.</p>
<p>"Why, Miss Cresswell, I—I—" John Taylor forsook
social amenities and pulled himself together. "Well," shortly,
"now for that talk—ready?" And quite forgetting Miss
Cresswell, he bolted into the parlor.</p>
<p>"The decision we have come to is this," said Harry Cresswell. "We
are in debt, as you know."</p>
<p>"Forty-nine thousand, seven hundred and forty-two dollars and
twelve cents," responded Taylor; "in three notes, due in twelve,
twenty-four, and thirty-six months, interest at eight per cent,
held by—"</p>
<p>The Colonel snorted his amazement, and Harry Cresswell cut in:</p>
<p>"Yes," he calmly admitted; "and with good crops for three years
we'd be all right; good crops even for two years would leave us
fairly well off."</p>
<p>"You mean it would relieve you of the present stringency and put
you face to face with the falling price of cotton and rising
wages," was John Taylor's dry addendum.</p>
<p>"Rising price of cotton, you mean," Harry corrected.</p>
<p>"Oh, temporarily," John Taylor admitted.</p>
<p>"Precisely, and thus postpone the decision."</p>
<p>"No, Mr. Cresswell. I'm offering to let you in on the ground
floor—<i>now</i>—not next year, or year after."</p>
<p>"Mr. Taylor, have you any money in this?"</p>
<p>"Everything I've got."</p>
<p>"Well, the thing is this way: if you can prove to us that
conditions are as you say, we're in for it."</p>
<p>"Good! Meet me in New York, say—let's see, this is March
tenth—well, May third."</p>
<p>Young Cresswell was thinking rapidly. This man without doubt
represented money. He was anxious for an alliance. Why? Was it
all straight, or did the whole move conceal a trick?</p>
<p>His eyes strayed to the porch where his pretty sister sat
languidly, and then toward the school where the other sister
lived. John Taylor looked out on the porch, too. They glanced
quickly at each other, and each wondered if the other had shared
his thought. Harry Cresswell did not voice his mind for he was
not wholly disposed to welcome what was there; but he could not
refrain from saying in tones almost confidential:</p>
<p>"You could recommend this deal, then, could you—to your own
friends?"</p>
<p>"To my own family," asserted John Taylor, looking at Harry
Cresswell with sudden interest. But Mr. Cresswell was staring at
the end of his cigar.</p>
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