t. He was certain, however, that the sum asked
by Valentine Simmons would obliterate his present resources. Yet he was
forced to admit that it did not seem exorbitant.
He continued his altruistic deliberations throughout the evening at his
dwelling. It might be well, before investing such a paramount sum, to
communicate with the Tennessee and Northern Company, receive a fresh
ratification of their intention. Yet he could not do that without
incurring the danger of premature questioning, investigation. It was
patent that he would have to be prepared to make an immediate distribution
of the options when his intention became known in Greenstream. He was
aware that when the coming of a railroad to the County became common
knowledge the excitement of the valley would grow intense.
Again, it might be better first to organize the timber of Greenstream, so
that a harmonious local condition would facilitate all negotiations, and
avert the danger, which Valentine Simmons had pointed out, of individual
blindness and competition. But, in order to accomplish that, he would have
to bring into concord fifty or more wary, suspicious, and largely ignorant
adults. He would have to deal with swift and secret avarice, with vain
golden dreams born of years of bitter poverty, privation, ceaseless and
incredible toil. The magnitude of the latter task appalled him; fact and
figure whirled in his confused mind. He was standing, and he suddenly felt
dizzy, and sat down. The giddiness vanished, but left him with twitching
fingers, a clouded vision. He might get them all together, explain,
persuade.... Goddy! it was for their good. They needn't be cross-grained.
There it would be, the offer, for them to take or leave. But, if they
delayed, watch out! Railroad people couldn't be fooled with. They might
get left; that was all.
This, he felt, was more than he could undertake, more than any reasonable
person would ask. If he paid Valentine Simmons all that money, and then
let them have back their own again, without a cent to himself, they must
be content. They should be able to bargain as well as he--who was getting
on and had difficulty in adding figures to the same amount twice--with the
Tennessee and Northern.
The following morning he departed for Stenton.
XIV
Gordon paid Valentine Simmons eighty-nine thousand dollars for the
latter's share of the timber options they had held in common. They were
seated in the room in which Gord
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