the ticker, and inquired for the head of the firm. The answer came from
a red-cheeked, clean-shaven, bullet-headed, immaculately upholstered
gentleman--(silk scarf, diamond horse-shoe stick-pin, high collar,
cut-away coat, speckled-trout waistcoat--everything perfect)--who stood,
paring his nails in front of the plate-glass window overlooking the
street, and who conveyed news of the elder Breen's whereabouts by a bob
of his head and a jerk of his fat forefinger in the direction of the
familiar glass door.
Breen sat at his desk when Jack entered, but it was only when he spoke
that his uncle looked up;--so many men swung back that door with favors
to ask, that spontaneous affability was often bad policy.
"I received your letter, Uncle Arthur," Jack began.
Breen raised his eyes, and a deep color suffused his face. In his heart
he had a sneaking admiration for the boy. He liked his pluck. Strange,
too, he liked him the better for having left him and striking out for
himself, and stranger still, he was a little ashamed for having brought
about the revolt.
"Why, Jack!" He was on his feet now, his hand extended, something of his
old-time cordiality in his manner. "You got my letter, did you? Well, I
wanted to talk to you about that ore property. You own it still, don't
you?" The habit of his life of going straight at the business in hand,
precluded every other topic. Then again he wanted a chance to look the
boy over under fire,--"size him up," in his own vocabulary. He might
need his help later on.
"Oh, we don't own a foot of it,--don't want to. If Mr. MacFarlane
decides to--"
"I'm not talking about MacFarlane's job; I'm talking about your own
property,--the Cumberland ore property,--the one your father left you.
You haven't sold it, have you?" This came in an anxious tone.
"No," answered Jack simply, wondering what his father's legacy had to do
with his Chief's proposed work.
"Have you paid the taxes?" Arthur's eyes were now boring into his.
"Yes, every year; they were not much. Why do you ask?"
"I'll tell you that later on," answered his uncle with a more satisfied
air. "You were up there with MacFarlane, weren't you?--when he went to
look over the ground of the Maryland Mining Company where he is to cut
the horizontal shaft?" Jack nodded. "So I heard. Well, it may interest
you to learn that some of our Mukton people own the property. It was I
who sent MacFarlane up, really, although he may not know it.
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