The American Senator eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 785 pages of information about The American Senator.

The American Senator eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 785 pages of information about The American Senator.

An hour had passed after this during which she tended him, giving him food and medicine, and he had slept before she ventured to allude to the subject which was nearest to her heart.  “John,” she said at last, “I have been thinking about Chowton Farm.”

“Well.”

“It certainly should be bought”

“If the man resolves on selling it.”

“Of course; I mean that.  How much would it be?” Then he mentioned the sum which Twentyman had named, saying that he had inquired and had been told that the price was reasonable.  “It is a large sum of money, John.”

“There might be a mortgage for part of it”

“I don’t like mortgages.  The property would not be yours at all if it were mortgaged, as soon as bought.  You would pay 5 per cent. for the money and only get 3 per cent from the land.”  The old lady understood all about it.

“I could pay it off in two years,” said the sick man.

“There need be no paying off, and no mortgage, if I did it I almost believe I have got enough to do it.”  He knew very well that she had much more than enough.  “I think more of this property than of anything in the world, my dear.”

“Chowton Farm could be yours, you know.”

“What should I do with Chowton Farm?  I shall probably be in my grave before the slow lawyer would have executed the deeds.”  And I in mine, thought he to himself, before the present owner has quite made up his mind to part with his land.  “What would a little place like that do for me?  But in my father-in-law’s time it was part of the Bragton property.  He sold it to pay the debts of a younger son, forgetting, as I thought, what he owed to the estate;—­“It had in truth been sold on behalf of the husband of this old woman who was now complaining.  “And if it can be recovered it is our duty to get it back again.  A property like this should never be lessened.  It is in that way that the country is given over to shopkeepers and speculators and is made to be like France or Italy.  I quite think that Chowton Farm should be bought.  And though I might die before it was done, I would find the money.”

“I knew what your feeling would be.”

“Yes, John.  You could not but know it well.  But—­” Then she paused a moment, looking into his face.  “But I should wish to know what would become of it—­eventually.”

“If it were yours you could do what you pleased with it.”

“But it would be yours.”

“Then it would go with the rest of the property.”

“To whom would it go?  We have all to die, my dear, and who can say whom it may please the Almighty to take first?”

“In this house, ma’am, every one can give a shrewd guess.  I know my own condition.  If I die without children of my own every acre I possess will go to the proper heir.  Thinking as you do, you ought to agree with me in that.”

“But who is the proper heir?”

“My cousin Reginald.  Do not let us contest it, ma’am.  As certainly as I lie here he will have Bragton when I am gone.”

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The American Senator from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.