When Laura had been in Washington
three months, she was still the same person, in one
respect, that she was when she first arrived there that
is to say, she still bore the name of Laura Hawkins.
Otherwise she was perceptibly changed.
She had arrived in a state of grievous
uncertainty as to what manner of woman she was, physically
and intellectually, as compared with eastern women;
she was well satisfied, now, that her beauty was confessed,
her mind a grade above the average, and her powers
of fascination rather extraordinary. So she,
was at ease upon those points. When she arrived,
she was possessed of habits of economy and not possessed
of money; now she dressed elaborately, gave but little
thought to the cost of things, and was very well fortified
financially. She kept her mother and Washington
freely supplied with money, and did the same by Col.
Sellers who always insisted upon giving
his note for loans with interest; he was
rigid upon that; she must take interest; and one of
the Colonel’s greatest satisfactions was to
go over his accounts and note what a handsome sum
this accruing interest amounted to, and what a comfortable
though modest support it would yield Laura in case
reverses should overtake her.
In truth he could not help feeling
that he was an efficient shield for her against poverty;
and so, if her expensive ways ever troubled him for
a brief moment, he presently dismissed the thought
and said to himself, “Let her go on even
if she loses everything she is still safe this
interest will always afford her a good easy income.”
Laura was on excellent terms with
a great many members of Congress, and there was an
undercurrent of suspicion in some quarters that she
was one of that detested class known as “lobbyists;”
but what belle could escape slander in such a city?
Fairminded people declined to condemn her on mere
suspicion, and so the injurious talk made no very damaging
headway. She was very gay, now, and very celebrated,
and she might well expect to be assailed by many kinds
of gossip. She was growing used to celebrity,
and could already sit calm and seemingly unconscious,
under the fire of fifty lorgnettes in a theatre, or
even overhear the low voice “That’s she!”
as she passed along the street without betraying annoyance.
The whole air was full of a vague
vast scheme which was to eventuate in filling Laura’s
pockets with millions of money; some had one idea of
the scheme, and some another, but nobody had any exact
knowledge upon the subject. All that any one
felt sure about, was that Laura’s landed estates
were princely in value and extent, and that the government
was anxious to get hold of them for public purposes,
and that Laura was willing to make the sale but not
at all anxious about the matter and not at all in
a hurry. It was whispered that Senator Dilworthy
was a stumbling block in the way of an immediate sale,
because he was resolved that the government should
not have the lands except with the understanding that
they should be devoted to the uplifting of the negro
race; Laura did not care what they were devoted to,
it was said, (a world of very different gossip to
the contrary notwithstanding,) but there were several
other heirs and they would be guided entirely by the
Senator’s wishes; and finally, many people averred
that while it would be easy to sell the lands to the
government for the benefit of the negro, by resorting
to the usual methods of influencing votes, Senator
Dilworthy was unwilling to have so noble a charity
sullied by any taint of corruption he was
resolved that not a vote should be bought. Nobody
could get anything definite from Laura about these
matters, and so gossip had to feed itself chiefly
upon guesses. But the effect of it all was,
that Laura was considered to be very wealthy and likely
to be vastly more so in a little while. Consequently
she was much courted and as much envied: Her
wealth attracted many suitors. Perhaps they came
to worship her riches, but they remained to worship
her. Some of the noblest men of the time succumbed
to her fascinations. She frowned upon no lover
when he made his first advances, but by and by when
she was hopelessly enthralled, he learned from her
own lips that she had formed a resolution never to
marry. Then he would go away hating and cursing
the whole sex, and she would calmly add his scalp
to her string, while she mused upon the bitter day
that Col. Selby trampled her love and her pride
in the dust. In time it came to be said that
her way was paved with broken hearts.
Poor Washington gradually woke up
to the fact that he too was an intellectual marvel
as well as his gifted sister. He could not conceive
how it had come about (it did not occur to him that
the gossip about his family’s great wealth had
any thing to do with it). He could not account
for it by any process of reasoning, and was simply
obliged to accept the fact and give up trying to solve
the riddle. He found himself dragged into society
and courted, wondered at and envied very much as if
he were one of those foreign barbers who flit over
here now and then with a self-conferred title of nobility
and marry some rich fool’s absurd daughter.
Sometimes at a dinner party or a reception he would
find himself the centre of interest, and feel unutterably
uncomfortable in the discovery. Being obliged
to say something, he would mine his brain and put
in a blast and when the smoke and flying debris had
cleared away the result would be what seemed to him
but a poor little intellectual clod of dirt or two,
and then he would be astonished to see everybody as
lost in admiration as if he had brought up a ton or
two of virgin gold. Every remark he made delighted
his hearers and compelled their applause; he overheard
people say he was exceedingly bright they
were chiefly mammas and marriageable young ladies.
He found that some of his good things were being
repeated about the town. Whenever he heard of
an instance of this kind, he would keep that particular
remark in mind and analyze it at home in private.
At first he could not see that the remark was anything
better than a parrot might originate; but by and by
he began to feel that perhaps he underrated his powers;
and after that he used to analyze his good things
with a deal of comfort, and find in them a brilliancy
which would have been unapparent to him in earlier
days and then he would make a note, of
that good thing and say it again the first time he
found himself in a new company. Presently he
had saved up quite a repertoire of brilliancies; and
after that he confined himself to repeating these
and ceased to originate any more, lest he might injure
his reputation by an unlucky effort.
He was constantly having young ladies
thrust upon his notice at receptions, or left upon
his hands at parties, and in time he began to feel
that he was being deliberately persecuted in this way;
and after that he could not enjoy society because
of his constant dread of these female ambushes and
surprises. He was distressed to find that nearly
every time he showed a young lady a polite attention
he was straightway reported to be engaged to her;
and as some of these reports got into the newspapers
occasionally, he had to keep writing to Louise that
they were lies and she must believe in him and not
mind them or allow them to grieve her.
Washington was as much in the dark
as anybody with regard to the great wealth that was
hovering in the air and seemingly on the point of
tumbling into the family pocket. Laura would
give him no satisfaction. All she would say,
was:
“Wait. Be patient. You will see.”
“But will it be soon, Laura?”
“It will not be very long, I think.”
“But what makes you think so?”
“I have reasons and good ones.
Just wait, and be patient.”
“But is it going to be as much as people say
it is?”
“What do they say it is?”
“Oh, ever so much. Millions!”
“Yes, it will be a great sum.”
“But how great, Laura? Will it be millions?”
“Yes, you may call it that.
Yes, it will be millions. There, now does
that satisfy you?”
“Splendid! I can wait.
I can wait patiently ever so patiently.
Once I was near selling the land for twenty thousand
dollars; once for thirty thousand dollars; once after
that for seven thousand dollars; and once for forty
thousand dollars but something always told
me not to do it. What a fool I would have been
to sell it for such a beggarly trifle! It is
the land that’s to bring the money, isn’t
it Laura? You can tell me that much, can’t
you?”
“Yes, I don’t mind saying that much.
It is the land.
“But mind don’t
ever hint that you got it from me. Don’t
mention me in the matter at all, Washington.”
“All right I won’t.
Millions! Isn’t it splendid! I mean
to look around for a building lot; a lot with fine
ornamental shrubbery and all that sort of thing.
I will do it to-day. And I might as well see
an architect, too, and get him to go to work at a
plan for a house. I don’t intend to spare
and expense; I mean to have the noblest house that
money can build.” Then after a pause he
did not notice Laura’s smiles “Laura,
would you lay the main hall in encaustic tiles, or
just in fancy patterns of hard wood?”
Laura laughed a good old-fashioned
laugh that had more of her former natural self about
it than any sound that had issued from her mouth in
many weeks. She said:
“You don’t change, Washington.
You still begin to squander a fortune right and left
the instant you hear of it in the distance; you never
wait till the foremost dollar of it arrives within
a hundred miles of you,” and she
kissed her brother good bye and left him weltering
in his dreams, so to speak.
He got up and walked the floor feverishly
during two hours; and when he sat down he had married
Louise, built a house, reared a family, married them
off, spent upwards of eight hundred thousand dollars
on mere luxuries, and died worth twelve millions.