Part 3 (1/2)
”Dear Sir,” began the letter, in the most uncompromisingly conventional of typewriting:
”_Dear Sir_:
”Enclosed please find, with t.i.tle-deed, a memorandum opened in your name by the late John Valiant some years before his death.
It was his desire that the services indicated in connection with this estate should continue till this date. We hand you herewith our check for $236.20 (two hundred and thirty-six dollars and twenty cents), the balance in your favor, for which please send receipt,
”And oblige, ”Yours very truly, ”(Enclosure) EMERSON AND BALL.”
He turned to the memorandum. It showed a sizable initial deposit against which was entered a series of annual tax payments with minor disburs.e.m.e.nts credited to ”Inspection and care.” The tax receipts were pinned to the account.
The larger wrapper contained an unsealed envelope, across which was written in faded ink and in an unfamiliar das.h.i.+ng, slanting handwriting, his own name. The envelope contained a creased yellow parchment, from between whose folds there clumped and fluttered down upon the floor a long flattish object wrapped in a paper, a newspaper clipping and a letter.
Puzzledly he unfolded the crackling thing in his hands. ”Why,” he said half aloud, ”it's--it's a deed made over to me.” He overran it swiftly.
”Part of an old Colony grant ... a plantation in Virginia, twelve hundred odd acres, given under the hand of a vice-regal governor in the sixteenth century. I had no idea t.i.tles in the United States went back so far as that!” His eye fled to the end. ”It was my father's! What could he have wanted of an estate in Virginia? It must have come into his hands in the course of business.”
He fairly groaned. ”Ye G.o.ds! If it were only Long Island, or even Pike County! The sorriest, out-at-elbow, boulder-ridden, mosquito-stung old rock-farm there would bring a decent sum. But Virginia! The place where the dialect stories grow. The paradise of the Jim-crow car and the hook-worm, where land-poor, clay-colored colonels with goatees sit in green wicker lawn-chairs and watch their shadows go round the house, while they guzzle mint-juleps and cuss at lazy 'cullud pussons.' Where everybody is an F. F. V. and everybody's grandfather was a patroon, or whatever they call 'em, and had a thousand slaves 'befo de wah'!”
Who ever heard of Virginia nowadays, except as a place people came _from_? The princ.i.p.al event in the history of the state since the Civil War had been the discovery of New York. Its men had moved upon the latter en ma.s.se, coming with the halo about them of old Southern names and legends of planter hospitality--and had married Northern women, till the announcement in the marriage column that the fathers of bride and bridegroom had fought in opposing armies at the battle of Mana.s.sas had grown as hackneyed as the stereotyped ”Whither are we drifting?”
editorial. But was Virginia herself anything more, in this twentieth century, than a hot-blooded, high-handed, prodigal legend, kept alive in the North by the banquets of ”Southern Societies” and annual poems on ”The Lost Cause”?
He picked up the newspaper clipping. It was worn and broken in the folds as if it had been carried for months in a pocketbook.
”It will interest readers of this section of Virginia (the paragraph began) to learn, from a recent transfer received for record at the County Clerk's Office, that Damory Court has pa.s.sed to Mr. John Valiant, minor--”
He turned the paper over and found a date; it had been printed in the year of the transfer to himself, when he was six years old--the year his father had died.
”--John Valiant, minor, the son of the former owner.
”There are few indeed who do not recall the tragedy with which in the public mind the estate is connected. The fact, moreover, that this old homestead has been left in its present state (for, as is well known, the house has remained with all its contents and furnis.h.i.+ngs untouched) to rest during so long a term of years unoccupied, could not, of course, fail to be commented on, and this circ.u.mstance alone has perhaps tended to keep alive a melancholy story which may well be forgotten.”
He read the elaborate, rather stilted phraseology in the twenty-year-old paper with a wondering interest. ”An old house,” he mused, ”with a bad name. Probably he couldn't sell it, and maybe n.o.body would even live in it. That would explain why it remained so long unoccupied--why there are no records of rentals. Probably the land was starved and run down. At any rate, in twenty years it would be overgrown with stubble.”
Yet, whatever their condition, acres of land were, after all, a tangible thing. This lawyer's firm might, instead, have sent him a bundle of beautifully engraved certificates of stock in some zinc-mine whose imaginary bottom had dropped out ten years ago. Here was real property, in size, at least, a gentleman's domain, on which real taxes had been paid during a long term--a sort of hilarious consolation prize, hurtling to him out of the void like the magic gift of the traditional fairy G.o.d-mother.
”It's an off-set to the hall-bedroom idea, at any rate,” he said to himself humorously. ”It holds out an escape from the n.o.ble army of rent-payers. When my twenty-eight hundred is gone, I could live down there a landed proprietor, and by the same mark an honorary colonel, and raise the cabbages I was talking about--eh, Chum?--while you stalk rabbits. How does that strike you?”
He laughed whimsically. He, John Valiant, of New York, first-nighter at its theaters, hail-fellow-well-met in its club corridors and welcome diner at any one of a hundred brilliant gla.s.s-and-silver-twinkling supper-tables, entombed on the wreck of a Virginia plantation, a would-be country gentleman, on an automobile and next to nothing a year!
He bethought himself of the fallen letter and possessed himself of it quickly. It lay with the superscription side down. On it was written, in the same hand which had addressed the other envelope:
_For my son, John Valiant, When he reaches the age of twenty-five._
That, then, had been written by his father--and he had died nearly twenty years ago! He broke the seal with a strange feeling as if, walking in some familiar thoroughfare, he had stumbled on a lichened and sunken tombstone.
”When you read this, my son, you will have come to man's estate. It is curious to think that this black, black ink may be faded to gray and this white, white paper yellowed, just from lying waiting so long. But strangest of all is to think that you yourself whose brown head hardly tops this desk, will be as tall (I hope) as I! How I wonder what you will look like then! And shall I--the real, real I, I mean--be peering over your strong broad shoulder as you read? Who knows? Wise men have dreamed such a thing possible--and I am not a bit wise.