Montgomery Brewster no longer had "prospects." People could not
now point him out with the remark that some day he would come into
a million or two. He had "realized," as Oliver Harrison would have
put it. Two days after his grandfather's funeral a final will and
testament was read, and, as was expected, the old banker atoned
for the hardships Robert Brewster and his wife had endured by
bequeathing one million dollars to their son Montgomery. It was
his without a restriction, without an admonition, without an
incumbrance. There was not a suggestion as to how it should be
handled by the heir. The business training the old man had given
him was synonymous with conditions not expressed in the will. The
dead man believed that he had drilled into the youth an
unmistakable conception of what was expected of him in life; if he
failed in these expectations the misfortune would be his alone to
bear; a road had been carved out for him and behind him stretched
a long line of guide-posts whose laconic instructions might be
ignored but never forgotten. Edwin Peter Brewster evidently made
his will with the sensible conviction that it was necessary for
him to die before anybody else could possess his money, and that,
once dead, it would be folly for him to worry over the way in
which beneficiaries might choose to manage their own affairs.
The house in Fifth Avenue went to a sister, together with a
million or two, and the residue of the estate found kindly
disposed relatives who were willing to keep it from going to the
Home for Friendless Fortunes. Old Mr. Brewster left his affairs in
order. The will nominated Jerome Buskirk as executor, and he was
instructed, in conclusion, to turn over to Montgomery Brewster,
the day after the will was probated, securities to the amount of
one million dollars, provided for in clause four of the
instrument. And so it was that on the 26th of September young Mr.
Brewster had an unconditional fortune thrust upon him, weighted
only with the suggestion of crepe that clung to it.
Since his grandfather's death he had been staying at the gloomy
old Brewster house in Fifth Avenue, paying but two or three
hurried visits to the rooms at Mrs. Gray's, where he had made his
home. The gloom of death still darkened the Fifth Avenue place,
and there was a stillness, a gentle stealthiness about the house
that made him long for more cheerful companionship. He wondered
dimly if a fortune always carried the suggestion of tube-roses.
The richness and strangeness of it all hung about him
unpleasantly. He had had no extravagant affection for the grim old
dictator who was dead, yet his grandfather was a man and had
commanded his respect. It seemed brutal to leave him out of the
reckoning--to dance on the grave of the mentor who had treated him
well. The attitude of the friends who clapped him on the back, of
the newspapers which congratulated him, of the crowd that expected
him to rejoice, repelled him. It seemed a tragic comedy, haunted
by a severe dead face. He was haunted, too, by memories, and by a
sharp regret for his own foolish thoughtlessness. Even the fortune
itself weighed upon him at moments with a half-defined melancholy.
Yet the situation was not without its compensations. For several
days when Ellis called him at seven, he would answer him and thank
fortune that he was not required at the bank that morning. The
luxury of another hour of sleep seemed the greatest perquisite of
wealth. His morning mail amused him at first, for since the
newspapers had published his prosperity to the world he was
deluged with letters. Requests for public or private charity were
abundant, but most of his correspondents were generous and thought
only of his own good. For three days he was in a hopeless state of
bewilderment. He was visited by reporters, photographers, and
ingenious strangers who benevolently offered to invest his money
in enterprises with certified futures. When he was not engaged in
declining a gold mine in Colorado, worth five million dollars,
marked down to four hundred and fifty, he was avoiding a guileless
inventor who offered to sacrifice the secrets of a marvelous
device for three hundred dollars, or denying the report that he
had been tendered the presidency of the First National Bank.
Oliver Harrison stirred him out early one morning and, while the
sleepy millionaire was rubbing his eyes and still dodging the
bombshell that a dream anarchist had hurled from the pinnacle of a
bedpost, urged him in excited, confidential tones to take time by
the forelock and prepare for possible breach of promise suits.
Brewster sat on the edge of the bed and listened to diabolical
stories of how conscienceless females had fleeced innocent and
even godly men of wealth. From the bathroom, between splashes, he
retained Harrison by the year, month, day and hour, to stand
between him and blackmail.
The directors of the bank met and adopted resolutions lamenting
the death of their late president, passed the leadership on to the
first vice-president and speedily adjourned. The question of
admitting Monty to the directory was brought up and discussed, but
it was left for Time to settle.
mp3 players
kaaza