"Well, what luck with the Longworths?"
"No luck at all," was the answer; "the young man seemed to have forgotten all about our conversation on board the steamer, and the old gentleman takes no interest in the matter."
Wentworth hemmed and tapped on the desk with the end of his lead pencil.
"I never counted much on that young fellow," he said at last. "What appeared to be his reason?"
"I don"t know exactly. He didn"t give any reason. He merely said that he would have nothing to do with it, after having got me to tell him what our option on the mine was."
"Why did you tell him that?"
"Well, it seemed, after I had talked to him a little, that there was some hope of his going in with us. I told him point-blank that I didn"t care to say at what figure we had the option unless he was going in with us.
He said of course he couldn"t consider the matter at all unless he knew to what he was committed; and so I told him."
"And what excuse did he make for not joining us?"
"Oh, he merely said he thought he would have nothing to do with it."
"Now, what do you imagine his object was in pumping you if he had no intention of taking an interest in the mine?"
"I"m sure I don"t know. I do not understand that sort of man at all. In fact, I feel rather relieved he is going to have nothing to do with it. I distrust him."
"That"s all very well, John, you are prejudiced against him; but you know the name of Longworth would have a very great effect upon the minds of other City men. If we can get the Longworths into this, even for a small amount, I am certain that we shall have very little trouble in floating the company."
"Well, all I can say is, my mission to the Longworths was a failure. Have you looked over the papers?"
"Oh yes, and that reminds me. The point on which the whole scheme turns is the availability of the mineral for the making of china, isn"t it?"
"That is so."
"Well, look at this letter; it came this morning."
He tossed the letter over to Kenyon, who read it, and then asked:
"Who"s Adam Brand? He doesn"t know what he is talking about."
"Ah, but the trouble is that he does. No man in England better, I should imagine. He is the manager and part owner of the big Scranton china works. I went to see Melville of that company yesterday. He could tell me nothing about the mineral, but kept the specimen I gave him, and told me he would show it to the manager when he came in. Brand is the manager of the works, and if anybody knows the value of the mineral, he ought to be the man."
"Nevertheless," said Kenyon, "he is mistaken."
"That is just the point of the whole matter--is he? The mineral is either valueless, as he says, or he is telling a deliberate lie for some particular purpose; and I can"t see, for the life of me, why a stranger should not only tell a falsehood, but write it on paper. Now, John, what do you know about china manufacture?"
"I know very little indeed about it."
"Very well, then, how can you put your knowledge against this man"s, who is a practical manufacturer?"
Kenyon looked at Wentworth, who was evidently not feeling in the best of humours.
"Do you mean to say, George, that I do not know what I am talking about when I tell you that this mineral is valuable for a certain purpose?"
"Well, you have just admitted that you know nothing about the china trade."
"Not "nothing," George--I know something about it; but what I do understand is the value of minerals. The reason I know anything at all about china manufacture is simply because I learned that this mineral is one of the most important components of china."
"Then why did that man write such a letter?"
"I"m sure I don"t know. As you saw the man, you can judge better than I whether he would tell a deliberate falsehood, or whether he was merely ignorant."
"I didn"t see Brand at all; I saw Melville. Melville was to submit this mineral to Brand, and let me know what he thought about it. Of course, everything depends upon the value of it in the china trade."
"Of course."
"Very well then, I took the only way that was open to me to find out what practical men say about it. If they say they will have nothing to do with it, then we might as well give up our mining scheme and send back our option to Mr. Von Brent."
Kenyon read the letter again, and pondered deeply over it.
"You see, of course," said George once more, "everything hinges on that, don"t you?"
"I certainly see that."
"Then, what have you to say?"
"I have to say this--that I shall have to take a trip among the china works of Great Britain. I think it would be a good plan if you were to write to the different manufacturers in the United States and find out how much they use of it. There is no necessity for sending the mineral.
They have to use that, and nothing else will do. Find out from them, if you can, how much of it they need, what price they will pay for pure material, and what they pay for the impure material they use now."
"How do you know, John, that there are not a dozen mines with that material in them?"
"How do I know? Well, if you want to impugn my knowledge of mineralogy, I wish you would do so straight out. I either know my business or I do not.
If you think I do not, then leave this matter entirely alone. I tell you that what I say about this mineral is true. What I say about its scarcity is true. There are no other mines with mineral so pure as this."
"I am perfectly satisfied when you say that, but you must remember those who are going to put their money in this company will not be satisfied.
They must have the facts and figures down before them, and they are not going to take either your word or mine as to the value of the mineral.
Your proposal about seeing the different manufactories is good. I would act upon it at once, if I were you. We must have the opinions of practical men set forth clearly before we can make a move in the matter.
Now, how much of this mineral have you got?"
"Only the few lumps I took with me in my portmanteau. The barrel full of it which we got at Burntpine has not arrived yet. I suppose it came by slow steamer and is probably on the ocean still."
"Very good. Take what specimens you have, go to the North, and see those manufacturers. Get, in some way or another, whether from the princ.i.p.als or from the subordinates, the price they pay for it, and the cost of removing the adulteration from the stuff they employ now; because that is really the material we come into compet.i.tion with. It is not with their first raw material, but with their material as cleared from the deleterious foreign substances, that we have to deal. Find out exactly what it costs to do this purifying, and then, when you get your facts and figures, I will arrange them for you in the best order. Meanwhile, as you suggest, I will learn what manufactories there are in the States. Nothing can be done except that until you come back, and, if I were you, I should leave at once."
"I am quite ready. I don"t want to lose any further time."
So John Kenyon departed, and was soon on his way to the North, with a list of china manufactories in his note-book.
That afternoon Wentworth got the letters off by the American mail, and he felt that they were doing business as rapidly as could be expected. Next morning there was a letter for John Kenyon addressed to the care of Wentworth, and by a later mail there came a letter to Wentworth himself from John, who had reached his first district and had had an interview already with the manager of the works. He found the mineral was all he had expected, and they would be glad to take a certain quant.i.ty each year at a specified rate. This letter Wentworth filed away with a smile of satisfaction, and then he began again to wonder why Adam Brand, representing such a well-known manufactory, should have written a deliberate falsehood. Before he had time to fathom this mystery, the office-boy announced that a gentleman wished to see him, and handed Wentworth a card which bore the name of William Longworth. Wentworth arched his eyebrows as he looked at it.
"Ask the gentleman to step in, please," he said; and the gentleman stepped in.
"How are you, Mr. Wentworth? I suppose you remember me, although I did not see much of you on board the steamer."