The Treasure of Hidden Valley
But we are perfectly certain that we have only to speak the word to put the business through all right.”     

       “Business!”—Roderick repeated the word with bitter emphasis.     

       “Yes, sir, business,” retorted Allen Miller, with some warmth.       “To my mind matrimony is one of the most important deals in life—perhaps the most important.”     

       “If the money is right,” laughed the young man contemptuously.       “But don’t you think that before another word is said about such a matter I should have the chance of seeing the young lady and the young lady a chance of seeing me?”     

       The humor of the situation had brought a pleasant smile to his face. The banker looked relieved.     

       “Wait now, my boy,” he replied musingly. “Do you remember when you were a little chap, perhaps twelve or thirteen years old, going with your Aunt Lois and myself to St. Louis on the Diamond Joe boat line?”     

       “Yes, I remember it perfectly.”     

       “Well, then,” continued Allen Miller, “you perhaps haven’t forgotten a lady and gentleman with a little tot of a girl only five or six years old, who joined us at Quincy. You engaged in a regular boyish love affair at first sight with that little girl. Well, she is the one—a mighty fine young lady now—just passed eighteen and her father is rated away up in the financial world.”     

       For the moment Roderick’s indignation over the cold-blooded, cut-and-dried, matrimonial proposition was arrested, and he did not even notice the renewed reference to finance. He had become pensive and retrospective.     

       “How very long ago,” he mused more to himself than to his Uncle Allen—“How very long ago since that trip down the river. Yes, I remember well the little blue-eyed, black-curly-headed chick of a girl. It was my first steamboat ride and of course it was a holiday and a fairyland affair to my boyish fancy.”     

       He drew in a long breath and looked out through the window at the snow which was now falling, as if many chapters of the world’s history had been written in his own life since that far away yet well remembered trip. He fell silent for a spell.     


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