Elsies Womanhood | Page 6

Martha Finley
festooned itself about
the one looking to the east.
Mr. Dinsmore was seated at his desk with a pile of papers before
him--legal documents in appearance; he would open one, glance over
its contents, lay it aside, and take up another only to treat it in like
manner.
Elsie stood but a moment watching him with loving, admiring eyes,
then gliding noiselessly across the floor, dropped gracefully at his feet
and laying her folded hands upon his knee looked up into his face with
an arch, sweet smile.
"Mon père, I have come for my lecture, or whatever you have laid up in
store for me," she announced with mock gravity and a slight tremble of
pretended fear in her voice.
Dropping the paper he held, and passing one hand caressingly over her
shining hair, "My darling, how very, very lovely you are!" he said, the
words bursting spontaneously from his lips; "there is no flaw in your

beauty, and your face beams with happiness."
"Papa turned flatterer!" she cried, springing up and allowing him to
draw her to his knee.
"I'm waiting for the lecture," she said presently, "you know I always
like to have disagreeable things over as soon as possible."
"Who told you there was to be a lecture?"
"Nobody, sir."
"What have you been doing that you feel entitles you to one?"
"I don't remember."
"Nor I either. So let us to business. Here, take this chair beside me. Do
you know how much you are worth?"
"Not precisely, sir," she answered demurely, taking the chair and
folding her hands pensively in her lap; "but very little, I presume, since
you have given me away for nothing."
"By no means," he said, with a slight smile of amusement at her
unwonted mood. "It was for your own happiness, which is no trifle in
my esteem. But you belong to me still."
She looked at him with glistening eyes. "Thank you, dearest papa; yes,
I do belong to you and always shall. Please excuse my wilful
misunderstanding of your query. I do not know how much money and
other property I own, but have an idea it is a million more or less."
"My dear child!--it is fully three times that."
"Papa! is it indeed?"
"Yes, it was about a million at the time of your Grandfather Grayson's
death, and has increased very much during your mamma's minority and
yours; which you know has been a very long one. You own several

stores and a dwelling house in New Orleans, a fine plantation with
between two and three hundred negroes, and I have invested largely for
you in stocks of various kinds both in your own country and in England.
I wish you to examine all the papers, certificates of stock, bonds, deeds,
mortgages, and so forth."
"Oh, papa!" she cried, lifting her hands in dismay, "what a task. Please
excuse me. You know all about it, and is not that sufficient?"
"No, the property is yours; I have been only your steward, and must
now render up an account to you for the way in which I have handled
your property."
"You render an account to me, my own dear father," she said low and
tremulously, while her face flushed crimson; "I cannot bear to hear you
speak so. I am fully satisfied, and very, very thankful for all your kind
care of it and of me."
He regarded her with a smile of mingled tenderness and amusement,
while softly patting and stroking the small white hand laid lovingly
upon his.
"Could I--could any father--do less for his own beloved child?" he
asked.
"Not you, I know, papa. But may I ask you a question?"
"As many as you like."
"How much are you worth? Ah! you needn't look so quizzical. I mean
how much do you own in money, land, etc.?"
"Something less than a million; I cannot tell you the exact number of
dollars and cents."
"Hardly a third as much as I! It doesn't seem right. Papa, take half of
mine."
"That wouldn't balance the scales either," he said laughingly; "and

besides, Mr. Travilla has now some right to be consulted."
"Papa, I could never love him again, if he should object to my giving
you all but a few hundred thousands."
"He would not. He says he will never touch a cent of your property; it
must be settled entirely upon yourself, and subject to your control. And
that is quite right; for he, too, is wealthy."
"Papa, I don't think I deserve so much; I don't want the care of so much.
I do wish you would be so good as to take half for your own, and
continue to manage the other half for me as you think best."
"What you deserve is
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