“Oh, it’s there all right. Cameron’s instructions were to deliver to you stocks whose total worth was ten thousand dollars within a certain period after I contacted you. Provided you met the requirements, of course. Had you returned home in forty-six, you would have received five thousand shares. They had quite a market value in those days. However, the situation has changed. Wall Street is wallowing in an all-time low. Ten thousands dollars now represents twenty thousand shares. The remaining five will be split equally between Alfred and Dennison. It was a rather strange provision in Cameron’s will and he certainly didn’t foresee the drop in the economy or the current inflation. The only reason he held back those shares of stock from Alfred and Dennison was to let them mature further before handling a greater interest in the business.”
“But it’s still only ten grand,” I said.
“There’s a little more.”
“Oh?”
Hunter spun around in his chair, pulled a file drawer open and extracted a stiff yellow folder. He handed the contents across the desk to me. “Nothing much, but part of my obligation. Your grandfather once purchased a large tract of land in New Mexico, speculating that a government irrigation project would be instituted in the area. The bill never passed Congress and the land is still there ... beautiful, rocky and arid. It’s a snake collector’s paradise and tourists take pictures of it. He left it to your mother and now it’s yours.” He tapped the paper in front of me and handed me a pen. “If you can find a sucker you might get him to take it off your hands at a quarter an acre. That would net you an even thousand dollars. At least it’s something. Taxes are negligible and paid to date.”
I scratched my name on the papers and shoved them back to him. “Thanks a lot,” I said. “Now how about my ten grand?”
“You just signed a notification of availability for it. Delivery
I scowled in disgust. “Do I have to?”
Leyland nodded. “I’m afraid so. Besides, think of the reunion you’ll have.”
“Like meeting a pack of cobras,” I said.
A ghost of a smile crossed the old man’s face, but I didn’t catch what he said. I asked, “What?”
He shook his head and smiled. “The day after tomorrow. We’ll leave from here. Four P.M.”
REFLECTIONS: LEYLAND HUNTER