“I will call at your office to-morrow forenoon, then.”
Andy apprised Mr. Crawford of the appointment made.
“I shall be glad to see your acquaintance, Andy,” said Mr. Crawford. “I have advices from a friend of mine in Washington that the railroad is sure to be completed within a short time. This land will be worth buying. Have you any money?”
“I have a hundred dollars in a savings bank,” answered Andy.
“Then I will give you a quarter interest in the purchase, and you can give me a note for the balance which at present you are unable to pay. I am sure we shall make a good deal of money within a short time, and I want you to reap some advantage, as it will have come to me through you.”
“Thank you, sir. I shall be very glad to have a share in the investment.”
About eleven o’clock, James Bristol, who proved to be a resident of Newark, New Jersey, presented himself at the office and was introduced by Andy to Mr. Crawford.
“Andy has told me of your business,” said the real estate agent. “You have some property in Tacoma.”
“Yes; I was persuaded to invest in some two years since. Now I need the money. Do you think you can find me a customer?”
“What do you ask for it?”
“A thousand dollars—the same price I paid.”
“Is it eligibly situated?”
“If the town ever amounts to anything, it will be in the business part.”
“How many lots will it divide into?”
“Twenty-five of the usual city dimensions.”
“Then I think I will take it off your hands. Part I will reserve for myself, and a part I will allot to a friend.”
“Can you pay me cash?”
“Yes. I will make out a check at once.”
Mr. Bristol breathed a sigh of satisfaction.
“I don’t mind telling you,” he said, “that I am very glad to realize on the investment. I have to meet a note for five hundred dollars in three days, and I was at a loss to know how to raise the money.”
“Then the transaction will be mutually satisfactory,” rejoined Mr. Crawford.
“Well, Andy,” said his employer, when his customer left the office, “we are now Western land owners. I will draw up a note, which I will get you to sign, for a hundred and fifty dollars, and you can assign to me the money in the savings bank. I shall expect interest at the rate of six per cent.”
“I shall be very glad to pay it, sir.”
It was a satisfaction to Andy to think that he had made an investment which was likely ere many years to make him golden returns. He began to read with interest the accounts of the growth and development of the West, and decided to be unusually economical in the future, so as to be able to pay up the note due to Mr. Crawford, that he might feel that he owned his Western property without incumbrance.
While Andy, as a rule, dressed neatly, there was one respect in which he did not win the approval of his neighbor, Sam Perkins.