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An esoteric message on a simple headstone leads
a young
man
to discover.
.
.
A Rich Man's Secret (The Key
to
Wealth
& Wisdom Lies Just Beyond Your Thoughts)
/ L/hen he saw the headstone, he sensed meaning, a message that he was meant to
more than
who was
L/ he sure"
that.
Something impelled him
had special
it
learn.
He knew no
to learn
more about
in this grave.
rich
map
man knew he
to his secret
hidden treasure were evidence
needn't leave a step-by-step "trea-
parchment: The "steps" leading to his invisible
and existed beyond physical
—
outside anyone's mind.
whomever would
They were
there, awaiting
leave his or her mechanical thinking behind
and take the step of faith required to enter the unknown. These directions this road map can't be misplaced and cannot fade. They're permanent beyond time!
—
—
—
About the Author Ken Roberts
has had an incredible career. Like so
years studying self-help guides,
about
how
to achieve personal
knew
of us, he thought he
then
Ken
moving from job
many
of us, he spent
and worrying
to job,
success. Like so
and professional
the answer, but his schemes
fizzled.
many
And
discovered the inner principle that you too will learn in
Rich Man's Secret.
His book
is
A
unique, with none of the recycled and
adages that you find crowding the self-help shelves. Ken Roberts is an American "everyman" who found success. Today, his philosophical and financial guidance has reached over 200,000 subfruitless
scribers in
86 countries. These people also seek a better life, and find in a combination of that profound folk wisdom, savvy mone-
Ken Roberts
tary strategy,
and
friendly help that
comes with the discovery of the
surprising principle revealed in this novel.
To Write to the Author you wish to contact the author or would like more information about this book, please write to the author in care of Llewellyn If
Worldwide, and we
will forward
your request. Both the author and
publisher appreciate hearing from you and learning of your enjoyment
of this book. Llewellyn Worldwide cannot guarantee that every letter
written to the author will be answered, but
all will
be forwarded.
Please write to:
Ken Roberts c/o Llewellyn
Worldwide
P.O. Box 64383, Dept. K580-0, St. Paul,
MN 55164-0383, USA
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P.O. Box 64383, Dept. K580-0, St. Paul,
MN 55164-0383, USA
New
Worlds
A Rich Man's Secret An Amazing Formula for Success
Ken
Roberts
1997 Llewellyn Publications St. Paul,
Minnesota 55164-0383, U.S.A.
A
©
1995 by Ken Roberts. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from Llewellyn Publications, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. Rich Man's Secret
FIRST EDITION
Seventh
Printing, 1997
Cover design: Anne Marie Garrison Cover art and interior art: Charles Shields Book design and layout: design Editor: Rosemary Wallner Project coordinator: Jessica Thoreson
W
Library of Congress Cataloging- hv Publication Data
Roberts, Ken, 1951-
A rich man's secret
:
an amazing formula
for success
/
Ken
Roberts. p.
cm.
ISBN 1-56718-580-0 1. I.
Motivation (Psychology)
—
Fiction. 2. Success
—
Fiction.
Title.
PS3568.023878R5 .54—dc20
1995
813'
95-6490
CIP Llewellyn Publications
A Division of Llewellyn Worldwide, Ltd. P.O.
Box 64383,
St. Paul,
MN 55164-0383
Acknowledgments My special
thanks to Guy Finley, whose inspiration, insight, and encouragement helped bring A Rich Man's Secret to light. Each of his books is a touchstone you will remember and refer to often.
Books
by
Guy
Finley:
Available from Llewellyn Publications:
Como
The Secret Way of Wonder The Secret of Letting Go Triunfar Sobre La Ansiedad y Los Problemas Freedom from the Ties that Bind Designing Your
Own Destiny
,
—fcjives of great men
We
can make our
And,
lives
all
remind us
sublime
departing, leave behind us
Footprints
on
the sands of time;
Footprints that perhaps another, Sailing o'er lifes
solemn main,
A forlorn and shipwrecked brother, Seeing, shall take heart again.
Chapter / L/ hat as
is it?
he reached
What
is it I
need
to
i
know! Victor asked himself
to answer the phone.
"Hello, Victor!" said his wife, Christine. called.
I
"My
office just
we were having!"
qualified for that big sales contest
Victor held the phone tightly to his ear and began to
Where
are
all these tears
tears scared
him.
He
could remember crying as a
never past grade school. Pull yourself
Dont
cry.
coming from? What's going on? The
together,
little kid,
but
he thought.
upset Christine.
"That's great, honey. What's the prize?" Victor asked, trying to sound upbeat.
"Since the others
made those last two listings, we get to go with on a secret getaway for a whole week," Christine I
explained.
"A
secret?" asked Victor,
"Well,
it's
"A
secret where?"
a secret," laughed Christine.
Victor didn't understand. "You to your office, get
place
on
a bus,
and
mean
it's
we're going to drive
going to take us some-
—and we don't know where?"
"No," said Christine, "We're going to "Fly?" exclaimed Victor.
I
fly
there!"
.
Ken Roberts
2
LAX
"Yes; the bus will bring us to
board a plane for
we'll
we'll get
I
know
don't
a smaller plane and
on
from the
When we
where.
and
office
land,
will take us to our secret
it
destination. Isn't that romantic?" Christine giggled.
"You mean you don't have
a clue as to
where we're
going?" asked Victor.
"No, we were only told what
an inkling
as to
is
it
doing wrong?
I
need
1
to
Do
be? Victor
it
No
wondered. What from everyone
think differently
1
know, and how do
they'd talk about the trip to his wife,
just told you.
one has
where we're going," explained Christine.
Well, where could
am
I
is it...
else?
what
What
With promises that Victor Truman said good-bye 1
later,
find
it?
hung up the phone, and began searching the want
ads again, wondering
if
he would ever find
Right Place.
his
Ever since high school Victor knew he wasn't cut out to follow the path his friends planned on.
company and applying
He dreaded
to him.
nature, like oil
Ym not
—
mitter
My
really
is
the thought;
it
for a big
just foreign
and water.
lazy,
1
were
simply wasn't of his
he thought,
in fact,
I
feel like
with no outlet to plug into. But what
dad says
Working
for a nine-to-five job
just
my
haven t found
such a thing for
am
a powerful transI
Right Place.
1
supposed to do?
wonder
if
there
me
Victor thought back on
all
high school, he performed magic
he had
tried.
at parties
While
still
in
and church groups.
After graduating, he landed a seasonal job at Universal Studios, the
motion picture complex. That ended when the
summer crowds went home, and worked part-time
He
so
he enrolled
at a local college
at a clerical job.
recalled sitting in the college parking lot before his
first class
in the morning, staring at his textbooks.
There was
A Rich Man's Secret something so foreboding about them;
like a fly in a
soup, he just didn't belong. After his
made the Dean's
list
merely out-of-place,
—of
3
scholastic probation.
like a dog-lover at a cat
bowl of
semester, Victor
first
He
wasn't slow,
show.
Victor's search continued: self-help books, seminars, self-
employment, unemployment, meditation, relaxation
regi-
mens, career counseling, therapy... each one costing more than the
making ends meet
Now
he remained
last. Still
thirty,
unfulfilled;
and he wasn't
financially either.
married, and the father of a son and daughter,
Victor lived with constant conflict: torn between "heaven and earth"
the
—
his earthly responsibilities of supporting a family
him
small Voice telling
still,
that his Right Place did exist.
wasn't an issue with
search.
It
ing, his
concern was
Deep within, Victor like that!
he laughed
anyway
—how
Although
tells
is
Something more,
exhausted from the
of whether to keep
me
on
try-
longer he could hold out.
impelled to teach.
felt
to himself.
ened out, but something
He was
him
how much
there
and
1
cant
to teach!
How
do you
my own life straightWhat would he teach,
get
to search for (but not find) your happiness? it
shook
his pride as a father
and husband,
Christine had obtained her real estate license and had gone to
work ing
selling
somewhat deliver
homes
in
Southern California. Victor began
sell-
insurance, so both his and Christine's schedules were
life
flexible.
and pick up
The
They their
alternated and helped one another
two children from a
real estate brokerage Christine
was a small firm with
Fernando
chose to apply with
offices in a well-to-do area in the
Valley. Christine
group of agents.
local preschool.
became one of
San
this close-knit
— Ken Roberts
4
The brokerage was owned by
Although he never salesman on his own, his office
Les was a motivator, and did
enjoyed
much
success as a
a husband-and-wife team. well.
it
consistently ranked near the top of sales comparison charts of
other agents in the area. a
Ann
was a sweet, mild
woman
with
keen business sense who ran the day-to-day operation of
the office. Les was a convivial the office. least
once
"Work a
tered bus that
together, play together" was his motto.
He looked
met
and boarded a char-
to a special restaurant or
—and dreaded—
these outings.
forward to the camaraderie, to being with
Christine's fellow agents
them were very
and
their
husbands and wives. Most
successful in their
and he enjoyed being with them
He was
At
a special outing. All the
at the office
would take them
event. Victor loved
ings.
that was the atmosphere in
month he arranged
agents and their spouses
of
man and
own work
or business
in casual, social surround-
ever-hoping to learn the reasons for their seem-
ing success. This also brought up the inevitable comparison
between himself and them.
They were
well
on the way, already enjoying what he
strove for: big houses, custom furnishings, expensive automobiles, tax shelters, private
schools for their children, excess
cash and the free time to spend
Once on an
it.
office junket to
Palm
Springs, the group
gathered in the hotel lounge to plan the afternoon
Some
had
activity.
of the group wanted to stay at the hotel and play tennis;
the others wanted to go shopping. Victor felt a pang when one of the women said, "My husband makes more than enough money, why shouldn't I go spend some of it?" If only
A Rich Man's Secret he could
tell
5
Christine to go out and spend what she wanted.
Heaven knows she
deserves
it.
who
Raising two children, taking care of a husband
know
his Right Place, trying to catch
working
as a real estate
up on
agent... all this
credit card debt,
in the confines of a
rented 800-square-foot house. Yet Christine did
and an ever-present smile on her
grace, style,
doesn't
it all
with
encouraging
face,
Victor in whatever his latest plan happened to be.
At home
later that night, a
washed over
frustration
tremendous wave of
Victor.
It filled
him
and
failure
all at
once with
and
feelings of guilt, anger, remorse, jealousy, hopelessness, self-pity. "I
can't go," he told his wife.
have so many
when and
bills to pay,
"How can
not to mention
I
all
go
when we
that
we need
The thought of everything overwhelmed him, and he slumped down onto the couch. "Oh, Victor..." Christine looked down at him with such sadness, but she knew she'd better try to pull him out of this state before he definitely made his mind up to not go. "...you if
have to go.
I
they ever do get paid?"
won't have any fun without you. Besides, you're
always the one
who
you, Victor; we'll
all
has the best time of
all.
Everyone
likes
miss you."
Victor looked at Christine's cute, pouty face and smiled, still
feeling guilty.
She was
so petite
and sweet.
third child rather than the supposed
He
felt like
her
head of the household.
Ken Roberts
6
Head this
of the household,
family together
"No, hon,
have I'll
and makes more money than
just can't go. It'd
I
me around
try to close
he thought. Sure! Poor
do!
probably do you good to not
your neck for awhile anyway. You just go and
some
sales
while you're gone."
Christine's face dropped, start dinner.
I
Christine holds
and she went
The phone rang and
to the kitchen to
she answered
Les...yes, he's here. Just a minute." Victor looked
it.
"Oh,
hi,
up and saw
Christine holding the phone out. "Hello?" said Victor, taking the phone. "Hello, Victor. How's
it
goin'?"
Victor was surprised; Les had never called specifically for
him
before. "Fine, Les.
How are
you?"
"Great, Victor, just great. Listen, did Christine
I'm very excited about this mystery trip we're taking; it's
really
going to do you a
"Why do "Oh, this trip
so,
lot of
I
think
I
think
good."
Les?"
don't know. You've been
I
is
you say
you?
tell
on my mind and
going to be good for you, too."
"Well, thanks, Les.
It's
nice of you to
call."
"Atta boy, Victor. Keep on keepin' on!" Les sounded
like
Victor's father.
"Thanks... bye."
"That was
different.
What
did he want?" Christine was
smiling, eyes wide. "Yes,
it
was
different. Les
been thinking about
me
never did that before. Said he'd
lately,
and that the secret
trip
was
going to be good for me." Victor was looking out the window,
wondering what
Les'
words
really
meant.
"Then... you're going?" Christine asked in a rising voice, anticipating a yes answer.
A Rich Man's
Secret
Victor brought his gaze back to Christine. She could
he was see,"
he
At
tell
trapped in thoughts of guilt and gloom. "We'll
still
said,
walking out of the kitchen.
some hope, Christine considered. She
least there's
called after him:
"I
love you, Victor."
Victor was up well before the children and Christine the next
He was watching
show when Christine came and snuggled under the blanket with him on the couch. "What time did you get up?" She kissed him on the cheek.
day.
the morning
"Five-thirty," Victor said, just as surprised saying
Christine was to hear
it
as
it.
"Five-thirty? What's going on?" she said, teasingly. "I
don't know.
I
even
tried to
go back to
sleep, but
I
had
to get up."
"Who's
woman on
this?" Christine asked, looking at a well-dressed
the television.
"Some kind
of business psychologist," Victor answered.
"...and," continued the psychologist, "not only are busi-
ness trips where the spouse goes along more productive than
the 'leave-the-spouse-at-home' jaunts that corporations are
infamous
for,
but the children of these marriages benefit great-
ly as well."
"Really? "It's
How so?" asked
good for children to be away from both parents at
times. Children
much
the show's host.
as parents
need vacations from their parents
need time away from
Christine looked at Victor,
who
just as
their children."
couldn't help but smile.
Ken Roberts
8
"Then
that settles
it?"
she pronounced, slapping
him on
the knee.
"Okay.
The
kids win,
and get a vacation from both of
Victor leaned over to kiss Christine as she hugged the neck.
us."
him around
big
morning came. Victor and Christine were
packed, the car was loaded, and they were off to her
Although they were given general for the climate they
would be
would be
available, they
were bound
still
instructions
—how
and what types of
in,
had no idea where
it
all
office.
to dress
activities
was they
for.
Enthusiasm was high
as the
agents and their spouses
greeted their traveling companions and transferred luggage
from their cars to the waiting bus,
engine running and
its
air
conditioner going. Soon, they were off on the forty-minute trip to
Los Angeles International Airport.
The
commotion weren't as diverse as usual. This trip prompted one main topic: Where were they headed? Speculation ran up and down the rows of seats. They didn't need passports for this journey, so that limited the guessing but only slightly. Everyone on the bus had his or conversations and
—
her
own
theory and eagerly explained the reasons behind
it.
Christine secretly hoped they were bound for Hawaii.
Victor was smiling, but the other husbands.
had
all
The
—
as
always
other
men
—comparing himself
the latest in sports gear, clothes, even luggage.
tened to them
name
places they
9
to
were well-traveled, and
He
lis-
had been that he had never
Ken Roberts
10
There was one obvious fact that Victor was aware of, but he usually pushed aside in his comparisons: Although the others had more money and seemingly solid occupations, they weren't happy not really. Their smiles and even heard
of.
—
were convincing on the
talk
surface, but just
beneath the pol-
ished veneer Victor could see the same fears and anxieties he
had.
The
better he
he had noticed
The
others
managed
latest food, fashion,
in their ruts.
had come
to
know
these people, the
more
this.
and
and keep up on the
to pay the bills
furnishings, so they were comfortable
Victor wasn't, so he searched harder. That was
the only difference.
After devouring the greater part of the self-help and suc-
books on bookstore shelves, he knew from himself that
cess
they
all
missed the mark somehow.
elusive Something, that
needed
What was
this
mark, this
to be understood? All the
books, strategies, methods, and techniques that Victor had studied and pursued claimed authority based
on one of only
two premises: One, that we can control outside events, or two, that
we should work
to control
and change our thoughts.
Victor had already concluded that attempting to control outside events side events,
is
futile because, if
we can indeed
with what do we control them?
Any
control outcontrol,
if it
were possible, would have to come from something we do, and anything we do
is
determined by our thoughts. So
this conclu-
sion leads to the second genre of self-help/success books: that
we can
control our thoughts.
But can we?
We know
—with our thoughts—
ing
Isn't
or
something
is
we wouldn't
something inherently wrong with
awry in our think-
try to
this?
change them!
What
is
the source
of these negative, harmful thoughts? Nothing Yve ever read or tried
A Rich Man's Secret answers
which must be
this,
the reason
reasoned. So what
"
*
why
V
"subconsciousHhat" and "hidden such
11
the
'positive- this,
so" don't work, Victor
the secret?
is
"Oh, look! We're here!" Christine was leaning forward
in
her seat and touching the tinted window with her finger. Conversations got louder airlines terminal
grand
slap,
as the bus pulled
up to the domestic
and stopped. With a loud
blast of air
and a
the big bus door swung open.
moved
In one large, bounding mass, the excited group
through the electric double doors of the terminal and stopped in line at the
metal detectors.
belt buckles, pocket change,
wish Christine and
1
every self,
bell, light,
looking
and
down
1
A few were detained because of
and metal sunglass frames.
had Rolex watches so
big they set off
siren in this building, Victor
thought to him-
She looked
like a little girl
at Christine.
standing in line, wide-eyed, her big white teeth showing through a smile of anticipation. Just
as
he was enjoying
this
vision, feelings of guilt descended again: You can thank
What's wrong with you? You
Christine for
this trip.
knows
success formulas forward
wife
all the
who
and backward, but
one who it's
your
delivers the rewards!
His feelings really got control of him: You got less experience than
you
re the
you do,
re just lazy! She's
yet she wins this trip.
Why
aren't
the successful real estate salesman?
Les and
names being
them
Ann,
ever-smiling at the group's guesses of city
tossed up to them, but never saying a word, led
to departure gate three.
As they turned into the waiting number and destina-
area, they all spotted the lettered flight
tion sign posted at the ticket counter. In unison they said
Knowing they would take a shuttle flight from guessing now narrowed down to one or two states.
aloud.
the
it
there,
Ken Roberts
12
Even though the primary destination was known now, they were hard-put to come up with where a smaller plane might be taking them. The suspense was ever greater now, although the guessing lessened. Knowing more of the puzzle
meant they now knew
less.
The views below transformed from
the dry, sandy, barren
deserts of the southwest to green terrain spotted with
and more
rivers, lakes,
After settling
more
and ponds.
down through
layers of thick lazy clouds,
the kind not often seen in Southern California, the plane
landed and came to
rest at the terminal.
Although the
tele-
scoping walkway from the terminal to their plane was fully enclosed, the outside heat and humidity crept passed through the air It
became
it
in.
As they
and on into the air-conditioned terminal,
chilly again.
was a long walk to the escalators that took them down
into the baggage area.
With luggage
in
hand, the smiling
group boarded a tram that took them on a short
trip to
what
appeared to be the local commuter airlines terminal.
With
the usual rubber-band-engine and bird-strikes-from-
the-rear jokes, they checked their bags at the counter, passed through detector,
what looked
seats
to a small twin-engine
up on what was more of a stool than a
stairway, they entered the cabin,
two
to be a makeshift metal
and walked across the tarmac
airplane. Stepping
one-man
each with an
aisle
which was twelve rows of
down
the middle.
They had
to
A
Rich Man's Secret
13
hunch down to walk the aisle and take their seats. Each seat had a window and a headset tucked into the pouch on the back of the seat in front. The cockpit, with a pilot and copilot, had a wooden sliding door for separation, but it was never closed during the bumpy flight.
They landed
farmland area surrounded by
in a
sprawling blankets of pine this airport
There was
trees.
one runway
at
and no control tower.
Here they were, but they
know what
that
airline office offered
only
didn't
still
meant. The waiting area in the tiny a vinyl
just
large,
well- worn chairs, so they
couch and two
meandered
outside and congregated under a huge magnolia tree.
More
know whether to be elated or good or bad? The thought that it was
confused than ever, they didn't disappointed all
—was
this
a practical joke crossed their minds, but
Murmurings of "Where rose
from the gathering
didn't
know
and
are we?" as
what. Les and
bits
no one spoke
of nervous laughter
they stood and waited for
Ann
it.
—they
stood in the middle of the
group, smiling.
"Look!" someone
said,
the long red-clay road.
with water,
as
if it
It
pointing to four vans coming
down
wasn't raining, but the air was heavy
could rain at any moment.
The
tires
of the
four vans sent up no dust from the roadway as they approached, alternately appearing and disappearing between the
tall trees
As
and high, wild shrubbery lining the access road.
the vans
came
this wasn't a joke.
closer, into clear view, the
Each van was
jet
group knew
black with what looked to
be a coat of wax half an inch thick. They looked wet. In small ornate lettering along both sides of each van ran the words
Grand Hotel.
Ken Roberts
14
Two men jumped from
the front seats of each van, walked
toward the group, made a shallow bow, and smiled.
"Welcome
to the
Grand Hotel,"
Each attendant wore a with a shiny black stiff,
stiff,
down
silk stripe
their leader said.
trim uniform of black pants
the outside of each
leg;
high-collared, snow-white tunic with large brass buttons;
and a white cloth-covered helmet with a brim front and similar to those
As
worn by
itself
rear,
hunters in Africa.
safari
the baggage was loaded into the
divided first
a
van, the group
last
up into three smaller groups, climbed into the
three vans, and headed back
down
the red dirt road.
Anticipation was high again; something truly special was just
ahead.
The
red-clay road
made
a surprisingly
smooth
ride.
Even
though the van's
air
knowledge that
was hot and humid outside was ever present.
The
it
little line
conditioners provided cool, dry
no
The
hills or
countryside was gently rolling,
mountains, and lush green every-
where. This was almost a tropical climate
was large and abundant.
phone poles with
the
of vans turned off the dirt road onto a two-
lane asphalt highway. basically flat,
air,
ease.
It
The
—
all
the vegetation
climbed over fences and up trees
were
stout, solid,
tele-
and shady.
This was rich farming country.
Between the ing
some
areas of natural, thick, jungle-like
thirty to forty feet high,
acres of crops.
were
flat,
growth
ris-
smooth-looking
There was corn, melons, and soybeans,
all
planted in perfectly straight rows so long that they'd disappear
over one
mound and
reappear some distance away.
They passed one shallow pond. The animals hud-
Occasionally, a herd of cows was seen.
herd standing in the end of a
dled under the shade of a giant oak
with Spanish moss.
tree,
which was dripping
A Rich Man's Secret Where could cities,
they be headed?
15
The
skyline included
no
not even a town. They passed weathered farmhouses
with tin-roofed barns and out-buildings. Mostly there were small, single-story, light-colored brick
the highway a hundred yards or
same
as the next,
so.
homes
set
Each looked
back from
basically the
with simple, boxy hedges, a magnolia tree or
two, and a screened aluminum patio attached. This was a
heavenly climate
for bugs,
which were constantly dotting the
van's windshield.
Every so often, the vans passed the impressive gates of large estates.
Through most of
these imposing arched, brick-
shrub-and-wood entrances, the group could trace long meandering driveways, up and front of three-
and
down
four-story
knolls, to
mansions
where they circled
—the kind
in
of "palaces"
not often seen, except in movies. These glimpses charged the
atmosphere in the vans even more than jolt
it
already was.
made the expectant
of these occasional sightings
The
travelers
mentally compare the richness of these passing estates to what lay in store for
them
at their van's final destination.
Then
little
caravan slowed and made a
the
the highway. There in front of
entry arch they had seen so
them
far.
left
turn off
rose the largest, widest
Rising up from a cluster of
giant camellia bushes, neatly trimmed to form great round
mounds, two massive square rough-wood heavy wooden arch, two
feet tall, that
pillars
Across the face of the arch in carved gold-leafed the words
Grand Hotel. The
passengers' eyes
quartet of vans neared the end of
The
its
supported a
spanned the entry road. letters
widened
were
as the
journey.
scenery inside the gate was not the typical natural,
overgrown countryside they had seen on the highway behind
them. Here were meticulously cared-for grounds: closely
Ken Roberts
16
mowed,
rolling lawns; tightly
trimmed rows of hedges; neatly
maintained duck ponds. Although no buildings were in sight yet, evidence of an exclusive resort was apparent. Now they could see part of a golf course several hundred yards off to the right. Its lighter, finer color
and texture was speckled with
golfers in their brightly colored outfits. Here and there could
be seen
little electric
Grand Hotel maintenance
with
carts
khaki-uniformed drivers.
And
there now, just off to the
among
brick buildings
left:
a glimpse of wood-and-
scores of oak trees.
looked so different: each one was laced with
green Spanish moss that dropped
The oaks here fragile gray
down from
and
strong, thick,
outstretched branches.
Expectations were higher than ever
now
as the
vans
pulled up and stopped under a wide, arched, ivy-covered brick
porte cochere, the
When rushed
Grand
Hotel's
main entryway.
the van doors opened, the heat and humidity
in. It felt tropical.
Victor and Christine
with the others through the overly
tall
moved along
double oak doors that
two attendants held open, and then into the Grand Hotel.
The
lobby rose two
encircling
it.
A
stories,
with a second-story balcony
four-sided rock fireplace was the centerpiece
and three hallways opened into
this central area.
All the fur-
nishings were antique. Except for the telephones and alu-
minum
luggage carts the bellhops pushed along, they could
have been standing in the mid-nineteenth century.
The manager
greeted Les and welcomed the entourage.
called out each traveler's line of bellhops that
When
He
to the next in a
had quietly formed since the group
arrived.
name was called, Victor and Christine followed down the second long hallway from the fireplace.
their
their guide
name and motioned
A Rich Man's Secret The
enameled wood
electric-lantern lamps
on the
The hallway had a and dark wood walls. Old
hotel was old but richly elegant.
rather low
enough
17
ceiling
mounted along the
light to navigate by.
walls revealed the
Dimly
Grand
lit
walls provided just
old framed photographs
Hotel's history. Victor
step to the middle of the hallway
when
had
to
they passed occasional
small antique tables and chairs placed along the walls of this
narrow passageway. Christine was grinning wider and wider with each step as she anticipated the elegance that was sure to meet their room's
Slightly
them when
door was opened.
more than halfway down the long
hop stopped and faced the door small gold numbers.
He
to his
left.
hall,
the bell-
One- two- three,
in
inserted the key in the lock, slowly
pushed the door open, and motioned with his hand and a
new
smile for Victor and Christine to enter their
quarters.
Christine was visibly impressed.
"Oh, goodness," she sighed,
As much
as Christine
1
"it's exquisite!'
was elated
in these
opulent sur-
roundings, Victor was equally depressed. All the usual negative thoughts that
you
re
even here, you
thing like this. just
dont
tormented him: Remember, You don't belong
in in
fit
Right Place,
loser.
a place
You
11
it's
Christines doing
never be able
to afford
in such plush surroundings
youd
like this. If
maybe youd make a
little
any-
—you
quit trying to find your
progress
—
that's just
an
excuse you use because you're too scared and lazy to go get a real job; Christine deserves It
with
was
a
lot better
than you,
difficult for Victor to
all this
look pleased and surprised
turmoil and brutality going
The group met
for
that's for sure!
on
in his head.
dinner that evening in the main dining
room, and those thoughts were
still
working him over:
Ken Roberts
18
Everyone's dressed nicer than you. You look so out- of-place.
Everyone
else
is
As they were
activities.
to sun by the pool,
and uncomfortable.
Some would
began plan-
play tennis, a few
two were going horseback
and, as always, several of the ping. Victor
stiff
finishing their meal, the others
ning the next day's
wanted
you look so
at ease, but
women
riding,
started in about shop-
even
Christine's face, but she didn't
watched
he expected she should, knowing they didn't have extra money for unnecessary shopping. She spoke of taking a walk and catching up on a book she and some of the other flinch as
women
were reading.
Victor was being bruised by defeating thoughts again, but
Do
time he wondered:
this
finally feel
cess?
the others think like
good about myself once
How much money
and success
Nothing the others planned ested Victor, so he agreed
much
golf
—much
tator.
He
never could understand
—
golf
it
do the following day to his
him
took a
own
surprise
work done? Maybe some of
to go
hadn't
partner, so
in as a golfer
How
inter-
—
He
just a spec-
played so
did they ever get
their success will
he
—
how businessmen
full half-day:
will I
it?
and wouldn't make a decent
suggested that they not count
much
to
do
and
amount of suc-
with several of the others.
golfing, of all things,
played
will
do,
I
gain a certain
I
any
rub off on you, his
thoughts told him. Later, as she slipped
between the
cool, stiff sheets of their
king-size bed, Christine said, "I can't believe
how
agreed to go golfing tomorrow." Victor chuckled. prised, too.
But you know
into view as
we were
"I
was
part of the golf course
sur-
came
driving in here today? All of a sudden,
got this urge to get out
peace and
how
quickly you
on
it.
Not
I
to golf, but just to enjoy the
stillness of it." Victor's eyes trailed off.
"So when
I
M ir
ir
3 ~T ir
X < cc
o CD CN 00 CD
C0~
CO
< u_
—
DC LU Q_
0)
_J
CD
CO CO
C/)
l ement Watt was a legend," Mr. Jessup began, "and a
up into one.
delightful mystery all rolled
but no one seemed to
very well.
was loved by
He
all,
wasn't secre-
by any means, but he seemed to be everywhere and
tive
nowhere and
know him
He
at the
same time." The old man squinted
raised his forehead as
could
if
his eyes
an enigma. Victor
to demonstrate
that he was enjoying his reminiscence.
tell
"How do you mean?"
Victor asked, moving forward
on the
edge of his chair.
"Clement Watt was
And none
a rich
man.
knew
A very, very wealthy man.
We'd hear a little bit here that he traded in the commodity markets, and another little bit there that he owned big businesses, and of
none of the
us,
bits
I
suspect,
the half of
were ever the same.
no end
to
Clement Watt's
guessed
it
if
doin's.
It
it.
seemed there was
just
But you never would have
you didn't know him, and
if
you did know him,
he'd never talk about his accomplishments."
"Did you know him?" Victor's eyes widened. Just then, Billy
The copy
for
"Yes,
old
man
came through
looked over Victor's head. "You got that
my friend here, sir. It
the door, but didn't interrupt.
came out
Billy?"
nice." Billy was proud of his work.
69
Ken Roberts
70
Victor turned in his chair and Billy held out the copy. Victor took
it,
at the article as
and looked
if it
were a picture
of Christine. Christine! Victor remembered that he missed
know how he would
the van and didn't
Hotel. Before he figured her.
But not
He had
yet.
that was leading to
get back to the
Grand
out, however, he'd better call
it all
tapped a vein here with Karl Jessup
what seemed
"Thanks very much. This
to be a gold mine.
a perfect copy," Victor said.
is
"You're welcome." Billy felt a
more important and
little
appreciated the attention.
Victor turned back toward the old
man and
continued:
"So you knew Clement Watt personally?"
The
old
man
laughed. "Well,
twelve-year-old boy could
know
a
I
knew him
man
as
good
in his seventies.
I
as a
met
him with my daddy on several occasions, and 1 saw him around town here many times growing up. My daddy always spoke fondly of Mr. Watt and would
tell
me
things about him.
knew more about
man
Thinkin' back now,
I
believe
from the few times
I
was actually near him. This sounds
I
that
mighty peculiar, but he had a presence about him that you could just
feel.
He
could calm you
"You mean he'd
try to
down just
bein' near him."
calm people down? How?" Victor
looked confused.
"No,
it
was
just his way, his
manner.
He
spoke
soft,
but he
spoke with authority. You knew he knew what he was talkin' about, that's
it.
No
gossipin',
no
chitchat.
He
always had a
purpose to what he said."
"Then you had conversations with him?" Victor asked. "Well, no, but one time I was next after him at the barber shop. That's the time I heard him speak the most. The barber was used to gossip talk and politics talk and such, and I
A Rich Man's
Secret
71
remember old Mr. Watt just sat there and had a pleasant smile on his lips. I could tell he didn't want to talk gossip or politics, but
it
him
didn't bother
that the others were.
quiet and happy, enjoying and taking
it all
He
just sat there
in."
"But you said he was extremely wealthy?" Victor was digging. u
Oh, he
wasn't here
all
would've
on
sitting
known
to
mention the big corporatook
sat on. It
a board meant,"
much, and my daddy
that
New
Chicago or
daddy used
and the boards he
what
figure out
My
was.
tion he started,
me
awhile to
he chuckled. "He
told
me he was
off to
York or Boston and such. But you never
it."
"Well, didn't he like to talk big business or talk about
money?" "Not that
I
heard that Saturday morning in the barber
shop.
He
here.
Whenever he was in town here, he stayed at Emma's down on Park Street. He had a permanent
wasn't a flaunty type and didn't even
own
a house
boarding house
room "I
there,
my daddy
saw him there once,
and he was tendin' his
Isn't
it
too.
I
was walkin' down the
some flowers
to
hands and knees.
man.
said.
He
in the front yard.
looked up and
grown-up talked
to
me
like a
Down on
said, 'Hello,
a beautiful day?' Bein' a kid,
I
street
young
was surprised a
grown-up, and
it
took
me
a
minute to answer back. "'Yes
sir,'
I
and
said,
he must've thought
him
for treatin'
he wasted "Karl?
me
like
or
I
remember
some thin'.
I
thinkin'
really liked
an adult and didn't want him
to think
there?" Sara's voice echoed up the stairway.
Not now! Victor hoped thinking.
stood there.
was dumb
on me."
his time
You up
I
just
his face didn't
show what he was
Ken Roberts
72
gotta go put supper on," she
"I
announced from downstairs.
Good! Victor thought, maybe
she'll
go home
cook and
to
leave Karl alone. "I'll
down
be
presently, Sara,"
knew
Darn! Victor
his time
ting first-hand information.
he called back. was
short.
Here he was
Maybe he could
get-
get another clue
from Mr. Jessup. "It
mentions Emma's boarding house in the paper," Victor
held up the copy Billy had made. "Did
Emma know
Mr. Watt
very well?"
"Oh,
'spect so, but she's
I
been long gone now.
believe her daughter runs the place now, though. there where
I
saw him that
knew
Victor
his time
day,
free to see
it! ),
"Mr. Jessup,
do
up and over on Park Street."
was about to end, and he
covery was safe with Mr. Jessup (after
was
I
It's still
all,
anyone
felt his dis-
world
in the
so he asked his Big Question:
happened on an old cemetery out by the
I
Grand Hotel that isn't used much anymore." "Oh, yeah, the old Civil War Cemetery. My momma and daddy's buried there. Haven't been out there for many years, though."
"Well, apparently Mr. for a reaction or
"He
is?
Watt
is
buried there." Victor waited
comment.
You know, now that you mention
recollect hearing that fact
it,
it
seems
I
do
some time back." The old man
rubbed the back of his neck. "Yes,
the
and
first step..
The
When "That's
old
there's a ."' .
man
message on his headstone.
It
says
Take
Victor waited.
looked at Victor, waiting for him to
finish.
Victor just looked back expectantly, Mr. Jessup said, it?
Nothin'
else?"
A Rich Man's Secret "No, nothing
The
else, just
man
old
Take
the
73
first step."'
chuckled. "That sounds like old Mr. Watt.
Very few words, but words with meanin'. That's what tellin'
you.
He
was
me
like that. Say, let
I
was
see that copy you
got there." Victor handed it.
"My daddy
him
wrote
the article.
He continued reading, and smiling. my time, but that orphanage's been
landmark around here. after
it
smiled as he quickly read
this."
"That was before
named
He
on Watt
It's
him soon
after the
Street,
a
you know. They
orphanage went
in,
my
daddy told me."
Do you want
"Karl!
supper tonight or not?" Mrs. Jessup's
voice coming up the stairway was playful, but she meant business. "Yes, dear heart. I'm comin'," Mr. Jessup called
back
as
he
stood and handed the copy back to Victor with a fond smile
on
his face.
"Thank you very much, Mr.
Jessup. You've
been more
than kind to me."
"Oh, nonsense, young memories
You brought up some good
me."
for
The two
fella.
left
down
the office and walked
the stairway to a
waiting Sara near the front door.
"Thank helped said,
me
you, Mrs. Jessup, for sharing your husband. He's
very
much
this
afternoon
—
evening," Victor
looking out through the glass door.
"Glad we could help," she smiled. this
er,
young'un
home and feed him
"Now
or he turns
I've got to get
grumpy and can-
tankerous on me."
The
old
chuckled.
man grumbled under
his breath
and Victor
Ken Roberts
74
"Oh, young
fella,
was
I
just thinkin'.
me
somethin' old Mr. Watt said to
He
front yard.
told
me
to
that,'
just
remembered
that day out in
Emma's
never believe that somethin'
couldn't be done. 'Don't believe that,
I
if
it
somebody
else tells
you
and don't believe it even if your own mind tells you he said. I had an inklin' that he had told me somethin'
very important
—
for a long time.
especially to a young'un.
And
you know,
got
it
me
I
remembered that
through some tough
Helped save this paper one rough spell we went through here. Remember that, Sara?" "Yes, dear. Now if you don't move along, it'll be bedtime." "You goin' back to the Grand Hotel?" Mr. Jessup asked times.
Victor.
"Weil,
don't have a car, and the last van back
I
Victor realized he had been irresponsible the track of time
and missed the van. This could be
could be stranded here.
He
felt
warm and
"Oh, go over to the hotel.
serious;
lost
he
embarrassed.
real nice. Just
It's
left...."
way he had
go up one
block to Park, then over one block more to Second Avenue. Tell ole
Walton
"Thanks and held up
I
said 'Hey.'"
again, folks. You've
his
hand
been
terrific."
Victor smiled
to say good-bye.
Sara and Karl waved back, locked arms, turned, and walked the opposite direction down very sweet together.
grow old together It
had
was
They looked Victor hoped he and Christine would
like that.
still fairly
light out, but
to call Christine, but right
he had to find a
First Street.
home
far off.
for the night. Victor felt that
new
He
now, even more importantly,
thing big was about to happen to
about to take on a major
evening wasn't
him
direction.
here, that his
some-
life
was
A Rich Man's Secret He walked up
75
Avenue toward the courthouse. There were few cars on the road, and even fewer pedestrians. First
Everyone seemed to already be home
for dinner.
He reminded
Victor was lonesome for Christine.
himself
again that he'd better call her soon or she'd be worried.
As he
arrived at Park Street, he looked up, across the
atop the courthouse where lights illuminated
street,
white tower.
What
a picture. Victor took
it all
in:
its
A
grand
balmy
summer's evening in a small American town. Brick and pastel-colored buildings lined up, quaint and cozy, along the short streets.
Two young
boys riding their bicycles
down
the
front steps of the towering courthouse across the street
(something they would never do during business hours), and the bright-white tower silhouetted against the dark-blue sky of dusk.
Up
and down Park
Street,
on both
sides of the court-
house, hundreds of huge old trees with their dark, broad, irregular forms slowly disappeared into the the kind of small- town- America scene
looming night. This
Norman
is
Rockwell captured
so perfectly Victor thought. ,
He offices
crossed First
along Park Street until he reached Second Avenue.
Just across ing;
it
Second stood the Park Hotel. What a grand
was a
large, two-story, gray-brick structure
high, slender, arched
Eight
Avenue and walked by the shops and
tall
windows
build-
with
six
across the front of each floor.
square white posts lining the edge of the sidewalk
supported a large white trians below.
White
wooden balcony
that sheltered pedes-
picket railing decorated the front edge of
on the secof each window
the balcony and created a sitting deck for rooms
ond
floor. Brass gas
lamps hung on both sides
lintel, so at night the Park Hotel became a shining beacon.
Ken Roberts
76
Victor could almost hear a honky-tonk piano's tinny tones
"Camptown
playing
Races." of the two eight-foot framed-glass entry
He opened one
doors and could feel the weight of the dark-green velvet curtains that
hung on the
inside.
Another time machine: Victor
stepped into the late 1800s.
A ceiling
down
large gas chandelier spilled
over what looked more
out of the vaulted
an opulent private great
a hotel lobby. Dozens of tiny gas flames glowing
room than
from the ends of
room with
like
its
ornately shaped brass tubing filled the
a nice, quiet, flickering glow.
Heavy,
were everywhere: in
rich, sedately colored fabrics
the chairs, couches, love seat, curtains, and rugs.
grand room. Dark rated
wood paneling and
"Good evening,
old oil landscapes deco-
sir."
man
Victor turned to the back corner of
standing behind a polished dark-wood
registration desk. Victor wasn't certain the
him
was a
long walls.
its
the lobby, to a
to
It
at
first.
man was
speaking
All the thick, soft furnishings in this
room
soaked up sounds, so his salutation reached Victor almost whisper.
When
he realized the
man was
as a
speaking to him,
Victor smiled and walked across the large room.
He was
a thin, average-looking
ness suit with a
stiff
man
in a dark
white shirt and boring
and proper behind the
registration desk as
tie.
if it
brown
He
busi-
stood erect
were a sympho-
ny conductor's podium, arms and hands outstretched, clasping the smooth
A
wooden
railing that
framed the top of the counter.
small brass lamp with a green glass shade illuminated the
large leather registration book.
The countertop was dark green
marble with small golden veins coursing through
it.
A Rich Man's Secret my
"Hello,
name's Victor Truman and
evening, please."
and
tie,
wonder
J
if
hell
me
let
77
I
need a room
this
check in without a coat
Victor wondered.
"Very good,
sir,"
"A room
relieved.
I
missed the
thought
I
cue. Victor was
for one?"
me.
"Yes, just
Hotel, so
man on
responded the
I'd
last shuttle
back to the Grand
spend the night in town," Victor
explained.
"Welcome
to the Park Hotel,"
he
said,
not noticing, or
possibly ignoring, Victor's attempt at conversation.
have any luggage that the
man
you'll
"Do you
need carried up to your room.7
"
mechanically continued.
From what he
just told the
man, Victor thought the answer
was obvious, but he responded anyway: "No, no luggage." "If you'll
kindly complete our register," the
man
requested,
holding out a pen. The pages were already facing forward. Victor took the pen and looked to the most recently complet-
ed line of information for guidance. begun.
The
A
new page had
top line contained the handwriting of a Mr. or
Mrs. Keith Andersen of Grants Pass, Oregon, just this
who
registered
morning. Victor guessed Mrs. Andersen wrote
the handwriting was light and flowing, as
had made
just
it.
if
a feminine
this:
hand
"11:30 A.M." was written by another hand.
Probably Walton's.
Victor wrote in the information and considered
much
nicer this
was than saying
all
these personal facts out
who keyed them into a computer. Much way. Then Victor wondered if he could use
loud to a hotel clerk
more
civilized this
a credit card.
"Can
I
how
put this on
my
Visa card?" Victor held
it
out.
Ken Roberts
78
"Of
course,
sir."
behind a big square
The man took the card and went to work wooden box that covered the counter just
to his right.
know how much a room here have much choice. And after all,
Victor realized he didn't
would
but he didn't
cost,
Mr. Jessup recommended the Park Hotel, and he didn't seem to be the least bit extravagant.
Then "Yes,
Victor remembered: "Are you Walton/" sir, I
am," Walton answered, looking up with a puz-
zled expression.
"Well, hello, Walton. Mr. Karl Jessup over at the Daily
Gazette told
sound right
tle
me
you 'Hey!'" The word
to tell
much
in the lobby of the Park Hotel;
'hey' didn't
too crude.
Walton looked
slightly embarrassed, perhaps
perturbed, but
managed
even a
lit-
to respond: "Tell Mr. Jessup
thank you." Victor guessed the ruffled Walton's just
down-home demeanor
image of his impeccable
been used by Mr. Jessup
Jessup was fond
of:
night, Mr.
bet he had
once again play a game Mr.
a credit card receipt for Victor to sign,
said perfunctorily, "Your
Truman, and
departure. Your
He
teasing ole Walton. Victor smiled.
Walton produced and then
to
self.
of Karl Jessup
room
is
I
room
is
sixty-five dollars a
shall total this statement
number
upon your
205, upstairs."
That sounded reasonable. Walton handed Victor
a
key with a very large square head. "205" was stamped in
"Thank
you, Walton.
And where
can
I
get
heavy it.
some dinner
now?" "You may dine until nine o'clock
Walton extended
his
in our dining
room."
hand toward a wide curtained archway
leading from the lobby.
Next
to
it
stood what must have been
A Rich Man's Secret a nine-foot tall grandfather's clock.
showed eight out came the
"Is
first
Something
The
big black hands
in the big clock clicked,
of eight mighty gongs.
They weren't
and deep. Walton was writing
just strong
Probably
o'clock.
79
filling in the
time
1
checked
in,
and
loud,
in the register.
Victor surmised.
there a telephone nearby?" Victor asked.
Walton
"There's one in your room,"
replied, looking up,
"and also a public telephone in the hallway between the dining
room and the
lounges."
"Thanks." Victor disappeared through the archway.
He was now
in a
narrow
anteroom,
area, a kind of
between the hotel lobby and the dining room.
A
dark-wood
rostrum stood unattended next to a matching curtained arch-
way opposite the one he had see into the dining room.
way
as
wide
as the
room
It
led
A middle-aged woman, full
just
through. Victor could
was old and elegant,
up a
too.
flight to the hotel's
A
stair-
rooms.
her hair in a tight bun, wearing a
black skirt and starched white blouse came through the
archway from the dining room. her
come
in:
A
wonderful aroma followed
good home cooking.
"May
I
seat
you
for dinner?"
She had
a soothing, motherly
quality to her voice. "Yes, please. I'm dining alone," Victor said.
"Very well. Please, follow me."
The aroma was even bread wasn't
better in the dining room. Fresh, hot
far away.
The dining room was as large as the lobby, but the light was dimmer in here. Curtains were drawn in the windows. A glass
lamp with two burning candles
sat in the
of forty or more round tables in the room.
middle of each
Cane
chairs with
leather seats circled each table. There were perhaps twenty
Ken Roberts
80
diners, all carrying
on
conversations, yet the
antly quiet and subdued.
The woman
room was
pleas-
led Victor to a smaller
round table with two chairs next to the front window.
It
was
away from other diners and Victor appreciated that. "This looks perfect," Victor said, "Thanks very much."
"Your waiter will serve you presently. Enjoy your meal." Victor sat and parted the his fingers.
The
gas lamps
sidewalk outside.
A
window
on the
curtains slightly with
front of the hotel
couple strolled
by.
The
line of
up the
lit
handsome
gas street lamps along Park Street stood at attention as far
down
the sidewalk as Victor could see.
And what
a
menu!
Victor's
eyebrows rose
as
he saw
his
choices for dinner: Buttermilk fried chicken with butter beans
and glazed sweet potatoes. River bottom gumbo with butter-
ham
milk cornbread. Country smoked boiled
new
with red-eye gravy,
potatoes covered in lemon garlic butter, and snap
beans cooked with hambone.
He made
his selection quickly (the
order with the waiter, and then er
archway in the back wall
this
first
seat,
wooden
one and pulled
change from a
the dining
his
room by anoth-
for the telephone.
Halfway down
hallway to the lounges there were low alcoves in the wall,
each with a the
left
gumbo), placed
his pocket.
dime into the
slot
shelf,
his
and telephone. Victor
sat in
Grand Hotel key and most of
his
He
fed
Good,
the
phone numbers on
and punched
in the
it.
number. "Grand
Hotel, good evening," the voice said. Victor couldn't believe
he had gotten through
"Room
for just a dime.
123 please."
"Hello." "Hi, sweetie, "Victor!
it's
Where
me." are you? I've
been very worried."
A Rich Man's Secret knew you would "Where are you?" "I
"I just
in
be,
and I'm
81
sorry."
checked into the Park Hotel over here
room "Why? What happened?" "I'm really onto something
in town. I'm
205."
here, Chrissy.
C. W.? Well, he really existed, and
somewhere around
sage hidden
"What
I
Remember
think he did leave a mes-
here."
did you find?"
"The date that was hidden
in the decoration
on the head-
stone was the same date of the local paper that carried an
about C. W.
cle
wealthy
—
arti-
Clement Watt. He was a very They even named a street after
his name's
man around
here.
him. But he wasn't a
he was
celebrity or anything like that,
actually kind of a quiet, private person, but very powerful
—
in
a good way."
"You sure
this isn't just a coincidence?"
Coincidence? Coincidence!
He had
forgotten to ask Mr.
Jessup about the yacht named Coincidental. The van driver said
it
just a
belonged to the orphanage. "No way,
when
"Tomorrow.
its
will I
have another clue to check out and
trips into
start
catch a hotel van on one of
all right,
Victor."
love you, honey."
love you, — you "I
too, Victor;
"Well, something has, or "I
I'll
I'll
town here."
"I'm so glad you're
to
this isn't
you be home?"
thing tomorrow morning.
"I
know
coincidence!"
"Well,
first
I
hope
so.
Good
and
is
if
about
night, Victor.
I
anything ever happened
to,
and
it's
love you."
great!"
Ken Roberts
82
Victor's
new
surge of enthusiasm overtook his appetite,
gumbo
but he remembered the
as
he returned
re-read the Daily Gazette newspaper
room.
He
bites.
The
room
205.
Victor opened the door he immediately thought of
his grandmother's house. There's a certain smell that
humid climates take on. This room had and took
between
old clock in the hotel lobby was bonging out nine
o'clock as he headed up the stairway to
When
to the dining
article
in
it,
homes
in
too. Victor liked
it
an extra deep breath.
The room was
small but
with an old-fashioned
full.
It
contained a double bed
two bedside
quilt,
tables with ornate
on white lace doilies, a small clock radio on telephone on the other. A three-drawer dresser and
antique lamps one, a
mirror stood next to the room's only window, across from the bed.
A proud old three-rung chair stood next to the small wall
closet next to the
No
no toothbrush,
Nine o'clock
was glad
TV, nothing
on
all
the radio
the
first
station
came
clothes,
—not being
this just sort of
way
to read,
nowhere
around here
to the
left.
to go.
at night.
moved more than an inch
in clearly. Elevator music.
inch more, hard-core country music. Turn
News. No. Two inches more, close
it
Keep some
to
The Garden
brother, a garden talk show.
Californians are crazy.
And
try
to the right edge
of the dial, a call-in talk station. Let's see what
"Welcome back
He
Slowly turning
more. Forties big band era music. That sounded nice. Let's another.
and
did.
to the right, the needle
before the
An
it
No
at night.
radio. Let's see what's
knob
no
luggage,
This was new for Victor
either.
turned the tuner knob
going.
No
what could he do now? All of
And he
happened.
the
door.
television, Victor noticed.
prepared. But
The
bathroom
this
is
like.
Variety Show.'" Oh,
the rest of the country thinks
A Rich Man's "Our
special guest tonight
famed Huntington Gardens San Marino? That's
"Our topic
this
right
in
is
the chief rosarian of the
San Marino."
near where
evening
H3
Secret
—
roses
1 live!
—has
lit
call
is
to
213-555-BUDS. That's 555-2837."
Five, five, five, B-17-D-S?
Two, one, that
up the station
The number
switchboard, but keep trying to get through.
Oh, come
on. Wait a minute!
three area code? That's Los Angeles!
I
must have heard
wrong.
"Hello? You're cial guest rosarian
KPLA! Then
on the tonight
that
is
some time warp, or going
line
with Gary Morgan and our spe-
on KPLA."
Los Angeles! Wait a minute,
am
1
in
nuts, or what?
"Yes, I'd like to ask your guest about the
American Rose
Society?"
What? the
don't believe
I
American Rose
this!
1
remember seeing an
article
Society in that newspaper. Victor pulled the
copy from his pocket, even though he knew the rose
remembered seeing had not been dental! Victor
about
copied. This
thought of the yacht again.
He
is
article
he
just too coinci-
felt
goose bumps
slowly spread over his back, shoulders, and arms.
"The American Rose Society was founded in 1899 to encourage research and help dispense information on all aspects of roses. The society began in Louisiana and is a thriving organization today with many local volunteer consultants you may contact for help and advice." Here 1 am all the way across the country listening to a radio station back
home. This must be
signal skips over vast distances.
but never had
"Thank
it
happen
you.
And
to
me
let's
that
But
phenomenon where
it's
the radio
so clear! I've heard of
before
go to our next
caller, please."
this,
Ken Roberts
84
"Hello?"
on the air. What is your question for our guest?" "Is it true there's no such thing as a blue rose?" "That's correct, there are no blue roses. Not many people aware of this fact. The so-called modern era of rose grow"Yes, you're
are
ing began in 1867
when
the
hybrid tea rose
first
that dominates present-day rose gardens
Exciting
new
new
hybrids of
colors
flourish at the turn of the century.
as the
—was introduced.
there
is
to
But a sky-blue, true-blue, or
Some
hybrids
Blue Girl, in 1964, and the Blue Nie of 1981 are
There are
actually lavender-colored roses.
and purple
class
and bicolors began
delphinium-blue rose has never been grown. such
—the
roses
mauve,
sometimes incorrectly called blue
gray,
roses,
but
The Japanese and Australians are amounts of money conducting gene-splicing
no true-blue
spending vast
also
rose.
experiments, using genes from petunias and other plant families,
but there
still is
no
true-blue rose."
"I'm afraid we're out of time tonight. This
thanking our special guest
Gardens
in
this
San Marino. Tune
is
Gary Morgan
evening from the Huntington in next
Variety Show,' same time, right here
week
to 'The
Garden
on KPLA, Los Angeles.
Stay tuned for news, sports, and weather with Mary Ashley." 1 still
cant
believe this!
Victor
other surprises lay in store. the words, "Take the
first
true-blue rose would look.
He
step,"
left
fell
the radio
on
to see
what
asleep mentally repeating
and trying
to imagine
how
a
—Victor awoke to birds chirping. Actually, one yapping blue woke him. He got out of
jay in particular
window, and pushed the curtains breathtaking.
What
a
morning!
bed, walked to the
aside. Beautiful.
Humid
Absolutely
skies definitely are
more dramatic. There's more substance to them somehow: more clouds, more moisture, more feeling. Maybe the beautiful skies are
why
people can tolerate humidity.
The sun was
red, rising
behind white bands of clouds.
A
pink cast dribbled over the landscape. Thick, moist shafts of pink sunlight shot through the
trees
and into the glistening
green grass beneath them in the park across the
This was a very special day. Victor
He phoned
felt
street.
it.
the front desk and Walton answered. Doesn't
he ever go home?
"Good morning, Walton. This
is
Victor
Truman
oh-five."
"Good morning, "Walton,
is
"Of course,
there a
little gift
shop in the hotel?"
sir."
"Good. Would
"We have
sir."
they have razors and such?"
a full selection of toiletries,
85
sir."
in two-
Ken Roberts
86 "Great. Could
some items delivered
get
I
to
my room
this
morning?"
"What
items would you like?"
"Let's see.
A
razor,
Yep, that should do
it.
"And would you morning,
toothbrush, toothpaste, and a comb."
like to order breakfast in
your room this
sir?"
room open
for breakfast?"
"Is
the dining
"It
opens in twenty minutes."
"Then I'll come down to eat. Thank you." "Very good, sir. Your sundries shall be brought up presently."
"Thanks very much, Walton, you're a champ."
That caught Walton "Thank
"Bye." Victor
ly
hung up and
hoping that
"And
all
night.
He
KPLA would be Go
Classic Radio,
on.
says
Eddy Arnold singing
Away.'
WCCR,
time, twenty-four hours, where
The weatherman
he realized that the
turned the volume up, secret-
that was the legendary
'Make the World
on Country today.
cleared his throat.
smiled. Poor Walton.
for his supplies to arrive,
had been on
classic,
He
you, I'm sure."
Waiting radio
off guard.
it
it's
It's
all
the classics,
all
should hit the mid- to high-
an extra pitcher of iced tea or lemonade today;
Now
see
if
the
going to be a hot one
eighties today with the humidity doin' the same. Better
scorcher.
his
seven-forty-five here
you can guess the
title
it's
make
gonna be
a
of this ole tune
from the Queen of Country Music, Miss Loretta Lynn." Twenty-four hours. That means KPLA's signal drowned out this strong local station
thought of the yacht again.
last night.
Coincidental? Victor
A Rich Man's Secret His
toiletries arrived
"dressed" quickly.
Not
short-sleeved tourist
packed
he thought, looking into
Maybe
I'll
buy one of those big floppy
numbers Yve seen so many of on
this trip.
He
new supplies in the paper bag in which they Then he remembered Jeffrey and Nicole. The kids
his
arrived.
always liked the sets
and Victor showered, shaved, and
too wrinkled,
the mirror at his shirt.
87
from
hotels.
shower cap.
shampoo, conditioner, and body
little
Nikki
will be especially pleased
And Jeff likes
er in the nightstand
lotion bottle
with
this plastic
postcards. Victor pulled the top
open and there
it
draw-
was: a set of stationery
and a color postcard of the Park Hotel. After checking out and thanking Walton, Victor went
The curtains were pulled back and sunlight streamed in. The abundance of sunshine made this a completely different room than it had appeared into the dining
last night.
room
for breakfast.
There were only
six
people having breakfast
—
three
couples scattered about the big room. Victor requested the
same
table
What there,
from the night before,
at the front
a view: the long sidewalk trailing
an occasional pedestrian. To the
window.
off,
left
a car here
and
across the street
was the grand brick courthouse, and everywhere
else
and what looked
and leaves.
like miles of trees, grass,
Everything green, and every shade of
Waiting gravy,
for his breakfast of
and sausage
links,
was park
it.
scrambled eggs, biscuits and
Victor re-read the article, something
he had done twenty times since that copy was made not much over twelve hours ago.
Emma's boarding house and the orphanage: the only two he had. Finding Mr. Jessup and
leads
was a their
blessing.
his microfiche
machine
Deep, muffled tones from the big clock made
way through the dining room.
It
was nine o'clock.
— Ken Roberts
88
Victor laid the article up against the plate opposite his
which would be every word of
it
Christine's
as
she were here
if
—and examined
he enjoyed his meal.
Victor paid his
bill
and asked the waitress
if
she
knew
where Emma's boarding house was located.
"Oh,
yes,
it's
just
two blocks farther down Park Street
on Second Avenue, then Third," she pointed out through the window, away from the courthouse, "then Fourth Avenue, and there's Emma's." here.
The
hotel's
"Does
Emma run
"Oh,
don't think so anymore."
I
it/"
Victor asked, testing her knowledge.
Victor thanked her and
forgetting something, looked
bag in his hand, touched the smiled.
down
He
was
article folded in his pocket,
to find
Then he smiled again when he know what it was he was looking
in the right place to find
just after
he was
white paper
for.
didn't actually
knew he was
felt like
at the little
Nope, he had everything he needed
was looking
It
the hotel.
left
and
what he
realized for.
he
But he
it.
nine o'clock, but the
air
was already warm
and heavy. The white clouds were billowing now. Victor could hear the blue jay that woke
still
him
as
he passed the end of
the hotel building and headed along the sidewalk to Emma's.
A row of shops and businesses lined hotel to Third Avenue. dise. Parker's
One was
Park Street from the
Parker's
General Merchan-
was a wooden two-story building that seemed a
out of place along this section of Park Street.
bit
formal than lier
all
somehow.
walked under
It
was
less
the other brick structures and looked friendIt
its
created
its
own atmosphere when one
enormous deep wooden porch that began
from the second story window and enveloped the entire walk in front of the building,
all
the
way out
side-
to the street. It
A Rich Man's Secret was almost
being indoors under here. Victor could easily
like
look through the large window panes and
no
since there was
Victor peered to determine
if
89
glare
under
was open:
around the store
voluminous porch.
in, first to see if Parker's
they had men's
Yes, Parker's
this
all
was open, and then
shirts.
A woman
with a shopping bag
came out of the store. Now, do they have men's shirts? Yes; over a doorway through the back wall was a sign: Men's Women's Children's Clothing Upstairs. Victor went
He came also
in.
out carrying a larger bag than he entered with.
was wearing a new
He
shirt: a slightly oversized, square-tail,
short-sleeve style with a subdued print that looked less touristy
than the loud
floral designs
he had been
Feeling refreshed now, he continued
where he
seeing.
down Park
left off.
Crossing Third Avenue, everything changed:
an
Street
all-residential
He was
in
neighborhood now with one long row of
antique homes. Every one of them had to have been built in the mid- to late- 1800s; the telltale architecture was outstanding.
The Queen Anne
style
abounded: wooden homes embell-
ished with high porches; ornamental white railings, posts, and turrets;
siding;
stone chimneys; steep-roofed dormers; scalloped
wood
and an abundance of fine, detailed woodwork.
Old, stout magnolia and oak trees stood in the front yards of most of these homes, protecting the family that lived
Ken Roberts
90
Their strong roots had reached out and beyond the
inside.
front yards over the years
sidewalk twist,
and now made
turn, and undulate as
large sections of the
a river flowed beneath
if
A
walk through time. Victor smiled and was coming to Fourth Avenue, and the end house. it.
It
was the belle of the
They saved
ball.
Victor thought. This house was a palace. the mighty old trees that occupied
on the block was diminished by
Two
flights of
stairs
its
It
the best for last,
stood taller than
yard. Every other
this old
house
grand dame.
ten feet wide led up to a deep, covered
porch that encircled the entire house. The porch had an extra gazebo with
its
own
spiral roof jutting
nolia tree at the front
left
corner.
roofs towered the second story.
out toward a huge mag-
Above
Its
the porch and gazebo
rooms had
their
own
cov-
ered balconies with white posts, railings, and gingerbread dec-
The
oration.
third-story windows' decorative white
frames were tucked under the front roof's
The
many
wood
gables.
separate roof of the home's rear section also rose
three stories, had two brick chimneys of
a white balcony railing running
Best of
all,
its
its
own, and flaunted
entire length.
there was a small rectangular
wooden
sign with
green script lettering planted in the lawn next to the oversized porch:
Emma's Boarding House.
Victor took a deep breath and climbed the eleven steps to
Then it was another good four paces The big porch could have been a room
the top of the porch.
to
the front door
of
its
own.
tops,
It
itself.
had wicker
chairs, benches, coffee tables
and a round table-and-chairs
chair, big
enough
for three adults,
set.
with
glass
A broad wooden swing
hung from two thick chains
in the circular gazebo-corner of the porch.
A Rich Man's Secret He times
91
pulled back the screen door and rapped lightly three
on the
front door.
Moving back
a step, he closed the
screen door and watched the leaded glass panes in the door.
few seconds
A
was movement behind the glass. handsome middle-aged woman in a simple,
later there
A
"Hello."
trim house dress and white apron answered the door. "Hi.
My
name's Victor Truman and I'm doing a
torical research.
Mr. Karl Jessup
who owns
the Daily Gazette
newspaper was very helpful yesterday, and an from 1899 led
me
little his-
article
I
found
here to Emma's boarding house."
"Oh, my. Eighteen ninety-nine,
that's
way before my
"Are you the proprietor, ma'am, may
how
wasn't quite sure
to go about this.
I
He
time."
ask?" Victor
want
didn't
to
sound pushy. "Yes, I'm
Emma's granddaughter."
"How do you I
do?" Victor nodded his head. "In this article
found," Victor took
it
out, "it tells of a
it
from
his pocket, unfolded
it,
and held
man named Clement Watt when he dediIt also says that when in
cated the orphanage here in town.
town he
lived at
Emma's boarding house. Would
same house where he stayed?" Seems
too
good
this
be that
to be true,
but
please say yes.
"Yes, this
the house.
is
Would you
wait a moment,
please?"
"Yes
I
will.
you, thank you! is
the house,
she it.
Thank I
wonder what
the other. lips.
is
the house!
she's doing?
and I'm standing here on
knows what I'm Victor's
you." This
talking about,
mind was
racing.
The woman
He
and
Thank you, thank
She didnt say no,
the porch. she's
stood
finally returned
this
The doors open,
doing something about
on one
foot
and then
and had a smile on her
That's good, that's good, Victor encouraged himself.
Ken Roberts
92
"Won't you come in? My name's Colleen." She smiled bigger now and pushed the screen door open with her right hand, stepping aside so Victor could enter. Victor wiped his shoes on the welcome mat, smiled at Colleen, and stepped "I
do appreciate any help
sure
about Mr. Watt," Victor told her.
at all in learning
What an
in.
more
understatement
that was, as he would soon find out.
The house was Shiny hardwood area rugs; high pastel-painted
as striking
floors
on the
inside as
it
was outside.
covered with thick, rich, deep-colored
wooden ceilings with ornate crown molding; wood walls with many old watercolor and oil
paintings, each hanging from a thick velvet cord. Antiques
were everywhere
—everywhere!
stools, couches. ..all antique.
Chairs, tables, lamps, books,
What
a showplace, what a
museum, Victor thought. "Please follow me," Colleen said, pleasantly.
They walked from this large atrium/sitting area through a doorway into an old-fashioned parlor that was just as stuffed with antiques. This room felt more snug than the other. It had a lower ceiling and a small fireplace. The area rug in here was of deep reds and dark blues. Sitting in a delicate fabric-and-wood armchair was an elderly
had white
woman. She
was very thin, wore glasses that made her
hair,
blue eyes look larger than normal, and had such a sweet smile. Victor
"Mama, about.
And
was captivated. this
is
Mr. Victor Truman, the
Mr. Truman, this
is
my
man
I
told
you
mother, Mrs. Minnie
Nelson." Colleen spoke deliberately and slightly slower. Victor smiled, smile.
He made
still
looking at those eyes and that sweet
a half-bow to the mother.
A Rich Man's Secret "It's
a pleasure to
93
meet you, ma'am. Thank you
for seeing
me." "Sit
down, young man." The old woman motioned with
her hand for Victor to
in a chair like hers
sit
on the opposite
side of the fireplace.
"Well,
leave you two to talk. Mr. Truman,
I'll
you some refreshment?" Colleen awaited folded hands, as
if
I
his response
offer
with
in prayer.
me
"Please, call
may
No, no thank you, I'm very com-
Victor.
fortable." Victor looked at
Minnie. "Mrs. Nelson?"
"Colleen, dear, bring us a pitcher of your delicious lemon-
That should
ade.
hit the spot
on
a day like today."
Victor thought of the local radio program he had heard just that "I'll
A pitcher of lemonade sounded good.
morning.
be right back." Colleen
left
the
room and Victor
turned to face Minnie Nelson.
"Colleen
tells
woman's blue eyes
me you sparkled.
"Yes, Mrs. Nelson.
I
asked of Clement Watt."
The
old
That sweet smile returned.
found
this
newspaper
article
from
1899 that says Mr. Watt stayed here when he was in town." Victor was holding the copy.
"May
I
see that?" she asked.
"Of course, Mrs. Nelson."
The
old
woman
forward to give
it
reached out her hand and Victor leaned
to her.
"And
don't call
name's Minnie. I'm over eighty, but
Nelson' makes
me sound
showed that sweet smile "Yes,
Minnie.
"Oh
aren't
you?
old."
I
me
Mrs. Nelson.
My
don't feel eighty. 'Mrs.
She winked
at Victor
and
again.
And you sure don't
you the charmer.
I'll
look eighty, either." bet you're married, aren't
Ken Roberts
94
"Yes,
ma'am
"Sure you
some sharp
—
er, yes,
are,
Minnie,
am."
I
you smooth- talker. Wouldn't take long to
little gal
hook
a catch like you."
for
Oh, that smile
again. Victor smiled back.
Minnie was enjoying every
bit of the old article. Victor
followed her eyes and could see that she was taking in every
word.
When
she finished, her eyes jumped back to re-read the
headline.
"Mr. Watt. Dear, dear Clement," she spoke, but not to
Then her eyes focused on Victor. "And what would you like to know about Clement Watt?" She was serious now, Victor.
with a "I
bit of suspicion
want
to
know
and protectiveness
in her voice.
everything about him," Victor said, naively.
"Why?" she questioned. Colleen entered the room with a tray on which glass pitcher of
placed
it
lemonade and two
on the small antique
glasses filled
with
sat a tall ice.
She
coffee table in front of a love
seat against the wall.
"Here,
I'll
do the honors." Victor stood and thanked
Colleen.
"Oh, playful
isn't
mood
he the chivalrous one," Minnie teased, her
returning.
Colleen giggled and fine.
Call
me
if
said, "I see
you need anything;
you two are getting along
I'll
be in the kitchen."
Victor poured out two glasses of lemonade and handed
one to Minnie. He
"Ummm,
sat
that's
down
again and took a
"Homemade from homegrown and took a
sip.
good."
lemons," Minnie declared,
sip herself.
"Now why Minnie asked.
are
you so interested
in
Clement Watt?"
A Rich Man's Secret
95
Victor was impressed. This old gal doesn't miss a
trick.
Gets right down to business. "I
when
didn't actually even I
found that
know
name
his
until yesterday,
over at the Daily Gazette newspa-
article
per office.
why were you
"Well, "I'll
have
looking for this article?" she pushed.
back up a
to
bit,"
Victor explained, sitting up in
his chair.
"All right, back up then.
with
mock
"Good. Thank you, Mrs. didn't
We
have
all
day," said
Minnie
gruffness.
have
—
er,
Minnie.
I
was hoping we
to rush our conversation."
"Never rush anything, young man. You remember Everything
—everything—has
own rhythm, and the world "Yes,
is
full
only a fool
its
its
own
pace,
its is,
of fools." Minnie smiled again.
tell
me
everything." She placed her glass
side table, folded the article up,
back in her arm chair
"You mean "I said
"Yes,
time,
rush that. Sorry thing
ma'am."
"Now you sat
own
tries to
that.
it?
as
if
You mean
handed
it
to say "Let's
everything
7
on
a
back to Victor, and
have
it!"
"
'everything,' didn't I?"
you
did.
Okay, here goes...."
Victor began his autobiography and discovery of the cemetery. Minnie Nelson carefully listened to every word. She
never interrupted and never showed any signs of emotion.
She
just listened
so soothing
it
with the
made
it
sincerest, dearest look
very easy for Victor to
on her
tell
about himself that he had never said to another person
even Christine.
face,
her things
—not
Ken Roberts
96
he finished nearly an hour later, with "And so here I am, talking with you," Minnie remained silent and still, as if summing up everything he had just told her. Victor took a
When
swallow of lemonade.
Then Minnie broke the long silence: "You're "What am I?" Victor raised his eyebrows. "You're a seeker.
and
this,
that's
why
I
And
had Colleen
very special.
invite
you
in.
Clement would have taken fondly
seekers are.
Victor's expression
"Now
that's very,
let
showed he wanted
me do some
a seeker."
to
sensed
1
Very
special,
to you."
know more.
Her hands were clasped
talking."
with both index fingers pressed together and pointed upward.
She
rested
them
against her
what she was going
remember
"I
lips, as if
considering
how
to put
to say next.
that cemetery well. Papa used to take us
on Sundays. Seems
there after church
for family outings, doesn't it?
But
it
a bit odd, a cemetery
was pretty much the
custom to pass through the cemetery over
to the big
local
meadow
where the townsfolk would gather on Sundays. Those are pleasant memories.
know
"I
quite
the headstone you saw
some time
he secreted Take the
after
he passed on.
first
step
—no more, no
much
less
Clement's.
sonally ordered those carved I
didn't
I
when
I
I
I
know
in the stone's decoration, but the
revealed, are very
While
—Clement's.
saw
once
it
of the date
words he posed,
—and the next
will
knew he must have first laid
eyes
be
per-
on them.
never heard him speak quite those exact words, that
was the principle he lived
—and prospered—
by. If
even
just a
handful of us would live our lives in an attempt to completely
understand that message, not only would we reach the heights
we long
for,
but this whole world would vastly improve.
A Rich Man's Secret "Please,
97
young man, Victor: Do not judge or draw any
conclusions about what I'm telling you here, as difficult as
Keep an open mind
will be.
as best
you can. You are hearing
things that very, very few people ever do. for certain, but
I
have a glimpse into
it
it all
know why
don't
I
because
has been
it
revealed to me, in just the way those carved words you've
seen promise.
"Clement Watt was a wise man, a very man. Not
this foolish
world thinks.
thought about this
way you think
in the
world we
it
that
He was
that
I
and help with
well.
Our
started to speak.
never
for us
all
and had
thirties,
just
borne Colleen
no time
all.
in
my
My mama— that's Emma
The whole
this prop-
family would pitch in
the chores and extra work that the guests
boarders enjoyed being part of a real family as just stay a short
while and then leave a
little huffy, sayin' it
was too much comin's and
enough peace and
quiet.
'Good
riddin's!'
goin's
then they can
just
go to
—
,'
well,
and not
Papa used to say
they don't like this family and what
'If
She stopped
boarding house right here, on
Oh, some would
about 'em.
I
way
finger.
remember him.
little
was good
required.
wiser than the world.
passed on. Before that, there's
don't
and papa ran a erty. It
my
just into
when Clement life
in the
live in."
him by holding up an index was
mean, and not
way before now, but he was wiser than
Minnie paused and Victor
"I
I
special, very wise
we
got here,
you know."
Victor smiled.
"Poor old Papa; he had such a temper. Anyhow, never a time us.
I
there's
Clement wasn't boarding with which seemed to be at least a few
don't recall that
Whenever he was
here,
days every month, sometimes longer,
I
remember him being
in
Ken Roberts
98
the garden.
He
loved the garden.
We
garden in the neighborhood, and
always had the prettiest I
do suspect
it
was on
account of Clement. "I
remember one summer evening: was
hot.
It
and
sit
about
just
what
and, with
asked
if
bedtime, but
I
my
my
so
was doing when
I
it
was
to stay
up
knew
my
big blue eyes,
make them up another pitcher of went off to bed. I think they knew what I
I
to
would be
yes, that
real nice.
into the kitchen, squeezed those lemons,
big fresh pitcher of lemonade.
Clement and
I
went outside on the porch
voice, rolling
little
me
they'd like
was up to and said
one
wanted
uncle Charley, and Clement.
sweetest
lemonade before
to
was hot, oh
It I
with the grown-ups on our front porch. There was
Papa and Mama, exactly
my
And
then
So
I
hurried
and brought back a I
just sat
down next
didn't leave. I'm certain they noticed, but
said anything
and
I
had the time of my
life,
sitting
up
no
late
with the grown-ups, listening to their voices muffled by the night, trailing off the porch into the darkness ets
where the
crick-
took over.
he couldn't figure out why we we always had a room or two that he reckoned we had the cleanest, tidiest
"At one point Papa weren't always
full
went empty. He
said
house and the best
said
up, that
home
saw him nudge
cookin' this side of the Mississippi,
Mama
and make her giggle and blush. we got the prettiest darn garden in town!' he said, givin' Clement a jab on the knee. 'We're doin' everything right, so what's wrong?' I remember him asking. then
I
'And on top of
"Clement 'you
all that,
said, 'W.
know how many
J.,'
that's
what everyone
called Papa,
eggs a codfish lays at one time?' Papa
looked at Clement like he just took leave of his senses. '"No, Clement,
I
reckon
I
don't.
How many?'
A Rich Man's Secret
99
'"A million,' Clement told him. Papa made a surprised
'And how many
face.
Papa answered.
"'Just one,'
Clement wasn't
just jokin'
"'Well,
I
lay at
could
I
one
tell
time?'
Papa knew
now.
And what
"That's right, just one. after she lays those
hen
eggs does an old
one million
does the codfish do
eggs?'
don't know,' Papa said, 'what does she do?'
'"Nothing. She does nothing after laying one million eggs.
But what does that old hen do
one
after she lays just that
egg?'
'"She cackles up a storm!' Papa was catching on, but he still
couldn't quite see the point of
this.
'"That's exactly right: she cackles.
you,
W.
that
it
"I
J.?'
So what does
Papa couldn't think of anything
to say.
that
tell
'It tells
you
pays to advertise!'
remember they
all
burst into laughter
—even Mama
but then she shushed them, saying we were going to wake our boarders and the neighbors. '"So
what
are
you saying
'"I'm saying to toot your
exactly,
own horn and
Take out an advertisement and place
is
Clement?' Papa asked.
tell
ring your
people
own
how good
here. In fact, tell 'em you're so picky
bell.
your
and particular
that you take applications and require references before you'll let just
anybody board
at
Emma's!'
"Papa put an advertisement
in the
paper like that.
worked magic, and we
always had a waiting
wanting to board with
us.
That's
when we
that you're in now, with three times the
list
built this
number
It
of people
house
of rooms,
that were always full up. Still would be to this day, but
Colleen and her husband and children
manageable now without having tend to so
many
boarders like
just like
it
nice and
to bring in outside help to
we used
to do.
J
Ken Roberts
00
remember Papa and Clement talking business around the kitchen table late one night when I got out of bed for water. I "I
always figured that Clement helped Papa with the money. That's
when he had
his
own
whether he was here or not Victor couldn't
private
room
that was always his
—and mostly he was "He
resist:
not."
lived right here, in this very
house?"
above our heads here." She pointed to the
"Just
ceiling.
"That was his favorite room, with a balcony and clear view out over the park across the
street.
"Clement was a wise man; he understood things the of us didn't. Like
he was here, I
I
I
said,
he was wiser than
could actually feel a change in the atmosphere.
can't describe this very well, but
"We
I'll
try:
when Clement would be here, but like month never went by that he didn't spend
never knew
said, usually a
I
three or four days with us.
It
was never
knew. Everyone was fond of Clement his visit
regular;
—
we
especially
just
never
me
—and
was always a pleasant surprise we looked forward
"Usually
I
would find him here when
school, but before
was here. went.
rest
When
this world.
He
He was
he was not shy
I
set foot
on the
I
to.
came home from
front porch,
I
knew
that he
brought a peacefulness with him wherever he a quiet
man
—
I
never saw him emotional
—but
at all."
Minnie gave that smile and continued.
"I
again, closed her eyes, laughed,
always thought of
never mean, but nothing swayed him.
him
He
as a lion:
He was
could walk into any
kind of situation and knew precisely what to do. Confidence,
complete confidence,
"What Minnie
that's
what he had."
did he look like?" Victor interrupted again, but
didn't
seem
to mind.
A Rich Man's Secret "He's right here
rush of goose
among
Minnie smiled. Victor
us,"
bumps sweep over
looked to the back wall of the simple gold-leafed
101
A
parlor.
a
She pointed and
his back.
wooden frame from
felt
hung
portrait
in a
a black velvet cord.
"That's him?" Victor stood and walked over to the picture.
A large family Bible lay atop a waist-high antique wood bookstand directly beneath the picture. Victor had to lean over to get close
enough
1892? This
is
a
handmade
to read the small, white,
in the lower right corner.
"Matthew Brady
Studios,
I
letters
New
York,
Matthew Brady photograph?"
"That process was called daguerreotype. plate.
it
remember
as a small girl
"I
do believe
it
when he
me
was forty years
by the time he brought
old, so
wasn't here."
took over a year of
ing before he brought
that.
a copper
begging Clement for a picture
of himself so he could be around even
Minnie chuckled.
It's
He
said
it
my
ask-
was taken when he it
to
me, some
twenty years had passed." She chuckled again.
"Did
it
look like him?" Victor asked, seriously.
Minnie was laughing now. "Not very much. sented that to me,
I
was
wasn't too tactful.
I
said,
just a
young
'Who
is
girl, as
this?
I
I
When he
said,
pre-
and usually
asked for a picture of
and Clement and I just laughed and laughed. Mama later what I had said and was so embarrassed of her improper little girl. I remember she turned red, opened her
you,'
found out
mouth, and placed her hands against her cheeks, aghast that could be so rude. But Clement just laughed.
He
couldn't have
cared less. That man had no vanity in his bones." Victor was laughing along with Minnie when he
down
I
sat
again.
"It's
getting rather warm,"
with her hand.
Minnie
said,
fanning her face
Ken Roberts
102
Oh no,
don't
"Would bit cooler?"
make me
Minnie
elbow
raised her
in
to the
yet.
verandah where
it's
a
for Victor to help her up.
arm out through the
foyer,
through the
and onto the broad, shady front porch.
"Now which "I
now, Victor thought, not
me
They walked arm front door,
leave
you care to escort
is
your favorite chair?" Victor asked.
have a fondness
for that rocking chair just over there."
She nodded her head toward the end of the porch,
right
under the cupola.
"Then
that's
where we're going." Victor smiled.
Their footsteps sounded good on the wooden
floor.
Victor
helped her into the old rocking chair. "I'll
go get our lemonade," he
said.
Colleen must have heard them walking and leaned out the front door.
"Can
I
get you
"Yes, Colleen.
iced tea
now? That
"Good
idea,
two anything?"
How will
about some of your delicious mint
ward
mama.
off this heat."
It'll
take a few minutes, but
I'll
be
back." Colleen disappeared into the kitchen.
"You "This sat
is
sit
right there."
Minnie pointed
how Clement and
where you
are,
I
and he'd
used to
sit
sit
and
to the swing seat. talk after supper.
I
in this rocking chair."
Victor raised his eyebrows. "That rocking chair?"
"This very chair." Minnie smiled her smile and closed her eyes for one brief
moment. Victor
smiled, too, his eyes trailing
off across the street to the park.
"The most valuable times of my
on
this
wanted
life
were spent right here
porch with Clement." She continued with what she to impart to Victor,
his lesson to continue.
who
sat
up
in the swing, eager for
A Rich Man's Secret "Mr. Clement Watt was a wealthy man. ularly
way
He
was a spectac-
wealthy and powerful man. But more than
and not
you're thinking,
in the
just in the
way the world wants
to
think upon these things." Victor cocked his head to the side the way a puppy does
when
trying to understand.
it's
"Clement Watt owned more companies and more railroads and more businesses and more land than anyone including myself
—ever knew. He used those things show others the
a pure, higher purpose: to world's ways.
He
way his
this
is.
infinitely
who
think, being a gardener. But then
I
and who would have cared? That's the
listened,
world
He would have been
a teacher.
more contented, would have
fallacy of the
used his vast wealth and position to teach.
Clement was
Yes,
as part of
But he wasn't
after the masses, either.
With
extreme wealth and power, he could have commanded the
front page of newspapers
whenever he
desired.
reached the masses with the wave of his
Clement was looking
"He
He
could have
little finger.
No,
for seekers, like yourself.
dealt with the world's most powerful
men
—
presi-
once heard a rumor around town here Clement had just come from a meeting at the White House with President Woodrow Wilson, so I asked him about
dents and leaders.
I
that
it
—
if
the rumor was true.
recollect.
Clement smiled
think any
less
"I
of
me
if
I
We at
didn't
were
me and
sitting right out here as said,
I
'Minnie, would you
have dinner with the President?'
took that to mean that he had indeed just seen
President Wilson, because ing anything about
never mentioned the rumor say-
him having
She winked and smiled
how rambunctious
I
dinner with the President."
at Victor.
He
chuckled and thought
she must have been as a young
woman.
— Ken Roberts
104
Clement saw Warren Harding quite often, and they would exchange cigars. And Mark Twain, too; he and Clement got along famously and enjoyed each other's company and cigars.
know
"I
for a fact that
—
"Gee, that's surprising..." Victor
thought aloud.
"Why?" asked Minnie. "Well, you'd think that
someone
so special
—
so wise
wouldn't have a bad habit like that."
"There you go thinkin' again!" Minnie straighter,
of
all,
up a
little
and Victor knew another lesson was coming.
"First
nothing smells quite so good
handmade
cigar.
as the
sat
aroma from a
fine,
those cheap, stinky ones nowadays that
It's
give cigars a bad reputation."
Victor smiled. praising a
good
It
seemed funny,
this cute little
woman
cigar.
"Some of the fondest memories I have are those times when I'd get a whiff of one of Clement's cigars halfway down the block walking home from school. I'd smile with delight and run the
rest of the
way home, knowing
find
I'd
Clement
tending the garden.
"Other times, on hot summer nights, my papa and Clement would be sittin', talkin' softly on the front porch, and the
way up
rich,
to
my
woodsy scent of Clement's room.
I
cigar
would find
its
it made me feel as if I made me feel connected
used to love that;
was down on the porch with them.
It
to them."
Victor understood, and ing these special
"When winked
I
felt grateful
that
Minnie was
moments with him.
would make a generalized, ignorant
at Victor, "
—statement
as
you
just did
—
"
about
shar-
Minnie cigars,
A
Rich Max's Secret
105
Clement would quote Shakespeare, from Hamlet: There nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes Victor nodded,
as
is
so.'"
it
he contemplated what Minnie had
just said.
"When
you watch your thoughts, Victor, instead of being the
way
— can you receive
the
taken over by them, you have an open mind, which it
Then
should be.
— and only
then
is
answers you desire. Another of Clement's favorite truisms
came from the
Bible,
I
believe: 'Nothing
not be made manifest.' Even down to
Minnie paused and smiled
is
secret, that shall
cigars."
"And about your The world Another passage, from
at Victor.
comment
regarding something being a 'bad habit':
has this
all
backwards
as well.
Matthew, wisely teaches that
it's
'Not that which goeth into
mouth defileth a man: but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth a man.' The more you remember to the
watch your thoughts, the
clearer you will see the truth in this,
While the world wastes
Victor.
you work
at
on curing
its life
watching your thoughts. As you do
'bad habits,' that, all else
will take care of itself."
Victor
hend
felt
it fully,
the depth of wisdom in
but he sensed that
it
this.
was
He
true,
didn't compre-
and that
would take on an entirely new meaning and focus
his life
as a result
of this visit with Minnie. "I
believe
Clement knew
by helping those people. river
He once
who
that he could help
more people
were, in turn, overseers of
many more
said that a drop of water at the source of a
was imbued with much more responsibility and potential
than a water drop
"What was he
down
at the
mouth
of the river."
trying to help people do?" Victor asked.
Ken Roberts
"He to
life,
convey
tried to
and that
it is
to people that there
a higher level
is
completely possible to live
it
right here
and now." "But he owned so much, and carried such weight... why
would he spend
when
his time
who
"For the few
the world
isn't interested?"
seek, for those fortunate
have that tiny spark in us and desire a better is
possible.
possible
Clement was
— and
a living
that
He
'If
people only
knew
—and other
sense life is
used to read
Shakespeare, Walden, Thoreau, Balzac, Longfellow very fond of Longfellow
we
example that such a
completely practical.
who
few of us
life
—he was
classic literature
and
baker, the clerk, the minister, the schoolboy, the banker,
the school lished a
marm
little
could
all
be happy and prosperous.'
book that he made
dreds of employees received.
He
Know. He planted that seed many,
it
took root.
sure every
called
it
in every
Anyone who worked
one of
say,
The
the lessons these writers teach!
and
He
pub-
his
hun-
Something You Should
one of them; and for
in
Clement was very
fortunate indeed.
"To have the wisdom that he had sibility
—and the
desire
—
to share
it
carries a certain respon-
with other like-minded
individuals."
Minnie repositioned
herself in her chair as she thought of
an example. "Suppose you were coming out of a jungle that you had
tried for years to get through. After so
much
effort,
you discovered that taking the treacherous jungle path not only led nowhere, but was unnecessary
as well. Finally leaving
the jungle once and for always, you see hoards of people run-
ning to get through the jungle that you secret of.
Now
I
ask you, Victor, would you
just discovered the tell
them?" Minnie
A Rich Man's Secret
107
leaned forward, those big blue eyes open wide, awaiting Victor's response. "Yes, of course
"But what
if
I
would."
only one or two of those people at a time
heeded your admonitions?" She leaned back, eyes "I
would
"Then you know the answer
dom
that
—
and joy
still
wide.
still try."
to your question.
Clement possessed comes to tell others."
With the
wis-
a certain responsibility
—jy'ictov was
trying to absorb the big mental mouthful of
information that Minnie had revealed to him, but a thousand questions were cropping up at the same time.
"Well, what did he understand about the jungle exactly?"
he
finally asked.
that, but
It
seemed that Minnie had
something
He hoped
still
answered
just
wasn't registering about her
him inane and a disappointment. Minnie smiled knowingly. Good, Victor metaphor.
she didn't consider
thought. "I'm going to
knew. This I
speak
it
tell
isn't to
you something of what Clement Watt
say that you'll
to you. This
is
now know
it
simply because
just the first step that places
you
clos-
er to the edge of the jungle."
Victor thought of the words inscribed in Clement Watt's
headstone.
"You can then begin to see your way clear of the jungle, or you can run right back in is
—
as
it
—
as
dangerous and painful as
it
most people do, preferring the known over the
unknown." Victor
"What
felt
the gravity of what was coming.
I'm about to
tell
you, Victor, will shock you.
don't have the luxury of time, you and
I,
and
this
is
We
a fortu-
itous opportunity for a very special seed to be planted in your
109
Ken Roberts
no
care. Like the parable of the sower,
road and birds
came and
and some
among
fell
yielded a crop, ty.
And
some
some
ate them; others
thorns. But a few
a hundredfold,
seeds fell
fell
some
fell
beside the
on rocky
on good
sixty,
places;
and
soil
and some
thir-
by the way, Victor, that chapter goes on to say that for
whoever
more shall be given and he shall have an abun-
has,
dance; but whoever does not have, even what he has shall be
taken away from him."
"Do you mean the
rich get richer
and the poor get poor-
err Victor pondered.
way you're thinking. Victor! Stop thinking about money! "Yes," she said pointing a finger, "but not in the
—
Money and The wise are money, ings
if
the wise use of rich,
and more
that's their desire.
— including money—
it
—comes with understanding.
just naturally
The
foolish are poor,
Do you
and
bless-
naturally elude them. Don't pursue
money, Victor. Seek understanding naturally follow.
comes, including
see
why
first,
the world
then is
things just
all
foolish?"
Victor nodded.
Colleen came out onto the porch, the screen door ping closed behind her. "Here's that special order: pitcher of
my
mint iced
secret-recipe
of one large pitcher, two glasses of
and napkins down on Victor and Minnie. Just
a
tea."
ice, a
She
railing,
later.
looked
and began yapping and chattering up a
with her hand. "Git! Git! You old jabber mouth,
you
full
round wicker side table between
storm. Minnie feigned surprise and then shooed
to
A
set a fresh tray
small plate of cookies,
then a blue jay landed on the porch
directly at Minnie,
slap-
Can't you see
I
him away
git! I'll talk
have company today? Git!" She
A
Rich Man's Secret
III
looked at Victor with a hopeless expression. Victor began laughing. Colleen giggled and
They were alone
again.
went back
was warm and
It
A
white, puffy clouds dangled in the sky.
only the leaves of the
trees;
into the house.
it
outside. Big,
still
moved
slight breeze
wasn't quite strong enough to
cool things down. Victor and Minnie sat and sipped Colleen's
immense
sweet, delicious iced tea, taking in the gazes
met and they conducted
Do you Yes,
sincerely wish to
Minnie, please
She began
as
"All right, then.
if
tell
Secret?
me.
that conversation
The
mental conversation:
a silent,
know The
Their
quiet.
Secret
is
this:
had been spoken aloud.
There
is
something enor-
mously wrong with how we think; how you think, how think,
how
understand
everyone thinks. it
to
do about
it.
about.
what
It's
I
can't explain
any great degree. But
This all
is
I
can
what Clement Watt's
of the wise
men who
and
it,
don't
I
you what to
tell
life's
I
work was
all
ever walked this earth
tried to teach others."
Victor never expected to hear anything like ly
not from a sweet
little
eighty-year-old
sensed that what she had just told true.
He
fixed
on the
at
him was
this, especial-
woman. But he true.
Absolutely
took a deep breath and was expressionless, his eyes floor.
He
took another deep breath and looked up
Minnie. She was watching him closely and knew
it
was
time to continue. "Victor, look at all those trees."
motion with her
thin, wrinkled
a
sweeping
arm and hand. "Do they
amongst themselves, resent each 'I
She made
other,
and say
fight
to themselves,
should be a pine tree instead of a magnolia'?" Victor smiled and
looking.
moved
his
head back and forth
slightly,
Ken Roberts
112
"Do they tomorrow
fret
about the heat today, or worry about what
yesterday? No. Well, carefree,
moan about what happened to them then, why aren't you and as happy,
will bring, or
and
I
successful as these trees?
more sophisticated than the
Because our brains are
tiny brains these trees have."
Victor enjoyed her one-sided question-and-answer logue. for she
He thought Minnie
mono-
should have been a school teacher,
would have been a good one.
Who knows? Perhaps she
had been.
Minnie leaned forward and downward, her eyes looking up to Victor now. She lowered her voice but increased intensity. "Victor Truman," she said
principals office
— "I'm about
—he
word: Learn. You must I'm about to
tell
you.
now
something
to divulge to you
that very, very few people ever learn.
And
its
a kid in the
felt like
that's the operative
seek to learn and understand what
There
is
nothing in
more impor-
this life
tant to seek than the understanding of this. Nothing. 'Seek ye
the
first
you'
is
kingdom of Heaven and
how
it's
all things
shall be
added unto
been so eloquently put."
Victor straightened himself.
"Those thoughts that rush through your mind,
my
mind,
Clement's mind, Plato's mind, everyone's mind, are not ours.
We us.
do not create them; they come from somewhere outside
Not knowing
be our
own
—
or even suspecting
—
this,
individual, self-made thoughts.
these thoughts." Victor didn't
know what
them to believe we are
we
We
take
to say, but before
he
could decide, she continued.
"What's wrong with believing that we create them
we all
carry these horrendous thoughts
times believing that
we
are it!"
—
this beast
is
that
—around
at
A Rich Man's Secret This was a could see
this.
lot for
She
Victor to take in
sat
back in her
113
all at
chair,
once and Minnie
took a sip of iced
tea,
and gave Victor that understanding, motherly look. He returned a weak smile.
"Now
look, Victor," she continued in a softer, calmer
voice. "There
and
what
it is
is
only one thing on this earth to understand,
not even resolving, but
just told you. Seeking,
I
simply seeking to understand this fact that we are not our
thoughts will answer any and every question you will ever pose. This living."
is
not philosophy, Victor;
rock-solid, practical
She pushed the back of one hand
of the other.
know what Study
it is
this,
It
I
open palm
smacking sound. "You don't
life?
This
is
what
to
do with
it.
you'll always get your right answer.
"Have you read "No,
a slight
do with your
to
and
made
into the
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde?"
haven't read
it."
Victor hoped she wouldn't scold
him.
"Read
it,
Victor!" Minnie smiled.
"It's
what
a story of
we're speaking about! Clement spoke of that book very often.
He
dined privately with Robert Louis Stevenson on
several occasions
and
told
me
fascinating accounts of their
conversations."
Victor was feeling overwhelmed now. "So what do
about these thoughts you speak
of?
somewhat desperately. Minnie smiled compassionately.
I
I
do
have to think!" he said
"Yes, dear,
you do
—we
new way; you must How? It's the most differently simple, yet most profound, idea you have ever heard: You must begin to watch your thoughts." Minnie paused and
all
do. But you
begin to think
must begin
to think in a
than you do now.
Ken Roberts
114
smiled.
She looked
resting
one on the
"But
angelic, eyes shining, her
other, in her lap.
know what
I
two small hands,
I'm thinking," Victor responded, with
doubt.
do you know that you have the most worried look
"Victor,
on your
know
face now, that
it's
that your right leg
wrinkled
prune?
And
beating faster than a
is
do you
humming-
wings?"
bird's
moment. He looked down
Victor froze, his eyes fixed for a
and caught
his right leg
stopped his
leg,
"That
bouncing madly against the
Then
that type of hypnosis
lives.
is
to call being lost in thought.
how most
people live their entire
That hypnosis, and abiding by what the beast
head constantly Wars,
He
they both smiled at one another.
what Clement used
is
seat.
closed his eyes, relaxed his face, and looked
sheepishly at Minnie.
And
like a
tells us,
fights, lawsuits,
and anxiety are a
is
how
this
in our
poor world operates.
neighbor-against-neighbor, crime,
fear,
result of listening to those beastly thoughts
and believing we are them. "Shakespeare said 'Sleep no more!' This
is
what he meant
by that. This hypnosis that we're under keeps us forever run-
ning in
circles, like
"But
all this
this secret,
the donkey chasing a carrot."
great literature you
how come none
of
its
mentioned that addresses millions and millions of
readers gets the message?" Victor's eyes narrowed, awaiting her
response.
"That
is
a perfect demonstration of
entire thought process
is,
have you read any of the "Yes,
Victor.
literature
some of it."
"And what
did you think?"
It's I
how
insidious this
so well-veiled. Tell me,
spoke of?"
A Rich Man's Secret thought
"I
time that
I
"And
it
115
was cumbersome reading, so much before
missed most of
its
my
original meaning."
did your professors help?" She raised her eyebrows.
"Well, they taught us that these people in the story had
we have
the same fears, desires, and problems that
modern
today, in
times."
"So what did you
infer
from the observation?"
"That nothing's changed."
"And are,
much normal
that you're just pretty
and that
life's
the
way you
a struggle," she finished his sentence.
"Right," Victor nodded.
"We
take
it
as history, as
entertainment.
We
don't see
the obvious. Clement mentioned The Purloined Letter to
once, by Edgar Allan Poe, enjoyed meeting.
I
read
it,
whom
me
he said he would have
and he and
I
discussed
it
in the
garden one day.
'"We don't story.
see the obvious,'
Our thoughts
at
them!
the same question you just
"We
said,
are as close as our
never take a close look
him
he
I
is
the lesson in that
own
imagine
1
breath, but
had
we
likely asked
asked of me."
don't see the obvious," Victor repeated, half to
himself.
"Another of
and authors was Walt
his favorite people
Whitman. He and Clement apparently spent much time together. remember being the center of attention among my I
little
classmates at school, reveling in telling stories about
Whitman had had. My teacher, remember, once accused me of fabricating fanciful tales. was so upset by this, and ran the whole way home that day to tell Clement how abominably had been treated, and how humiliated was." Minnie made a sorrowful face to conversations that Clement and Mr. I
I
I
I
Ken Roberts
116
how
demonstrate
many
she looked that day
years ago,
and
then smiled. Victor chuckled. "I
came running
into the backyard here,"
Minnie pointed
her thumb behind her, "and found Clement where he usually
was
—working
ing
one of
and he
I
his
hands and knees, enjoy-
blurted out
up on one knee.
raised
and looked me
ders
on
in the garden,
his big cigars.
He
my
put his
straight in the eyes
woe to him hands on my shoultale of
with that wonderful,
knowing expression of his. '"Minnie, he said softly and calmly, 'now what told you to '
get so upset
and
"'Just a
flustered like this?'
thought in
head, knowing
I
my
head,'
I
replied,
hanging my
had forgotten again." Minnie took a deep
breath and exhaled. "Oh, that dear, kind
man was
so
patient with me.
'"And what did that thought
tell
you exactly?' he con-
tinued. '"It
girls
told
—and
like you,
me
that
that I
and that
I
was ugly
—
didn't deserve to I
wanted them
uglier
than
all
the other
have an important friend
to like me.'"
Victor had a sad look on his face, listening to Minnie recall this
memory.
"Victor,
wake up!" she snapped, clapping her hands.
Victor was startled. "Don't you go getting lost in thought over this.
on
Stay awake now!
this porch.
Know
that you're sitting here with
Sense where your feet
are tight or relaxed.
If
are.
Know
if
me
your hands
you don't know these things, you're
hypnotized, asleep, and those thoughts took you over again."
With
lips,
Minnie barked
manner she could
muster. Victor
a smile barely breaking past her
these orders in the sternest
pictured her as a military
drill instructor
and smiled. "Come
A Rich Man's Secret on,
come awake,"
had
117
she motioned with her hand to do what she
said.
Separating himself mentally, as
he saw that
self,
Then he
eyes.
his face
if
thinking outside of him-
was tight and wrinkled around his
sensed his rigid jaw and relaxed
it.
His hands
were clenched, and he opened them. His toes were tightly
them loose. Then he noticed his shoulders were bunched up, and he let them relax. Then he looked at he
curled;
let
Minnie. "That'a boy," she smiled, reassuringly.
where you
are, you're lost in
lifted
as
to
if
if
you're asleep like
her chin and gave one nod of her head downward
add an exclamation point to the end of that statement.
She smiled and sleep
And
you don't know
thoughts have a fine ole time running you ragged."
that, those
She
thought.
"If
"Now where
said,
was
I
before you
went
to
on me?"
Victor couldn't remember, and just as he began to feel
ashamed, he caught
it:
Once
again he removed himself from
himself and quickly did a rundown on his condition jaw, hands, feet, shoulders.
He
in short breaths.
relax as
He
also noticed
—
face,
he was breathing
took in a deep breath and
body
let his
he exhaled.
Minnie noticed "That's right!"
rosebush
all this
She winked
among
all
with great approval on her face. at Victor.
"Clement pointed
to a
the others there in the corner of the back-
yard..." Victor's
he listened
mind
started to
to last evening.
mind and came back
again.
wander
off to the radio talk
show
But then he caught his wandering
He
didn't think
Minnie noticed.
Ken Roberts
118
"...and said, 'Minnie,
what
if all
these other rosebushes
suddenly didn't like this one rosebush here?
any
Would
make
that
difference at all to this rosebush?'
"'No,"
I
answered.
'"And would than
it is
this
one rosebush be any
less
spectacular
now?'
"'No,'
said again.
I
'"Then what
make
the only thing that could
is
this little
rosebush here feel sad and hurt?' he asked me.
'"Only
if
the
little
rosebush had thoughts about the other
rosebushes.'
"That's absolutely right.
And what
if
this little
even did have those hurtful thoughts, what could '"It
could
know
that they were there, but
do?'
wouldn't have
Clement smiled and gave my shoulders a
to listen to them!' little
it
it
rosebush
squeeze with both hands.
"That's right, Minnie!' he said."
Victor was amazed
how Minnie
could remember those
conversations so precisely. "Victor,"
Minnie continued, "you always remember
what you've learned here today: There's nothing only something to life,
see. Just
and everything
and given
to you.
this,
to do, there's
be the unbiased observer in your
you'll ever
need to know
Clement used
to say this to
off a barrage of questions, 'Well,
will
be revealed
me when
what about
this
I'd fire
and what
about that...'" she tapped her fingers and thumb together rapidly, imitating a bird's beak.
have sounded that's
Then
like that old blue jay.
what my mind sounds
Victor nodded, realizing
she chuckled.
Come
"I
to think
must
on
it,
like!"
how
insightful her little joke was.
A Rich Man's Secret "But the important thing
doing
Not
this, Victor.
try to suppress
anyway. You
and watch.
just
to
know
that our minds are
that you're to fight those thoughts, or
them, or even
And
is
119
remember
try to
drown them out
—we
can't
watch them. Watch and watch
to
what happens!" There was that
then, watch
special smile again.
Colleen poked her head through the doorway again.
"Mama,
it's
time for your nap now."
"Oh, I'm too wound up "but Colleen's right,
"Minnie,
how
I
will
deeply and looked at the
"By
stayin'
to rest,"
should go I
lie
Minnie
raised her arms,
down."
ever thank you?" Victor breathed
frail,
sweet old woman.
awake and makin' the best use of your
she said with forced sternness. Clement used to
Minnie,
isn't a foot race,
it's
just a great big
tell
me
life!"
'Life
classroom to
learn in.'" "It just
seems so overwhelming. Almost impossible."
"Colleen?" Minnie looked to her still
left to
see
if
Colleen was
standing in the doorway. She was. "Bring that family
Bible out here to our friend."
that said "Wait until you see
She turned
to Victor
this."
Colleen returned to the porch carrying the Bible and carefully placed
it
with a look
on
Victor's lap.
It
large, thick
was heavy. The
cover was gold-stamped, and had beautiful gold-edged pages. It
looked very old and had been read often. Victor looked up at Minnie with a smile.
"Open
it,"
she ordered expectantly, waving a hand.
Victor placed his right hand along the edge of the smooth gold pages and at that place
felt
and
a separation.
let
He
carefully
opened the Bible
the top half open out fully and rest
on
his
A Rich Man's Secret left
He
thigh.
coursed over
"This
is
looked
him from
—
I
down on
121
the open Bible and a chill
his scalp to his toes.
don't believe
it
—
this
is
impossible*."
mouth
His
was open and his eyes were wide. "Yep, so impossible that you're looking right at
Minnie
it,"
said matter-of-factly.
There
in front of
him
—
fragile, flat,
and wrinkled
—was
a
sky-blue rose carefully dried between the pages of the Bible.
"This
is
impossible!" he repeated,
open.
"I
expert
— say that
don't believe this!
can't be done!"
I
just
is
an
tells
you.
—an
had
different
it
stared at the blue rose.
'It's
again. "That's
what
impossible,' they say. All the experts,
Victor, believe those harmful thoughts in their heads. But
know
still
impossibility, that
Minnie chuckled, her eyes twinkling the world
eyes
heard an expert on roses
a sky-blue rose
He
mouth and
now; you know
better.
Now
to say to those so-called experts."
see
you
what Clement
She motioned
to the
Bible again.
Victor looked down,
still
amazed, and saw a piece of
lowed stationery resting on the pages to the blue rose.
At
left,
yel-
opposite the
the top center of the sheet, two letters in old-
fashioned type were printed: C. W. There was handwriting in old black fountain-pen ink. Victor looked up at Minnie, eye-
brows
raised.
She
"He wrote
smiled.
this?" Victor
looked back
down
and read aloud:
Things are not what they seem. Always seek "The Impossible," which never more than a step away.
is
at the
paper
Ken Roberts
122
The
chill surged
"Nothing
remember
Never
dear Victor, as long as you
to leave those thoughts
flinch; just watch."
don't
know how
head,
I
Clement,
'I
just
my
smiled at
me and
its
own, almost magically.'"
down
at the blue rose
and the handwriting
A peaceful feeling came over him.
again.
"Does anyone know about
my
"Just
And now
family.
"Oh,
I
know
wanted
Minnie?"
this blue rose,
you, of course," she added.
"You never told anyone about
it?"
to tell everyone, to tell the world, in fact,
better now."
"But the world's been trying to create a blue rose ever.
by.
She remembered something and
said in exasperation to
I
know how!' and Clement
Victor looked
I
watch them go
just
how, Minnie. Always, remember now and the
is
how comes of
but
and
to not listen to those awful thoughts in
just don't
'Now
my
impossible,
is
continued. "Once
said,
through Victor's body.
I
just
heard that expert on the radio
last
for... for-
night say the
Japanese and Australians are conducting expensive experi-
ments
—
splitting genes
these." Victor looked "I
know,
I
—trying desperately
down and
to create
one of
studied the blue rose again.
know, Victor." She held her hand up, her palm
facing him. "This
is
quite a gardening community,
and we
would have become immensely famous having a blue rose growing in our garden. The American Rose Society would have named
it
after
Clement.
It
would have made the cover
of The Saturday Evening Post magazine even."
"Well, what happened?" Victor couldn't wait to hear the rest of the story.
And he had
"This was one of the
so
last
many more times
questions.
Clement was here
two or three months before he passed on.
I
—
just
was married by
A Rich Man's Secret then, and
we
all
lived together in this very house.
had a corner of the backyard that was garden. Papa had built
"When he was make over
him
his
own
just his, for his small
potting and tool shed.
to the courthouse
called
town, and
He
loved those flowers.
me
over. Like
knew what
I
I
I
said, this
was seeing.
is
just like
quite a gardening
centifolias
a rather tall plant.
roses
Neyron were
variety
as usual, a
that plant
Victor started to interrupt. Minnie
They
all
petals.
But
And
like
me, was the one blue one.
This
Cabbage
called the Paul
deep pink, with row upon row of
said those exact words:
I
on
introduced way back in 1869.
first
there, right in front of
you, Victor,
called
rose
to
it
my
that pretty true-blue
it
rose, just
and
line
couldn't believe
I
you — but there was: — one of many —what we Every other —on was what was supposed be — what was eyes
would
and bank and such, Clement was
was across the yard putting clothes on the
Clement
Clement
here, other than the brief walks he
usually in his garden. "I
123
impossible!"'
is
knew
his question
and
kept talking.
looked at
"I
it
and touched
wasn't playing a trick
Was
pened:
just
laughed at
asked, 'Minnie, you
can't
we
nature?
'I
just
know:
a day
Why would
came out
—
want
Now
to is
all
asked
I
it,
was
my
it
if
Clement
him how
it
hap-
hybridized?
carryin' on.
know howV And
I
Then he
finished his
how.' That's right,' he said,
'Why
stand here and enjoy this beautiful expression of
special little secret? "I
carefully to see
on me. Then
a cutting, did he bud
it
"Clement lesson with
it
we want It
to let the foolish world in
on our
surely wouldn't be special after that.'
in the yard every day
—sometimes
several times
to admire that beautiful, one-of-a-kind rose.
When
it
Ken Roberts
124
reached press
it
its full
bloom,
begged Clement to
I
in that family Bible.
He
let
"I'm sure glad he did," Victor whispered,
how
it
me
pluck
it
and
reluctantly agreed."
wondering
still
could have happened. Minnie saw the wheels turning
in his head.
"Victor, you're
mind rose
trying to figure
still
scrambling to explain
is
it,
it
out, aren't you?
Your
thinking perhaps the blue
was a mutation or some such thing." Victor smiled sheepishly.
"Well,
Clement!
let I
me
came up with
meant, and
this
it,
it
at
it,
and
this theory
what he
is
and over, you look
did the very same thing. Poor
I
me, 'Minnie, don't
said to
time,
you:
tell
that,
think, realize.' said: 'If
I
and
finally
he
asked what he
you misspell a word over
you wonder
if
you got
it
right this
bothers you. But then you go to the dictionary, look at
know
that
it's
spelled right,
and from then on whenever
you write that word, you don't have to
think
about
it,
you
just
realize it.'"
Victor paused and looked at her before he spoke. "Minnie, did that rosebush
"My Clement
bloom again
after
Clement passed away?"
family talked and wondered about that often after left us.
And
the very next season there were seven
beautiful true-blue roses
on
that plant amongst the deep-pink
ones." Victor's eyes burst open.
How could you keep
it
"What
did you do with them?
a secret?"
Minnie smiled and paused. "It wasn't easy. More than anyone, I knew what Clement had taught me, and I knew what the right thing to do was. I do believe Clement could have planned cult to leave
way just to teach me. It was very diffithose roses on the bush and let them come and it all
that
A Rich Man's Secret go naturally.
was very
It
watching those them.
And
this too;
selfish,
worked
I
difficult.
I
had
to
work extra hard
impish, greedy thoughts and not act
just as
my
hard at helping
at
on
family with
you can imagine. But when we watched that
last
and fall away, we knew we had done the right thing. No amount of worldly gain we could have possibly received from those roses would have come even close to the value we all received in wisdom petal of the last of the seven blue roses die all
from them." Victor wished he fully understood what Minnie was saying.
"Clement was a and he gave
his
truly rare
whole
life
and remarkable man, Victor,
to let others
know
they can be the
same."
"Did
it
ever bloom again?"
"No, never again
—not blue or pink."
"Mama, time for that nap." Colleen must have left after she handed Victor the Bible, but she was back again, and Victor realized this was
it.
"Minnie," he sounded solemn,
"How can
ever thank
I
you?"
"How? Now
is
how," she smiled, sitting forward in her
rocking chair. She looked small and
fragile, like
Victor carefully closed the Bible and asked,
"May
I
the rose.
return this
for you?"
"Oh, nonsense. Colleen and
I
will take care of that."
She
waved her hand. "I
wonder
if
I
should keep pursuing Clement's clues
must have meant that headstone
—he
to lead to something."
Victor was puzzled. "I'm sure he did. into me, so
I
He
certainly didn't figure
can't be his secret."
They laughed
on you running together.
Ken Roberts
126
"But you all
are,
Minnie; you're a gold mine and a diamond
rolled into one!"
"Oh, go on," Minnie waved him away. "What does your heart
her
—not your head—
own
you to do?" she asked, touching
tell
heart with her fingertips.
me to keep looking," Victor said, sitting up He remembered to separate himself from his He did a quick once-over of his face, jaw, hands,
"It tells
straight. thoughts.
feet, shoulders,
and breathing. Minnie noticed and smiled.
"Then
off
Victor
knew now that this really was good-bye. may kiss you on the cheek?" Victor
you
go,
"Minnie,
young man," she
said in a
motherly way.
I
surprised
himself by asking this and hoped she wouldn't be offended.
okay by me, but what
"It's
about
it?"
your sassy
little
wife say
Minnie snapped back.
won't
"I
will
tell her,
so she'll never know." Victor stood
and
stepped over to Minnie. She looked so sweet sitting there, like
He bowed down and
a precious little bird.
cheek.
It
made
a
kissed her right
smack.
little
"My, my!" Minnie smiled, touching her cheek.
wash
it
for a
Colleen was smiling
mother
won't
as she
stepped over and helped her
up.
"May
I
help?" Victor
"Oh, no! No! You
That was an
"How
did you
moved
git!
interesting
as
if
be; didn't she choose to
to take
Minnie by the arm.
You have things
way
know my
She responded wink.
"I
week!" she giggled.
to put
wife
is
to
go learn now."
it.
sassy?" Victor asked.
that were a
silly
question: "She has to
marry a seeker?" Minnie gave Victor a
A Rich Man's Secret
127
Victor smiled, thanked them both, picked up his white
paper bag, and descended the
many porch
walked down the wide pathway there,
he turned around
pear into the house.
The
to
steps.
to the sidewalk.
He
slowly
Stopping
watch Minnie and Colleen disap-
screen door slapped shut and Victor
was alone again. Take
the first step,
Absolutely true!
he thought, and
He had
the next will be revealed.
stepped right into a miracle.
m
hungry, Victor thought.
It
like
more houses from here on down
the
Park Hotel,
mind
He
Now
made.
the block.
it
racing.
the thoughts really raced.
How different
Think Yllgo back the orphanage.
told
It
deliberately slowed his pace
noon. Looks
close to
and ask around about
and he caught
raced,
But why?
eat,
must be
and
He
to hurry up.
felt
each step he
laughed out loud.
this was.
hotel, Victor could see that the
than
when he had
were more of a
town
in the
His
him
As he approached Third Avenue, one block from life
to
than
town had come more
to
The people he saw They were all across
morning.
left it this
local class
Main
little
the
tourists.
Street section where he had
first
entered.
Victor realized he didn't think of himself as a tourist any longer.
He was
Victor
felt
a "local" now. Thinking of that
the
new
made him
smile.
spring in his step as he crossed the
boardwalk under Parker's General Merchandise's looming front porch. His footsteps echoed under here. If those goofy -looking sports shoes
have
this
all the tourists
I
were wearing
wear,
against this boardwalk. Victor caught that thought.
how
1
wouldn't
simple pleasure of hearing leather soles and heels clopping
critical
he was and grimaced.
129
He
realized
Ken Roberts
130
"Never
He
flinch, Victor!"
could hear Minnie's voice
again. Never flinch, he considered, just watch. Be an unbiased observer.
Here's the hotel.
1
wonder
if
Walton s
still
here? Yes, Yll bet he
Victor entered the Park Hotel lobby.
grand
And
in full daylight.
still
just as
Several people were passing through.
Walton on the phone, being
there was
self. It felt
was
It
is.
good to see a familiar
face.
The
impeccable
his
big clock
showed
it
was 12:15. 1
wonder
thought
He walked ties
stood.
if
there's a
he turned to
as
to the
As
podium where
a "local,"
front window.
crowd
in the dining
room? Victor
exit the lobby through the archway.
a
young hostess
he requested
twen-
in her
"his" table-for-two in the
She turned, peeked around the heavy velvet up a menu and
curtains, turned back, smiled, picked
said,
"Right this way, please."
There were more people than he'd seen on ous
the hotel dining room. Twenty,
visits to
were having lunch here today. Being mostly
The
they were talking business.
than ago,
it it
was
this
morning
dawned on him
had happened here Waiting
at
maybe
locals,
thirty,
he guessed
noise level was also higher
at breakfast
—and
two previ-
his
—only about
dinner
last night.
four hours
So much
in such a few short hours.
for his food to be prepared, Victor read his
of the article again.
And
again. "Don't think,
remembered Clement Watt's Clement Watt
left
copy
realize ."
He
instructions to Minnie. All right,
a permanent clue
—August
4,
1899
—on
his
headstone. That led to the only record he
knew
that
what happened
And
that revealed this
article.
that day: the newspaper.
would report
Victor looked the copy over again. But what
Jessup hadn't purchased that microfiche machine?
if
Mr.
Seemed
A Rich Man's Secret like a
weak
link
if
Mr. Watt wanted to leave a permanent
chain attached to his
Okay, so
131
secret.
must be
the next step
and
in this article,
that
seems
obvious, really.
"Excuse me," Victor said to a passing waitress.
The sound
and
waitress turned
"Do you know where age
—
is
this "Is
the Children's
Home
—the orphan-
from here?" She paused momentarily, her eyes rolling
up to the fifth
That made him
said, "Yes, sir."
old.
ceiling. Victor
grade
when
—
remembered
Woods
old Mr.
a teacher of his in the
—catching him looking up
like
asked a question in front of the class and saying,
the answer written
on the
ceiling, Victor?"
The whole
class laughed.
"Yes," the waitress continued, "go out the hotel, turn left
to the corner, turn left
blocks to
Watt
You'll see
it
It's
on Second Avenue, go down
Street, turn left again
standing
all
by
itself. It
and go another block.
takes in the
a very large, two-story, white building
all
Victor repeated
it
to
to her
He
and traced an
thought
anyone watching from another
and nodded that he understood her
"Got only she
it.
Thanks," he
knew about
the
said.
this
itself."
She
all.
invisible route in
must look very strange
table.
The
waitress smiled
directions.
"Watt
man whom
whole block.
by
smiled, realizing that was a lot to memorize after
the air in front of him.
three
Street,"
that street
he whispered.
was named for.
If
Ken Roberts
132
The
chimed once as Victor walked through the Walton was on the phone again, as another cou-
big clock
hotel lobby.
ple stood in front of his desk.
He
looked busy.
Victor pushed the big heavy door open and was out
Park Street again.
He
the corner. Children's
He
turned
turned
Home.
1
Three blocks
left
left
and began
wonder what
to
Watt
and walked the few
I'll
his journey over to the
find.
Street, a left turn,
block more. Victor noticed
how
watch
he was
his thoughts. Usually
on
steps to
little
and
just
one
he remembered to
lost in
them, thinking
about the past, or whisked away by the future. Several times during his
visit
with Minnie, he thought
ing was rather simple ever,
this
thought-watch-
and obvious. More and more now, how-
he was seeing that
it
wasn't.
This was a lovely old residential
street; so quiet
Majestic white sycamores lined the street
on both
and shady. sides, their
boughs meeting high overhead. Low, cotton-ball clouds peeked through an occasional opening was
its
own
in the leafy
dome.
It
peaceful environment under here.
Victor spotted what must be the roof of his destination well before he exited the dark-green tunnel.
It
was an inviting
red gabled roof, the shade of a red rubber ball, fresh and clean looking, not like
the
many
homes he was
He
of the dark, moist, weathered ones
on
passing.
parried a slinging tree branch and high-stepped over
the same
tree's
root rising from the middle of the sidewalk and
emerged from behind what must have been a ten-foot-high wall of dense shrubbery.
There atop a gently sloping mound of neatly cut lawn, probably a hundred yards back off the sidewalk, rested the Children's
Home.
A
white storybook picket fence ran along
A Rich Man's
Secret
133
the sidewalk and disappeared at the bottom of the Home's rolling property.
"There
it
is,"
Victor said under his breath, a broad smile
forming.
The 6,500
square foot house was enormous,
than Victor envisioned.
made
special.
it
much
was a simple house, but
It
larger
its size
A white, wood-frame house, with lots of plain
windows. Four red-brick chimneys rose high above the
roof,
one on each outside wall of the home. It
appeared
much
taller
than two
stories; its floor
was high
above the ground to accommodate a complete basement with high windows that could be seen sides of the house.
and
The
at
ground level
all
along the
front porch was necessarily very high,
also extremely deep.
A
simple, neat, low shrub ran the
perimeter of the house.
Only a few large trees stood in front, none close to the home. A few more were in back. Two stout ropes tied to a graceful aging limb of one of the trees dropped
down some
twenty feet and held a weathered old two-by-eight
two
feet
above the ground.
It
Victor wanted to go swing on
The
swayed
less
than
slightly in the breeze.
it.
narrow, crowned gate in the simple white picketed
fence was covered by a pergola, nearly invisible beneath the
cascading ivy
it
supported. Victor cautiously opened the stur-
dy gate and grimaced when
it
creaked as he slowly and care-
What am I doing, trying not to wake anyone? A cobblestone walkway meandered up to the front steps. Victor watched his steps and noticed how the grass fully closed
and latched
it.
grew between the smooth,
slightly
rounded stones.
He
con-
sidered that this was the very same house and property described in the article from 1899 that was in his pocket. The
Ken Roberts ceremony must have taken place
on
this
right there in front
huge old porch. Mr. Watt
of
may have walked
me now these
—
same
cobblestones.
wooden
Victor climbed the three flights of wide
and took four long door.
was
It
boards.
strides across the
difficult to step softly
stairs
deep porch to the front
on the
enameled
bare,
Reaching up and taking hold of the gleaming
brass
door knocker, Victor inhaled deeply, rapped twice, and waited.
He
caught himself rocking sideways from one foot to the
other and stopped.
Then he
noticed his clenched hands and
relaxed them.
"Watch, watch, watch." his head.
He
could hear Minnie's voice in
She must be napping now.
A smiling middle-aged woman opened the door. "Hello," she said, pleasantly.
Smiling back, Victor began his well-practiced speech. "Hello.
My
name's Victor Truman, and
I've
come
to speak
with the director of the Children's Home."
"That would be Mr. McCully. asked, as
if
she already
Is
he expecting you?" she
knew he had no appointments
sched-
uled at this particular time.
"No, no
he's
not expecting me," answered Victor.
a very brief question concerning the founder of this
"I
have
home, Mr.
Clement Watt." "Oh,
name
yes,
Mr. Watt," she
said, as
if
come
in.
in a long time. "Please,
she hadn't heard that I'll
tell
Mr. McCully
you're here."
Victor thanked her and stepped into a large entry hall. "I'll
just
be a moment," she said and turned to leave the
room through
a
doorway on the opposite
side of the room.
A Rich Man's Secret was good that she didn't invite him to maybe Mr. McCully would see him immediately. At the end of the entry room was a fireplace with com-
Victor considered sit
—
it
that
fortable-looking chairs, end tables, and reading lamps.
looked very homey. brick fireplace.
had similar
Two
portraits
hung on
Although they were of
It
either side of the
different
men, they
all
qualities about them: serious, but concerned.
Victor concluded that they were kindly men. These must be the
Children's Home's Directors since 1899.
McCully
's
picture
is
up
I
wonder
if
Mr.
there!
Turning to the wall directly opposite him, Victor breathed in deeply,
and
between two small was a very
electric wall
He
wall
lamps with tiny fabric shades
large oil painting in a
was Clement!
on the
his eyes widened. There, centered
heavy ornate wood frame.
It
looked older than he did in Minnie's picture
of him, but there was no doubt, that was Clement. Victor
stepped closer to study the painting.
block etched
letters
A
small brass plate with
attached to the bottom of the frame con-
Clement Watt, Founder. 18524933. Since he was eighty -one when he died, Victor calculated, he was in his sixties when Minnie began to know him. Victor heard the woman's footsteps. She returned through the doorway and said with a smile, "Mr. McCully will be
firmed
happy
it:
to see
you now."
Great. Victor tried not to
seem too
excited.
"Thank you
very much," he smiled back, half bowing. "Please follow me."
He
took one
last
glance at Clement and
felt
a chill run
through him, and followed her through the doorway.
They walked down
a quiet
hallway and the
stopped and turned at a door at the end.
woman
Ken Roberts
136
"Here's Mr. McCully's office," she said.
"Thank you again," Victor said, slowly entering the doorway. As he stepped through, there on his left was Mr. McCully, walking around a rather small desk, right hand extended, a pleasant smile on his face. Victor stepped toward
him and they shook hands. "John McCully," he said with an energetic handshake and confident smile.
"Nice to meet you, Mr. McCully. I'm Victor Truman."
have a seat." Mr. McCully gestured to one of the wooden chairs angled in front of his desk. "Thank you, sir." Victor sat and wondered if this chair was "Please,
two simple
dreaded by
all
the children
who
lived here. Victor felt like a
student, in a way.
"Mrs. Dowell
tells
me
you're inquiring about our founder,
Mr. Watt." Mr. McCully sat back and clasped his hands across his
wide stomach.
He
appeared to be looking forward to
this
conversation.
"Mr. McCully," Victor shifted in the hard
"I'm looking for information, but Victor suddenly aloud.
He
felt
a
felt his face
I
don't
wooden
know what
chair, it
is."
when he heard these words and head get warm and wondered if Mr.
little
foolish
McCully could see his embarrassment. Watch, watch, He remembered Minnie's directions again and relaxed
watch. as best
he could. "I
"but
I
never knew Mr. Watt, of course," Mr. McCully began, understand he was quite a
man
—very unassuming, very
powerful, and extremely wise. I'm the fourth director to oversee the Children's
Home, and
to strict guidelines set
it's
down, I'm
run and operated according
told,
by Mr. Watt himself."
A Rich Man's Secret Victor was surprised saying so
much so
—but
quickly. But
grateful
now
it
—
137
that Mr.
McCully was
was his turn to speak.
"Mr. McCully," Victor paused momentarily. Yes, he'd just better level with Mr. McCully; he
had nowhere
else to turn: "I
discovered Mr. Watt's headstone in the old cemetery out by
Grand Hotel." He studied Mr. McCully's expression carefully. There was no reaction. "A date August 4, 1899 is the
—
hidden in
it."
He
—
kept watching for a reaction.
Still
none.
"Since that's not his date of birth nor the date of his death,
assumed
it's
somehow." No change
significant
McCully's demeanor. "So
I
dug up," an
I
in Mr.
interesting choice of
words, Victor thought, "this newspaper article from that date."
Victor produced the copy from the worn white bag that had
become
his briefcase.
Mr. McCully looked interested
now and
carefully took the
copy Victor held out. Watch, watch, watch, Victor remembered as he sat and waited for Mr. McCully to read the
He
article.
smiled twice as he read every word. Victor's mind was rac-
ing,
but he caught
and watched.
it
Then he
shoulders to relax them. tight,
and he relaxed
me, he thought, and
it.
1
There's so
don't even
He
raised
and lowered
noticed his forehead;
much know
it
his
was
going on in and around it
most of
the time.
He
thought of Minnie. Mr. McCully handed the copy back to Victor. silent for a
something
moment
as
— something
if
He was
in thought. Victor anticipated
big.
But he remembered himself
again and relaxed.
Mr. McCully was
up
at the ceiling,
still
leaning back in his chair, looking
with a slight smile on his
lips.
Then
his
chair creaked and groaned and he sort of free-fell forward into
an upright,
sitting position.
His hands were
now
clasped
on
Ken Roberts
138
He
the desktop.
acted as
if
he wanted
to speak, but
speaking. Victor leaned forward, his eyes say, "Yes, yes!
Finally
What
is
he wasn't
open wide,
as
if
to
it?"
he spoke.
"Mr. Truman, please
come with me."
Mr. McCully stood, but didn't look at Victor. a kind of blank look, as
Victor following.
if
in thought.
He
They ended up back out
He
had
still
left his office,
with
in the entry hall at
the wall opposite the fireplace and four pictures. Without a
word, Mr. McCully turned to Victor and gestured with his
hand
two small frames hanging on the
to
Victor smiled and looked at Mr. McCully
on the two
zeroed in
frames.
One was
illustration. It
story house, with four chimneys,
"That's
this
and a very
McCully looked
this
one
is
it
could have
large porch.
like
he was
a copy of the article
Victor pointed to the second frame and to read
"Is
like
was of a large two-
still
trying
something out.
"And away
and then
house!" Victor realized.
"Yes, in 1899." Mr.
to figure
briefly,
possibly a photo, but
one of those old-fashioned types that looked been an extremely detailed
left
wall.
from
I
moved
showed you!" in just inches
it.
Mr. Wheeler's picture one of those?" Victor turned and
pointed back to the fireplace. "Yes. He's at the top left side.
successors,
"But
seemed
and
I
The
other three were his
follow them.
that's all
I
know." Mr. McCully's voice
to be trying hard to recall
trailed off.
He
something that would solve
Victor's puzzle.
Victor read enough of the original article to be sure didn't contain
some
fact that his
copy
didn't.
Then he
it
turned
A Rich Man's Secret to Mr.
McCully with an expression
He looked back at how to help you."
139
that asked,
Victor with a look that said,
"What now?" "I don't know
Victor turned to the portrait of Clement Watt on the adjoining wall
"I
wonder
if
he
left a
secret here,"
he
said,
speaking more to the picture than to Mr. McCully.
"From what
I know about him, I'd say you're onto McCully sounded very supportive; Victor
little
something.'" Mr.
appreciated that. "Well, thank you very
much
for your time
and help, Mr.
McCully." Victor shook his hand, thanked him, and walked to the front door.
"What "I
will
think
you do now?" Mr. McCully asked.
I'll
go to the
trustee of..." All of a
sudden
McCully must know who
who
First it
National Bank and see the
dawned on Victor
that Mr.
that would be since that's probably
signs his paycheck.
Mr. McCully caught the same thought and continued
where Victor Farmer. He's
left off.
now
"...That will be Mr. Farmer, Mr.
Tom
the bank president and handles the endow-
ment personally. Tell him said hello." "Where is the bank?" Victor asked. "It's right on Park Street, across from the courthouse." With renewed enthusiasm, Victor smiled and shook Mr. McCully's hand again. "Mr. Tom Farmer. Great. That's where I'll go next. Thank I
you again, Mr. McCully."
"Not
at
all.
And
if
I
can help in any way, please,
just ask."
Mr. McCully stood in the doorway awhile as Victor walked across the broad porch, down the cobblestone pathway.
steps,
and along the
J
Ken Roberts
40
Just before reaching the front gate, Victor stopped
and
turned around to face the house again.
The
well!
Where
the well?
is
across the property but didn't see
happened
to the well?
It
He scanned back and forth the well. What could have
should be somewhere close to the
porch, as described in the article. He'd read
how
it
so
many
times,
could he forget the well? I'd
three,
better go see Mr. Farmer, just in case the
he reasoned.
come back and
If
bank
closes at
he doesn't know about the well,
I'll
ask Mr. McCully.
Victor briskly retraced his route over to the Children's
Home
and calculated that
it
must be about two- thirty.
hungry again, but there was no time
to eat
He was
now.
Watch, watch, watch. Minnie's words came to mind again.
It
was warm and humid. Victor kept up the pace, however,
and before too long found himself back on the corner of Park Street
and Second Avenue, where the Park Hotel stood,
down and way back
across the street from the courthouse.
just
Along the
had considered that he must have walked in front of the First National Bank on his way to the library, but he couldn't remember it. He turned left onto Park Street, walked along the block of shops and offices to First here, Victor
Avenue, and now stood
at First
and Park. There
it
was:
one
building in from the corner and right across from the grand
courthouse building.
A Rich Man's Secret The building.
were
tall
National Bank was a very
First Its
141
one-story, brick
tall,
windows and doors matched the
and narrow,
doors and entered. counter with two
too. Victor
opened one of the twin front
was quiet and cool
It
teller stations
building: they
stood to the right.
room was scattered with half same number of people were either
a dozen desks.
walking quietly about, looking very
efficient.
the
About halfway
sitting
A
inside.
small
The rest of About the
behind the desks or
back, in the middle of the floor, with four
leather chairs in front of
it,
sat the biggest
small rectangular nameplate was perched
all.
A
front edge.
It
desk of them
on
its
read T. Foster.
A man who looked too young to be the manager of a bank sat
behind
it
and was talking on the phone, head down,
ing furiously with his free hand. Victor wondered
he was
sitting at his desk, talking
furiously.
this
He
concluded that
bank; he was
he knew
if
on the phone, and writing
T. Foster
was
really
nowhere
in
thought, a million miles from here.
lost in
What Minnie had
writ-
explained to him seemed so simple,
almost too simple, this morning; but now, in just a few short hours, Victor was beginning to sense the weight of
had taught him. Everyone he
realized. They're all
on
in this
bank
is
what she
really asleep mentally,
autopilot!
Victor stepped close enough to T. Foster's desk to
know
he was waiting to see him, but stayed far
not be intrusive. As
if
let
him
enough back
to
by habit, Victor caught himself letting
his eyes wander, not really seeing anything at
all.
He was
asleep, too, along with the rest of these people!
He remembered
himself and realized that he was nervous
and self-conscious standing Watch, watch, watch.
He
in the
middle of the floor
like this.
relaxed his knees and shoulders, and
— Ken Roberts
142
growing warmer and warmer
felt his face
nervous and self-conscious he his lip
felt.
He
as
he saw how very
caught himself biting
and relaxed his jaw and facial muscles. Then he
noticed that his right foot was turned over on
its side.
This
watching and relaxing was hard work. Just
when he noticed
his
hands tightly clenching the
white bag they held in front of him, T. Foster spoke in Victor's direction.
"May
I
help you?"
Victor stepped up to the desk. "Yes, Mr. Foster, is
my name
Victor Truman. I'm here from Los Angeles to see Mr.
Farmer." Victor thought calling
much
couldn't be that
take, but the Los
Maybe even
him
even though he
Mister,
older than himself, was a good
Angeles part may have been a
move
bit too
to
much.
misleading. Victor began to immediately worry,
but he caught his face and forehead wrinkling with worry and relaxed them. "Yes, Mr.
Truman.
Is
Mr. Farmer expecting you?"
This could be trickier than
it
was with Mr. McCully.
Better use the one ace he held.
"No, no
he's not.
that should do
it.
ful in
an
me
Mr. Watt's Children's
must be one of the noticed just then
Mr. McCully sent
over here." There,
Home endowment
largest accounts in this bank. Victor
how he
flipped from worried to nearly boast-
instant.
"One moment, Mr. Truman. Won't you be "Thank you."
seated?"
him while T. probably mahogany
Victor took the chair directly in front of Foster walked to a heavy oversized
—
door to an office in the rear corner of the bank. There was a brass plate
on
it
but Victor couldn't read
it
from here.
T.
A Rich Man's Secret knocked twice
Foster
143
and then walked into the
softly
office,
closing the door behind him.
Moments
later
he returned and
said,
"Mr. Farmer will see
you now." Victor thanked
him and walked toward
Farmer was standing
he seemed pleasant and calm.
Just a
mind. Victor guessed he was in his
and Mr. Farmer invited Victor Mr. Farmer broke the "Yes,
sir.
the big door. Mr.
He wasn't smiling, but busy man with lots on his
as Victor entered.
to
They shook hands
sixties.
sit.
"So you know John McCully?"
ice.
Mr. McCully helped
me
with some research I'm
doing on Mr. Clement Watt, the founder of the Children's
Home." Victor then paused from Los Angeles, and
trip
He
continued:
discovered Mr. Watt's headstone
cemetery by the Grand Hotel."
in the old
"There's a date
And
I
since
it's
—August
4,
comment from "I'm here on a
for a reaction or
Mr. Farmer. There was none.
1899
—hidden
Still
no
in the decoration.
not his date of birth or date of death,
must be significant
in
reaction.
I
assume
it
some way."
Mr. Farmer leaned back in his leather swivel chair, finger-
touching and pressed against his
tips
But
least he
still,
this article." Victor
handed read
Good. At
no comment was forthcoming. searched the newspaper files, and on that very day was
looks interested. "I
lips.
it.
it
produced and unfolded the copy and
to Mr. Farmer.
He
acted as
if
He
paused and waited as Mr. Farmer
he had never seen
it,
or
if
he
did,
it
was
bringing back pleasant memories. Victor remembered to
watch himself. He saw that he was
still
nervous, but relieved,
that Mr. Farmer didn't feel that Victor was wasting his time.
Mr. Farmer finished the
"My
uncle was the very
first
article,
handed
trustee of the
it
back, smiling.
Watt endowment,"
Ken Roberts
144
he volunteered. Good, he was beginning
to
warm
up. Victor
waited for more, but there wasn't any.
"So
began researching the clues in
I
Mr. Watt considered August
this article to see
why
4, 1899, important enough to
hide in his headstone."
Mr. Farmer was thinking, and Victor waited.
He
noticed
his hand was clutching the arm of the chair and relaxed
He
also noticed a thought going by that told
just a big
waste of time
—
him
and everyone
his
was
it.
all
Then he thought. He
else's.
forehead tighten in reaction to that
felt his
this
relaxed again.
could be, Mr. Truman, that Mr. Watt was just so proud
"It
of the Children's office wall
up
Home
—
Mr. Farmer's eyes traveled the
"
to the ceiling.
He was
still
thinking. Victor
waited and watched.
"My
uncle was very fond of Clement Watt." Mr. Farmer
was speaking to the window sat
up
straighter
didn't speak of
all,
but
I
Victor weren't there. Victor
of course, their's being a fiduciary
always
Watt. That was unusual, for ple." Mr.
if
and anticipated some good information. "He
him much,
relationship and
as
Farmer smiled,
still
my
knew my uncle
respected Mr.
uncle respected very few peo-
looking out the window.
Victor smiled, too, and thought of Minnie. "I
knew Mr. Watt was
spoke of him, vast wealth
knew
a special
as little as that was,
man
by the way
and not
just
my
uncle
because of his
and position. Indeed, very few people actually
the extent of his holdings and enterprises." Victor was
all ears
and wondered
bounds of discretion.
if
Mr. Farmer had
He hoped
just
stepped over the
he'd keep going!
Mr. Farmer turned his chair around backwards and pulled a well-worn, leather-bound notebook about the size of a small-
A Rich Man's Secret town telephone
directory from a
145
row of books and
files
stand-
He
turned
ing along the top of the credenza behind his desk.
back and placed edges and looked
'This
it
on
his desk in front of him.
down
at
try,
I
have ever seen in
and
again, it
its
my
is
to
the clearest piece of writ-
dealings in the financial indus-
been considerable." Mr. Farmer was smiling
that's
down
looking
still
touched
down by Clement Watt
trust. It
all
He
fondly, almost reverently.
the directive laid
is
administer his children's ing
it
respectfully at the book.
contains the routine legal jargon, but
when
it
"Of course
comes
to the
home's day-to-day operation and the children's treatment, care,
and education, you know
Show
it
to
this
is
an inspired document."
me! Victor's thoughts were shouting.
"I'm afraid I'm not at liberty to divulge any of tion, but
I
will tell
Clement Watt
will
I'm afraid that's
Darn!
Now
"I will tell
all
you that whatever you can learn about Mr. be a treasure to you your entire I
can
tell
I
life.
Again,
you."
what!
you that
I
can
recall
no connection between
that article and that specific date and these instructions.
informa-
its
wish
I
endowment
could be of help."
"You have been, Mr. Farmer. Now, more than sure I'm onto something
ever, I'm
and should keep going." Victor stood
his shoulders. "But just don't know where." They shook hands again and Mr. Farmer spoke like
and shrugged
I
a
father to Victor. "Follow through, son, for you have every-
thing to gain."
"Now
what/" he muttered. Victor suddenly realized that
he was experiencing a feeling that was very familiar
He was
exuberant and ready, with nowhere to go!
to him:
Ken Roberts
146
Victor was standing out front of the First National Bank, staring out across the street at the
huge courthouse building.
His shoulders slumped as he realized he didn't even remember leaving Mr. Farmer's office, exiting the bank, and ending
up here on the sidewalk. All that could have taken place an
hour ago, or a day ago,
for that matter. "Stay
awake, Victor,"
he heard Minnie saying. As he remembered himself and
came no
into the present, the words Take the
less
—and
the next will be revealed crossed his
Those words had gotten him
And
first step
—no more,
mind.
where he presently was.
to
monumental stride this had been! Four short days ago, if someone had told him all that was about to happen, he wouldn't have believed it. As he stood there in front quite a
of the bank, contemplating
had already proved ing to push
him
C. W.'s prophetic message
he realized that something was
What was telling him to moment? He stood firm and
along.
do something at this just
true,
how
rush and just
attempted to
watch the best he could. Although he couldn't
any one thought in in his
going!
Victor stayed put.
As
Don
t
I
dont know what
just stand around!
agitated as his mass of thoughts
became, he reasoned: Yve taken
Now
identify
message up there
particular, the general
head was, Get
try-
to
the first step
do next.
instruction, to take the first step
I
If
and
it
led
stay true to
—no more,
no
less
me
here.
C. W.'s
— then
the
next will be revealed. The others just happened to come more quickly, apparently; this
ones taking a
little
longer. So,
V 11
just
wait and watch.
He
felt
funny
the sidewalk.
—nervous,
actually
The thoughts were
stupid standing out here like
could get arrested for
loitering.
this.
—
just
really
standing there
hopping now: You
on
look
People are watching you. You
Someone
inside the
bank
is
going to
A Rich Man's Secret come out and It
you
tell
to leave, or
worse
147
yet, call the police
on you.
was a never-ending barrage.
Never before had he examined what was going on
own mind
All that he learned this morning with
like this.
Minnie was making more and more before?
are against me! All right,
off
didn't
I
ever see that
seems so obvious, but so esoteric as
thoughts parading through
the next step
Why
obviously not!
best interest
It all
thoughts.
sense. These thoughts are
—
my
not in
well.
The
my mind right now are not for me that's the first step. And when I see
they
—
that,
immediately apparent: Don't go along with those
is
Dont
in his
do what they say!
So Victor stood right there, refusing to give in and dash somewhere anywhere! just to appease these relentless
—
—
thoughts.
Two men were approaching from library
on the
the direction of the
corner. Victor was determined to stay put
even
though the thoughts droned on and now had new ammunition:
Those two men are looking
businessmen and
wont
They
at you.
think well of you.
homes, two nice cars, kids
look like respectable
They both have
families,
money
in the
Victor could hear
them
in private schools, lots of
bank. Victor watched and just stayed put.
They were very
close
now and
more than
talking. Actually, they were doing
seemed
to be almost arguing.
what he wants to him.
to
One was
saying, "Look! If that's
do with the property, then
And no one
can make me!
I
talking; they
I
don't like
sure won't sell it,
and
I
won't
go along."
The other man then responded with an have
just struck
that says
The
we first
him: "I've got
can't put
man was
it!
That's
some C, C, and Rs puzzled.
"What
it!
idea that must
There's
no law
in the deed...."
are C, C,
and Rs?"
Ken Roberts
148
"Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions!" The second
man
boasted.
The two men walked that he was standing
were walking down
right past Victor, not
even aware
They weren't even aware
there.
that they
this sidewalk, Victor realized.
Victor had heard Christine speak of C, C, and Rs before in
connection with her various
listings of
homes
in exclusive
neighborhoods. There's a homeowner's association that comes
up with a
of dos and don'ts that
list
Things
living in that neighborhood.
your
home
if
the color you intend
and you
street,
is
actually a condition of
like
you can only paint
approved by the associa-
committee, you can't work on your car in
tion's architectural
view of the
is
can't park a boat at the front curb.
Wait a minute! There must have been C, C, and Rs Clement Watt's day,
manent a document the
deed
to the
anything from Children's
a
s
grave,
it
would be
to be
Then found
the
is
about as per-
in his directions
.
And
endowed
the perpetually
just said
how thorough and
clear
even though the directive
not be public, the deed to the Children's
That has
deed
is! And, deeds are public records. Yes, Home. If Clement Watt could control
Home. Mr. Farmer
Mr. Watt was
real property
as there
Children his
And
too!
in
Home surely
is.
The
may
deed.
it!
the thoughts started again: Yes, but what
newspaper
article
if
you hadn't
—how would you have even known
Home? Victor caught this doubt, and the face that came with it. He relaxed. It didn't
about the Children's
wrinkles in his matter what
if,
did
it?
The
fact
is,
he
Victor took a deep breath. grance of the
air
and
felt its
and arms. He relaxed
had found
He
the article!
smelled the natural
warmth and humidity on
his shoulders
fra-
his face
and hands. Back
in the
A Rich Man's Secret he looked up and
present,
149
there, right in front of him, stood
the courthouse.
Victor crossed Park Street and Capitol Parkway, the circular street that
in the park.
separated the courthouse and
He
made
an island
it
hurried up the broad walkway lined
on each
and high-stepped up the wide, curved stairs two at a time to one of the four enormous front doors under the columned portico. Judging by his own height, these side by rosebushes,
doors must be over twelve feet
He
tall.
entered into a large anteroom with two doors in each
of the three inside walls.
doorway
to his
A
brass sign
hung over each. The
immediate right was labeled Museum. That
was very appealing, but the day was
late
and Victor needed
to
see that deed.
The door
in the
one: Land Records.
back corner to
The door opened
his left
seemed
to be the
into a small waiting area
created by a stand-up countertop. Four
wooden
chairs stood
against the wall facing the counter. Victor noticed that the
countertop was solid
— there was no section
exit through. Various official-looking forms,
and papers were neatly arranged
A woman
in her
forties,
in
it
to enter or
announcements,
in little stacks.
working diligently
at
her desk,
heard Victor enter, but continued until she reached a good place to stop.
She smiled
pleasantly as she rose and stepped
over to the counter. "Hello," she said.
Victor smiled back. "Hello.
Is
this the office
where
I
can
get a copy of a property deed?"
"Yes
it is."
"Good. I'm interested
on Watt
Street
in the
Home
deed to the Children's
—between Third and Fourth Avenues?
I
don't
Ken Roberts
150
think it
was named Watt Street
it
at that time, though;
was Third Street then." Victor watched to see
lowing
this.
of him.
He
lished the
She was.
If
if
I
think
she was
fol-
anything, she seemed to be way ahead
continued: "Also, since a Mr. Clement Watt estab-
home
as a
foundation, the most recent deed will
probably be one from him, or one of his companies, to the Children's
Home
Foundation
"The Children's so
I
Home
itself.
was dedicated
would guess that that deed would
Her forehead furrowed.
"Yes,
August of 1899,
in
also be dated that year."
can search that deed by
I
property address, but anything before about 1910
now.
And
I'll
archived
only have a photocopy of the original deed.
Those that old were mostly handwritten, and stored elsewhere. So
I'll
so they're preserved
be searching our working copies
and can produce a copy of that copy
what she
is
She smiled
for you."
long do you think
submit
"How
will take?"
it
now, but since we're
this request to a clerk
almost closed today, likely before
if
was humorous.
just said
"Well, that sounds good to me," Victor smiled back.
"I'll
as
I
would think
I'll
have
it
for
you
—
well,
noon tomorrow."
"That'll be great," said Victor.
"I'll
see you then.
Thanks
very much."
Victor
left
the
Land Records
office
and
nothing to do until the deed was found. o'clock;
he could
visit
the
o'clock van back to the
museum
It
realized
he had
was nearly four
awhile, then catch the five
Grand Hotel and
return here
on the
one o'clock van tomorrow. Victor walked diagonally across the foyer and slowly
opened the big wooden door marked Museum. this rather small
room with
a very
tall ceiling.
No
one was
in
The afternoon
A Rich Man's Secret sunlight streamed in the
covered the walls and
tall
151
palatine windows. Memorabilia
filled several long, glass display cases.
This was more of a scrapbook room than a true museum,
Victor thought, as he looked into the long glass case nearest
the door. Mostly old letters, mementos, and newspaper accounts of the town's major events and leading
He moved
citizens.
next case and examined old photographs and a sample spike from the first railroad line to the
through town. Oh, and of the Civil
here's
War Cemetery
where C. W.'s tombstone was
placed. Victor studied this
could recognize parts of
He worked
his
standing at the case
dows that looked
it.
a photo of the dedication ceremony
photograph carefully to see
Yes, those
later if
he
cannons look familiar.
way around the museum room and was on the front wall, beneath the tall win-
so impressive from the street.
flower beds, and trees looked so peaceful outside.
The The
lawn, hotel,
shops, and businesses along the opposite side of Park Street
were pretty
as a picture. It
was quiet here. The only noise came
from Victor's footsteps on the shiny hardwood
He
floor.
took in a deep breath and closed his eyes.
He
felt
the
warmth on his face and smelled the musty air in the room. He opened his eyes and looked down into the case before him. Waves of chills started at his head and ran down sun's
through his body to his
feet.
In the glass case, looking right at
him, was a photograph of Clement Watt. tered card beneath Children's
it
read:
Home, August
4,
A
small hand-let-
Clement Watt, founder of the 1899.
There was a calm, confident, peacefulness about him. There was such kindness and wisdom in his slight smile. Did he leave a secret message to be found? Minnie seemed to think
so.
Victor leaned forward on his toes, looking out the
Ken Roberts
152
window behind the
Emma's board-
display case, trying to see
down Park Street. No, too many trees. He looked back down into the glass case. Next to C. W.'s picture was a photograph of the Children's Home. It's even ing house two blocks
warmer and homier-looking lawn
is
There
s
thick the
same white up
blestone walk that
today.
The
trees are taller
and green. The hedges and picket fence
and
little
Where's the well?
well.
full.
gateway, and the cob-
Perhaps C. W. did walk
to the large front porch.
same stone pathway. The
now. The
mature and
vines are
It's
nowhere
in this picture.
There, next to the two photographs was the newspaper article.
Victor took his copy out and held
the two. Exactly the same. So C.
W.
did
this article, this clue to his headstone's
it
out to compare
manage
to preserve
hidden message.
Victor was more confident than ever that he was right path,
and that there was, indeed, a path. He had
lowed C. W.'s directions more, no
less
He was again: the sight.
And
on the
precisely:
—and the next
will
Take the
first
step
fol-
—no
be revealed.
at that uncomfortable, but always rewarding, place
end of as
the next step
his thoughts, with
he was learning, is
no apparent next
that's the right place to be, for
always grander than anything his
can dream up. The secret
is
step in
to simply
remember
own mind
this.
—Victor knew there was nothing the copy of the deed. There was o'clock van back to the
else to
still
do now but wait
for
time to catch the five
Grand Hotel,
so he left the court-
house and enjoyed a brisk walk back through town.
He
walked past the picturesque shops and buildings along Main Street to the sturdy old oak tree standing in the cul-de-sac.
The van was on
time. Victor
and an older couple were
its
only
returning passengers.
He
sat
on the
rear
bench
seat
where he could stretch out
and watch the passing countryside more comfortably. There were very few cars on the road. Victor thought of home, where at five o'clock in the
afternoon the streets were jammed.
After miles of green, open spaces and bright blue
skies,
the
van turned under the Grand Hotel entryway arch and on up the driveway to the welcoming porte cochere.
As
they pulled
under and stopped, Victor realized he had not remembered himself even once since leaving town. This observation
153
made
Ken Roberts
154
him
came
grimace, but the instruction
flinch, just watch."
He
and
smiled,
Victor went straight to his to be
"home."
also felt
It
good
to
silently
room
him
again: "Don't
thanked Minnie.
at the hotel.
It felt
good
to be rid of this noisy paper bag
that served as his attache and suitcase
all
day.
What
a day
it
had been.
He
freshened up, put on some aftershave, and went look-
As he walked through
ing for Christine.
the grounds, he noticed
how
the hotel and around
deeply absorbed others were in
their thoughts; they're walking on autopilot, miles
He remembered
away
mentally.
himself again and vowed to stay awake the
of the evening.
rest
Five minutes later he was at the tennis courts and realized
he didn't remember walking
that
him
all this
time
is
was
useless, that to stay
impossible.
A
there.
and even though he noticed
his face
it,
awake
Then he remembered
frown came over
another thought told for
any length of
the blue rose.
When
Christine was playing singles with another agent.
she saw him, she dropped her racquet, ran out of the court,
and hugged him. "You look
"Oh "Where
Chris Evert out there," Victor smiled.
missed you so much," she
I
said,
hugging him again.
did you get this snazzy shirt?"
"This?
Now
like
all
I
It's
need
my is
tourist shirt;
I
blend in with the crowds.
a video camera." You cant even afford a video
camera, his thoughts reminded him. Victor caught that thought, relaxed away the tension that came with silently addressed
show me well. All
how
it:
Well,
to afford one!
if
you
Doing
re so this,
it,
and
smart and all-knowing,
he
realized that all
he had to do was stay out of those thoughts.
was
A Rich Man's Secret "Do you mind "No,
if
we
155
stop now?" Christine asked her friend.
that's fine," the
woman
replied, "see
you two
at
dinner."
Christine gathered her things, and she and Victor went
back to their room to dress
for dinner.
Although what Victor had
just
experienced amounted to
the two most important days in his
life
—
a true turning
point
—
And
although Christine sensed the impact of his discovery
it
wasn't something to be shared with others casually.
from what
Victor had told her on the phone and this
little
evening while dressing urge to speak of
for dinner, they
among
it
others.
And what
Dinner dragged on and on. it
Victor was
now
both contained the
a different view of
able to see. People talking incessantly, but
not really even listening to each other. Victor noticed himself rushing through the meal. to rush?
Why
cant
I sit
Why? he
here calmly
thought. What's
and enjoy
this
telling
me
meal?
Victor tried to see exactly what his thoughts were telling
him
that
made him want
to hurry. All
he saw, however, were
He was rushing. It occurred to him to deliberately slow down and see what would happen. The pressure increased. He still couldn't identify any particular thought, their effects:
but he was watching the pressure build.
and Victor
him
told
true.
down, took a deep breath,
He
did notice a thought that
in his chair.
everyone else at the long table was watching him.
inspection, however, he saw that this was clearly not
Everyone
else
thoughts, and had this
grew even more,
finally just put his fork
and relaxed back
Upon
It
room having
was self-absorbed,
no awareness
dinner.
lost in their
own
that they were even here in
Ken Roberts
156
Christine noticed what Victor was doing and asked
about
it.
"If
I
don't
know why
moment, then I'm choices.
that
him
I
I'm acting the
I
am
at
any given
machine, and machines have no
just a
What happens
way
them
to
is
just accidental.
noticed
I
was rushing through dinner, a million miles away in
thought, so
down to see what made me rush along."
slowed
I
were saying that
it
was
my
thoughts
Christine didn't understand completely, but she tried. Victor continued, half-whispering to his eager student. "If
dinner
I
know
don't
—
that I'm sitting here in this
no one here does
as
— then
Christine opened her eyes wider as "If
if
room having
I'm lost in thought."
to say, Yes, go on.
I'm lost in thought, then I'm either mulling over some-
thing from the past, which
is
usually something painful, or I'm
projecting something out into the future, which also
So I'm
painful.
usually living in a
is
made-up dream and
usually
actually
The only way to really live is to be right knowing what's really going on." here in the here and now Christine was listening intently. "You mean like driving a hurting myself.
—
—
car for miles it?"
and miles and not remembering anything about
she asked.
Victor considered her example for a "Yes,
I
think
so.
The
moment and
instinctual part of the brain obviously
kept the car on the road and out of the lane of oncoming
But you
—the
past or future. future don't
—were
driver
And
even
and projected
said,
lost in
cars.
thought, somewhere in the
that can't be living, because the past and
exist
—
fantasies."
they're just based
on
stored memories
A Rich Man's Secret
157
Christine nodded and tried to sort out these
Dinner was over and people began room.
One
of Christine's friends
new
ideas.
to leave the dining
came over and suggested
that
they join her and her husband in the hotel theater where the
movie War Games was being shown. Christine looked at Victor.
He
could see that she wanted
to go.
"Sure,
let's
go." Victor said. "I
The showing began meet
The
hope they have popcorn."
at eight o'clock, so
they agreed to
at the hotel's private theater a little before then.
theater was
down
a hallway off the balcony that circled
the hotel lobby's massive fireplace.
It
was a spacious room, but
the low ceiling, windowless walls, and subdued lighting it
made
feel intimate.
Six rows of dark-brown leather chairs sat in the cool, dark, quiet
room awaiting
their audience.
They were
alter-
nately spaced, so each had a clear view of the curtained wall at the front of the
room.
Victor and Christine arrived before their friends and took chairs
on the
right side of the theater, halfway back.
They
sat
and spoke in whispers about Victor's discovery as people began
filtering in.
"Over here," Christine
said in a
saw her friend and her husband. In atory to whisper.
hushed voice when she
this
room,
it
just felt oblig-
Ken Roberts
158
The
what
their
movie,
War
four spoke of their secret vacation spot,
activities
had been, and someone asked about
this
Games. Christine's friend had heard conflicting opinions,
some
for
and others
against.
Just then the curtain covering the front wall slowly
opened
electrically to reveal a textured white screen.
Within
seconds the movie began.
From almost the opening scene, Victor grew more and more enthralled. "This is a movie all about thoughts," he excitedly whispered in Christine's ear. indicate that she didn't understand 'Til tell
you
later,"
War Games was
a
he
to
what he meant.
said.
new
which had been made
She shook her head
Fonda and Walter Matthau.
on the
angle
into a It
movie
in
best-seller FaiUSafe,
1964 starring Henry
was about World
War
III
being
triggered accidentally.
In
War Games,
David, a bright high school student
spends a lot of time at into his school's
home on
his computer,
main computer and change
Desiring to learn more about a
who
can even tap
grades.
new computer game on
the
market, he programmed his computer to automatically dial
company that produced this new game. His computer makes contact with another computer, but it's not the one he hoped to reach; it belongs to
phone numbers
in the vicinity of the
the U. S. Defense Department. This computer's purpose
prevent World
War
analysis of early
warning systems and nuclear deterrents.
David challenges
III
it
is
by making judgments based on
to a
game
nuclear Warfare" and the computer
called "Global is
to its
Thermo-
delighted to oblige.
Since this "thinking" computer runs the United States' entire defense system,
its
activities are projected
onto several
A Rich Man's Secret
159
huge screens in the underground war room command center. The small hotel audience was enthralled as War Games reached its climactic ending. But Victor was the most wideeyed and compelled of
he
tion of the
all.
Because of what Minnie explained,
he was watching a very accurate demonstra-
realized that
human
brain in operation.
Knowing
this,
one
could plainly see the mental error people make that prevents
them from attaining the life they truly desire. As David's and the computer's nuclear "war" between the United States and Russia unfolded on the screens before them, the U.S. General and his icked.
They were watching
nuclear war
come
were
staff
and pan-
baffled,
the elements of a full-scale
together, but couldn't verify
—
or deny
—
its
authenticity.
The computer was game they were playing
in control.
David asked
it if
this
was a
or the real thing.
"What does it matter?" the computer replied. With only a few hours remaining before the computer began launching nuclear warheads toward Russia, David ly
located the computer's programmer and brought
command center. He can't stop can
learn,
it
never learned
in a "thinking" process
They begin
futility;
that
any of them
whereby
it
is,
is
it
doesn't
know
to attempt to
can learn
it
the
engage
futility.
suggesting games that would demonstrate this
to the computer. if
to the
the computer, but explains that, although
value of giving up. So their only hope it
him
final-
The programmer
still
asked his group of assistants
play Tic-Tac-Toe.
They
all said
"Why?" he continued. "Because you see the
Once you know
the secret of Tic-Tac-Toe,
because no one ever wins
—
it
it's
always ends in a
no. futility in
it.
futile to play
tie."
Ken Roberts
160
So they challenged the computer to a game of Tic-TacToe. When the computer asked how many players, they answered "Zero" which meant the computer would play against
itself.
While the nuclear war
were launched and headed
missiles
and some 2,400 Russian
escalates,
on
for their U.S. targets
the screens before them, the general wants to retaliate and
immediately launch our missiles in a counter-attack.
But the programmer understands the computer and to
convince the general that what he sees on the screens
him
before
is
Don't respond
As
just a like a
machine's hallucination.
machine," the programmer
"It's tells
a bluff.
him.
the general fights his impulse and training to react and
respond, the computer begins playing
TaC'Toe, until of
tries
moves
The
it's
game
after
game of Tic-
racing through every possible combination
at lightning speed.
tension builds as Russia's missiles are just seconds
away from
striking their targets,
when
the Tic-Tac-Toe games
cease and another series of calculations screen:
The computer
playing
—and
finally
is
applying what
understanding
it
fills
the primary
just learned
—Tic-Tac-Toe
from
to every
possible combination of nuclear confrontations.
When win
the computer concludes that neither side would
in scenario after scenario streaming by at nearly the speed
of light, the big screen suddenly goes blank. silent,
the screens are dark, the computer
The
A
strange game.
is
thinking.
big screen twinkles as the computer announces
conclusion: to play.
is
The room
The only winning move
is
its
not
A Rich Man's Secret
161
Victor was electrified. This was a movie about think!
It's
we
so obvious, but
We can't see
ous solution.
how we
can't see the only logical, obvi-
the forest for the trees.
Obviously. Victor heard two couples leaving the theater discussing the movie's "flaws."
ment about being
He
understood Minnie's com-
wiser than the world a
little better.
Christine and her friend were partners in a tennis tourna-
ment, and had to be ready early the next morning, so they decided against having a
good nights and
left
Victor explained
had revealed
to
late treat
and
They
coffee.
said their
the theater for their rooms.
—two or three times—how what Minnie
him about our
thoughts, and our misunder-
standing of them, was so dramatically and clearly shown in
War Games.
Christine tried to follow his excited explanations,
but Victor saw that she was tired and needed to sleep.
He had
trouble falling asleep, reflecting
day's "coincidental" events.
store for
him tomorrow.
He
anticipated
That's
on
this
important
what might
lay in
when he remembered
to
watch, instead of be, his thoughts. His forehead was furrowed, his
hands were clenched,
his legs
were twisted under the cov-
ers in the strangest fashion.
Victor repositioned himself in a natural, comfortable position,
and kept watching. Then he noticed how rapid and
shal-
low his breathing was; he consciously slowed and deepened It
occurred to him
tomorrow was going
that his
to unfold.
mind wanted
He
noticed
to project
how
it
just
it.
how raced
along, thousands of thoughts speeding by, that very few could
even be singled out and examined. His mind, he saw, was relentless.
No
wonder Minnie
As he caught
called
it
a "beast."
his thoughts again projecting tomorrow's
events, he thought of the
movie they had
just seen. It
dawned
Ken Roberts
on him that his mind could not possibly know, or project, what would happen tomorrow how could it? But then, isn't
—
this
what worry and anxiety are
about? Arent worry and anxi-
all
ety simply ignorant projections that can't possibly be based in reality?
Minnie's words came to him: "There
mously wrong with
Can
this really
how we
be true?
is
something enor-
think."
Could
this
consequences of one grand delusion?
whole world be suffering
What a prospect.
the
—Jyictov awoke with the in the
window.
Christine
A
still slept,
The morning light was dim squawked in bursts outside.
sunrise.
blue jay
and Victor used
this
time to quietly watch
his thoughts.
Lying
still,
aware of his breathing and moving chest, he
noticed his eyes darting about the room, unwilling to settle on
one
What
object.
told
them
be giving them orders, but doesn't
want me
1
to be so restless?
cant
to lie here in
bed
After several minutes of
see
it
or sense
like this.
this,
Some
And
But what
he noticed
head tighten with an expression of
it.
thought must
something
is it?
and
his face
frustration.
He
fore-
couldn't
catch a thought, but then realized one just told him he failed
when he He remembered watch. He relaxed and
miserably at this thought-watching business. That's
caught the tightness in his face and forehead. Minnie's instructions to not react, just
began again.
No
wonder nothing new
I'm so busy see, there s
see
it
at the beck
and
enters
my
no room for anything new;
anyway He knew he had I
mind, Victor considered.
call of these thoughts that
I
dont even
Ym never present enough to
just received a valuable clue to
the importance of staying present, and the value of separating
himself from these invisible, never-ending task masters.
163
Ken Roberts
164
when
Victor realized he was lost in thought again
Christine had awakened and actually gotten out of bed before
he knew his
Another shock and pang of
it.
mind. Just watch, don't
disgust shot through
But what a waste of
react.
thought told him. Maybe, he considered, but present and out of
to stay
thoughts, III just be lost in defeated.
He
this it.
if I
time, a
don't attempt
rush of negative, destructive
If
I
dont
then I'm already
try,
noticed his breathing again, something he hadn't
done since twenty minutes ago when he began
"Good morning! You
this exercise.
ready for the big tournament?"
think so," Christine said, stretching and yawning.
"I
"Want
have breakfast together?"
to
"Sure. That'd be nice.
noon, but
thought
I
just in case they find
"Good.
If
we
I'd it
is
supposed to be ready by
town
sooner."
hurry,
around the grounds
The deed
take the nine o'clock van into
maybe we can
after breakfast. I'm
get a nice walk in
due
at the courts at
nine also."
They
dressed and were in the dining
room
at a table
next to the picture-window wall well within an hour. Christine ordered a fruit plate and Victor was enjoying eggs,
bacon, and
"There isn't there."
topic
all
grits.
really
is
something
Christine spoke as
along,
which they
to all this if
you stumbled onto,
they had been discussing the
hadn't.
The answer was
obvious,
but Victor reiterated what they both already knew. "Absolutely. This for,
and
it
is
what
I've
—we've —been searching
was right here, under our noses,
only thing that makes perfect sense. But
you noticed
how
little
all
the time.
it's
not
It's
easy.
the
Have
you know where you are and that
A Rich Man's Secret you're
even breathing?
asleep
we
are
Isn't
it
shocking to
realize
how
deeply
?"
begun
"Yes, I've
"Everyone
to notice that."
else in this
room
— in the
thinks they're alive and well, but
look at them
165
—
at us
—
to see
how
all
whole world!
you have to do
is
—
just
deeply asleep and frightened
they are." "I
was thinking about being on the tennis court yesterday
my
and how poisonous that
I
looked
fat
thoughts
are.
They were
ple were laughing at me, that I'd never be I
wasn't a good mother and wife, and
less.
It's
wonder we make
a
telling
me
and ugly out there running around, that peo-
it
good
at tennis, that
on and on;
through
life
it
was relent-
as well as
we
do,
carrying this tremendous burden.
"Then
thought
I
how
impressionable small children, espe-
and how they can be severely damaged because
cially, are,
them over and over that they're no good, bad, that they'll never amount to anything.
cruel parent will
that they are
tell
Well, the child usually believes
come from we
—
adults
all
these
lies
because they
a source the child believes without question
parent or elder.
—
And
then
listen to
without question. But look at them
a
—how
it
occurred to
me
just last
and believe these thoughts if
we'll just stop a
—
its
night that
in our
moment and
head
take a
horrendous!"
Victor smiled proudly at Christine. She knew. She under-
stood the treasure Victor had found here. "Let's
go
for that walk,"
he
said.
Ken Roberts
They had walked
for nearly
and clearings around the
an hour, meandering the paths
hotel.
was a hot, tropical morn-
It
but the lush setting and fragrant scents made one forgive
ing,
the humidity.
Christine and Victor were coming up a knoll to the tennis courts,
still
"If
discussing their discovery.
hadn't run into Minnie or whatever else
I
we would
here yet,
last night: all set
to
wage war, believing that
only way. But like the programmer
computer
in a totally
new
direction so
the futility and destructiveness of
Minnie
—
W.
or C.
that leads to a completely "I just
walk
this
"Me "So it.
noticed
sent the
could learn for
itself
present path of under-
—has shown
us another direction
new outcome.
little I've
been here mentally on our
morning."
I
think the point
how
not knowing
I
can't
is,
like
change
I
am
is
are.
Go
get 'em,
lost
Minnie taught me,
it;
all
I
can do
is
just to see
just see
certainly better than being lost
it.
and
it.
"Here we
those thoughts ful
its
it
who
too," Christine whispered.
Obviously,
Seeing
how
find
be like that computer in the movie
still
and prepared
that's the
standing,
may
I
tell
you,
I
champ!
And no
matter what
say you're the prettiest, most grace-
of all!"
Christine hugged and kissed
him good-bye and
Victor
left
the tennis courts to catch the van into town.
He
sat in the
back of the van again. Six others came
aboard and soon they were underway. Victor resolved to stay
awake the
entire trip into town, but they
the hotel's entry arch
when he
realized
had barely cleared
he had not even been
A Rich Man's Secret aware of his
own
breathing. Darn!
And
167
then he remembered:
Don't react just observe. Be an impartial observer. ,
The smooth easy
ride
and cool
—even tempting—
tained a determined sent in the here and
The
air inside
He
the van
started over.
made
He
to drift into mental sleep.
effort,
it
very
main-
however, and managed to be pre-
now for several
short stretches.
old covered bridge was just ahead. Victor readied
himself to get a good look at the Coincidental
when
they
crossed over the bridge.
The
driver slowed the
van and with a
were on the wooden planks of the bridge. Victor the river.
He
The boat was
bump they looked down
slight
gone; the Coincidental wasn't there.
turned and looked up river but saw only two small fishing
boats drifting along.
As
the van pulled into the cul-de-sac and
came
to a stop,
began the moment he
dis-
covered the Coincidental missing. Faster than he could
see,
Victor caught his
his
mind drew
mind
racing.
It
conclusions, changed those conclusions, and
made assumptions.
In those few brief
moments, those
thoughts took Victor through a whirlwind of emotions
—from
elated to depressed, from hopeful to forlorn. All this turmoil
because the Coincidental wasn't there.
no evidence
at all.
And
all this
His mind had no knowledge whatsoever,
except that the Coincidental wasn't docked where days ago, yet his
it
based on
it
was two
reeled off a multitude of imaginings that sent
emotional system gyrating.
Victor considered
expended minute!
how much energy he must have
in just the past few seconds
— and how
profitably to
it
— not even one
would have served him much more
have remained
in the present.
Ken Roberts
Thanking the down Main Street
driver as he left the van, Victor headed into town.
forty-seven as he turned
himself rushing and pace. it
It
was
as
if
left
made
a stiff tail
The
onto
clock post showed nineFirst
Avenue. He noticed
a deliberate effort to slow his
wind was pushing him along. But
wasn't anything so obvious as that
—
it
was
just those
invisible thoughts.
He
Watt Street, where the automobile traffic began, and looked down it to see if the Children's Home was visible.
crossed
No, those towering old
the street blocked the view.
he
tried to look
trees providing a tunnel
Coming up on
First Street
over
now,
through the glare in the front windows of the
Daily Gazette building and see Mr. or Mrs. Jessup.
There was the courthouse, a block away but in
and
its size
stature.
he had business
Thoughts
how
still
there,
Since he had been in it
it,
still
imposing
and now that
was familiar rather than intimidating.
streamed through Victor's mind, telling him
foolish this search of his was.
They
told
him
there was
no
nothing to be found, and that he was impractical and
secret,
irresponsible to be expending
all this
time and energy on
nothing but a childish wild-goose chase.
When
Victor caught these thoughts, he stopped abruptly
on the sidewalk. Then a whole new barrage of thoughts came: What are you doing? People are staring at you! in his tracks
Get
going,
ready!
you have
That
deed's probably
Move!
He
stayed put and saw
what was going on was
to get to the courthouse!
all just
when he
more
clearly
than he ever had
here. First the thoughts told
him
just
that this
an irresponsible, childish waste of time. Then
actually, physically, stopped his pursuit
—
as those
A Rich Man's Secret thoughts told stop, but to
Amid
him
to
do
—they
the flurry of rushing, conflicting thoughts coursing
through his mind, Victor more taught
shouting to not
rallied again,
keep pressing on! Very strange.
fully realized
him and what Clement's note 11
meant: Always seek
what Minnie had
to her in the Bible
1
the impossible.
'
Its
solution
just
lies
beyond
your mind.
Now
This had to be what that instruction meant.
how my mind
seen
how can this all
trust
1
it?
Yve
with nothing but chaos and conflict,
filled
So how can
I
mentally stand aside and watch
taking place? That's the great lesson Minnie taught me, or
might never have
And this is Come
known
to think of
it,
was a
there
what Clement was
For things are not tle,
is
that
life
past bury
strife!
its
all this
turmoil.
trying to teach Minnie.
this is also
what they seem. In
what he meant the world's
in the bivouac of Life, be not like
hero in the
outside
I
in his speech:
broad
dumb, driven
field
of bat-
Be a
cattle!
Trust no future, howe'er pleasant,
let
the
dead
dead. Act, act in the living present. Heart within, and
God o'erhead. "fust
beyond your mind" means "no future" and
past." Stopping
mind
is
"just
and taking a good look
beyond"
it.
So
this
is
"the
at what's going
where
my
Heart
is,
on
with
dead
in
my
"God
o'erhead."
A sense of calm swept through him; a feeling of tranquility. Victor looked over at the courthouse and crossed Park
more slowly than those thoughts
Street, deliberately walking
him
told
to. It
occurred to him that the way
it
mostly was
now, he was a slave to the thoughts in his mind, and that task was to reverse this: His job was to actually
way
his
slave
mind now operated
so that these thoughts
and not the master. He
his
change the
became the
also considered that, based
upon
Ken Roberts
170
what he learned from Minnie, be brought about by force or
transformation could not
this
but just the observation of
will,
the entire process would bring about the change.
All
this, in less
time than
Now
other side of Park Street. eat
first
and then check
his shoulder at the dining
when he This
is
took him to cross over to the
his
in at the
Victor silently responded.
eat,
ing.
it
mind was
Records
He
room windows
recalled C.
W.s note
But
I
to go
did just
in the Park
Hotel
had control of him
again.
he thought. These
impossible,
office.
him
actually looked back over
realized that his thoughts
Then he
telling
thoughts are too overpower-
to
Minnie
in the Bible
and
remembered himself again. Victor bounded up the steps to the courthouse and pushed
open one of
its
heavy doors. His footsteps made sharp,
tall,
hollow sounds across the office all
He
entered the Land Records
and saw four people gathered around one of the
looking
men
floor.
down
intently at
desks,
some paperwork. One of the two
looked up and spoke to Victor.
"Yes,
may I help
"Ah,
yes," said Victor, nervously. Just
you?"
nervousness and tried to see
spoke to a
woman
deed — from
its
then he noticed his
cause. "I was in yesterday
here about obtaining a copy of an old
1899." Victor quickly studied the two
around the desk.
and
Yes, the
one who helped him was
women
there.
She
looked up and smiled.
"Oh,
yes.
Hello there. Yes, your deed was brought in very
soon after we opened this morning. Apparently trouble locating it among the old records." "That's great," said Victor.
clenched and relaxed them.
He
they had no
noticed his hands were
A Rich Man's Secret your envelope
"Let's see,
is
right over here."
She went
to
another desk and picked up a very wide, very long brown envelope with a waxed-string and fastener attached. She
unwound
the string, opened the envelope
flap,
and pulled out
a single sheet of white paper. Walking to the counter where
Victor stood, she began looking "Yes, this erty, if
is
it
over.
the most recent deed recorded on the prop-
you could call
it
the paper sideways, "in
ed
it
recent
May
—
it
was recorded," she turned
of 1899."
She smiled and hand-
to Victor.
He was
very excited and noticed his hands shaking as he
took the copy.
He
written.
He
could see
was handling
this wasn't the original
it
had
been originally hand-
all
very gingerly and then realized
it
and wasn't
The woman
delicate.
noticed this and smiled.
"Oh,
this
wonderful, just fantastic!" Victor
is
mind racing now. All he wanted and study every inch of
it.
to
do was go
"How much
is
sit
said, his
someplace
the fee for this?"
"Five dollars," the lady replied.
Victor laid the copy
out of his wallet.
he thought
worth
It's
five
pulled five dollars
hundred— even
five thousand.'
to himself.
"Thank you up his
on the counter and
very
much
for
your help," Victor
said,
picking
prize.
"Not looking
at all," the lady replied. "I
hope
it's
what you're
for."
Victor smiled, turned for the door, and the next thing he
knew, he was standing on the front steps outside the courthouse. Where was
1
the last
walking from the Records
few moments?
office
,
I
don't even
across the foyer,
remember
and out
the front
Ken Roberts
172
doors. Insidious. Yes, that's a very accurate term to describe
how
thoughts operate. It
was a splendid
day,
even with the heat
and flowers around the courthouse were
rising.
The
trees
so fresh
and
vibrant. Victor inhaled a deep breath of clean park air
and
decided to
down
sit
right here,
all
on the edge of
a large planter,
and enjoy every word of this deed.
He
chuckled to himself. Here he was,
to Disneyland, all It
like a child
a trip
worked up over a copy of an old deed.
looked almost a hundred years old: completely hand-
even the recording mark was dated and signed by
written,
hand. There was the
title
—Land Deed. Then
bounds description of the property running graphs.
It's
a wonder they got so
page; the handwriting larger
on
and
for several para-
much information all on one Maybe the original deed is
isn't all that tiny.
copy was reduced
this
a meets-and-
to fit
on one page by
the photo-
copying machine. Here's some legal
Clement Watt deeded
Home
Children's
according to
Here
its
it is!
mumbo
jumbo, but from what
the property
from
his
own name
Foundation, with directions that
it
I
can
tell,
over to the
be governed
by-laws.
"This grant
is
in fee simple
and
it is
conditioned
upon the foundation of preserving the statue of the well I have placed on the property. It must henceforth and forever remain on this property, completely visible and accessible both to the property's residents and That's that well
7 .
it!
Victor read
it
again.
visitors alike."
Now
what's so special about
A Rich Man's Secret As
173
Victor waited for someone to open the door, he wondered
he looked presentable. He
Home
if
practically ran to the Children's
from the courthouse and was
He
out of breath.
still
straightened his hair and wiped his brow with his fingers.
Mrs. Dowell answered the door. "Hello, Mrs. Dowell.
you
If
recall,
I'm Victor Truman.
I
was here yesterday meeting with Mr. McCully."
Truman. Nice to
"Yes, Mr. "I
know
see Mr.
I'm always showing up unannounced, but could
McCully
"Oh,
I
few moments?"
for just a
not here
he's
now. He's hosting a group of gen-
just
tlemen on a river cruise after
see you again."
this
morning.
expect him back
I
lunchtime."
"You mean the Coincidental 1." "Yes.
Have you seen
"Yes,
I
gone
this
first
saw
morning
"They
it
as
I
it?"
two days ago on the
came
river.
Then
was
it
into town."
rather early this morning," she smiled.
left
"Mrs. Dowell, in the newspaper account of the dedication
ceremony of
home back
this
an inscription on
its
in 1899, a statue of a well with
roof was mentioned.
Is
that well
still
on
the property?"
"Why,
yes.
It's
just
around back, down a
little
path to a
slight clearing."
"Would "Oh,
down and
it
yes,
be okay
by
all
if
I
went down
means. Certainly
to look at it?" it's
all right.
Just
go on
take your time."
"Thank you, Mrs. Dowell. Thank you very much." Victor wondered if Mr. McCully had said anything about himself or the reason for his tainly
was kind and
cordial.
visit yesterday.
Anyway, she
cer-
Ken Roberts
He
the big broad porch and walked on the law
left
around the house to the back. Several children played in tl yard while a young girl in her teens supervised. She looked i as Victor
came around the
he pretended he was
corner.
Not wanting
to startle h
M
!
./