The Millionaire Baby

Anna Katharine Green
The Millionaire Baby, by Anna
Katharine Green

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Katharine Green
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Title: The Millionaire Baby
Author: Anna Katharine Green

Release Date: June 22, 2007 [eBook #21904]
Language: English
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THE MILLIONAIRE BABY
by
ANNA KATHARINE GREEN
Author of "The Filigree Ball," "The Leavenworth Case," Etc.

A. L. Burt Company, Publishers, New York
Copyright 1905 The Bobbs-Merrill Company January
Press of Braunworth & Co. Bookbinders and Printers Brooklyn, N. Y.

[Illustration: "HUSH! THERE IS NO DOUBT ON THAT TOPIC;
THE CHILD IS DEAD. LET THAT BE UNDERSTOOD BETWEEN
US." ]

CONTENTS
I Two Little Shoes
II "A Fearsome Man"
III A Charming Woman
IV Chalk-Marks

V The Old House in Yonkers
VI Doctor Pool
VII "Find the Child!"
VIII "Philo! Philo! Philo!"
IX The Bungalow
X Temptation
XI The Secret of the Old Pavilion
XII Behind the Wall
XIII "We Shall Have to Begin Again"
XIV Espionage
XV A Phantasm
XVI "An All-Conquering Beauty"
XVII In the Green Boudoir
XVIII "You Look As If--As If--"
XIX Frenzy
XX "What Do You Know?"
XXI Providence
XXII On the Second Terrace
XXIII A Coral Bead
XXIV "Shall I Give Him My Word, Harry?"

XXV The Work of an Instant
XXVI "He Will Never Forgive"
XXVII The Final Struggle

THE MILLIONAIRE BABY

I
TWO LITTLE SHOES
The morning of August eighteenth, 190-, was a memorable one to me.
For two months I had had a run of bad luck. During that time I had
failed to score in at least three affairs of unusual importance, and the
result was a decided loss in repute as well as great financial
embarrassment. As I had a mother and two sisters to support and knew
but one way to do it, I was in a state of profound discouragement. This
was before I took up the morning papers. After I had opened and read
them, not a man in New York could boast of higher hopes or greater
confidence in his power to rise by one bold stroke from threatened
bankruptcy to immediate independence.
The paragraph which had occasioned this amazing change must have
passed under the eyes of many of you. It created a wide-spread
excitement at the time and raised in more than one breast the hope of
speedy fortune. It was attached to, or rather introduced, the most
startling feature of the week, and it ran thus:
A FORTUNE FOR A CHILD.
By cable from Southampton.
A reward of five thousand dollars is offered, by Philo Ocumpaugh, to
whoever will give such information as will lead to the recovery, alive
or dead, of his six-year-old daughter, Gwendolen, missing since the

afternoon of August the 16th, from her home in ----- on-the-Hudson,
New York, U. S. A.
Fifty thousand dollars additional and no questions asked if she is
restored unharmed within the week to her mother at Homewood.
All communications to be addressed to Samuel Atwater, -----
on-the-Hudson.
A minute description of the child followed, but this did not interest me,
and I did not linger over it. The child was no stranger to me. I knew her
well and consequently was quite aware of her personal characteristics.
It was the great amount offered for her discovery and restoration which
moved me so deeply. Fifty thousand dollars! A fortune for any man.
More than a fortune to me, who stood in such need of ready money. I
was determined to win this extraordinary sum. I had my reason for
hope and, in the light of this unexpectedly munificent reward, decided
to waive all the considerations which had hitherto prevented me from
stirring in the matter.
There were other reasons less selfish which gave impetus to my resolve.
I had done business for the Ocumpaughs before and been well treated
in the transaction. I recognized and understood both Mr. Ocumpaugh's
peculiarities and those of his admired and devoted wife. As man and
woman they were kindly, honorable and devoted to many more
interests than those connected with their own wealth. I also knew their
hearts to be wrapped up in this child,--the sole offspring of a long and
happy union, and the actual as well as prospective inheritor of
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