This is episode twenty-nine of the novel, From Here To 1137. If you would like to purchase From Here To 1137, it is available on Amazon in Kindle format or paperback.
Good Stock
When Tom returned, he met with Gene Francis at his office. He informed Gene of the investment. Gene was furious. And fuel was added to his flaming disgust when Tom refused to tell him where the stock tip came from. He made up a story that he had found the twenty-five thousand dollars behind a freezer in the mud room.
The week ended. Saturday morning and afternoon were occupied by a farm implement show in Ft. Wayne, sponsored by International Harvester. Then it was back home.
Not only did Tom sit and wait, he also forgot. Between the mundane winter chores around the farm, he spent a couple of days reading. Reading was his great distraction. From time to time, Edgar and the mild weather of Costa Rica and warm Pacific breezes fancied his imagination. However, it was only in passing.
‘Maybe I should visit Edgar,” Tom thought. ‘Nah, there would be questions and denials. Edgar and I are like vinegar and oil. We will never mix well. I hate seeing him waste his life. He has dreamed, planned, studied, and worked to get into a good law school. More than me, he must be feeling his life is a waste. Maybe I can do something for him.”
‘I wonder how Debbie is getting along in college. I hope our futures are set—together. I can’t keep secret forever; the pod in my cornfield. Maybe Gordon will come back someday, soon, and take it away.”
Tom laid down his book and walked into the kitchen. He warmed a can of tomato soup and fixed a ham salad sandwich. He sat at the kitchen table. Halfway through the meal, the phone rang.
He picked up the wall phone extension in the kitchen. “Hello.”
“Tom, this is Gene. I need to see you in my office immediately.”
“Sure, I’ll be there in twenty minutes.”
Tom poured the remainder of the soup down the drain. He wrapped the uneaten portion of the sandwich in a napkin. He slung on his coat, and he and the sandwich headed for the truck. He let the truck warm up for a minute while eating, taking a couple of bites from the sandwich. Then he backed from the drive and drove toward Gene’s office.
‘I wonder what’s up?” He thought. “Gene sounded, well, I’m not sure how he sounded. I’ve never heard him sound like that before. I can’t tell whether he’s excited or downright depressed. There’s probably some problem with the trust. I give him the advice Brain gave me: sit and wait.’
‘Gene has a lot of responsibility, and it’s probably getting to him. I guess that’s why you shouldn’t have friends as clients. It gets personal. He probably has a big decision to make and wants to give me a heads up.’
Depressing and terrible thoughts about the farm pestered Tom. He even wondered if Gene had received information about Edgar, and maybe something had happened to him.
Tom arrived, parked his truck, and walked into the office.
“Go on in,” Gene’s secretary said, “Mr. Francis is waiting for you.”
Tom walked in and closed the door.
“Have a seat, Tom,” Gene said.
Tom sat in a chair in front of Gene’s desk.
“What’s going on, Mr. Francis?”
“Have you been watching the stock market?” Gene asked.
“No, I was told to sit and wait. Have the stocks taken a dip?”
“What’s the name of that company, again?” Gene said.
“Braxton Industrial Coating.”
“Again, how much did you pay per share?” Gene asked.
“I paid a dollar per share.”
Gene picked up a small slip of paper. He held it up to read. “Right now it’s at five dollars and twenty-five cents per share.”
“I should probably contact a broker and sell,” Tom said calmly.
“How did you know?” Gene said.
“Know what?”
“How did you know about a stock that would jump four times the purchase price?” Gene said.
“One can never be sure.”
“You’re saying out of all the companies on the stock exchange, you picked the biggest winner,” Gene said.
“I suppose beginner’s luck.”
Gene stared at Tom.
“I don’t think you’re buying that, are you?””
“I don’t know what to believe,” Gene said.
“I overheard a couple of guys talking at that farm implement show in Ft. Wayne a couple of days ago.”
“And based on a couple of guys just talking, you invested twenty-five thousand?” Gene said.
“That’s about it.”
“Did you hear anything else?” Gene asked.
“If you mean any other stock tips, no, that was about it.”
Gene picked up the phone and pushed a few numbers. “Yeah, this is Gene Francis. Can you tell me what Braxton Coating is at now?”
Gene waited a moment. “OK, thanks.”
Gene set the phone down. He looked at Tom and grinned. “It’s up another fifty-five cents.”
“On what information did you buy?” Gene asked.
“The company was about to go under. There were some anxious investors who were willing to lose a lot rather than all. They were certain that Braxton could not hold out until a big contract came along. When I talked to Braxton himself, he was unaware of the contract coming his way.”
“Are you holding on to the stock for a while?” Gene asked.
“Well,” Tom smiled, “the market is volatile. And before it swings in the other direction, I’d like to sell off and pay the farm’s debt.”
“That sounds like a good thing,” Gene said. “I’d sure sleep better.”
“I figured you would,” Tom said. “And me too.”
