The Waverly Tontine by Saul Isler
Colin Waverly tells the epic story of his father's shifty investment scheme, and what became of the capital. Image generated with OpenAI If word of it had ever spread, Father's tontine would most certainly have become the most famous in history. But it had been held the darkest of secrets until I learned of it just this past week. Outside of its participants, I may be the only one to know of its provenance. And its stunning conclusion. My name is Colin Waverly. My Father - God love him, he was a good one, but I hardly knew him - Richard Townshend Waverly, Dickie to his friends and colleagues, was the instigator of the Waverly Tontine. Thus its eponymous name. Tontine? I presumed you understood. It's, well, a cross between a wager and a life insurance policy, but isn't a life insurance policy, after all, nothing more than a wager? One by which you deign to be the sole beneficiary. What informed me of the Waverly Tontine was a wax-sealed, hand-written le...