Ten camels left Beersheba with a mission no caravan had ever carried before. Targum Pseudo-Jonathan on Genesis 24:10 notes something most readers breeze past: "all the goodly treasures of his lord were in his hand." Not a selection of treasures. Not a representative sample. All of them.
Abraham did not send his servant with a negotiator's purse. He sent him with the entire estate. The message to the bride's family was therefore the same message Abraham had always lived by: what God has given me is not mine to hoard. If this journey is blessed, take what you need.
The ten camels traveled northeast to Aram, to the city of Nachor on the banks of the Pherat — the Euphrates. This was not a short trip. It was the reversal of Abraham's own original journey. Decades earlier he had walked south and west out of that country at God's command (Genesis 12:1). Now his servant was walking back, carrying everything Abraham had accumulated since, to bring a daughter of that country home.
The Targum's detail about "all the goodly treasures" tells us something about trust. Abraham trusted his servant with the entirety of his house. And he trusted God with the outcome. When you travel on behalf of someone else's dream, you do not bargain. You bring everything. And you let the One who sent you decide what it buys.