The Wall Between

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The Wall Between Page 15

by Sara Ware Bassett


  CHAPTER XV

  ELLEN'S VENGEANCE

  It was useless to pretend that Ellen's death did not bring to Lucy Webstera sense of relief and freedom. It was as if some sinister, menacing powerthat had suppressed every spontaneous impulse of her nature had suddenlybeen removed and left her free at last to be herself. Until now she hadnot realized how tired she was,--not alone physically tired but tired ofgroping her way to avoid the constant friction which life with her auntengendered.

  For the first few days after the funeral she kept Melvina with her and didnothing but rest. Then returning energy brought back her normal desire foraction, and she began to readjust her plans. Together the two womencleaned the house from top to bottom, rooting into trunks, chests, andcupboards, and disposing of much of the litter that Ellen had accumulated.Afterward Melvina took her leave, and Lucy turned her mind torenovations.

  She would have new paper and fresh paint, she decided; also thelong-coveted chintz hangings; and to this end she would make an expeditionto the village to see what could be procured there in the way of artisticmaterials. It might be necessary for her to go to Concord, or even toBoston for the things she wanted.

  In the meantime, since she was driving to town, perhaps she had bettertake along her aunt's will. There must be formalities to be observedregarding it, and although she was not at all sure what they were, Mr.Benton would of course know.

  But search as she would, the white envelope with its imposing red seal wasnowhere to be found. She went through every drawer in her bureau, everypigeonhole in her desk; she ransacked closet and bookshelf; she evenemptied all her belongings upon the bed and examined each articlecarefully to see if the missing document had by any chance strayed into afantastic hiding place; but the paper failed to come to light.

  What could have become of it? The envelope had been there, that she knew.Only a week ago she had seen it in the top drawer of her desk. She wouldstake her oath that she had not removed it. Vague disquietude tookpossession of her. Tony had always been honest, and of Melvina's integritythere could be no question. As for Ellen, had she not herself put the willinto the girl's keeping--as a weapon with which to meet this veryemergency? It was incredible, preposterous to assume that she had taken itback, especially when one considered her helplessness to do so unaided.That solution might as well be dismissed as ridiculous.

  The paper was lost, that was all there was to it. Lost!

  In her own absent-mindedness, or in a moment of confusion and weariness,she had either accidentally destroyed it, or she had removed it from itscustomary place to a safer spot and forgotten where she had put it.

  Yet, after all, how foolish it was of her to worry. Doubtless Mr. Bentonhad a copy of the document, and if she made full confession of herstupidity he would know what to do. Didn't lawyers always keep copies ofevery legal paper they drew up? They must of course do so.

  Therefore without breathing a word of her troubles to the Howes--not evento Martin--she set forth to the village, her dreams of redecorating thehouse being thrust, for the time being, entirely into the background bythis disquieting happening.

  Mr. Benton was alone in his stuffy little office when she arrived.Evidently his professional duties were not pressing, for he was hunched upover a small air-tight stove and amid a smudge of tobacco smoke wasreading "Pickwick Papers." At the entrance of a client, however, and thisclient in particular, he rose in haste, and slipping simultaneously intohis alpaca coat and his legal manner--the two seemed to be a one-piecegarment--held out his hand with a mixture of solicitude and pleasure.

  "My dear Miss Webster," he began. "I hope you are well. You have sustaineda great loss since I last beheld you, a great loss."

  He drew forward a second armchair similar to the one in which he had beensitting and motioned Lucy to accept it.

  "Your aunt was a worthy woman who will be profoundly missed in thecommunity," he continued in a droning voice.

  Lucy did not answer. In fact the lawyer did not seem to expect she would.He was apparently delivering himself of a series of observations whichcame one after the other in habitual sequence, and which he preferredshould not be interrupted.

  "Death, however, is the common lot of mankind and must come to us all," hewent on in the same singsong tone, "and I hope that in the thought of yourdevotion to the deceased you will find comfort."

  Having now terminated the introduction with which he was accustomed topreface his remarks on all such occasions, he regarded the girl in thechair opposite him benignly.

  "I was intending to come to see you," he went on more cheerfully, and yetbeing careful to modulate his words so that they might still retain thebereavement vibration, "but you have forestalled me, I see. I did not wishto hurry you unduly."

  "I have been tired," Lucy replied simply, "but I am rested now and quiteready to do whatever is necessary."

  "I am glad to hear that, very glad," Mr. Benton returned. "Of course thereis no immediate haste; nevertheless it is well to straighten out suchmatters as soon as it can conveniently be done. When do you contemplateleaving town?"

  Lucy met the question with a smile.

  "Oh, I don't intend to leave Sefton Falls," she said quickly. "I havegrown very fond of the place and mean to remain here."

  "Indeed," nodded Mr. Benton. "That is interesting. I am glad to hear weare not to lose you from the village."

  He rubbed his hands and continued to nod thoughtfully.

  "About how soon, if I might ask so personal a question, do you think youcould be ready to hand over the house to the new tenant?" he at lastventured with hesitation.

  "I'm afraid I don't understand you."

  The lawyer seemed surprised.

  "You knew of your aunt's will?"

  "I knew she had made a will, yes, sir. She gave it to me to keep forher."

  "You were familiar with the contents of it?"

  "Not entirely so," Lucy answered. "I knew she had left me the house andsome money. She told me that much."

  "U--u--m!" observed Mr. Benton. "But the second will--she spoke to you ofthat also?"

  "I don't know what you mean."

  "You were not cognizant that a few days before the deceased passed--shallwe say, away"--he paused mournfully,--"that she made a new will andrevoked the previous one?"

  "No."

  "No one told you that?"

  "No, sir."

  The lawyer straightened himself. Matters were becoming interesting.

  "There was a second will," he declared with deliberation. "It was drawn upone morning in your aunt's room, with Miss Melvina Grey, Mr. CalebSaunders, and the boy Tony as witnesses."

  Lucy waited breathlessly.

  "This will," went on Mr. Benton, "provides for quite a differentdisposition of the property. I must beg you to prepare yourself for adisappointment."

  The girl threw back her head.

  "Go on, please," she commanded.

  "Quite a different disposition of the property," repeated Mr. Benton,dwelling on the cadence of the phrase.

  "What is it?"

  The man delayed.

  "Have you any reason to suppose, Miss Webster, that your aunt was--shallwe say annoyed, with you?"

  "I knew she did not like the way I felt about some things," admittedLucy.

  "But did not some vital difference of opinion arise between you recently?"Mr. Benton persisted.

  "I spoke my mind to Aunt Ellen the other day," confessed the girl. "I hadto."

  "Ah! Then that explains matters!"

  "What matters?"

  "The somewhat strange conditions of the will."

  Having untangled the enigma to his own satisfaction, Mr. Benton proceededto sit back and enjoy its solution all by himself.

  "Can't you tell me what they are?" Lucy at last inquired impatiently.

  "I can enlighten you, yes. In fact, it is my duty to do so."

  Rising, he went to the desk drawer and made a pretense of fumbling throughhis papers; but it was easy to see that
the document he sought had beencarefully placed on the top of the sparse, untidy pile that cluttered theinterior of the rickety piece of furniture.

  "Perhaps," he remarked, "there is no real need to burden your mind withlegal formalities; nevertheless----"

  "Oh, don't bother to read me the whole will," broke out Lucy sharply."Just tell me in plain terms what Aunt Ellen has done."

  It was obvious that Mr. Benton did not at all relish the off-handedness ofthe request.

  He depended not a little on his professional pomposity to bolster up acertain lack of confidence in himself, and stripped of this legal regaliahe shriveled to a very ordinary person indeed.

  "Your aunt," he began in quite a different tone, "has left her property toMr. Martin Howe."

  Lucy recoiled.

  "To whom?"

  "To Martin Howe."

  There was an oppressive pause.

  "To Martin Howe?" the girl stammered at length. "But there must be somemistake."

  Mr. Benton met her gaze kindly.

  "I fear there is no mistake, my dear young lady," he said.

  "Oh, I don't mean because my aunt has cut me off," Lucy explained withpride. "She of course had a right to do what she pleased. But to leave theproperty to Martin Howe! Why, she would scarcely speak to him."

  "So I have gathered," the lawyer said. "That is what makes the will soremarkable."

  "It is preposterous! Martin will never accept it in the world."

  "That contingency is also provided for," put in Mr. Benton.

  "How?"

  "The property is willed to the legatee--house, land, and money--to bepersonally occupied by said beneficiary and not sold, deeded, or givenaway on the conditions--a very unusual condition this second one----"Again Mr. Benton stopped, his thumbs and finger neatly pyramided into aminiature squirrel cage, over the top of which he regarded his clientmeditatively. His reverie appeared to be intensely interesting.

  "Very unusual indeed," he presently concluded absently.

  "Well?" demanded Lucy.

  "Ah, yes, Miss Webster," he continued, starting at the interrogation. "AsI was saying, the conditions made by the deceased are unusual--peculiar,in fact, if I may be permitted to say so. The property goes to Mr. MartinHowe on the condition that in six months' time he personally rebuilds thewall lying between the Howe and Webster estates and now in a state ofdilapidation."

  "He will never do it," burst out Lucy indignantly, springing to her feet.

  "In that case the property goes unreservedly to the town of Sefton Falls,"went on Mr. Benton in an even tone, "to be used as a home for thedestitute of the county."

  The girl clinched her hands. It was a trap,--a last, revengeful, defiantact of hatred.

  The pity that any one should go down into the grave with such bitternessof heart was the girl's first thought.

  Then the cleverness of the old woman's plot began to seep into her mind.All unwittingly Martin Howe was made a party in a diabolical scheme todefraud her--the woman who loved him--of her birthright, of the home thatshould have been hers.

  The only way he could restore to her what was her own was to marry her,and to do that he must perform the one deed he had pledged himself neverto be tempted into: he must rebuild the wall. Otherwise the property wouldpass into other hands.

  Nothing could so injure the Howe estate as to have a poor farm next door.Ellen of course knew that. Ah, it was a vicious document--that last Willand Testament of Ellen Webster.

  Mr. Benton's voice broke in upon Lucy's musings.

  "The deceased," he added with a final grin of appreciation, "appoints Mr.Elias Barnes as executor, _he being_," the lawyer quoted from the writtenpage, "_the meanest man I know_."

  Thus did the voice of the dead speak from the confines of the grave! Deathhad neither transformed nor weakened the intrepid hater. From her aunt'scoffin Lucy could seem to hear vindictive chuckles of revenge and hatred,and a mist gathered before her eyes.

  She had had no regrets for the loss of Ellen's body; but she could not butlament with genuine grief the loss of her soul.

 

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