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A Cousin's Conspiracy: or, A Boy's Struggle for an Inheritance
A Cousin's Conspiracy: or, A Boy's Struggle for an Inheritanceполная версия

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A Cousin's Conspiracy: or, A Boy's Struggle for an Inheritance

Язык: Английский
Год издания: 2017
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“Do you know who I am?” demanded Clarence haughtily.

“No, I don’t, nor do I care.”

“I am Clarence Ray, son of Squire Stephen Ray. He is a magistrate, and he can send you to jail.”

These words of Clarence had the effect he desired. The stranger released him, and eyed him with close scrutiny.

“So you are the son of Stephen Ray?” he said.

“Yes. What have you to say now?”

“That you had no right to run into me, whoever your father may be.”

“I shall report your insolence to my father. I shall charge you with violently assaulting me.”

“I might have known you were Stephen Ray’s son,” said the stranger thoughtfully.

“Do you know my father?” asked Clarence.

“I am on my way to call upon him.”

“I don’t think it will do any good. He never gives money to tramps.”

“I have a great mind to give you another shaking up,” said the man, and in some fear Clarence edged away from him.

It was evident that this shabby-looking stranger had not a proper respect for those who were in a higher station.

“I will tell him not to give you anything,” continued Clarence.

“Like father, like son,” said the stranger thoughtfully, apparently not disturbed by the boy’s threats.

Evidently he was no common tramp, or he would have been more respectful to the son of the man from whom he was probably about to ask a favor.

“You just wait till you see my father. He’ll give you a lecture that you won’t soon forget.”

“You’d better get on your wheel, boy, and go right along,” said the stranger calmly.

“Do you know where my father lives?”

“Yes, at yonder fine house. I see him sitting out on the piazza. Shall we go along together?”

“No, I don’t keep such company as you.”

“And yet some day you may be as poor and friendless as myself.”

“That isn’t very likely. My father is a very rich man.”

“I knew him when he was poor.”

More and more puzzled by the independent manner of this shabby stranger, Clarence made a spurt, and soon found himself in the grounds of his father’s house.

“With whom were you talking, Clarence?” asked Stephen Ray as his son joined him on the piazza.

“One of the most impudent tramps I ever came across,” answered Clarence. “He made an attack upon me, and pulled me from my bicycle.”

Stephen Ray’s cheek flamed with anger. An insult to his son was an insult to him.

“Why did he do this? How dared he?”

“Because I happened to touch him as I passed,” answered Clarence.

“He actually pulled you from your bicycle?” asked Stephen Ray, almost incredulous.

“Yes.”

“I should like to meet him. I should feel justified in ordering his arrest.”

“You will have a chance to meet him. He told me he was going to call upon you – there he is now, entering the gate.”

Stephen was glad to hear it. He wanted to empty the vails of his wrath on the audacious offender.

He was accustomed to seeing men of the stamp of this stranger quail before him and show nervous alarm at his rebukes. He had no doubt that his majestic wrath would overwhelm the shabby outcast who had audaciously assaulted his son and heir.

He rose to his feet, and stood the personification of haughty displeasure, as the poor man who dared his anger walked composedly up the path. He now stood by the piazza steps.

“It is well you have come here,” began the squire in a dignified tone. “My son tells me that you have committed an unprovoked outrage upon him in dragging him from his wheel. I can only conclude that you are under the influence of liquor.”

Stephen Ray waited curiously to hear what the man would say. He was prepared for humble apologies.

“I am no more drunk than yourself, if that is what you mean, Stephen Ray.”

Squire Ray was outraged and scandalized.

“You must be drunk or you would not dare to talk in this way. Who authorized you to address me in this familiar way?”

“You are only a man, I believe, Stephen Ray. I have addressed you as respectfully as you have spoken to me.”

“Respect – to you?” repeated Mr. Ray disdainfully. “Has the time come when we must be respectful to tramps?”

“A poor tramp is quite as deserving of respect as a rich rascal.”

“What do you mean by that?” demanded the squire suspiciously.

“It was a general remark.”

“It is well that it was. But it has no application in the present instance. If you are poor I will give you a quarter, but only on condition that you apologize to my son.”

The stranger laughed.

“Why should I apologize to your son?” he asked.

“You pulled him off his wheel. Do you deny it?”

“No, I do not. Do you know what he did?”

“He brushed against you with his wheel, he tells me, accidentally.”

“So that is his version of it? He deliberately ran into me.”

“I gave you warning. I said ‘Out of the way, there!’” interrupted Clarence.

“Yes, but you had no right on the sidewalk.”

“It seems to me, sir, that you are remarkably independent for a man of your rank. Even if it had been as you say, you had no right to assault my son. I might have you arrested on your own confession, but I will forbear doing so on condition that you leave town at once.”

“I have a little business with you first.”

“If you expect alms, you have come to the wrong man.”

“I know very well that you are not charitable. I used to be acquainted with you.”

“Who are you?”

“My name is Benjamin Bolton.”

Stephen Ray looked startled.

“Benjamin Bolton!” he repeated, half incredulous. “I can’t believe it.”

CHAPTER XXV

A STARTLING DISCLOSURE

“Look at me closely, Stephen Ray,” said the strange visitor. “I think you will see some traces of the Bolton you used to know.”

Stephen Ray did examine his visitor closely. Against his will he was obliged to acknowledge the resemblance of the man before him to one who in past times had had an intimate acquaintance with his affairs.

“You may be Benjamin Bolton,” he said after a pause, “but if so, you have fallen off greatly in your appearance. When I first knew you, you were well dressed and – ”

“Respectable, I suppose you mean to say?”

“Well, respectable, if you will have it so. Now you look more like a tramp than a lawyer.”

“True as gospel, every word of it. But it isn’t too late to mend. That’s an old proverb and a true one. It is quite in the line of possibility that I should get back to the position from which I fell.”

“Perhaps so, but I’m not very sanguine of it.”

“With your help nothing is impossible.”

“You must not count upon that,” said Stephen Ray stiffly. “It is a good while since we parted company. I don’t myself care to renew the acquaintance.”

“But I do,” rejoined Bolton with emphasis.

“I have very little time at my disposal,” said Ray, pulling out an elegant gold watch and consulting it.

“I think it may be well for you to spare me a little time,” went on Bolton quietly.

There was something in his tone that sounded like a threat, and Stephen Ray could not wholly conceal his uneasiness.

“Well,” he said, “I will give you ten minutes. Get through your business, whatever it is, as soon as possible.”

“Hadn’t you better send your son away?” suggested Bolton significantly.

“Why should I?”

But on second thoughts Mr. Ray concluded to act on the hint, and turning to Clarence he said: “Clarence, you might take another spin on your wheel.”

This did not suit Clarence at all. His curiosity had been excited by his father’s change of front toward the objectionable stranger, and he counted on finding out the reason for it.

“Why can’t I stay?” he grumbled.

“This man and I have a little private business together.”

He spoke firmly, and Clarence knew by his tone that further remonstrance would be unavailing, so with a dissatisfied look he left the room.

“Now, sir,” said Stephen Ray sharply, when his son had taken his departure. “I gave you ten minutes. You will need to be expeditious.”

“It will take more than ten minutes – what I have to say,” returned Bolton coolly. “I am rather tired of standing, so you will excuse me if I sit down.”

As he spoke he dropped into a comfortable chair three feet from his host.

“Confound his impudence!” thought Ray, much annoyed.

“I think we had better go indoors,” he said.

He did not care to be seen in an apparently friendly conversation with a man like Bolton.

“I think myself it may be better.”

He followed Ray into a room which the latter used as a library and office, and took care to select a comfortable seat.

“Really, Stephen Ray,” he remarked, glancing around him at the well-filled bookcases, the handsome pictures, and the luxurious furniture, “you are very nicely fixed here.”

“I suppose you didn’t come to tell me that,” responded Stephen Ray with a sneer.

“Well, not altogether, but it is as well to refer to it. I have known you a good many years. I remember when you first came here to visit your uncle in the character of a poor relation. I don’t believe you had a hundred dollars to your name.”

Such references grated upon the purse-proud aristocrat, who tried to persuade himself that he had always been as prosperous as at present.

“There is no occasion for your reminiscences,” he said stiffly.

“No, I suppose you don’t care to think of those days now. Your cousin, Dudley, a fine young man, was a year or two older. Who would have thought that the time would come when you – the poor cousin – would be reigning in his place?”

“If that is all you have to say, our interview may as well close.”

“It isn’t all I have to say. I must indulge in a few more reminiscences, though you dislike them. A few years passed. Dudley married against his father’s wishes; that is, his father did not approve of his selection, and he fell out of favor. As he lost favor you gained it.”

“That is true enough, but it is an old story.”

“Does it seem just that an own son should be disinherited and a stranger – ”

“A near relative,” corrected Stephen Ray.

“Well, a near relative, but less near than an only son. Does it seem right that Dudley should have been disinherited and you put in his place?”

“Certainly. My cousin disobeyed his father.”

“So he was left in poverty.”

“I don’t see how that concerns you, Benjamin Bolton. My uncle had the right to dispose of his property as he pleased.”

“Probably Dudley Ray is living in poverty now.”

“You are mistaken. He is dead.”

“Indeed! Poor fellow! He was a generous and high-minded man.”

“Whatever he may have been, he offended his father, and suffered the consequences.”

“Too true!”

“But I fail to understand why you should have come to discuss this matter with me.”

“When did Dudley die?”

“I can’t be sure as to the year. I think it was about a year after his father’s death.”

“I presume that his father’s injustice helped to hasten his end.”

“I won’t permit any reflections upon my dear uncle and benefactor. He did what he liked with his own. He felt that the estate would be better in my hands than in Dudley’s.”

“Admitting for a moment that this was so, did your heart prompt you to bestow a part of the estate on your unfortunate cousin?”

“No; for I am sure my uncle would have disapproved of such action on my part.”

“Do you know if he suffered much from poverty?”

“No; I did not concern myself with that, nor need you.”

“I would like to comment on one of your statements. You say that your uncle had a right to dispose of his estate as he pleased.”

“Do you dispute it?”

“No; I agree with you. Stephen Ray, was his estate disposed of according to his wishes?”

Mr. Ray started, and his face became flushed.

“What do you mean?” he asked.

“I mean that he bequeathed the estate to his son, and you took possession of it.”

Bolton spoke slowly, and eyed Stephen Ray keenly.

“Are you mad?” gasped Stephen. “How could I do that? His will, devising the estate to me, was duly probated, and I entered upon my inheritance by due process of law.”

“I know such a will was probated.”

“Then what have you to say?” demanded Stephen Ray defiantly. “Do you mean to deny that the will was genuine?”

“No.”

“Because if you do, you can go to the probate office, and submit the will to any judge of my uncle’s handwriting.”

“There will be no occasion. I admit that the will was written by him.”

“What do you mean, then?” asked Stephen Ray, showing relief.

“I mean this – that it was not his last will and testament.”

“Where is a later one? Produce it if you can?” said Stephen Ray triumphantly.

“You say this fearlessly because you found a later will – and destroyed it.”

“It is a vile slander!”

“No; I will swear that such a will was made.”

“If it was destroyed, he destroyed it himself.”

“No, he did not. I am willing to swear that when he died that will was in existence.”

“I don’t think your swearing will do much good,” sneered Stephen Ray.

“Perhaps so, but one thing has not occurred to you.”

“What is that?”

“A duplicate of the last will was placed in my hands. That will exists to-day!”

Stephen Ray started violently.

“I don’t believe it,” he said.

“Seeing is believing.”

“Then bring it here, and let me see it. However, there is one material circumstance that would make it of no value.”

“What is it?”

“My cousin Dudley is dead, and so is his son Ernest. There would be no one to profit by the production of the alleged will.”

Bolton was quite taken aback by this statement, as Stephen Ray perceived, and he plumed himself on the success of his falsehood.

“When did the boy die?” asked Bolton.

“About five years ago.”

“And where?”

“At Savannah,” answered Ray glibly.

“What should have taken him down there?”

“I am not positive, but I believe after his father’s death a Southern gentleman became interested in him and took him to Georgia, where the poor boy died.”

Bolton looked keenly at the face of his companion, and detected an expression of triumph about the eyes which led him to doubt the truth of his story. But he decided not to intimate his disbelief.

“That was sad,” he said.

“Yes, and as you will see, even had your story about the will been true, it would have made no difference in the disposal of the property.”

“Still the revelation of your complicity in the suppression of the last will would injure your reputation, Mr. Ray.”

“I can stand it,” answered Ray with assumed indifference. “You see, my dear fellow, you have brought your wares to the wrong market. Of course you are disappointed.”

“Yes, especially as I am dead broke.”

“No doubt.”

“And it prompts me to take my chances with the will in spite of the death of the rightful heirs.”

“What do you propose to do?”

“Lay the matter before a shrewd lawyer of my acquaintance.”

Stephen Ray looked uneasy. The lawyer might suggest doubts as to the truth of his story concerning Ernest’s decease.

“That would be very foolish,” he said.

“Would it? Then perhaps you can suggest a better course.”

“You are a man of education and have been a lawyer yourself. Get a place in the office of some attorney and earn an honest living.”

“You see how I am dressed. Who would employ me in this garb?”

“There is something in what you say. I feel for you, Bolton. Changed as you are, you were once a friend. I certainly haven’t any reason to feel friendly to you, especially as you came here with the intention of extorting money from me. But I can make allowance for you in your unfortunate plight, and am willing to do something for you. Bring me the document you say you possess, and I will give you fifty – no, a hundred dollars.”

Bolton eyed his prosperous companion with a cunning smile.

“No, Stephen Ray, I prefer to keep the will,” he replied, “though I can do nothing with it. Give me the money unconditionally, and if I get on my feet you will have nothing to fear from me.”

CHAPTER XXVI

BOUGHT OFF

Bolton’s reply did not quite suit Mr. Ray, but he felt that if he said too much about the will it would give it an exaggerated importance in the eyes of the man before him. So he answered carelessly: “I will give you the hundred dollars, but I wish it understood that it is all I can give you at any time. Don’t apply to me again, for it will be of no use.”

“I understand,” said Bolton non-committally.

“Shall I give you a check?”

“I could do better with the money. My name is not known now at any bank.”

“Well, I think I can accommodate you. I believe I have that sum in my desk.”

He opened a drawer in his secretary, and produced a hundred dollars in crisp new bills. They had been taken from the bank the day before for a different purpose.

Bolton took them joyfully. It was long since he had so much money in his possession. He had been his own worst enemy. Once a prosperous lawyer he had succumbed to the love of drink and gradually lost his clients and his position. But he had decided to turn over a new leaf, and he saw in this money the chance to reinstate himself, and in time recover his lost position.

“Thank you,” he said, but while there was relief there was no gratitude in his tone.

“And now,” said Stephen Ray, “I must ask you to leave me. I have important business to attend to. You will excuse me if I suggest it would be better to go away – to a distance – and try to build yourself up somewhat where you are not known.”

“I might go to Savannah.”

“Yes, to Savannah, if you think it will be to your advantage,” said Ray with equanimity.

The other noticed his manner, and he said to himself: “He is willing to have me visit Savannah. It is clear that Ernest did not die there.”

Benjamin Bolton left the house in a pleasant frame of mind. It was not the sum which he had received that exhilarated him. He looked upon it only as the first installment. It was clear that Stephen Ray feared him, for he was not an open-handed man, and would not have parted with his money unnecessarily.

Bolton had not arranged his campaign, but he was determined to raise himself in the world by playing on the fears of the man he had just visited.

“I wonder,” he said to himself, “whether Dudley Ray’s son is dead. If so the document is of no value, and though I should prefer to have it, I won’t insist. He was a strong and healthy boy, and he may still be living.”

This was a point not easy to ascertain.

He went to a restaurant and obtained a substantial meal, of which he stood very much in need. Then he went out for a stroll. He did not propose to leave the place yet.

As he was walking along he met Clarence Ray again, but not now on his wheel. The boy recognized him.

“Are you going to stay in town?” asked Clarence curiously.

“Not long.”

“Did you get through your business with pa?”

“Yes, for the present. I suppose you know that you have a cousin about your own age. I used to know him and his father.”

“Did you? His father is dead.”

“So I have understood. Do you happen to know where the son is?”

“Somewhere out West, I think.”

Bolton pricked up his ears. So it seemed that Stephen Ray had deceived him.

“I would give five dollars to know where he is,” he said slowly.

“Have you got five dollars?” Clarence asked doubtfully.

By way of answer Bolton took a roll of bills from his pocket. They were those which Stephen Ray had given him.

“Do you mean it?” asked Clarence in a more respectful tone.

“Yes, I mean it.”

“Why didn’t you ask pa?”

“He never liked the boy nor his father, and I don’t think he would tell me.”

“That is true. He didn’t like either of them.”

“I suppose you couldn’t find out for me?”

“I don’t know but I could,” answered Clarence brusquely.

He had a special use for five dollars, and it struck him that he might just as well earn the money offered by the stranger.

“If you could I would cheerfully pay you the five dollars. You see I used to know Ernest Ray and his father, and I would be pleased to meet them again.”

“Just so,” said Clarence complacently. “How long are you going to remain in town?”

“I did think of going to Elmira to-night, but I think on the whole I will stay at the hotel here till to-morrow morning.”

“That will give me time to find out,” said Clarence.

“All right! You had better not ask your father, for I don’t think he would tell you.”

“That’s so. He will be going out this evening, and then I will search in his desk. I saw a letter there once in which the boy’s name was mentioned. But I say, if you’ve got money why don’t you buy some new clothes?”

“Your suggestion is a good one,” said Bolton, smiling. “Come to look at myself I do appear shabby. But then I’m no dude. I dare say when you rode into me this morning you took me for a tramp.”

“Well, you did look like one.”

“That’s so. I can’t blame you.”

“Shall I find you at the hotel this evening?”

“Yes.”

“Then I’ll see what I can do.”

About seven o’clock Squire Ray went out to attend to a business meeting, and Clarence was left in possession of the study. He locked the door, and began to ransack his father’s desk. At length he succeeded in his quest.

Benjamin Bolton was sitting in the public-room of the hotel an hour later, smoking a cigar, and from time to time looking toward the door. Presently Clarence entered.

“Have you got it?” asked Bolton eagerly.

“Yes,” nodded Clarence.

He took a piece of paper from his vest pocket and handed it to Bolton.

It read thus: “Ernest Ray, Oak Forks, Iowa.”

“How did you get it?” asked Bolton.

“I found a letter in pa’s desk from an old man named Peter Brant, asking pa for some money for the boy, who was living with him.”

“When was that letter written?”

“About two years ago.”

“Thank you. This gives me a clue. Come out of doors and I will give you what I promised. It isn’t best that anyone should think we had dealings together.”

Five minutes later Clarence started for home, happy in the possession of a five-dollar bill.

“I never paid any money more cheerfully in my life,” mused Bolton. “Now I must find the boy!”

CHAPTER XXVII

OREVILLE

When Ernest and Luke Robbins started for California, they had no very definite plans as to the future. But they found among their fellow passengers a man who was just returning from the East, where he had been to visit his family. He was a practical and successful miner, and was by no means reluctant to speak of his success.

“When I landed in ’Frisco,” he said, “two years ago, I had just forty dollars left after paying the expenses of my trip. I couldn’t find anything to do in the city, so I set out for the mines.”

“Where did you go?” asked Luke, becoming interested.

“To Oreville. At least, that’s what they call it now. Then it didn’t have a name.”

“I hope you prospered,” said Ernest.

“Well, not just at first, but luck came after a while. When I reached the mines I was dead broke, and went to work for somebody else. After a while I staked out a claim for myself. Well, I won’t go into particulars, but I’ve got six thousand dollars salted down with a trust company in ’Frisco, and I’ve got a few hundred dollars about my clothes besides.”

“That’s the place for us, Ernest,” said Luke.

“So I think,” answered Ernest.

“Do you want to go to the mines?” asked the miner.

“Yes; we have our fortunes to make, and are willing to work.”

“Then go out to Oreville with me. Have you got any money?”

“We have enough to get there, and perhaps a little over.”

“That will do. I’ll set you to work on one of my claims. We will share and share alike. How will that suit you?”

“It seems fair. Do you think we can make enough to live upon?”

“That depends partly on yourselves and partly upon luck.”

“At any rate, we are willing to work,” said Ernest.

“Then I’m your friend, and will help you,” said the miner heartily. “Tom Ashton never goes back on his friends.”

This was very encouraging. Luke and Ernest were not dead broke, but were near it. They had less than forty dollars between them, and they had already found out that living was high in California. They remained but a day in San Francisco, and then started for Oreville with Mr. Ashton.

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