CHAPTER XXII.
MRS. WALTER SCOTT AND THE WILL. Millbank, or, Roger Irving's ward | ||
22. CHAPTER XXII.
MRS. WALTER SCOTT AND THE WILL.
ROGER came from New York the next evening. He
could not stay from Millbank any longer. He had
made up his mind to face the inevitable. He would
make the best of it if Magdalen accepted Frank, and if she did
not, he would speak for himself at once. Roger was naturally
hopeful, and something told him that his chance was not lost
forever, that Frank was not so sure of Magdalen. He could
not believe that he had been so deceived or had misconstrued
her kind graciousness of manner toward himself. A thousand
little acts of hers came back to his mind and confirmed him in
the belief that unless she was a most consummate coquette, he
straight to Millbank without stopping at the office. He was
impatient to see Magdalen, but she was not on the steps to
meet him as was her custom when he returned from New York
or Boston, and only Mrs. Walter Scott's bland voice greeted
him as he came in.
“Magdalen was sick with one of her neuralgic headaches,”
she said, “and had not left her room that day.”
Roger would not ask her if it was settled. He would rather
put that question to Frank, who soon came in and inquired
anxiously for Magdalen. A person less observing than Roger
could not have failed to see that the Frank of to-day was not
the same as the Frank of yesterday. He did not mean to appear
differently, but he could not divest himself wholly of the
feeling that by every lawful right he was master where he had
been so long a dependent, and there was in his manner an air
of assurance and independence, and even of patronage, toward
Roger, who attributed it wholly to the wrong source, and when
his sister left the room for a moment, he said, “I suppose I
am to congratulate you, of course?”
Frank wanted to say yes, but the lie was hard to utter, and
he answered, “I think so. She wishes time to consider. Girls
always do, I believe.”
Roger knew little of girls, he said, and he tried to smile and
appear natural, and asked who had called at the office during
his absence, and if his insurance agent had been to see about
the mill and the shoe-shop.
Frank answered all his questions, and made some suggestions
of his own to the effect that if he were Roger he would insure
in another company, and do various other things differently.
“I am something of an old fogy, I reckon, and prefer following
in my father's safe track,” Roger said, with a laugh, and
then the conversation ceased and the two men separated.
Magdalen's headache did not seem to abate, and for several
days she kept her room, refusing to see any one but Hester
and Mrs. Walter Scott, who vied with each other in their attentions
nursing during those few days, and called Magdalen by every
pet name there was in her vocabulary, and kissed her at least
a dozen times an hour, and carried messages which she never
sent to Frank, who was in a state of great excitement, not only
with regard to Magdalen, but also the Will, thoughts of which
drove him nearly frantic. Every day of his life he mounted
the garret stairs, and groping his way to the loose plank, went
down on his knees to see that it was safe. The Will had a
wonderful fascination for him; he could not keep away from it,
and one morning he took it from the box, and carrying it to
the window, sat down to read it again, and see if it really did
give everything to him. For the first time then he noticed
the expression, “To the boy known as Roger Lennox Irving.”
It was a very singular way to speak of one's child, he
thought, and he wondered what it could mean, and why his
grandfather had, at the very last, made so unjust a will; and he
became so absorbed in thought as not to hear the steps on the
stairs, or see the woman who came softly to his side and stood
looking over his shoulder.
Magdalen had, at last, asked to see Frank. She had made
up her mind, and insisted upon being dressed, and meeting him
in her little sitting-room, which opened from her chamber.
“Do you feel quite equal to the task?” Mrs. Walter Scott
had said, kissing and caressing the poor girl, whose face was
deathly pale, save where the fever spots burned upon her
cheeks. “You don't know how beautiful you look,” she continued,
as she wrapped the shawl around Magdalen, and then,
with another kiss, went in quest of Frank.
No one had seen him except Celine, who remembered having
met him in the little passage leading to the garret stairs.
“He was there yesterday and the day before,” she said, and
then passed on, never dreaming of all which was to follow those
few apparently unimportant words.
“That is a strange place for Frank to visit every day,” Mrs.
she, too, started for the garret. She always stepped lightly,
and her soft French slippers scarcely made a sound as she went
up the stairs. Frank's back was toward her, and she advanced
so cautiously that she stood close behind him before he
was aware of her presence. She saw the soiled paper he held
in his hand, read a few words, and then uttered a cry of exultation,
which started Frank to his feet, where he stood confronting
her, his face as white as marble, and his eyes blazing with
excitement. His mother was scarcely less pale than himself,
and her eyes were fixed on his with an unflinching gaze.
“Ah!” she said, and in that single interjection was embodied
all the cruel exultation and delight and utter disregard
for Roger, and defiance of the world, which the cold, hard woman
felt.
Anon there broke about her mouth a peculiar kind of smile,
which showed her glittering teeth, and made Frank draw back
from her a step or two, while he held the paper closer in his
hand, and farther away from her. She saw the motion, and
there was something menacing in her attitude as she went close
to him, and whispered,—
“I was right, after all. There was another Will, which
somebody hid. Where did you find it?”
“Magdalen found it,” Frank involuntarily rejoined, mentally
cursing himself for his stupidity when it was too late.
“Magdalen found it? And is that what ails her? Let me
see it, please.”
For a moment Frank was tempted to refuse her request, but
something in her face compelled him to unfold the paper and
hold it while she read it through.
“Why, Frank, it gives you everything,” she exclaimed, with
joy thrilling in every tone, as she clutched his arm, and looked
into his face. “I never supposed it quite as good as this.”
“Mother,” Frank said, drawing back from her again, “are
you a fiend to exult so over Roger's ruin? Don't you see it
gives him a mere nothing, and he the only son?”
All the manhood of Frank's nature was roused by his
mother's manner, and he was tempted for a moment to tear
the will in shreds, and thus prevent the storm which he felt was
rising over Millbank.
“There may be a doubt about the `only son,”' Mrs. Walter
Scott replied. “A father does not often deal thus with his
only surviving son. What do you imagine that means?” and
she pointed to the words, “the boy known as Roger Lennox
Irving.”
Frank knew then what it meant; knew that in some way a
doubt as to Roger's birth had been lodged in his grandfather's
mind, but it found no answering chord in his breast.
“Never will I believe that of Roger's mother. He is more
an Irving than I am, everybody says. Shame on you for crediting
the story, even for a moment, and my curse on the one
who put that thought in the old man's heart, for it was put
there by somebody.”
He was cursing her to her face, and he was going on to say
still more when she laid her hand over his mouth, and said, —
“Stop, my son. You don't know whom you are cursing,
nor any of the circumstances. You are no judge of Jessie
Morton's conduct. Far be it from me to condemn her now
that she is dead. She was a silly girl, easily influenced, and
never loved your grandfather, who was three times her age.
We read that the parents' sin shall be visited upon the children,
and if she sinned, her child has surely reaped the consequences,
or will when this Will is proved. Poor Roger! I, too,
am sorry for him, and disposed to be lenient; but he cannot
expect us to let things go on as they have done now that everything
is reversed. How did Magdalen happen to find it?”
She was talking very gently now, by way of quieting Frank,
who told her briefly what he knew of the finding of the Will,
and then, little by little as she adroitly questioned him, he let
out the particulars of his interview with Magdalen, and Mrs.
Walter Scott knew the secret of Magdalen's distress. Her face
was turned away from Frank, who did not see the cold, remorseless
pitting herself against the Millbank fortune. Magdalen's
value was decreasing fast. The master of Millbank could surely
find a wife more worthy of him than the beggar girl who had
been deserted in the cars, and that Magdalen Lennox should not
marry her son was the decision she reached at a bound, and
Frank must have suspected the nature of her thoughts, as she
sat nervously tapping her foot upon the floor, and looking off
through the window, with great wrinkles in her forehead and
between her eyes.
“Mother,” he said, and there was something pleading as well
as reproachful in his voice, “I did not mean that you should
know of this, and now that you do, I must beg of you to keep
your knowledge to yourself. I shall lose Magdalen if you do
not, and I care more for her than a hundred fortunes.”
His mother turned fully toward him now and said, sneeringly,
“A disinterested lover, truly. Perhaps when you promised
to destroy the Will you forgot the hundred thousand which, if
Roger remained master here, would come to you with Magdalen,
and you made yourself believe that you were doing a very unselfish
and romantic thing in preferring Magdalen and poverty to
Millbank.”
“Mother,” Frank cried, “I swear to you that a thought of
that hundred thousand never crossed my mind until this moment.
My love for Magdalen is strong enough to brave poverty
in any form for her sake.”
“And you really mean to marry her?”
She put the question so coolly that Frank gazed at her in
astonishment, wondering what she meant.
Of course he meant to marry her if she would take him; he
would prefer her to a thousand Millbanks. “And mother,” he
added, “you shall not tell her that you know of the Will until
after to-morrow. She is to give me her answer then. Promise,
or I will destroy this cursed paper before your very eyes.”
He made a motion as if he would tear it in pieces, when,
it fast in her own hands.
“The Will is not safe with you,” she said. “I will keep it
for you. I shall not trouble Magdalen, but I shall go at once
to Roger. I cannot see you throw away wealth, and ease, and
position for a bit of sentiment with regard to a girl whose parentage
is doubtful, to say the least of it, and who can bring you
nothing but a pretty face.”
She had put the Will in her pocket. There was no way of
getting it from her, except by force, and Frank saw her depart
without a word, and knew she was going to Roger. Suddenly
it occurred to him that Roger might not have left the office yet,
and he started up, exclaiming, “I am the one to tell him first,
if he must know. I can break it to him easier than mother.
I shall not be hard on Roger.”
Thus thinking, Frank started swiftly across the fields in the
direction of Roger's office, hoping either to meet him, or to find
him there, and trying to decide how he should break the news
so as to wound his uncle as little as possible, and make him
understand that he was not in fault.
CHAPTER XXII.
MRS. WALTER SCOTT AND THE WILL. Millbank, or, Roger Irving's ward | ||