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else. He had no desire that his son should ever profit by the labours and deprivations of all those joyless years in which his fortune had been scraped together. It was only as the choice of the lesser evil that he would consent to Percival's inheriting the property from his daughter, rather than that it should fall into the hands of Mr. Holbrook. The lawyer had hard work before he could bring his client to this point; but he did at last succeed in doing so, and Percival Nowell's name was written in the will.

'I don't suppose Nowell will thank me much for what I've done, though I've had difficulty enough in doing it,' Mr. Medler said to himself, as he walked slowly homewards after this prolonged conference in Queen-Anne's-court. For of course the chances are ten to one against his surviving his daughter. Still these young women sometimes go off the hooks in an unexpected way, and he may come into the money.'

on.

There was only one satisfaction for the attorney, and that lay in the fact that this long laborious interview had been all in the way of business, and could be charged for accordingly: To attending at your own house with relation to drawing-up the rough draft of your will, and consultation of two hours and a half thereupon;' and so The will was to be executed next day; and Mr. Medler was to take his clerk with him to Queen-Anne's-court, to act as one of the witnesses. He had obtained one other triumph in the course of the discussion, which was the insertion of his own name as executor in place of Gilbert Fenton, against whom he raised so many specious arguments as to shake the old man's faith in Marian's jilted lover.

Percival Nowell dropped-in upon his father that night, and smoked his cigar in the dingy little parlour, which was so crowded with divers kinds of merchandise as to be scarcely habitable. The old man's son came here almost every evening, and behaved altogether in a very dutiful way. Jacob Nowell seemed to tolerate rather than to invite his visits, and the adventurer tried in vain to get at the real feelings underlying that emotionless manner.

'I think I might work round the governor if I had time,' this dutiful son said to himself, as he reflected upon the aspect of affairs in Queen-Anne's-court; but I fancy the old chap has taken his ticket for the next world-booked through-per express train, and the chances are that he'll keep his word and not leave me sixpence. Rather hard lines that, after my taking the trouble to come over here and hunt him up.'

There was one fact that Mr. Nowell the younger seemed inclined to ignore in the course of these reflections; and that was the fact that he had not left America until he had completely used-up that country as a field for commercial enterprise, and had indeed made his name so far notorious in connection with numerous shady

transactions as to leave no course open to him except a speedy departure. Since his coming to England he had lived entirely on credit; and beyond the fine clothes he wore and the contents of his two portmanteaus, he possessed nothing in the world. It was quite true that he had done very well in New York; but his well-being had been secured at the cost of other people; and after having started some half-dozen speculations, and living extravagantly upon the funds of his victims, he was now as poor as he had been when he left Belgium for America, the commission-agent of a house in the iron trade. In this position he might have prospered in a moderate way, and might have profited by the expensive education which had given him nothing but showy agreeable manners, had he been capable of steadiness and industry. But of these virtues he was utterly deficient, possessing instead a genius for that kind of swindling which keeps just upon the safe side of felony. He had lived pleasantly enough, for many years, by the exercise of this agreeable talent; so pleasantly indeed that he had troubled himself very little about his chances of inheriting his father's savings. It was only when he had exhausted all expedients for making money on the other side,' that he turned his thoughts in the direction of Queen-Anne's-court, and began to speculate upon the probability of Jacob Nowell's good graces being worth the trouble of cultivation. The prospectuses which he had shown his father were mere waste paper, the useless surplus stationery remaining from a scheme that had failed to enlist the sympathies of a Transatlantic public. But he fancied that his only chance with the old man lay in an assumption of prosperity; so he carried matters with a high hand throughout the business, and swaggered in the little dusky parlour behind the shop just as he had swaggered on New-York Broadway or at Delmonico's in the heyday of his commercial success.

He called at Mr. Medler's office the day after Jacob Nowell's will had been executed, having had no hint of the fact from his father. The solicitor told him what had been done, and how the most strenuous efforts on his part had only resulted in the insertion of Percival's name after that of his daughter.

Whatever indignation Mr. Nowell may have felt at the fact that his daughter had been preferred before him, he contrived to keep hidden in his own mind. The lawyer was surprised at the quiet gravity with which he received the intelligence. He listened to Mr. Medler's statement of the case with the calmest air of deliberation, seemed indeed to be thinking so deeply that it was as if his thoughts had wandered away from the subject in hand to some theme which allowed of more profound speculation.

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And if she should die childless, I should get everything?' he said at last, waking-up suddenly from that state of abstraction, and turning his thoughtful face upon the lawyer.

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Everything.'

Have you any notion what the property is worth?'

'Not an exact notion. Your father gave me a rough list of the sums in the funds-invested at different times and in different directions. Altogether I should fancy the income will be something handsome-between two and three thousand a year perhaps. Strange, isn't it, for a man with all that money to have lived such a life as your father's ?'

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'Strange indeed,' Percival Nowell cried with a sneer. And my daughter will step into two or three thousand a year,' he went on; very pleasant for her, and for her husband into the bargain. Of course I'm not going to say that I wouldn't rather have had the money myself. You'd scarcely swallow that, as a man of the world, you see, Medler. But the girl is my only child, and though circumstances have divided us for the greater part of our lives, blood is thicker than water; and in short, since there was no getting the governor to do the right thing, and leave this money to me, it's the next best thing that he should leave it to Marian.'

To say nothing of the possibility of her dying without children, and your coming into the property, after all,' said Mr. Medler, wondering a little at Mr. Nowell's philosophical manner of looking at the question.

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Sir,' exclaimed Percival indignantly, do you imagine me capable of speculating upon the untimely death of my only child?'

The lawyer shrugged his shoulders doubtfully. In the course of his varied experience he had found men and women capable of very queer things when their pecuniary interests were at stake; and he had not a most exalted opinion of Mr. Nowell's virtue, he knew too many secrets connected with his early career.

'Remember, if ever by any strange chance you should come into this property, you have me to thank for getting your name into the will, and for giving your daughter only a life-interest. She would have had every penny left to her without reserve, if I hadn't fought for your interests as hard as ever I fought for anything in the whole course of my professional career.'

'You're a good fellow, Medler; and if ever fortune should favour me, which hardly seems on the cards, I sha'n't forget what I promised you the other day. I daresay you did the best you could for me, though it doesn't amount to much when it's done.'

Long after Percival Nowell had left him, Mr. Medler sat idle at his desk meditating upon his interview with that gentleman.

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I can't half understand his coolness,' he said to himself; I expected him to be as savage as a bear when he found that the old man had left him nothing. I thought I should hear nothing but execrations and blasphemies; for I think I know my gentleman pretty well of old, and that he's not a person to take a disappoint

ment of this kind very sweetly. There must be something under that quiet manner of his. Perhaps he knows more about his daughter than he cares to let out; knows that she is sickly, and that he stands a good chance of surviving her.'

There was indeed a lurking desperation under Percival Nowell's airy manner, of which the people amongst whom he lived had no suspicion. Unless some sudden turn in the wheel of fortune should change the aspect of affairs for him very soon, ruin, most complete and utter, was inevitable. A man cannot go on very long without money; and in order to pay his hotel-bill, Mr. Nowell had been obliged to raise funds from an accommodating gentleman with whom he had done business in years gone by, and who was very familiar with his own and his father's autograph. The bill upon which this gentleman advanced the money in question bore the name of Jacob Nowell, and was drawn at three months. Percival had persuaded himself that before the three months were out, his father would be in his grave, and his executors would scarcely be in a position to dispute the genuineness of the signature. In the mean time the money thus obtained enabled him to float on. He paid his hotel-bill, and removed to lodgings in one of the narrow streets to the north-east of Tottenham-court-road; an obscure lodging enough, where he had a couple of comfortable rooms on the first-floor, and where his going-out and coming-in attracted little notice. Here, as at the hotel, he chose to assume the name of Norton instead of his legitimate cognomen.

CHAPTER XIX.

GILBERT ASKS A QUESTION.

GILBERT FENTON called at John Saltram's chambers within a day or two of his return from Hampshire. He had a strange, almost feverish, eagerness to see his old friend again; a sense of having wronged him for that one brief moment of thought in which the possibility of his guilt had flashed across his mind; and with this feeling there was mingled a suspicion that John Saltram had not acted quite fairly to him; that he had kept back knowledge which must have come to him as an intimate ally of Sir David Forster.

He found Mr. Saltram at home in the familiar untidy room, with the old chaos of books and papers about him. He looked tired and ill, and rose to greet his visitor with a weary air, as if nothing in the world possessed much interest for him nowadays.

'Why, John, you are as pallid as a ghost!' Gilbert exclaimed, grasping the hand extended to him, and thinking of that one moment in which he had fancied he was never to touch that hand again. 'You have been at the old work, I suppose-over-doing it, as usual!'

'No, I have been working very little for these last few days.

The truth is, I have not been able to work. The divine afflatus wouldn't come down upon me. There are times when a man's brain seems to be made of melted butter. Mine has been like that for the last week or so.'

'I thought you were going back to your fishing village near Oxford.'

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No; I was not in spirits for that. I have dined two or three times in Cavendish-square, and have been made much of, and have contrived to forget my troubles for a few hours.'

'You talk of your troubles as if you were very heavily burdened; and yet, for the life of me, I cannot see what you have to complain of,' Gilbert said wonderingly.

'Of course not.

That is always the case with one's friendseven the best of them. It's only the man who wears the shoe that knows why it pinches and galls him. But what have you been doing since I saw you last ?'

I have been in Hampshire.'

'Indeed!' said John Saltram, looking him full in the face. And what took you into that quarter of the world?'

'I thought you took more interest in my affairs than to have to ask that question. I went to look for Marian Holbrook,—and I found her.'

'Poor old fellow!' Mr. Saltram said gently. any satisfaction for you in the meeting ?'

And was there

'Yes, and no. There was a kind of mournful pleasure in seeing the dear face once more.'

She must have been surprised to see you.'

'She was, no doubt, surprised—unpleasantly, perhaps; but she received me very kindly, and was perfectly frank upon every subject except her husband. She would tell me nothing about him—neither his position in the world, nor his profession, if he has one, as I suppose he has. She owned he was not rich, and that is about all she said of him. 'What ground have you for such an idea?'

Poor girl, I do not think she is happy!'

'Her face, which told me a great deal more than her words. Her beauty is very much faded since the summer evening when I first saw her in Lidford Church. She seems to lead a lonely life in the old farmhouse to which her husband brought her immediately after their marriage-a life which few women would care to lead. And now, John, I want to know how it is you have kept back the truth from me in this matter; that you have treated me with a reserve which I had no right to expect from a friend.'

What have I kept from you?'

'Your knowledge of this man Holbrook.'

'What makes you suppose that I have any knowledge of him?' 'The fact that he is a friend of Sir David Forster's. The house

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