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Cursed by a Fortune.
by George Manville Fenn.
CHAPTER ONE.
"Yes, James; this is my last dying speech and confession."
"Oh, papa!" with a burst of sobbing.
"Be quiet, Kitty, and don't make me so miserable. Dying is only going to sleep when a man's tired out, as I am, with the worries of the world, money-making, fighting for one's own, and disappointment. I know as well as old Jermingham that it's pretty nearly all over. I'm sorry to leave you, darling, but I'm worn out, and your dear mother has been waiting for nearly a year."
"Father, dearest father!" and two white arms clung round the neck of the dying man, as their owner sank upon her knees by the bedside.
"I'd stay for your sake, Kitty, but fate says no, and I'm so tired, darling, it will be like going into rest and peace. She always was an angel, Kitty, and she must be now; I feel as if I must see her afterwards. For I don't think I've been such a very bad man, Will."
"The best of fellows, Bob, always," said the stout, florid, country-looking gentleman seated near the great heavily-curtained four-post bed.
"Thanks, James. I don't want to play the Pharisee, but I have tried to be an honest man and a good father."
"Your name stands highest in the city, and your charities--"
"Bother! I made plenty of money by the bank, and I gave some away, and I wish it had done more good. Well, my shares in the bank represent a hundred and fifty thousand; those are Kitty's. There's about ten thousand pounds in India stock and consols."
"Pray, pray don't talk any more, papa, dear."
"Must, Kitty, while I can. That money, Will, is yours for life, and after death it is for that boy of yours, Claud. He doesn't deserve it, but perhaps he'll be a better boy some day. Then there's the lease of this house, my furniture, books, plate, pictures, and money in the private account. You will sell and realise everything; Kitty does not want a great gloomy house in Bedford Square--out of proceeds you will pay the servants' legacies, and the expenses, there will be ample; and the residue is to be given to your wife for her use. That's all. I have made you my sole executor, and I thought it better to send for you to tell you than for you to wait till the will was read. Give me a little of that stuff in some water, Kitty."
His head was tenderly raised, and he drank and sank back with a sigh.
"Thank you, my darling. Now, Will, I might have joined John Garstang with you as executor, but I thought it better to give you full control, you being a quiet country squire, leading your simple, honest, gentleman-farmer's life, while he is a keen speculative man."
James Wilton, the banker's brother, uttered something like a sigh, muttered a few words about trying to do his duty, and listened, as the dying man went on--
"I should not have felt satisfied. You two might have disagreed over some marriage business, for there is no other that you will have to control. And I said to myself that Will would not try to play the wicked uncle over my babe. So you are sole executor, with very little to do, for I have provided for everything, I think. Her money stays in the old bank I helped to build up, and the dividends will make her a handsome income. What you have to see to is that she is not snapped up by some plausible scoundrel for the sake of her money. When she does marry--"
"Oh, papa, dear, don't, don't! You are breaking my heart. I shall never marry," sobbed the girl, as she laid her sweet young face by the thin, withered countenance on the pillow.
"Yes, you will, my pet. I wish it, when the right man comes, who loves you for yourself. Girls like you are too scarce to be wasted. But your uncle will watch over you, and see to that. You hear, Will?"
"Yes, I will do my duty by her."
"I believe you."
"But, papa dear, don't talk more. The doctor said you must be kept so quiet."
"I must wind up my affairs, my darling, and think of your future. I've had quite enough of the men hanging about after the rich banker's daughter. When my will is proved, the drones and wasps will come swarming round you for the money. There is no one at all, yet, is there?" he said, with a searching look.
"Oh, no, papa, I never even thought of such a thing."
"I know it, my darling. I've always been your sweetheart, and we've lived for one another, and I'm loth to leave you, dear."
"Oh, father, dearest father, don't talk of leaving me," she sobbed.
He smiled sadly, and his feeble hand played with her curls.
"G.o.d disposes, my own," he said. "But there, I must talk while I can.
Now, listen. These are nearly my last words, Will."
His brother started and bent forward to hear his half-whispered words, and he wiped the dew from his sun-browned forehead, and shivered a little, for the chilly near approach of death troubled the hale, hearty-looking man, and gave a troubled look to his florid face.
"When all is over, Will, as soon as you can, take her down to Northwood, and be a father to her. Her aunt always loved her, and she'll be happy there. Shake hands upon it, Will."
The thin, white, trembling hand was placed in the fat, heavy palm extended, and rested there for some minutes before Robert Wilton spoke again.
"Everything is set down clearly, Will. The money invested in the bank is hers--one hundred and fifty thousand pounds, strictly tied up. I have seen to that. There, you will do your duty by her, and see that all goes well."
"Yes."
"I am satisfied, brother; I exact no oaths. Kate, my child, your uncle will take my place. I leave you in his hands." Then in a low voice, heard only by her who clung to him, weeping silently, he whispered softly, "And in Thine, O G.o.d."
The next morning the blinds were all down in front of Number 204, Bedford Square, which looked at its gloomiest in the wet fog, with the withered leaves falling fast from the great plane trees; and the iron shutters were half drawn up at the bank in Lothbury, for the old leather-covered chair in the director's rom was vacant, waiting for a new occupant--the chairman of the Great British and Bengalie Joint Stock Bank was dead.
"As good and true a man as ever breathed," said the head clerk, shaking his grey head; "and we've all lost a friend. I wonder who will marry Miss Kate!"
CHAPTER TWO.
"Morning, Doctor. Hardly expected to find you at home. Thought you'd be on your rounds."
The speaker was mounted on a rather restive cob, which he now checked by the gate of the pretty cottage in one of the Northwood lanes; and as he spoke he sprang down and placed his rein through the ring on the post close by the bra.s.s plate which bore the words--"Pierce Leigh, M.D., Surgeon, etc.," but he did not look at the ring, for his eyes gave a furtive glance at the windows from one to the other quickly.
He was not a groom, for his horse-shoe pin was set with diamonds, and a large bunch of golden charms hung at his watch chain, but his coat, hat, drab breeches, and leggings were of the most horsey cut, and on a near approach anyone might have expected to smell stables. As it was, the odour he exhaled was Jockey Club, emanating from a white pocket handkerchief dotted with foxes' heads, hunting crops and horns, and saturated with scent.
"My rounds are not very regular, Mr Wilton," said the gentleman addressed, and he looked keenly at the commonplace speaker, whose ears stood out widely from his closely-cropped hair. "You people are dreadfully healthy down here," and he held open the garden gate and drew himself up, a fairly handsome, dark, keen-eyed, gentlemanly-looking man of thirty, slightly pale as if from study, but looking wiry and strong as an athlete. "You wished to see me?"
"Yes. Bit off my corn. Headache, black spots before my eyes, and that sort of thing. Thought I'd consult the Vet."
"Will you step in?"
"Eh? Yes. Thankye."
The Doctor led the way into his flower-decked half-study, half-consulting room, where several other little adornments suggested the near presence of a woman; and the would-be patient coughed unnecessarily, and kept on tapping his leg with the hunting crop he carried, as he followed, and the door was closed, and a chair was placed for him.
"Eh? Chair? Thanks," said the visitor, taking it by the back, swinging it round, and throwing one leg across as if it were a saddle, crossing his arms and resting his chin there--the while he stared rather enviously at the man before him. "Not much the matter, and you mustn't make me so that I can't get on. Got a chap staying with me, and we're going after the pheasants. I say, let me send you a brace."
"You are very good," said the Doctor, smiling rather contemptuously, "but as I understand it they are not yet shot?"