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"Joel," answered his father, with an attempt at solemnity, "the judgments of the Lord have fallen upon your unhappy cousin."
"What do you mean, Mr. Fox?" asked his wife, showing curiosity in turn.
"I mean that he is lying dead at the bottom of the sea."
"Don't be so tantalizing, Mr. Fox. If you know anything about the boy, out with it!"
When Mrs. Fox spoke in this tone her husband knew that she would not stand any nonsense. So he answered without delay. "Soon after he left our happy home, Maria, he shipped on board the _Nantucket_, as a common sailor, I presume, and the ship was lost off in the Southern Ocean with all on board."
"How awful, pa," said Sally, who alone of all the family had felt kindly toward Harry, "and he was so good-looking, too!"
"He wasn't a bit better looking than Joel," said her mother sharply.
"Oh, ma!"
"It's true. I never could see any good looks in him, and it doesn't become you, miss, to go against your own brother. How did you find it out, Mr. Fox?"
"I came across an old copy of the _New York Herald_, giving an account of the disaster, and mentioning Harry Vane as one of the pa.s.sengers. Of course it's a mistake, for he must have been one of the common sailors."
"Well, I reckon there's no call for us to put on mourning," said Mrs.
Fox.
"I don't know about that. It might look better."
"What do we care about Harry Vane?"
"My dear, he left property," said Mr. Fox significantly. "There's three hundred dollars in the hands of that man in Ferguson, besides the money he got for saving the train, as much as two hundred dollars. As we are his only relatives, that money ought to come to us by rights."
"That's so, husband. On the whole, I'll put a black ribbon on my bonnet."
"And I'll wear a black necktie," said Joel. "How much of the money am I to have?"
"Wait till we get it," said his father shortly.
"What steps do you propose to take in this matter, Mr. Fox?" queried his wife.
"I'm going to Ferguson to-morrow, to see Mr. Benjamin Howard. Of course he won't want to give up the money, but I'll show him I mean business, and am not to be trifled with."
"That's right, pa," said Joel approvingly.
"Five hundred dollars will give us quite a lift," said Mrs. Fox thoughtfully.
"So it will, so it will, my dear. Of course, I'm sorry to hear of the poor boy's death, but I shall insist upon my rights, all the same."
Mrs. Fox warmly approved of her husband's determination, being quite as mean and money-loving as he.
CHAPTER x.x.xVI.
A HEART-BROKEN RELATIVE.
Late in the afternoon, John Fox knocked at the door of Benjamin Howard, in the town of Ferguson. It was a hundred miles distant from Colebrook, his own residence, and he grudged the three dollars he had spent for railroad fare; still he thought that the stake was worth playing for.
"I am John Fox of Colebrook," he said, when Mr. Howard entered the room.
"You may have heard of me."
"I have," answered Mr. Howard, slightly smiling.
"I am the only living relative of Harry Vane, that is, I and my family."
"I have heard Harry speak of you," said Mr. Howard, non-committally.
"Yes, poor boy! I wish he were alive;" and Mr. Fox drew out a red bandanna handkerchief and covered his eyes, in which there were no tears.
"What do you mean?" asked Mr. Howard, startled.
"Then you haven't heard?"
"Heard--what?"
"That he sailed in the ship _Nantucket_, which was lost, with all on board, in the Southern Ocean?"
It so happened that Mr. Howard had received a letter from Harry after his arrival in Australia, and so knew that Harry was not lost. For a moment he thought Mr. Fox might have later information, but saw that it was not so. He decided to draw Mr. Fox on, and ascertain his object in calling.
"I hope that this is not so," he said gravely.
"There is not a doubt of it," answered Fox. "There's an account of the loss of the vessel in the _New York Herald._ I cut it out, and have it in my pocket-book. Would you like to see it?"
"If you please."
Mr. Fox produced the sc.r.a.p, and asked triumphantly, "Doesn't that settle it?"
"Suppose that it does, what then?"
"What then? It follows that Harry's money comes to me and my family, as the only surviving relatives. You've got money of his, the boy told me."
"Yes."
"About how much?"
"About three hundred dollars."
"So I thought. That money ought to be handed over to me."
"I don't see that, Mr. Fox."