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With a side glance at Paula, he went out, closing the door. Mr. Ricaby quickly approached Paula. Laboring under some excitement, he said:
"Your uncle demands an interview with you. I told him you refused to go to him."
"Quite right! Go to him indeed!" she exclaimed indignantly.
"He and Mr. Cooley are now at my office. They want to come here to see you."
"I won't see them," she cried.
"Perhaps it would be good policy," said the lawyer thoughtfully.
"No," she retorted emphatically. "I won't see them."
"Yes, Paula," said the lawyer kindly, but firmly, "they can keep up this legal battle for years--as long as they choose--until we're exhausted and most of the money we're fighting for is expended in fees and costs.
Cooley will never give up--and we can't go on without money. Something might be gained by meeting them halfway." He hesitated a moment and then went on: "Cooley told me over the telephone just now that he had new evidence. He could prove that his client had a partnership with his brother, and was ent.i.tled to half----"
"He can prove anything," she cried contemptuously. "I refuse to degrade myself by a compromise. It shall be all or nothing."
Nervous and agitated, Mr. Ricaby strode up and down the room. He was advising the girl for the best. He had experience in these matters.
Well he knew the law's terrible delays, and even then the result was uncertain.
"If you fight them," he said, "it means more costly litigation. I may be able to get Wratchett, but I'm not sure that he'll fight Cooley. They're such strong political cronies. You've nothing to lose by holding out the olive branch, and much to gain. Really, Paula, it's better for you to see them. I am so sure about it that I told them to come over."
With a gesture of discouragement Paula sank down in a chair.
"G.o.d knows I'm as tired of the struggle as you are, Mr. Ricaby," she cried, "but I hate to give up. I know you're advising me for the best--yes--I'll be guided by you--I will see them--and--and yield as gracefully as I can, but it seems hard, very hard. When will they come?"
"In a few minutes," replied the lawyer.
CHAPTER IX.
Bascom Cooley had not overestimated his abilities or the extent of his pull. He had not, indeed, been successful in his efforts to have the new will set aside. There are some things which not even crooked lawyers, with all their cunning and underhand methods, are unable to do. Even his perjured witnesses could not disprove the fact that John Marsh was legally married to Paula's mother, and that he was of sound mind when he made the second will. Backed by all the influence of the System, he could not prevent Paula from inheriting what was naturally and legally hers. Yet, thanks to the mysterious and powerful support behind him, he did manage to score in one important point. He was able to manipulate the legal wires in such a way that Paula, after the Court decision rendered in her favor, found herself no better off than she was before.
Being a minor, she could not touch her inheritance. The appointment of a guardian was necessary, and Bascom Cooley, after much secret and underhand manoeuvring, finally persuaded a judge to appoint the girl's uncle special administrator until she could come of age. It was clearly unconst.i.tutional and at once evoked protest from Paula's attorney. But to no purpose. The court's order was peremptory. An appeal to a higher court would mean more endless and expensive litigation. The best plan, perhaps, was to wait patiently the one short year and then demand a strict accounting. At least, so argued Mr. Ricaby.
Bascom Cooley now had things going his way. Jimmy, his poor, weak tool, was in sole control of the Marsh millions. For twelve months he could do what he liked with the money. Much can be accomplished in a year--money can be made, money can be lost. If, when the day of accounting came, there was a scandal, Jimmy alone would be held responsible, and as for denouncing others as having shared in the division of the spoils, he would not dare. Cooley knew too much of his business for that.
The next important step was to control, as far as possible, the movements of the ward herself. It would never do to have her living in a cheap boarding house, going and coming as she pleased, surrounded by people who might tell her embarra.s.sing truths. The influence of Leon Ricaby, especially, Mr. Cooley was anxious to remove. He felt that with the attorney out of the way, they would have less trouble with the girl.
That is why he had impressed Jimmy with the urgent necessity of taking Paula as a more or less unwilling boarder under his roof.
"She'll kick like a steer," he growled. "But that's nothing. I like a gal with some spirit in her. She must do what we say, whether she likes it or not."
Overbearing, brutal, defiant, Mr. Cooley entered the sitting room of Mrs. Parkes' boarding house, followed meekly by Jimmy Marsh. Fashionably dressed, dyed and perfumed, Paula's uncle, in personal appearance, offered a sharp contrast to the burly, coa.r.s.e-looking lawyer. The two men were types so utterly dissimilar that it was almost paradoxical to find them in such close a.s.sociation. It was as if the lamb suddenly found it to his taste to consort with the wolf. While the lawyer advanced into the room, his air arrogant, his manner insolent, Jimmy remained in the background, nervous and fidgetty. That he was completely under the mental control of his attorney was plainly evident.
Mr. Ricaby was alone in the room, awaiting their arrival.
"Hallo, Ricaby--howdy?" exclaimed the big lawyer. "You know Mr.
Marsh----"
Jimmy nodded and Mr. Ricaby bowed stiffly. His manner was freezingly polite.
"Yes, I think I have that pleasure."
Without troubling to wait for an invitation, Mr. Cooley flopped his large person into an armchair. Then, looking all around as if in search of someone, he asked:
"Well, where's the young lady?"
"She'll be here in a moment," replied Mr. Ricaby. There was an awkward pause, and then he went on: "I need scarcely tell you that this sudden visit is most unexpected."
The big lawyer gave a coa.r.s.e laugh.
"Always expect the unexpected from Bascom Cooley!" he cried. "Sit down, Mr. Marsh. Yes, Mr. Ricaby, Bascom Cooley aims at a certain point, but he never looks in the direction he's aiming, and while the other side is carefully guarding the wrong place--bing!--Bascom Cooley's got 'em where he wants 'em."
Mr. Ricaby nodded.
"Quite so!" he said, with a shade of irony.
Mr. Cooley grinned.
"That's why the aforesaid is in a cla.s.s all by himself," he chuckled.
Mr. Marsh ventured to obtrude himself into the conversation. Timidly he said:
"Perhaps my niece may find the hour inconvenient. I'm perfectly willing to postpone----"
Mr. Cooley stamped his foot impatiently.
"Now, look here, Marsh, don't be a fool; don't establish a precedent of meekness, or you'll have to be meek all the time. That's the advice I give young married men, Ricaby."
He laughed boisterously at his own wit, and looked at Mr. Ricaby as if expecting him to join in the merriment. But Paula's attorney remained sober as a judge.
"Come, come, be cheerful!" went on Mr. Cooley; "why not let us be good friends? Why can't Miss Paula be made to understand that my client is her friend as well as her nearest relative? Flesh and blood is flesh and blood--you can't get away from that fact. He wants to open his heart to her. Hang it, they've been separated long enough! All his movements, however seemingly unfriendly, have been actuated only by a sense of justice to his own family."
"Perfectly true--perfectly true," broke in Jimmy eagerly. "She is my brother's child, and, although we've seen nothing of her, nevertheless I feel that I am far more competent to--to take charge of--the family estate--than she is."
"The family estate?" interrupted Mr. Ricaby, elevating his eyebrows.
"Yes," said Jimmy boldly. "My brother's estate and mine. You know, the woman he married----"
Cooley held up his hand with a deprecating gesture:
"Now, please, don't let us go into that phase of the matter. The marriage was kept secret, but we have conceded that it was a marriage.
Once and for all, let us have done with this litigation business. My client doesn't want to drag this case through the courts for years. He can if he wants to--but he doesn't. What he wants is--peace and harmony."
"And his brother's estate," interrupted Mr. Ricaby sarcastically.