Part 9 (1/2)
”Did he ever threaten this proceeding before?”
”He had hinted it, but not so definitely.”
”Did Mr. Hall know of Mr. Crawford's objection to his suit?”
”He did.”
”Did he know of your uncle's hints of disinheritance?”
”He did.”
”What was his att.i.tude in the matter?”
Florence Lloyd looked proudly at her lover.
”The same as mine,” she said. ”We both regretted my uncle's protest, but we had no intention of letting it stand in the way of our happiness.”
Still Gregory Hall did not look at his fiancee. He sat motionless, preoccupied, and seemingly lost in deep thought, oblivious to all that was going on.
Whether his absence from Sedgwick at the time of the murder made him feel that he was in no way implicated, and so the inquiry held no interest for him; or whether he was looking ahead and wondering whither these vital questions were leading Florence Lloyd, I had no means of knowing. Certainly, he was a man of most impa.s.sive demeanor and marvellous self-control.
”Then, in effect, you defied your uncle?”
”In effect, I suppose I did; but not in so many words. I always tried to urge him to see the matter in a different light.”
”What was his objection to Mr. Hall as your husband?”
”Must I answer that?”
”Yes; I think so; as I must have a clear understanding of the whole affair.”
”Well, then, he told me that he had no objection to Mr. Hall, personally. But he wished me to make what he called a more brilliant alliance. He wanted me to marry a man of greater wealth and social position.”
The scorn in Miss Lloyd's voice for her uncle's ambitions was so unmistakable that it made her whole answer seem a compliment to Mr.
Hall, rather than the reverse. It implied that the sterling worth of the young secretary was far more to be desired than the riches and rank advocated by her uncle. This time Gregory Hall looked at the speaker with a faint smile, that showed appreciation, if not adoration.
But I did not gather from his att.i.tude that he did not adore his beautiful bride-to-be; I only concluded that he was not one to show his feelings in public.
However, I couldn't help feeling that I had learned which of the two was more anxious for the engagement to continue.
”In what way was your uncle more definite in his threat last night, than he had been heretofore?” the coroner continued.
Miss Lloyd gave a little gasp, as if the question she had been dreading had come at last. She looked at the inexorable face of the butler, she looked at Mr. Randolph, and then flashed a half-timid glance at Hall, as she answered,
”He said that unless I promised to give up Mr. Hall, he would go last night to Mr. Randolph's and have a new will drawn up.”
”Did he do so?” exclaimed Gregory Hall, an expression almost of fear appearing on his commonplace face.
Miss Lloyd looked at him, and seemed startled. Apparently his sudden question had surprised her.
Mr. Monroe paid no attention to Mr. Hall's remark, but said to Miss Lloyd, ”He had made such threats before, had he not?”