Part 41 (1/2)

Barcroft had sent a telegram to his parents from the Hook of Holland announcing his safety. He had also gone to the post office immediately upon his arrival in England, but the place did not open till nine. It was now nearly noon.

He had not gone more than a hundred yards when Kirkwood overtook him, flushed with excitement.

”Here's a business!” he exclaimed. ”Don't know whether to be sorry or glad. I've just had a letter informing me that my uncle, Antonius Grabb, has shuffled off this mortal coil. This is from his partner, who, apparently, is executor to the will. He wants me to call at his office as soon as possible. Billy, my festive, I'm afraid I'm a rich man. The thought of it appals me. I've handled thousands of Government cash in my time, but never had as much as a hundred to my credit before.”

”Congrats, you lucky bounder!” said Billy heartily.

”And so I have to run up to Town,” continued the A.P., ”there to face an interview of momentous import. Frankly I funk it. How about it? Will you come with me? We can put up at the Whatsname Hotel--you know where I mean--and take the first train in the morning to Tarleigh.”

”All right,” a.s.sented Barcroft, after a brief consideration of the proposal. ”We'll have to look sharp if we're to catch that twelve-fifteen. Here's luck--a taxi.”

”Well, that is playing a low-down game,” remarked Fuller as they rejoined him on the platform. ”You two unsociables, declining my invitation to run up to Town, have evidently hatched a plot to have a stunt on your own account. But I've spotted your little game, you sly dogs. Now own up--what's the move?”

”We did change our minds,” confessed the A.P. ”Force of circ.u.mstances, you know. Fuller, I'm a millionaire of sorts--in pence, I fancy. At any rate, my uncle Antonius has died, and we're off to see his executor. Come to his office with us? The more the merrier, you know, and I'll stand dinner at the Carlton, if it hasn't been 'taken over.'”

Arriving at Ely Place the three officers were ushered into the presence of Mr. Fasly Gott, junior partner of the firm of Grabb and Gott.

The lawyer regarded his callers with wellconcealed interest.

”Mr. Robert Kirkwood, I presume,” he exclaimed addressing Fuller.

”Almost wish I were,” muttered the lieutenant to himself as he indicated the rightful bearer of the name.

”Ah, yes, of course,” murmured Mr. Gott, re-adjusting his pince-nez.

”I can see a strong resemblance to your late relative, my esteemed partner.”

”That's not a compliment,” thought the A.P. ”In fact, it is a downright perversion.” The lawyer cleared his throat. Obviously he did not like the presence of three officers in naval uniform. His reason was soon apparent.

”Your uncle's will,” he continued, ”is, to say the least, somewhat out of the ordinary. First let me impress upon you that its contents were absolutely unknown to me, his executor, until after his decease. He leaves the whole of his real and personal estate, representing a sum of at least seventy thousand pounds, to his nephew, Robert Angus Kirkwood----”

”Lucky dog!” interposed the irrepressible Fuller.

Mr. Gott gave a deprecatory cough. Levity was a rare emotion in that gloomy office, the motto of which in the vast majority of cases ought to be--'Abandon Hope, all ye who Enter Here.'

”Subject to one condition,” he continued. ”My late partner, as you might know, was a man of pacific temperament. Here I must hasten to explain that the will is dated 1913, that is, a twelvemonth previous to the outbreak of this deplorable war, and there is no codicil. The condition is as follows:--That the said Robert Angus Kirkwood resigns his commission in his Majesty's Navy, otherwise the bulk of the estate goes to the Society for the Encouragement of the Discovery of Antediluvian Remains.”

”In that case,” rejoined Kirkwood calmly, ”I think you had better communicate with the secretary of the Society for the Encouragement of the Discovery of Antediluvian Remains and inform him that my uncle's legacy is at his disposal. I am rather surprised that you should have written asking me to call. The proposition is an insult to His Majesty's Service.”

”You show the proper spirit, Mr. Kirkwood,” said the lawyer, with genuine admiration for the young officer's _esprit de corps_. ”It is a peculiar will, and, if you desire to dispute its terms, you may be successful at the Courts; I should be happy to undertake the case.

However, there is one clause. The bulk of the estate goes to this eccentric Society. The residue, consisting of deeds of real estates to the value of seven thousand pounds, goes to you unconditionally.”

The interview lasted about twenty minutes, at the end of which the three officers prepared to leave.

”By the bye,” remarked the A.P., ”I suppose you can let me have a copy of the list of securities?”

”Yes, a copy,” replied Mr. Gott. ”The deeds will be handed over when probate of the Will has been declared. You will understand that the duties will be considerable?”

”Lucky to have to pay 'em,” commented Kirkwood. ”Thank you, Mr.

Gott. Good afternoon.”