Volume Ii Part 6 (2/2)
”You said I knew him; but I never heard of him; I don't know the family at all.”
”Yes, you do; you know them only too well; you will be as much surprised as I was myself--as I am still, whenever I allow myself to dwell on the subject. Mr. Stanley is the cousin-german of your friend, Miss Elinor Wyllys. Mr. Wyllys himself, Mrs. Stanley, the step-mother, and young Hazlehurst, are the individuals who stand between him and his rights,” continued Mr. Clapp, rising, and walking across the room, as he ran his fingers through his brown curls.
”Impossible!” exclaimed Kate, as the fan she held dropped from her hand.
”Just what I said myself, at first,” replied Mr. Clapp.
”But surely you are deceived, William--how can it be?” continued the wife, in amazement. ”We always thought that Mr. Stanley was lost at sea, years ago!”
”Exactly--it was thought so; but it was not true.”
”But where has he been in the mean time?--Why did he wait so long before he came to claim his inheritance?”
”The same unhappy, reckless disposition that first sent him to sea, kept him roving about. He did not know of his father's death, until four years after it had taken place, and he heard at the same time that he had been disinherited. When he came home, after that event, he found that he was generally believed to have been lost in the Jefferson, wrecked in the year 18--. He was, in fact, the only man saved.”
”How very extraordinary! But why has he never even shown himself among his friends and connexions until now?”
”Why, my dear, his habits have been unhappily very bad in every way for years; they were, indeed the cause of his first leaving his family. He hated everything like restraint--even the common restraints of society, and cared for nothing but a sailor's life, and that in the worst shape, it must be confessed. But he has now grown wiser--he has determined to reform. You observed he signed the temperance pledge this evening?”
”It all sounds so strangely, that I cannot yet believe it, William.”
”I dare say not--it took me four years to believe it.”
”But what do you mean to do? I hope you are not going to undertake a law-suit against two of our best friends, Mr. Wyllys and Mr. Hazlehurst?”
”That must depend on Mr. Wyllys and Mr. Hazlehurst, themselves. I have undertaken, Catherine, to do my best towards restoring this injured man to his property.”
”Oh, William; suppose this man is in the wrong, after all! Don't think of having anything to do with him.”
”My dear, you talk like a woman--you don't know what you say. If I don't act in the premises, do you suppose he won't find another lawyer to undertake his cause?”
”Let him have another, then: but it seems too bad that we should take sides against our best friends; it hardly seems honourable, William, to do so.”
”Honour, alone, won't make a young lawyer's pot boil, I can tell you.”
”But I had rather live poorly, and work hard all my life, than that you should undertake a dishonest cause.”
”It is all very pretty talking, but I have no mind to live poorly; I intend to live as well as I can, and I don't look upon this Stanley cause as a bad one at all. I must say, Catherine, you are rather hard upon your husband, and seem to think more of the interests of your friends, than of his own.”
”How can you talk so, William, when you know you can't think it,”
said the wife reproachfully, tears springing to her eyes.
”Well, I only judge from what you say yourself. But in my opinion there is no danger of a law-suit. As Mr. Stanley's agent, I shall first apply to Mrs. Stanley and Mr. Hazlehurst to acknowledge his claim; and when the evidence is laid before them, I have no kind of doubt but they will immediately give up the property; as they are some of your very honourable people, I must say I think they are bound to do so.”
”Certainly, if the evidence is so clear; but it seems to me, from all I have heard since I have been a lawyer's wife, that evidence never is so very clear, William, but that people disagree about it.”
”Well, I flatter myself that people will be staggered by the proofs we can bring forward; I feel sure of public opinion, at least.”
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