Volume Ii Part 20 (2/2)

Stanley. The tone of each was civil and respectful; though each contained a technical legal notice, that they would be required to surrender to William Stanley, the property of his late father, according to the will of the said John William Stanley; which the said William, his son, had hitherto neglected to claim, though legally ent.i.tled to it.

”There: is certainly an air of confidence about those letters of Clapp's,” said Harry, ”as if he felt himself on a firm foothold.

It is very extraordinary!”

”Of course: he would never move in such a case, without some plausible proof,” said Mr. Wyllys.

”But how could he get any proof whatever, on this occasion?” said Mrs. Stanley. ”For these eighteen years, nearly, William Stanley has been lying at the bottom of the ocean. We have believed so, at least.”

”Proofs have been manufactured by lawyers before now,” said Mr.

Wyllys. ”Do you suppose that if William Stanley had been living, we never should have heard one trace of him during eighteen years?--at a time, too, when his father's death had left him a large property.”

”What sort of a man is this Mr. Clapp?” asked Mrs. Stanley. ”His manners and appearance, whenever I have accidentally seen him with the Hubbards, struck me as very unpleasant: but is it possible he can be so utterly devoid of all principle, as wilfully to countenance an impostor?”

”He is a man whom I do not believe to possess one just principle!” said Mr. Wyllys. ”Within the last year or two, I have lost all confidence in his honesty, from facts known to me.”

”I have always had a poor opinion of him, but I have never had much to do with him,” said Harry; ”still, I should not have thought him capable of entering into a conspiracy so atrocious as this must be, if the story be not true.”

”He would do any dirty work whatever, for money. I KNOW the man,”

said Mr. Wyllys, with emphasis.

”It is possible he may be deceived himself,” observed Mrs.

Stanley.

”Very improbable,” replied Mr. Wyllys, shaking his head.

”A shrewd, cunning, quick-witted fellow, as I remember him, would not be likely to undertake such a case, unless he had some prospect of success,” said Harry, pacing the room again. ”He must know perfectly well that it is make or break with him. If he does not succeed, he will be utterly ruined.”

”He will give us trouble, no doubt,” said Mr. Wyllys. ”He must have got the means of putting together a plausible story. And yet his audacity confounds me!”

”Eighteen years, is it not, since William Stanley's death?” asked Harry, turning to Mrs. Stanley.

”It will be eighteen years next October, since he sailed. I was married in November; and from that time we have never heard anything from the poor boy, excepting the report that the Jefferson, the s.h.i.+p in which he sailed, had been s.h.i.+pwrecked on the coast of Africa, the following winter, and all hands lost.

That report reached us not long before my husband's death, and caused him to word his will in the way it is now expressed; giving to the son of his kinsman and old friend, half his property, in case his son's death should be confirmed. The report WAS confirmed, some months later, by the arrival of an American vessel, which had ridden out the storm that wrecked the Jefferson: she saw the wreck itself, sent a boat to examine it, but could find no one living; although several bodies were picked up, with the hope of reviving them. But you have heard the whole sad story before, Harry.”

”Certainly; I merely wished to hear the facts again, ma'am, from your own lips, lest I might have forgotten some important point.”

”Although you were quite a child at the time, Harry,” said Mr.

Wyllys, ”eight or ten I believe, still, I should think you must remember the anxiety to discover the real fate of William Stanley. I have numbers of letters in my hands, answers to those I had written with the hope of learning something more positive on the subject. We sent several agents, at different times, to the princ.i.p.al sea-ports, to make inquiries among the sailors; it all resulted in confirming the first story, the loss of the Jefferson, and all on board. Every year, of course, made the point more certain.”

”Still, we cannot say that is not impossible {sic} he should have escaped,” observed Harry.

”Why should he have waited eighteen years, before he appeared to claim his property?--and why should he not come directly to his father's executors, instead of seeking out such a fellow as Clapp? It bears on the very face every appearance of a gross imposture. Surely, Harry, you do not think there is a shade of probability as to the truth of this story?”

”Only a possibility, sir; almost everything is against it, and yet I shall not rest satisfied without going to the bottom of the matter.”

”That, you may be sure, we shall be forced to do. Clapp will give us trouble enough, I warrant; he will leave no stone unturned that a dirty lawyer can move. It will be vexatious, but there cannot be a doubt as to the result.”

”You encourage me,” said Mrs. Stanley; ”and yet the idea of entering into a suit of this kind is very painful!”

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