GRANT FALLS UNDER SUSPICION
In furtherance of his scheme to throw
suspicion upon Grant, Willis Ford decided to make
another call upon his stepmother the succeeding evening.
It occurred to him that she might possibly connect
his visit of the evening before with her loss, and
he wished to forestall this.
“Is Mrs. Estabrook at home?” he asked
of the servant.
“Yes, sir.”
When the housekeeper made her appearance
he carefully scrutinized her face. She was calm
and placid, and it was clear that she had not discovered
the abstraction of the bonds.
“I dare say you are surprised
to see me so soon again,” he commenced.
“I am always glad to see you,
Willis,” she said. “Come upstairs.”
“What a pleasant room you have, mother!”
“Yes, I am very comfortable.
Have you had any return of your sickness?” she
asked, anxiously.
“No, I have been perfectly well.
By the way, mother, I have a special object in calling.”
“What is it, Willis?”
“I want to speak to you about
those bonds of yours. If you will only sell them
out, and invest in Erie, I am sure you will make in
six months a sum equal to several years interest.”
“That may be, Willis, but I
am very timid about taking a risk. Those bonds
represent all the property I have.”
Willis Ford’s conscience pricked
him a little, when he heard her speaking thus of the
property he had so heartlessly stolen; but he did
not show it in his manner.
“What is the date of your bonds, mother?”
he asked.
“I don’t know. Does that make any
difference?”
“It makes some difference.
Those that have longest to run are most valuable.”
“I can easily tell,” said
the housekeeper, as she rose from her chair and opened
the bureau drawer, in full confidence that the bonds
were safe.
It was an exciting moment for Willis
Ford, knowing the sad discovery that awaited her.
She put her hand in that part of the
drawer where she supposed the bonds to be, and found
nothing. A shade of anxiety overspread her face,
and she searched hurriedly in other parts of the drawer.
“Don’t you find them, mother?” asked
Willis.
“It is very strange,” said Mrs. Estabrook,
half to herself.
“What is strange?”
“I always kept the bonds in the right-hand corner
of this drawer.”
“And you can’t find them?”
“I have looked all over the drawer.”
“You may have put them, by mistake, in one of
the other drawers.”
“Heaven grant it!” said Mrs. Estabrook,
her face white with anxiety.
“Let me help you, mother,” said Willis,
rising.
She did not object, for her hands trembled with nervousness.
The other drawers were opened and
were thoroughly searched, but, of course, the bonds
were not found.
Mrs. Estabrook seemed near fainting.
“I have been robbed,” she said. “I
am ruined.”
“But who could have robbed you?” asked
Ford, innocently.
“I-don’t-know. Oh,
Willis! it was cruel!” and the poor woman burst
into tears. “All these years I have been
saving, and now I have lost all. I shall die
in the poorhouse after all.”
“Not while I am living, mother,”
said Willis. “But the bonds must be found.
They must be mislaid.”
“No, no! they are stolen. I shall never
see them again.”
“But who has taken them? Ha! I have
an idea.”
“What is it?” asked the housekeeper, faintly.
“That boy—Grant Thornton—he
lives in the house, doesn’t he?”
“Yes,” answered Mrs. Estabrook,
in excitement. “Do you think he can have
robbed me?”
“What a fool I am! I ought to have suspected
when—–”
“When what?”
“When he brought some bonds to me to-day to
sell.”
“He did!” exclaimed Mrs. Estabrook; “what
were they?”
“A five-hundred-dollar and a hundred-dollar
bond.”
“I had a five-hundred and five
one-hundred-dollar bonds. They were mine—the
young villain!”
“I greatly fear so, mother.”
“You ought to have kept them,
Willis. Oh! why didn’t you? Where is
the boy? I will see Mr. Reynolds at once.”
“Wait a minute, till I tell
you all I know. The boy said the bonds were handed
to him by an acquaintance.”
“It was a falsehood.”
“Do you know the number of your bonds, mother?”
“Yes, I have them noted down, somewhere.”
“Good! I took the number of those the boy
gave me for sale.”
Mrs. Estabrook found the memorandum.
It was compared with one which Willis Ford brought
with him, and the numbers were identical. Four
numbers, of course, were missing from Ford’s
list.
“That seems pretty conclusive,
mother. The young rascal has stolen your bonds,
and offered a part of them for sale. It was certainly
bold in him to bring them to our office. Is he
in the house?”
“I’ll go and see.”
“And bring Mr. Reynolds with you, if you can
find him.”
In an excited state, scarcely knowing
what she did, the housekeeper went downstairs and
found both parties of whom she was in search in the
same room. She poured out her story in an incoherent
manner, inveighing against Grant as a thief.
When Grant, with some difficulty,
understood what was the charge against him, he was
almost speechless with indignation.
“Do you mean to say I stole your bonds?”
he demanded.
“Yes, I do; and it was a base, cruel act.”
“I agree with you in that, Mrs.
Estabrook. It was base and cruel, but I had nothing
to do with it.”
“You dare to say that, when
you brought the bonds to my son, Willis, to be sold
to-day?”
“Is this true, Grant?”
asked Mr. Reynolds. “Did you sell any bonds
at the office to-day?”
“Yes, sir.”
The broker looked grave.
“Where did you get them?” he asked.
“They were handed to me by an acquaintance in
Wall Street.”
“Who was he?”
“His name is James Morrison.”
“What do you know of him? Is he in any
business?”
“I know very little of him, sir.”
“Have you handed him the money?”
“No, sir. I am to meet
him to-morrow morning at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, and
pay him.”
“Why doesn’t he call at the office?”
“I don’t know,”
answered Grant, puzzled. “I suggested to
him to bring the bonds to the office himself, but
he said he was in haste, and offered me a dollar to
attend to the matter.”
“This seems a mysterious case.”
“Excuse me, Mr. Reynolds, but
I think it is plain enough,” said the housekeeper,
spitefully. “That boy opened my bureau drawer,
and stole the bonds.”
“That is not true, Mr. Reynolds,” exclaimed
Grant, indignantly.
“How did you know the bonds
were offered for sale at my office to-day, Mrs. Estabrook?”
inquired the broker.
“My son—Willis Ford—told
me.”
“When did you see him?”
“Just now.”
“Is he in the house?”
“Yes, sir. I left him in my room.”
“Ask him to be kind enough to accompany you
here.”
The housekeeper left the room.
Grant and his employer remained silent during her
absence.