Mrs. Brent’s strange temptation.
Now that Phil is fairly established
in the city, circumstances require us to go back to
the country town which he had once called home.
Mrs. Brent is sitting, engaged with
her needle, in the same room where she had made the
important revelation to Phil.
Jonas entered the house, stamping
the snow from his boots.
“Is supper most ready, mother?” he asked.
“No, Jonas; it is only four o’clock,”
replied Mrs. Brent.
“I’m as hungry as a bear. I guess
it’s the skating.”
“I wish you would go to the
post-office before supper, Jonas. There might
be a letter.”
“Do you expect to hear from Phil?”
“He said nothing about writing,”
said Mrs. Brent indifferently. “He will
do as he pleases about it.”
“I did’nt know but he would be writing
for money,” chuckled Jonas.
“If he did, I would send him some,” said
Mrs. Brent.
“You would!” repeated Jonas, looking at
his mother in surprise.
“Yes, I would send him a dollar
or two, so that people needn’t talk. It
is always best to avoid gossip.”
“Are you expecting a letter
from anybody, mother?” asked Jonas, after a
pause.
“I dreamed last night I should
receive an important letter,” said Mrs. Brent.
“With money in it?” asked Jonas eagerly.
“I don’t know.”
“If any such letter comes, will you give me
some of the money?”
“If you bring me a letter containing
money,” said Mrs. Brent, “I will give
you a dollar.”
“Enough said!” exclaimed
Jonas, who was fond of money; “I’m off
to the post-office at once.”
Mrs. Brent let the work fall into
her lap and looked intently before her. A flush
appeared on her pale face, and she showed signs of
restlessness.
“It is strange,” she said
to herself, “how I have allowed myself to be
affected by that dream. I am not superstitious,
but I cannot get over the idea that a letter will
reach me to-night, and that it will have an important
bearing upon my life. I have a feeling, too, that
it will relate to the boy Philip.”
She rose from her seat and began to
move about the room. It was a relief to her in
the restless state of her mind. She went to the
window to look for Jonas, and her excitement rose
as she saw him approaching. When he saw his mother
looking from the window, he held aloft a letter.
“The letter has come,”
she said, her heart beating faster than its wont.
“It is an important letter. How slow Jonas
is.”
And she was inclined to be vexed at
the deliberation with which her son was advancing
toward the house.
But he came at last.
“Well, mother, I’ve got
a letter—a letter from Philadelphia,”
he said. “It isn’t from Phil, for
I know his writing.”
“Give it to me, Jonas,”
said his mother, outwardly calm, but inwardly excited.
“Do you know any one in Philadelphia, mother?”
“No.”
She cut open the envelope and withdrew the inclosed
sheet.
“Is there any money in it?” asked Jonas
eagerly.
“No.”
“Just my luck!” said Jonas sullenly.
“Wait a minute,” said
his mother. “If the letter is really important,
I’ll give you twenty-five cents.”
She read the letter, and her manner
soon showed that she was deeply interested.
We will look over her shoulders and read it with her:
“Continental hotel, Philadelphia,
Feb. 5.
“Dear madam:—
“I write to you on a matter
of the greatest importance to my happiness, and shall
most anxiously await your reply. I would come
to you in person, but am laid up with an attack of
rheumatism, and my physician forbids me to travel.
“You are, as I have been informed,
the widow of Gerald Brent, who thirteen years since
kept a small hotel in the small village of Fultonville,
in Ohio. At that date I one day registered myself
as his guest. I was not alone. My only son,
then a boy of three, accompanied me. My wife
was dead, and my affections centered upon this child.
Yet the next morning I left him under the charge of
yourself and your husband, and pursued my journey.
From that day to this I have not seen the boy, nor
have I written to you or Mr. Brent. This seems
strange, does it not? It requires an explanation,
and that explanation I am ready to give.
“To be brief, then, I was fleeing
from undeserved suspicion. Circumstances which
I need not detail had connected my name with the mysterious
disappearance of a near friend, and the fact that a
trifling dispute between us had taken place in the
presence of witnesses had strengthened their suspicions.
Knowing myself to be innocent, but unable to prove
it, I fled, taking my child with me. When I reached
Fultonville, I became alive to the ease with which
I might be traced, through the child’s companionship.
There was no resource but to leave him. Your
husband and yourself impressed me as kind and warm-hearted.
I was specially impressed by the gentleness with which
you treated my little Philip, and I felt that to you
I could safely trust him. I did not, however,
dare to confide my secret to any one. I simply
said I would leave the boy with you till he should
recover from his temporary indisposition, and then,
with outward calmness but inward anguish, I left my
darling, knowing not if I should ever see him again.
“Well, time passed. I went
to Nevada, changed my name, invested the slender sum
I had with me in mining, and, after varying fortune,
made a large fortune at last. But better fortune
still awaited me. In a poor mining hut, two months
since, I came across a man who confessed that he was
guilty of the murder of which I had been suspected.
His confession was reduced in writing, sworn to before
a magistrate, and now at last I feel myself a free
man. No one now could charge me with a crime from
which my soul revolted.
“When this matter was concluded,
my first thought was of the boy whom I had not seen
for thirteen long years. I could claim him now
before all the world; I could endow him with the gifts
of fortune; I could bring him up in luxury, and I
could satisfy a father’s affectionate longing.
I could not immediately ascertain where you were.
I wrote to Fultonville, to the postmaster, and learned
that you and Mr. Brent had moved away and settled
down in Gresham, in the State of New York. I learned
also that my Philip was still living, but other details
I did not learn. But I cared not, so long as
my boy still lived.
“And now you may guess my wish
and my intention. I shall pay you handsomely
for your kind care of Philip, but I must have my boy
back again. We have been separated too long.
I can well understand that you are attached to him,
and I will find a home for you and Mr. Brent near
my own, where you can see as often as you like the
boy whom you have so tenderly reared. Will you
do me the favor to come at once, and bring the boy
with you? The expenses of your journey shall,
of course, be reimbursed, and I will take care that
the pecuniary part of my obligations to you shall
be amply repaid. I have already explained why
I cannot come in person to claim my dear child.
“Telegraph to me when you will
reach Philadelphia, and I will engage a room for you.
Philip will stay with me.
“Yours gratefully,
“OSCAR Granville.”
“Mother, here is a slip of paper
that has dropped from the letter,” said Jonas.
He picked up and handed to his mother
a check on a Philadelphia bank for the sum of one
hundred dollars.
“Why, that’s the same as money, isn’t
it?” asked Jonas.
“Yes, Jonas.”
“Then you’ll keep your promise, won’t
you?”
Mrs. Brent silently drew from her
pocket-book a two-dollar bill and handed it to Jonas.
“Jonas,” she said, “if
you won’t breathe a word of it, I will tell you
a secret.”
“All right, mother.”
“We start for Philadelphia to-morrow.”
“By gosh! that’s jolly,”
exclaimed Jonas, overjoyed. “I’ll
keep mum. What was in the letter, mother?”
“I will not tell you just now. You shall
know very soon.”
Mrs. Brent did not sleep much that
night. Her mind was intent upon a daring scheme
of imposture. Mr. Granville was immensely wealthy,
no doubt. Why should she not pass off Jonas upon
him as his son Philip, and thus secure a fortune for
her own child?