An important discovery.
“Mr. Carter, can you spare me
a couple of days?” asked Philip.
“Certainly, Phil,” answered
the old gentleman. “May I ask how you wish
to dispose of the time?”
“I would like to go to Planktown
to see my friends there. It is now some months
since I left the village, and I would like to see my
old friends.”
“The desire is a natural one.
Your home is broken up, is it not?”
“Yes, but I can stay at the
house of Tommy Kavanagh. I know he will be glad
to have me.”
“It is strange that your step-mother
and her son have left no trace behind them,”
said Mr. Carter thoughtfully. “It looks
suspicious, as if they had some good reason for their
disappearance.”
“I can’t understand why
they should have left Planktown,” said Philip,
appearing puzzled.
“Is the house occupied?”
“Yes. I hear that a cousin
of Mrs. Brent occupies it. I shall call and inquire
after her.”
“Very well, Philip. Go
when you please. You may be sure of a welcome
when you return.”
In Planktown, though his home relations
latterly had not been pleasant, Philip had many friends,
and when he appeared on the street, he met everywhere
glances of friendly welcome. One of the first
to meet him was Tommy Kavanagh.
“Where did you come from, Phil?” he asked.
“I am glad enough to see you. Where are
you staying?”
“Nowhere, Tommy, at present.
If your mother can take me in, I will stay at your
house.”
“Take you? Yes, and will
be glad enough to have you stay with us. You
know we live in a small house, but if you don’t
mind——”
“What do you take me for, Tommy?
Whatever is good enough for you and your mother will
be good enough for me.”
“What are you doing, Phil?
You don’t look as if you had hard work making
a living.”
“I am well fixed now, but I
have had some anxious days. But all’s well
that ends well. I am private secretary to a rich
man, and live in a fine brown-stone house on Madison
Avenue.”
“Good for you, Phil! I knew you’d
succeed.”
“Where is Mrs. Brent? Has anything been
heard from her?”
“I don’t think anybody
in the village knows where she is—that is,
except her cousin, who lives in your old house.”
“What is his name?”
“Hugh Raynor.”
“What sort of a man is he?”
“The people in the village don’t
like him. He lives alone, and I hear that he
cooks for himself. He is not at all social, and
no one feels very much acquainted with him.”
“I shall call upon him and inquire after Mrs.
Brent.”
“Then, Phil, you had better
go alone, for he doesn’t like callers, and he
will be more ready to receive one than two.”
Philip enjoyed his visit, and was
busied making calls on his old acquaintances.
He was much pleased with the cordiality with which
he had been received.
It was not till the afternoon of the
second day that he turned his steps toward the house
which had been his home for so long a time.
We will precede him, and explain matters
which made his visit very seasonable.
In the sitting-room sat Hugh Raynor,
the present occupant of the house. He was a small,
dark-complexioned man, with a large Roman nose, and
his face was at this moment expressive of discontent.
This seemed to be connected with a letter which he
had just been reading. Not to keep the reader
in suspense, it was mailed at Chicago, and was written
by Mrs. Brent. We will quote a paragraph:
“You seem to me very unreasonable
in expecting me not only to give you the house rent-free,
but also to give you a salary. I would like to
know what you do to merit a salary. You merely
take care of the house. As for that, there are
plenty who would be glad to take charge of so good
a house, and pay me a fair rent. Indeed, I am
thinking that it will be best for me to make some
such arrangement, especially as you do not seem satisfied
with your sinecure position. You represent me
as rolling in wealth. Jonas and I are living
very comfortably, and we have nothing to complain
of, but that is no reason for my squandering the small
fortune left me by my husband. I advise you to
be a little more reasonable in your demands, or I
shall request you to leave my house.”
“Selfish as ever,” muttered
Mr. Raynor, after reading this letter over again.
“Cousin Jane never was willing that any one else
should prosper. But she has made a mistake in
thinking she can treat me meanly. I am in
A position to turn the tables
upon her! This paper—if she
dreamed I had found it, she would yield to all my
demands.”
He laid his hand upon a paper, folded
lengthwise, and presenting the appearance of a legal
document.
He opened the paper and read aloud:
“To the boy generally known
as Philip Brent and supposed, though incorrectly,
to be my son, I bequeath the sum of five thousand dollars,
and direct the same to be paid over to any one whom
he may select as guardian, to hold in trust for him
until he attains the age of twenty-one.”
“This will Mrs. Brent carefully
concealed,” continued Mr. Raynor, “in
order to save the money for herself and Jonas.
I wonder she was not prudent enough to burn it, or,
at any rate, to take it with her when she left Planktown.
It is a damaging secret, but I hold it, and I mean
to use it, too. Let me see, what is it best to
do?”
Mr. Raynor spent some time in quiet
thought. It seemed to him that it might be well
to hint his discovery in a letter to Mrs. Brent, and
to make it the basis of a demand for a generous sum
of hush-money—one thousand dollars, at
least. He might have decided to do this but for
an incident which suggested another course.
The door-bell rang, and when he opened
the door with some surprise, for callers were few,
he saw standing before him a tall, handsome boy, whom
he did not recognize.
“Do you wish to see me?” he asked.
“What is your name?”
“My name is Philip Brent.”
“What!” exclaimed Mr.
Raynor, in visible excitement, “are you the son
of the late Mr. Brent?”
“I was always regarded as such,” answered
Philip.
“Come in, then. I am glad
to see you,” said Mr. Raynor; and Phil entered
the house, surprised at a reception much more cordial
than he had expected.
In that brief moment Mr. Raynor had
decided to reveal the secret to Phil, and trust to
his gratitude for a suitable acknowledgment. In
this way he would revenge himself upon Mrs. Brent,
who had treated him so meanly.
“I have been wishing to see
you, for I have a secret of importance to communicate,”
said Mr. Raynor.
“If it relates to my parents,
I know it already,” said Phil.
“No; it is something to your
advantage. In revealing it I make Mrs. Brent
my enemy, and shall forfeit the help she is giving
me.”
“If it is really of advantage
to me, and I am able to make up your loss to you,
I will do it,” said Phil.
“That is sufficient. I
will trust to your honor. You look like a boy
who will keep a promise though not legally bound.”
“You only do me justice, Mr. Raynor.”
“Then cast your eye upon this paper and you
will know the secret.”
“Is it a will?” exclaimed Phil, in surprise.
“Yes, it is the will of the
late Gerald Brent. By it he bequeaths to you
five thousand dollars.”
“Then he did not forget me,”
said Phil, more pleased with the assurance that he
had been remembered than by the sum of money bequeathed
to him. “But why have I not known this
before?” he asked, looking up from the will.
“You must ask that of Mrs. Brent!”
said Mr. Raynor significantly.
“Do you think she suppressed it purposely?”
“I do,” answered Raynor laconically.
“I must see her. Where can I find her?”
“I can only say that her letters
to me are mailed in Chicago, but she scrupulously
keeps her address a secret.”
“Then I must go to Chicago. May I take
this paper with me?”
“Yes. I advise you to put
it into the hands of a lawyer for safe keeping.
You will not forget that you are indebted to me for
it?”
“No, Mr. Raynor. I will take care you lose
nothing by your revelation.”
The next morning Phil returned to New York.