CHAPTER IV
UNPLEASANT BUSINESS
It was now nine o’clock, rather
a late hour for callers in the country, and Mrs. Barclay
waited not without curiosity to hear the nature of
the business which had brought her two visitors at
that time.
“Take seats, gentlemen,”
she said, with the courtesy habitual to her.
Squire Davenport, who was disposed
to consider that he had a right to the best of everything,
seated himself in the rocking-chair, and signed his
companion to a cane chair beside him.
“Mr. Kirk,” he commenced,
“is thinking of coming to Pentonville to live.”
“I am glad to hear it,”
said Mrs. Barclay politely. Perhaps she would
not have said this if she had known what was coming
next.
“He is a carpenter,” continued
the squire, “and, as we have none in the village
except old Mr. Wade, who is superannuated, I think
he will find enough to do to keep him busy.”
“I should think so,” assented the widow.
“If he does not, I can employ him a part of
the time on my land.”
“What has all this to do with me?” thought
Mrs. Barclay.
She soon learned.
“Of course he will need a house,”
pursued the squire, “and as his family is small,
he thinks this house will just suit him.”
“But I don’t wish to sell,”
said the widow hurriedly. “I need this
house for Ben and myself.”
“You could doubtless find other
accommodations. I dare say you could hire a
couple of rooms from Elnathan Perkins.”
“I wouldn’t live in that
old shell,” said Mrs. Barclay rather indignantly,
“and I am sure Ben wouldn’t.”
“I apprehend Benjamin will have
no voice in the matter,” said Squire Davenport
stiffly. “He is only a boy.”
“He is my main support, and
my main adviser,” said Mrs. Barclay, with spirit,
“and I shall not take any step which is disagreeable
to him.”
Mr. Kirk looked disappointed, but
the squire gave him an assuring look, as the widow
could see.
“Perhaps you may change your
mind,” said the squire significantly. “I
am under the impression that I hold a mortgage on this
property.”
“Yes, sir,” assented Mrs. Barclay apprehensively.
“For the sum of seven hundred dollars, if I
am not mistaken.”
“Yes, sir.”
“I shall have need of this money
for other purposes, and will trouble you to take it
up.”
“I was to have three months’
notice,” said the widow, with a troubled look.
“I will give you three months’
notice to-night,” said the squire.
“I don’t know where to
raise the money,” faltered Mrs. Barclay.
“Then you had better sell to
my friend here. He will assume the mortgage
and pay you three hundred dollars.”
“But that will be only a thousand
dollars for the place.”
“A very fair price, in my opinion, Mrs. Barclay.”
“I have always considered it
worth fifteen hundred dollars,” said the widow,
very much disturbed.
“A fancy price, my dear madam;
quite an absurd price, I assure you. What do
you say, Kirk?”
“I quite agree with you, squire,”
said Kirk, in a strong, nasal tone. “But
then, women don’t know anything of business.”
“I know that you and your cousin
are trying to take advantage of my poverty,”
said Mrs. Barclay bitterly. “If you are
a carpenter, why don’t you build a house for
yourself, instead of trying to deprive me of mine?”
“That’s my business,” said Kirk
rudely.
“Mr. Kirk cannot spare the time to build at
present,” said the squire.
“Then why doesn’t he hire
rooms from Elnathan Perkins, as you just recommended
to me?”
“They wouldn’t suit him,”
said the squire curtly. “He has set his
mind on this house.”
“Squire Davenport,” said
Mrs. Barclay, in a softened voice, “I am sure
you cannot understand what you ask of me when you seek
to take my home and turn me adrift. Here I lived
with my poor husband; here my boy was born.
During my married life I have had no other home.
It is a humble dwelling, but it has associations
and charms for me which it can never have for no one
else. Let Mr. Kirk see some other house and
leave me undisturbed in mine.”
“Humph!” said the squire,
shrugging his shoulders; “you look upon the
matter from a sentimental point of view. That
is unwise. It is simply a matter of business.
You speak of the house as yours. In reality,
it is more mine than yours, for I have a major interest
in it. Think over my proposal coolly, and you
will see that you are unreasonable. Mr. Kirk
may be induced to give you a little more—say
three hundred and fifty dollars—over and
above the mortgage, which, as I said before, he is
willing assume.”
“How does it happen that you
are willing to let the mortgage remain, if he buys,
when you want the money for other purposes?”
asked the widow keenly.
“He is a near relative of my
wife, and that makes the difference, I apprehend.”
“Well, madam, what do you say?” asked
Kirk briskly.
“I say this, that I will keep the house if I
can.”
“You needn’t expect that I will relent,”
said the squire hastily.
“I do not, for I see there is
no consideration in your heart for a poor widow; but
I cannot help thinking that Providence will raise up
some kind friend who will buy the mortgage, or in some
other way will enable me to save my home.”
You are acting very foolishly, Mrs.
Barclay, as you will realize in time. I give
you a week in which to change your mind. Till
then my friend Kirk’s offer stands good.
After that I cannot promise. If the property
sold at auction I shouldn’t he surprised if it
did not fetch more than the amount of my lien upon
it.”
“I will trust in Providence, Squire Davenport.”
“Providence won’t pay
off your mortgage, ma’am,” said Kirk, with
a coarse laugh.
Mrs. Barclay did not answer.
She saw that he was a man of coarse fiber and did
not care to notice him.
“Come along, Kirk,” said
the squire. “I apprehend she will be all
right after a while. Mrs. Barclay will see her
own interest when she comes to reflect.”
“Good-evening, ma’am,” said Kirk.
Mrs. Barclay inclined her head slowly, but did not
reply.
When the two had left the house she
sank into a chair and gave herself to painful thoughts.
She had known that Squire Davenport had the right
to dispossess her, but had not supposed he would do
so as long as she paid the interest regularly.
In order to do this, she and Ben had made earnest
efforts, and denied themselves all but the barest
necessities. Thus far she had succeeded.
The interest on seven hundred dollars at six per
cent. had amounted to forty-two dollars, and this
was a large sum to pay, but thus far they had always
had it ready. That Squire Davenport, with his
own handsome mansion, would fix covetous eyes on her
little home, she had not anticipated, but it had come
to pass.
As to raising seven hundred dollars
to pay off the mortgage, or induce any capitalist
to furnish it, she feared it would be quite impossible.
She anxiously waited for Ben’s
return from the Town Hall in order to consult with
him.