The Moonstone Wilkie Collins (ebook reader for manga .txt) đ
- Author: Wilkie Collins
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Sir John was dozing, when I entered the room. He roused himself at the sight of me.
âHow do you do, Mr. Bruff?â he said. âI shanât be very long about this. And then Iâll go to sleep again.â He looked on with great interest while I collected pens, ink, and paper. âAre you ready?â he asked. I bowed and took a dip of ink, and waited for my instructions.
âI leave everything to my wife,â said Sir John. âThatâs all.â He turned round on his pillow, and composed himself to sleep again.
I was obliged to disturb him.
âAm I to understand,â I asked, âthat you leave the whole of the property, of every sort and description, of which you die possessed, absolutely to Lady Verinder?â
âYes,â said Sir John. âOnly, I put it shorter. Why canât you put it shorter, and let me go to sleep again? Everything to my wife. Thatâs my Will.â
His property was entirely at his own disposal, and was of two kinds. Property in land (I purposely abstain from using technical language), and property in money. In the majority of cases, I am afraid I should have felt it my duty to my client to ask him to reconsider his Will. In the case of Sir John, I knew Lady Verinder to be, not only worthy of the unreserved trust which her husband had placed in her (all good wives are worthy of that)â âbut to be also capable of properly administering a trust (which, in my experience of the fair sex, not one in a thousand of them is competent to do). In ten minutes, Sir Johnâs Will was drawn, and executed, and Sir John himself, good man, was finishing his interrupted nap.
Lady Verinder amply justified the confidence which her husband had placed in her. In the first days of her widowhood, she sent for me, and made her Will. The view she took of her position was so thoroughly sound and sensible, that I was relieved of all necessity for advising her. My responsibility began and ended with shaping her instructions into the proper legal form. Before Sir John had been a fortnight in his grave, the future of his daughter had been most wisely and most affectionately provided for.
The Will remained in its fireproof box at my office, through more years than I like to reckon up. It was not till the summer of eighteen hundred and forty-eight that I found occasion to look at it again under very melancholy circumstances.
At the date I have mentioned, the doctors pronounced the sentence on poor Lady Verinder, which was literally a sentence of death. I was the first person whom she informed of her situation; and I found her anxious to go over her Will again with me.
It was impossible to improve the provisions relating to her daughter. But, in the lapse of time, her wishes in regard to certain minor legacies, left to different relatives, had undergone some modification; and it became necessary to add three or four codicils to the original document. Having done this at once, for fear of accident, I obtained her ladyshipâs permission to embody her recent instructions in a second Will. My object was to avoid certain inevitable confusions and repetitions which now disfigured the original document, and which, to own the truth, grated sadly on my professional sense of the fitness of things.
The execution of this second Will has been described by Miss Clack, who was so obliging as to witness it. So far as regarded Rachel Verinderâs pecuniary interests, it was, word for word, the exact counterpart of the first Will. The only changes introduced related to the appointment of a guardian, and to certain provisions concerning that appointment, which were made under my advice. On Lady Verinderâs death, the Will was placed in the hands of my proctor to be âprovedâ (as the phrase is) in the usual way.
In about three weeks from that timeâ âas well as I can rememberâ âthe first warning reached me of something unusual going on under the surface. I happened to be looking in at my friend the proctorâs office, and I observed that he received me with an appearance of greater interest than usual.
âI have some news for you,â he said. âWhat do you think I heard at Doctorsâ Commons this morning? Lady Verinderâs Will has been asked for, and examined, already!â
This was news indeed! There was absolutely nothing which could be contested in the Will; and there was nobody I could think of who had the slightest interest in examining it. (I shall perhaps do well if I explain in this place, for the benefit of the few people who donât know it already, that the law allows all wills to be examined at Doctorsâ Commons by anybody who applies, on the payment of a shilling fee.)
âDid you hear who asked for the Will?â I asked.
âYes; the clerk had no hesitation in telling me. Mr. Smalley, of the firm of Skipp and Smalley, asked for it. The Will has not been copied yet into the great Folio Registers. So there was no alternative but to depart from the usual course, and to let him see the original document. He looked it over carefully, and made a note in his pocketbook. Have you any idea of what he wanted with it?â
I shook my head. âI shall find out,â I answered, âbefore I am a day older.â With that I went back at once
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