No Name Wilkie Collins (e book reader android TXT) đ
- Author: Wilkie Collins
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âShe had been wise enough in her own interests to dread the influence of his brother-officers, and to persuade him, up to the period of the marriage ceremony, to keep the proposed union between them a secret. She could do this; but she could not provide against the results of accident. Hardly three months had passed, when a chance disclosure exposed the life she had led before her marriage. But one alternative was left to her husbandâ âthe alternative of instantly separating from her.
âThe effect of the discovery on the unhappy boyâ âfor a boy in disposition he still wasâ âmay be judged by the event which followed the exposure. One of Andrewâs superior officersâ âa certain Major Kirke, if I remember rightâ âfound him in his quarters, writing to his father a confession of the disgraceful truth, with a loaded pistol by his side. That officer saved the ladâs life from his own hand, and hushed up the scandalous affair by a compromise. The marriage being a perfectly legal one, and the wifeâs misconduct prior to the ceremony giving her husband no claim to his release from her by divorce, it was only possible to appeal to her sense of her own interests. A handsome annual allowance was secured to her, on condition that she returned to the place from which she had come; that she never appeared in England; and that she ceased to use her husbandâs name. Other stipulations were added to these. She accepted them all; and measures were privately taken to have her well looked after in the place of her retreat. What life she led there, and whether she performed all the conditions imposed on her, I cannot say. I can only tell you that she never, to my knowledge, came to England; that she never annoyed Mr. Vanstone; and that the annual allowance was paid her, through a local agent in America, to the day of her death. All that she wanted in marrying him was money; and money she got.
âIn the meantime, Andrew had left the regiment. Nothing would induce him to face his brother-officers after what had happened. He sold out and returned to England. The first intelligence which reached him on his return was the intelligence of his fatherâs death. He came to my office in London, before going home, and there learned from my lips how the family quarrel had ended.
âThe will which Mr. Vanstone the elder had destroyed in my presence had not been, so far as I know, replaced by another. When I was sent for, in the usual course, on his death, I fully expected that the law would be left to make the customary division among his widow and his children. To my surprise, a will appeared among his papers, correctly drawn and executed, and dated about a week after the period when the first will had been destroyed. He had maintained his vindictive purpose against his eldest son, and had applied to a stranger for the professional assistance which I honestly believe he was ashamed to ask for at my hands.
âIt is needless to trouble you with the provisions of the will in detail. There were the widow and three surviving children to be provided for. The widow received a life-interest only in a portion of the testatorâs property. The remaining portion was divided between Andrew and Selinaâ âtwo-thirds to the brother; one-third to the sister. On the motherâs death, the money from which her income had been derived was to go to Andrew and Selina, in the same relative proportions as beforeâ âfive thousand pounds having been first deducted from the sum and paid to Michael, as the sole legacy left by the implacable father to his eldest son.
âSpeaking in round numbers, the division of property, as settled by the will, stood thus. Before the motherâs death, Andrew had seventy thousand pounds; Selina had thirty-five thousand pounds; Michaelâ âhad nothing. After the motherâs death, Michael had five thousand pounds, to set against Andrewâs inheritance augmented to one hundred thousand, and Selinaâs inheritance increased to fifty thousand.â âDo not suppose that I am dwelling unnecessarily on this part of the subject. Every word I now speak bears on interests still in suspense, which vitally concern Mr. Vanstoneâs daughters. As we get on from past to present, keep in mind the terrible inequality of Michaelâs inheritance and Andrewâs inheritance. The harm done by that vindictive will is, I greatly fear, not over yet.
âAndrewâs first impulse, when he heard the news which I had to tell him, was worthy of the open, generous nature of the man. He at once proposed to divide his inheritance with his elder brother. But there was one serious obstacle in the way. A letter from Michael was waiting for him at my office when he came there, and that letter charged him with being the original cause of estrangement between his father and his elder brother. The efforts which he had madeâ âbluntly and incautiously, I own, but with the purest and kindest intentions, as I knowâ âto compose the quarrel before leaving home, were perverted, by the vilest misconstruction, to support an accusation of treachery and falsehood which would have stung any man to the quick. Andrew felt, what I felt, that if these imputations were not withdrawn before his generous intentions toward his brother took effect, the mere fact of their execution would amount to a practical acknowledgment of the justice of Michaelâs charge against him. He wrote to his brother in the most forbearing terms. The answer received was as offensive as words could make it. Michael had inherited his fatherâs temper, unredeemed by his fatherâs better qualities: his second letter reiterated the charges contained in the first, and declared that he would only accept the offered division as an act of atonement and restitution on Andrewâs part. I next wrote to the mother to use her influence. She was herself aggrieved at being left with nothing more than a life interest in her husbandâs property; she sided
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