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The Missing Will

by Rett Winwood


I.

I was in the city, working busily away at my law-books, when the despatch came that Uncle Robert Collingwood was on his death-bed, and had asked to see me. Of course such a summons was not to be disregarded, so I straightway set about packing my carpet-bag, and perhaps ought to have dropped into it a few scalding tears, with the clean linen and box of paper collars that found their way there, but did not. I only set about the work quietly, and with so much attention that not a single needed article was forgotten.

Riding out in the cars, I had time for thought, but none for grief. Uncle Robert was an old man, very wealthy and very odd, and my nearest relative living; but he had seemed to utterly ignore my existence, for a few years back, and now I felt no more sorrow at the thought of his death, than at that of the merest stranger. In fact, he was a stranger, and as such I regarded him. He had asked for me, however, and I could not refuse to go to him.

There was no carriage waiting for me at the station, when I reached it at last, and I was obliged to find a hack. When I arrived at the house, a single glance was sufficient to tell me that all was over. A deathly stillness seemed to hover about the place, and a black streamer was fluttering from the door-knob. The servant who let me in, said that my uncle had died very early in the morning. Finding myself too late, I asked to be shown to a room where I could rest from the fatigue of the journey. The servant led the way up stairs, and we had hardly reached the landing, when a door opened, near at hand, and a figure flitted in, and paused where the sunbeams from the great oriel window that lighted the upper hall fell full and bright upon her. A figure scarcely of medium size it was, yet astounding in a certain sort of indescribable girlish grace, clad in a flowing robe… Read More