postman was pressed for time.â
âIt is from the lawyers. Some sort of document,â said Osbert. âWhat are you engaged in, Grannie?â
âIn nothing. It is a copy of your uncleâs will. They wrote that they were sending it. There wonât be anything to say about it. I know very much what it must be.â
âIt will only affect yourself,â said Erica. âBut there may be some minor legacies that will have a human interest.â
âIt will be short and clear,â said Jocasta, as she broke the seal. âThere can be no question about it. âThis is the last will and testament of me, Hamilton Grimstone, bachelor, of Egdon House, Egdon, Somerset.â Then some legal formalities and what you call minor legacies to servants and other dependants. And now the gist of the will. âI give and bequeath to my mother, Jocasta Grimstone, widow, all of which I die possessed in the aforesaid house which she owns and at present occupies. And all else of which I die possessed, namely my investments, securities and moneys at the bank, I give and bequeath absolutely to Hermia Heriot, spinster, of Egdon Hall, Egdon, Somerset, whom I wished to make my wifeââ Hermia Heriot! The Heriotsâ eldest daughter! The mistress of the school! What does it mean? It canât mean what it says. It canât be meant as it stands.â
There was a pause. Hollander vanished from the room as if feeling his presence an intrusion, allowing his demeanour to change at the door to one of eager purpose.
âIt does mean what it says,â said Osbert. âAll wills are meant as they stand. And this one stands like this. There is something we have not known. Did Uncle see much of Miss Heriot?â
âHe saw her at the school when he went there with Amy and me. He showed an interest in her both before and after they met. Both before and after; that tells its tale; the feeling was half imaginary. It canât have meant anything. He would not have kept it from his mother. What are we to do about it? It is clear that something should be done.â
âIt seems she must have refused him,â said Erica.âOf course she knew him very little. She may not want to take the money. It seems possible that she will not.â
âMost people want to take money,â said Osbert. âIt gives them so much else that they want. This is an unusual case, but it follows the usual line. There is no other for it to follow.â
âIt is too unusual to be accepted,â said his grandmother. âHe must have made the will in a mood of emotion, and then omitted to alter it. It is a trouble to change a will. My poor boy, he went through that alone. But it could not have gone deep.â
âHe may have wished it did,â said Erica. âPerhaps he wanted an outlet for feelings he liked to imagine. And he could not know that he was going to die, and that the will would take effect.â
âThat is another way of saying it means nothing. That is, in itself. Of course it has its legal meaning.â
âIt has,â said Osbert. âAnd it is the whole of its actual meaning. The money belongs to Hermia Heriot, as his other possessions belong to you. That is how he has apportioned his effects. Is the money very much? Have you any idea of the amount?â
âNo definite idea. He inherited a fortune and added to it. He was reticent about the figures, but they were on an unusual scale. If Miss Heriot had known it, and known him better, we canât say what the result would have been.â
âBut she would not have accepted him,â said Amy, unthinkingly, or rather saying what she thought.
âWe shall never know what she would have done if she had seen more of him.â
Amy was silent on the probable result of this.
âWe know nothing,â said Erica, âexcept how he felt to her or wished to feel.â
âIt is true, poor boy! Oh,
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