I was invited to stay to luncheon by my lawyer, and I accepted the invitation. In the course of the conversation Van Beek said— “The country seat, Runenburg, will be at your disposal on the 31st of October next; but the house in town is let till the May following, and the tenants would like to stay on, if it be agreeable to you. They are very respectable people. How am I to act in the matter?” I stared at him in surprise and perplexity. Such a strange feeling came over me. I who have never possessed a stick or a stone in my life (in fact, I always felt it a relief when the quarter’s lodging bill was paid), now I had to decide about a house in town and a country seat. “I think, Mr. Van Beek, everything had better remain as it is until the question of my marriage with Miss Mordaunt is settled.” “The Jonker forgets that that condition is not binding.” “I look upon it as binding, though such may not be the legal interpretation of the will.” “Would you not like to see the house whilst you are in Utrecht? It is beautifully situated, and well worth a visit, I can assure you.” “No, thank you, sir; but I should like to see the house in which my aunt lived: from its surroundings I may be able to obtain a better idea of her character.” “Oh, with pleasure, Jonker! I thought I had already told you,” began Van Beek, somewhat embarrassed, “that the old lady had bequeathed it to me, on condition her maid should occupy it as long as she lives. It is a splendid legacy; that I do not deny. But consider, I have served her thirty years in all kinds of business, some of which cost me much trouble and loss of time. And I may remind you that there is no extra money set aside for my expenses as executor, whilst I am recommended to assist the “My dear sir,” I rejoined, “it was to be expected that aunt would treat you generously. It is not my intention to dispute any of her bequests. It will be a sort of pilgrimage for me.” “We will drive there at once after luncheon. It is only half an hour’s distance from the town.” I must confess the interior of my aunt’s dwelling did not enable me to gather any new ideas of the strange personage who once occupied it. The old waiting-woman received us with coolness, and chanted the praises of her late mistress in pious terms. The young cook shed a torrent of tears, and was evidently astonished not to see me do the same; whilst the man-servant eyed me askance, as if he feared I had come there to cut off his legacy. The house was furnished in a moderately comfortable style, most of the furniture being of the good solid sort common in the reign of King William I., though there had been an attempt to imitate the style of the First French Empire. There was only one sofa in the house, and one armchair À la Voltaire, in which Miss Roselaer reposed herself for just one hour after “She was always making up her accounts or writing,” said her maid, “when she was not either reading or knitting.” “And what did she read?” I asked. “Mostly ‘unbelieving books’—those in the bookcase there; sometimes, but very seldom, the Bible.” The “unbelieving books” were French, German, and English classics. I pointed out to Van Beek that I should like to possess this small but well-selected library. All the books are beautifully though not showily bound, and they bear marks of assiduous reading. Among the “unbelieving books” are the works of FÉnelon, Bossuet, and Pascal, peacefully assorted with those of Voltaire and the EncyclopÆdists, whilst Lavater, Gellert, Lessing, and Klopstock find a place by the side of Goethe and Schiller, and the plays of Iffland and Kotzebue. This was the first moment of unalloyed pleasure I have felt since I came into my fortune, when I once more cast my eyes over the library and beheld it with all the pride of ownership. I involuntarily put forth “I should rather have thought the Jonker would have preferred my lady’s Bible,” she said. “I should certainly like the Bible as well as the other books, Mrs. Jones—that is to say, unless you wish to keep it yourself as a memento.” “Oh no, Jonker! such a worldly, new-fashioned book I would not have in my possession. I can’t look upon it as God’s word; and I could never understand how my lady found edification in it.” “What’s the matter with the Bible?” I asked Van Beek as we left the house. “Nothing, absolutely nothing. It is an ordinary States-Bible, only not printed in the old-fashioned German type.” Upon my word, I thought aunt must indeed have The next day I set out for the small town of Zutphen, which is within an easy drive of the Castle de Werve. |