"If Mrs. Tuke knew," he said to himself, "she would say Providence was interposing to prevent me putting an end to my useless life."
He lay in bed an hour longer than he would have done had the weather been fine. "It is of no use getting up till breakfast-time," he reflected.
He heard the postman"s rat-tat-tat while he was dressing, and wondered if there were any letters for him.
He came slowly and listlessly down the stairs. Another day of weariness and mental distress stretched out before him. "I am only prolonging the agony," he said to himself, as he took his lonely seat at the head of the table.
Then his eye rested on a large envelope by the side of his place, with a blue stamp in the corner.
He was alert in a moment. "An American letter," he said, half aloud, and his thoughts flew off to Madeline Grover unconsciously. The address, however, was in a man"s handwriting--there could be no doubt about that.
He tore open the envelope quickly and mechanically, and turned to the signature at the end of the letter. "Seaward and Graythorne," he read, and a look of perplexity came into his eyes.
He opened out the letter, and an enclosure fluttered on to his plate. He picked it up and stared.
"There must be some mistake," he said with a gasp, and he drew his hand across his eyes as though to remove some dimness that had gathered. Yet, there was his own name clear and distinct enough. "Pay to the order of Mr. Rufus Sterne the sum of five thousand dollars."
"Five thousand dollars," he muttered. "Why, that is a thousand pounds--a thousand pounds. I must be dreaming surely."
He turned to the letter at length, and began to read. Slowly, as he waded his way through the legal jargon, the truth began to dawn upon him. It had to do with the property his father had acc.u.mulated. Some Judge Cowley, of the Supreme Court of somewhere, had authorised a distribution, and the enclosed was the sum paid on account.
That was about all he could make out. But why a firm of solicitors in New York should be acting in a case of disputed property somewhere out in Pennsylvania, was a problem he could not understand.
He was in no mood, however, to worry himself over legal subtleties. The great outstanding fact--the fact that dominated all others--was that he was in possession of a thousand pounds.
The revulsion of feeling was so great that for a moment or two it seemed to unman him. The cords that had been strung up so long to the very highest point of tension were suddenly relaxed. The hard stoicism with which he had fortified himself, melted like wax in the flame of a candle. The dull numbness of despair, which was rendering him indifferent to life, vanished like mist before the summer sun. The joy of hope, the dream of love, the fire of ambition, were all kindled afresh as by an electric spark. The wailing wind, instead of sobbing began to sing. The moaning ocean commenced to laugh and rejoice. The rain-drops were tears of joy that Nature shed. Light and love, and beauty and delight were everywhere. His breakfast remained untouched. He was quite unconscious of the fact until Mrs. Tuke came into the room.
"Why, you haven"t tasted your breakfast," she said, lifting her eyes and hands in astonishment.
"Haven"t I?" he said, with a smile.
"And your bacon is quite cold."
"I forgot all about it, Mrs. Tuke."
"And your tea is like ditch-water."
"I"m very sorry."
"It"s like throwing money away."
"Oh, never mind."
"But I do mind, I hate wastefulness, especially in young people."
"Well, forgive me this time. I"ve had a surprise."
"Oh, indeed! A pleasant surprise, I hope. You"ve had enough of the other sort."
"A very pleasant surprise. Now, brew me a fresh pot of tea and warm up the bacon. I really feel as if I had got an appet.i.te."
"Well, it"s time you had. You"ve been wasting to a shadow the last six months," and Mrs. Tuke hurried out of the room.
Rufus laughed aloud when she was gone. He felt he would either have to laugh or cry. "If only granny were here I should hug her," he said to himself. "I feel so buoyant that I could almost hug Mrs. Tuke."
The wind was still blowing strong from the west as he made his way over the hill to the mine, but its voice was like a song in his ears. The rain had ceased, though the sky was still dark with clouds; but all the landscape seemed flooded with golden sunshine. His nerves were tingling with a new joy, his eyes sparkling with an unwonted fire. He was glad to be alive again, glad to feel the wind of heaven upon his face.
How wearily he had dragged his steps over the hill morning by morning; how dull and continuous had been the pain at his heart! Now all sense of weariness was gone; he seemed to tread on air; his heart was light and buoyant, and all the pain had pa.s.sed away.
He paused a moment where he paused a year before to look at a patch of green lawn that sloped away from Trewinion Hall. A vision of Madeline Grover came back to him for a second and vanished.
"If it be G.o.d"s will," he said to himself, reverently, and with a smile upon his face he continued his way.
During the dinner hour he lodged the precious draft in the bank, and then hurried back to the mine again. In a day or two he got word that the draft was quite in order, and had been duly honoured. With that message vanished his last fear, for he had dreamed the previous night that the whole thing was a hoax and the draft not worth the paper on which it was printed.
His first act was to pay back Felix Muller what he owed him with interest. This he did by cheque.
"I cannot see him," he said to himself. "He would pour ridicule on my beliefs, and laugh my new-found faith to scorn. Moreover, I am not sure that he will be grateful, and I would not like my faith in him to be totally destroyed."
Sat.u.r.day, being half-holiday, he made his way to Tregannon, to see his grandparents and tell them the news. The old folks were greatly excited, and the Rev. Reuben hunted up all the papers and correspondence dealing with his son"s property. The names of Seaward and Graythorne did not appear, however, in any of the doc.u.ments; nor was the name of Judge Cowley ever mentioned.
"I do not understand it at all," the old man said in his most solemn tones. "But then what can you expect in a new country like America?
Everything appears to be haphazard and go-as-you-like."
"Haphazard or no," Rufus replied, "the property has not been all eaten up by the lawyers."
"Well, yes," the old gentleman said, reflectively, "there would appear after all, to be some sense of honesty and justice in the country. But why don"t you take a journey across and look after things for yourself?"
Rufus gave a little start, and looked at his grandfather with a questioning light in his eyes.
"I mean it," the old man said, quietly. "If I were a few years younger nothing would please me better."
"It had never occurred to me," Rufus replied, slowly and thoughtfully.
"Then think about it. You can travel cheaply in these days; besides, you may be able to pick up ideas."
"Yes, that is true," he answered, reflectively. "At any rate it is worth considering."
For the rest of the evening Rufus thought of little else. Conversation ranged over a dozen topics, but he heard scarcely half of what was said.
Constantly his thoughts harked back to his grandfather"s suggestion, and his eyes caught a far-away expression.
"I think you are tired," his granny said to him at length, and she looked at him with a quizzical smile on her wrinkled face.
"I am a little."
"Will you remain while we have prayers?" she questioned, hesitatingly.
"Yes granny. I would like to hear grandfather pray again."