登陆注册
26297300000062

第62章 CHAPTER XV THE DOCTOR'S WILL(2)

Just as the post master fell into the chair he saw at the gate the heated face of the clerk of the court who returned to the house of death with the celerity of a weasel.

"Well, what is it now?" asked the post master, unlocking the gate for his co-heir.

"Nothing; I have come back to be present at the sealing," answered Massin, giving him a savage look.

"I wish those seals were already on, so that we could go home," said Minoret.

"We shall have to put a watcher over them," said Massin. "La Bougival is capable of anything in the interests of that minx. We'll put Goupil there."

"Goupil!" said the post master; "put a rat in the meal!"

"Well, let's consider," returned Massin. "To-night they'll watch the body; the seals can be affixed in an hour; our wives could look after them. To-morrow we'll have the funeral at twelve o'clock. But the inventory can't be made under a week."

"Let's get rid of that girl at once," said the colossus; "then we can safely leave the watchman of the town-hall to look after the house and the seals."

"Good," cried Massin. "You are the head of the Minoret family."

"Ladies," said Minoret, "be good enough to stay in the salon; we can't think of our dinner to-day; the seals must be put on at once for the security of all interests."

He took his wife apart and told her Massin's proposition about Ursula.

The women, whose hearts were full of vengeance against the minx, as they called her, hailed the idea of turning her out. Bongrand arrived with his assistants to apply the seals, and was indignant when the request was made to him, by Zelie and Madame Massin, as a near friend of the deceased, to tell Ursula to leave the house.

"Go and turn her out of her father's house, her benefactor's house yourselves," he cried. "Go! you who owe your inheritance to the generosity of her soul; take her by the shoulders and fling her into the street before the eyes of the whole town! You think her capable of robbing you? Well, appoint a watcher of the seals; you have a right to do that. But I tell you at once I shall put no seals on Ursula's room; she has a right to that room, and everything in it is her own property. I shall tell her what her rights are, and tell her too to put everything that belongs to her in this house in that room-- Oh! in your presence," he said, hearing a growl of dissatisfaction among the heirs.

"What do you think of that?" said the collector to the post master and the women, who seemed stupefied by the angry address of Bongrand.

"Call HIM a magistrate!" cried the post master.

Ursula meanwhile was sitting on her little sofa in a half-fainting condition, her head thrown back, her braids unfastened, while every now and then her sobs broke forth. Her eyes were dim and their lids swollen; she was, in fact, in a state of moral and physical prostration which might have softened the hardest hearts--except those of the heirs.

"Ah! Monsieur Bongrand, after my happy birthday comes death and mourning," she said, with the poetry natural to her. "You know, YOU, what he was. In twenty years he never said an impatient word to me. I believed he would live a hundred years. He has been my mother," she cried, "my good, kind mother."

These ****** thoughts brought torrents of tears from her eyes, interrupted by sobs; then she fell back exhausted.

"My child," said the justice of peace, hearing the heirs on the staircase. "You have a lifetime before you in which to weep, but you have now only a moment to attend to your interests. Gather everything that belongs to you in this house and put it into your own room at once. The heirs insist on my affixing the seals."

"Ah! his heirs may take everything if they choose," cried Ursula, sitting upright under an impulse of savage indignation. "I have something here," she added, striking her breast, "which is far more precious--"

"What is it?" said the post master, who with Massin at his heels now showed his brutal face.

"The remembrances of his virtues, of his life, of his words--an image of his celestial soul," she said, her eyes and face glowing as she raised her hand with a glorious gesture.

"And a key!" cried Massin, creeping up to her like a cat and seizing a key which fell from the bosom of her dress in her sudden movement.

"Yes," she said, blushing, "that is the key of his study; he sent me there at the moment he was dying."

The two men glanced at each other with horrid smiles, and then at Monsieur Bongrand, with a meaning look of degrading suspicion. Ursula who intercepted it, rose to her feet, pale as if the blood had left her body. Her eyes sent forth the lightnings that perhaps can issue only at some cost of life, as she said in a choking voice:--

"Monsieur Bongrand, everything in this room is mine through the kindness of my godfather; they may have it all; I have nothing on me but the clothes I wear. I shall leave the house and never return to it."

She went to her godfather's room, and no entreaties could make her leave it,--the heirs, who now began to be slightly ashamed of their conduct, endeavoring to persuade her. She requested Monsieur Bongrand to engage two rooms for her at the "Vieille Poste" inn until she could find some lodging in town where she could live with La Bougival. She returned to her own room for her prayer-book, and spent the night, with the abbe, his assistant, and Savinien, in weeping and praying beside her uncle's body. Savinien came, after his mother had gone to bed, and knelt, without a word, beside his Ursula. She smiled at him sadly, and thanked him for coming faithfully to share her troubles.

"My child," said Monsieur Bongrand, bring her a large package, "one of your uncle's heirs has taken these necessary articles from your drawers, for the seals cannot be opened for several days; after that you will recover everything that belongs to you. I have, for your own sake, placed the seals on your room."

"Thank you," she replied, pressing his hand. "Look at him again,--he seems to sleep, does he not?"

同类推荐
  • Lin McLean

    Lin McLean

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 形色外诊简摩

    形色外诊简摩

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 海桑文集

    海桑文集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 诸阿阇梨真言密教部类总录

    诸阿阇梨真言密教部类总录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 六十颂如理论

    六十颂如理论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 女皇陛下的绝宠妖孽

    女皇陛下的绝宠妖孽

    【女主为皇,狠毒傲娇狂妄型,跋扈天下,非np】齐昭尧是个穿越而来的冒牌女皇,她发现自己最憋屈的事,居然是身边的妖孽太多!”混账!”一把推开围绕在自己身边的众美男,她咬牙切齿:“朕要成为一代至尊女皇,首先就必须清肃六宫,把你们这些磨人的妖精们全都送出宫去!”“女皇陛下,您这是打算今后都独宠臣侍一人吗?”最妖孽的那只持扇走来,倒在她的肩头。齐昭尧咽了一口口水,勾勾手指,画风瞬变:“爱妃,来!”
  • 一切成就,从心开始

    一切成就,从心开始

    成功不仅是与别人相比,更重要的是要了解自己,唤醒你心目中的巨人,努力不懈地追求梦想,追求进步,让自己的每一天都比昨天更好。其实生活对于我们每个人来讲都是很公平的,命运对谁都没有一副完美的笑脸,幸福与痛苦,成功与失败都一直伴随在我们左右。没有一种成功是必须要实现的,但是只有你敢于攀登你所选择的山顶,成功才会离你越来越近。成功并非一场竞赛,也不是一座难以逾越的高山。它其实只是你生来就具有的权利,它是你生活的本来面目。我们往往把成功看得那么神秘,那么遥远,那么高不可攀,其实,成功的大门只是虚掩着,根本没有对我们关闭,只要我们轻轻一推,就可以打开。
  • 放手,让你更自由

    放手,让你更自由

    一个御姐内心的大学生,一个工作的大叔,因为一个喜欢的声音,走进了对方的内心。两个人擦出了火花,但是因为异地的关系,让两个人慢慢的疏远了,一个真实的故事,一个爱情的小故事……
  • 美男都是不靠谱的

    美男都是不靠谱的

    一个极品方式死亡的女子被所谓的神送到异世当讨伐魔王的勇士的爆笑之旅。(所有的美男都是不靠谱的)
  • 龙魂斗霸

    龙魂斗霸

    梦想当兵考军校改变命运的吊丝龙天翼,救灾时竟穿越到异世界武魂帝国。他这个原世的吊丝逆袭的将不仅仅是“龙魂斗霸”的名号,而是帝国的皇权!
  • 曙光记

    曙光记

    乱世浩劫,必有曙光乍现。无数年前魔族开始窥视人类大陆,无数的英雄,无数的豪杰在这边土地上留下可悲可泣的传说故事。十年前一位不可一世的魔族王者身死在了人类大陆的土地上,为整个世界赢得了难得的和平时光,如今十年过去了,一个少年重新踏上了新的旅途。
  • 千夜华殇

    千夜华殇

    在古老的东方,一直流传着这样一个传说,一个关于三生石、彼岸花的传说,它的名字叫做《千夜华殇》!“傻子苏,娶仙姑,洞房夜里守花烛。”“傻子傻,种石花,石头开花惊天下!”伴随着这首童谣,我们不妨一起来看看,这段爱情传说……
  • 大公鸡鲁斯图

    大公鸡鲁斯图

    我只是想写个童话,居然找不到分类,算了,先写吧。讲的是一只叫鲁斯图的大公鸡帮助猫爪团打败土狗帮,维护森林和平的故事。
  • 学校恐怖事件

    学校恐怖事件

    平淡无奇的高中生活。作为一个普通到几乎会被无视的十八岁高中女生,秦九儿在不该的地方看到了不该看的一幕。班花张雪亲手将一位同学解体,然后扔进了教室的柜子里。被威胁的秦九儿在班长杨鑫的帮助下报警。随后张雪却失踪了,不久后在一处废弃的杂货堆里发现了她的尸体。本以为事情已经结束,但是没想到奇怪的事情逐步发生起来。
  • 沫影刹那

    沫影刹那

    不存在的童话,哪怕是在奇幻的世界也不会有。一个外星系的美丽公主移落在地球上,与地球上男孩发生的故事。由一开始的懵懵懂懂,再到后来的彻底明白。但一切都已随风而息,顺风而散,最终谁也成不了谁的谁……