<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br/> <small>THE SECRETARY</small></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap">IN THE performance of her secretarial
duties, May Thurston duly drummed on
her machine the remarkable letter to Saxe
Temple, in which the old miser made known
his intended disposition of a golden treasury.
Because she possessed an excellent New
England conscience, the girl maintained
silence, despite the urgings of a feminine
desire to share the secret. This reticence
on her part was the more admirable inasmuch
as, just at this time, her affections
were becoming strongly engaged by a suitor.</p>
<p>Hartley Masters, the man in the case, was
a civil engineer employed in the neighborhood
with a survey for an electric road. On
one occasion, he had stopped at Abernethey’s
cottage for a glass of water from the well.
The master of the house was absent at the
time, but the secretary was present, and, by
some chance, out of doors that pleasant May
morning. Conventions seemed rather
absurd in that remote region. The young<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
engineer admired the charming face and
slender form, and hastened to engage her
in conversation. She responded without
reluctance, rather with pleasure in this diversion
from the monotony of her days. Afterward,
a considerable intimacy developed
between the two. May Thurston had much
of her time free, and Masters contrived so
to arrange his work as to take full advantage
of her leisure. That his heart was touched
seriously may be doubted, but his courtship
lacked nothing in the evidences of intensity
and sincerity. He made a deep impression
on the girl, who was both ingenuous and
tender. Masters was the first to whom she
had given more than the most casual heed,
and, almost at the outset, she found her
affections engaged. She regarded him as
astonishingly handsome—as, in truth, he
was—in a melodramatic fashion of his own,
with huge dark eyes, long-lashed and glowing,
a sweep of black mustache, and thick,
clustering hair, which was always artistically
tousled. In fact, the whole appearance of
the man was blatantly artistic, in the bohemian
acceptation of the word, and he was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span>
scrupulous to wear on all occasions a loose
bow of silk at his throat. He was tall, too,
and broad enough, but there was too much
slope to his shoulders, his neck was too long,
his head bulked too large for harmony. His
voice was agreeable, his manners were
suave, quickened by a jauntiness, which was
perhaps assumed to harmonize with the
insouciant air of the cravat. May Thurston,
who had read her Byron, thought of him as
<i>The Corsair</i>, and her heart fluttered.</p>
<p>It is easily understood that the secretary’s
keeping silence concerning her employer’s
remarkable testamentary plans showed her
the possessor of some strength of character,
as well as a sense of honor. She even managed
to keep her own counsel after Masters
openly declared his love, and besought her
to become his wife—at some vague time in
the future, when he should have arrived at
a position of independence. She yielded
readily to his ardor, and had plighted troth,
all a-tremble with maidenly confusion and
womanly raptures. Then, a few days later,
Abernethey died. She felt now that she was
at liberty to reveal the circumstances of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span>
will to her lover. As they strolled on the
lake shore, the evening of the day after the
miser’s death, May told the story, to which
Masters listened with absorbed attention.</p>
<p>“Mad as a hatter!” he ejaculated, contemptuously,
as the girl brought her narrative
to a close. Yet, though his voice was
mocking, there was manifest in his expression
an eagerness that puzzled the girl.</p>
<p>She would not permit his comment to go
unrebuked:</p>
<p>“No,” she declared firmly, “Mr. Abernethey
was not mad. He was eccentric, of
course—very! That was all, however. He
wasn’t crazy—unless every miser is crazy.
He had a sense of humor, though, and he
didn’t quite know what to do with his money.
So he finally worked out the scheme I’ve
told you of.”</p>
<p>“Then, he really did it as a sort of joke,”
Masters suggested eagerly.</p>
<p>“As much that as anything else,” May
answered, and her tone was thoughtful.
“There was sentiment on account of Saxe
Temple’s mother and the old love-affair.
And, of course, this young man’s interest in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>
music made it seem like a good disposal of
the money. But I have a suspicion, too, that
Mr. Abernethey really enjoyed hiding the
money—making it hard for anyone else to
get hold of it, you know. That idea appealed
to his miserly instincts, I think. How he
hated to leave it! ‘No pockets in a shroud!’
I’ve heard him mutter a hundred times. It
was horrible—and pitiful.”</p>
<p>“Yes, miserliness is an awful vice,”
Masters agreed. His tone was perfunctory,
although his inflections were energetic
enough.</p>
<p>There fell a little silence between the
lovers. Where they sat on the west shore,
beneath the rampart of wooded hills, it was
already deep dusk, but out on the open space
of water shone a luminous purple light, shot
over with rose and gold, a reflected sunset
glow over the eastern mountains. May
Thurston stared happily at the wide, dancing
path over the water that led to the newly
risen full moon, and she dreamed blissfully
of the glory of life that was soon to come
to her beside the man who had chosen her
as his mate. Masters, on the contrary, while<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span>
equally enthusiastic in his musings, was by
no means sentimental, as he gazed unseeingly
across the lake’s level, now wimpling
daintily at touch of the slow breeze. The
young engineer’s thoughts were, truth to
tell, of a sort sordid, even avaricious, covetous;
and, at last, after a period of profound
reflection, he uttered his thought:</p>
<p>“May, dearest,” he said softly, with a
tender cadence, “what a shame it is that that
old miser didn’t think of us!”</p>
<p>The girl faced her companion with a
movement of shocked surprise.</p>
<p>“Think of us!” she repeated, confusedly.
“Whatever can you mean?”</p>
<p>Masters turned, and regarded May with
intentness, a fond smile showing beneath the
curve of his mustache. His voice, as he
spoke now, was softer than usual:</p>
<p>“Why,” he said, “I was just thinking on
the hardness of fate—sometimes. Here was
this old man, with more money than he knew
what to do with, and here are we without a
penny. There was nothing money could do
for him, except gratify a vice—the madness
of the miser; and money could do everything<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</SPAN></span>
for you and me, sweetheart. The thought
of it made me say it was a shame the old
man didn’t think of us!”</p>
<p>“Well, after all, we couldn’t expect him
to,” the girl said placidly, with the sober
sense characteristic of her. “Of course, it
would have been nice to have his fortune,
but we must be patient, Hartley.” She
turned her face again to the east, and looked
out into the deeper purples of the distance,
beholding again fair visions of the happiness
to come.</p>
<p>The man’s tones were somber, as he
replied:</p>
<p>“I tell you, May, it seems to me like no
man’s money.”</p>
<p>The girl aroused herself from dreaming,
and for the second time regarded her lover
with puzzled inquiry.</p>
<p>“What do you mean by that, Hartley?”
she demanded.</p>
<p>“I mean,” came the deliberate answer,
“that this hidden fortune of Abernethey’s
doesn’t really belong to anyone at this
moment.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense!” the secretary exclaimed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</SPAN></span>
briskly, confident as to the fact out of her
stores of business experience. “The money
belongs to the estate. By due course of law,
it will go to Saxe Temple, if he fulfills the
condition under which it has been left him.
If he fails, it will go to the girl and the
musicians’ home.” She smiled contentedly,
pleasantly conscious of her own erudition,
and looked out over the lake again, watching
idly the frolicing dance of the swallows to
the movement of the waves.</p>
<p>“On the contrary,” Masters continued
argumentatively, “at this very moment, the
ownership of that gold is problematical.
Nobody exactly owns it, although theoretically
the title to it is vested in the surrogate’s
court, or whatever they call it in this wilderness.
As a matter of strict fact, that gold
has become hidden treasure. To be sure, the
old man has left directions as to who shall
have it if found, and who shall have it if
it’s not found. But, suppose now, someone
else were to find it—not Saxe Temple?”
The girl uttered an ejaculation, and faced
her lover with startled surprise, meeting the
fire of his gaze bewilderedly. “Suppose I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</SPAN></span>
were to find it?”</p>
<p>May Thurston sprang to her feet, and
regarded the speaker with an expression of
sheer amazement, which swiftly changed to
one of dismay. The softly-tinted rose of her
cheeks flamed suddenly to scarlet; her luminous
eyes, usually so gentle, sparkled dangerously.
She stared fixedly at the man for a
few seconds. At first, he encountered her
gaze steadily enough, smiling. But, presently,
under the accusation in her look, the
smile passed from his lips, and his eyes fell.
The girl continued to observe him indignantly
for a few moments more. Then, at
last, she spoke; and now there was more of
sorrow than of anger in her voice:</p>
<p>“Hartley!”</p>
<p>The exclamation was a reproach, and as
such the young man recognized it. He rose
quickly, caught May’s hands in his, and
spoke tenderly in justification of himself, his
eyes again meeting hers boldly.</p>
<p>In the days that followed, Masters showed
a wily patience. He recurred to the subject
of the miser’s gold again and yet again. The
girl’s reluctance slowly grew less, as she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</SPAN></span>
found herself unable to combat the ingenuities
of his reasoning. Finally, she reached
a point where she no longer opposed his
wishes, although she still held to her own
conviction as to the wrongfulness of that
which he proposed. The man felt that he
could trust to her neutrality, so reluctantly
conceded. With this for the time being, he
rested content.</p>
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