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PAGE 5

Mary With The High Hand
by [?]

* * * * *

The clock had struck ten before Mr. Baines, the solicitor, knocked at the door. Mary hesitated, and then took him upstairs in silence while he suavely explained to her why he had been unable to come earlier. This lawyer was a young Scotsman who had descended upon the town from nowhere, bought a small decayed practice, and within two years had transformed it into a large and flourishing business by one of those feats of energy, audacity, and tact, combined, of which some Scotsmen seem to possess the secret.

‘Here is Mr. Baines, Edward,’ Mary said quietly; and then, having rearranged the sick man’s pillow, she vanished out of the room and went into the kitchen.

The gas-jet there showed only a point of blue, but she did not turn it up. Dragging an old oak rush-seated rocking-chair near to the range, where a scrap of fire still glowed, she rocked herself gently in the darkness.

After about half an hour Mr. Baines’s voice sounded at the head of the stairs:

‘Miss Beechinor, will ye kindly step up? We shall want some asseestance.’

She obeyed, but not instantly.

In the bedroom Mr. Baines, a fountain-pen between his fine white teeth, was putting some coal on the fire. He stood up as she entered.

‘Mr. Beechinor is about to make a new will,’ he said, without removing the pen from his mouth, ‘and ye will kindly witness it.’

The small room appeared to be full of Baines–he was so large and fleshy and assertive. The furniture, even the chest of drawers, was dwarfed into toy-furniture, and Beechinor, slight and shrunken-up, seemed like a cadaverous manikin in the bed.

‘Now, Mr. Beechinor.’ Dusting his hands, the lawyer took a newly-written document from the dressing-table, and, spreading it on the lid of a cardboard box, held it before the dying man. ‘Here’s the pen. There! I’ll help ye to hold it.’

Beechinor clutched the pen. His wrinkled and yellow face, flushed in irregular patches as though the cheeks had been badly rouged, was covered with perspiration, and each difficult movement, even to the slightest lifting of the head, showed extreme exhaustion. He cast at Mary a long sinister glance of mistrust and apprehension.

‘What is there in this will?’

Mr. Baines looked sharply up at the girl, who now stood at the side of the bed opposite him. Mechanically she smoothed the tumbled bed-clothes.

‘That’s nowt to do wi’ thee, lass,’ said Beechinor resentfully.

‘It isn’t necessary that a witness to a will should be aware of its contents,’ said Baines. ‘In fact, it’s quite unusual.’

‘I sign nothing in the dark,’ she said, smiling. Through their half-closed lids her eyes glimmered at Baines.

‘Ha! Legal caution acquired from your cousin, I presume.’ Baines smiled at her. ‘But let me assure ye, Miss Beechinor, this is a mere matter of form. A will must be signed in the presence of two witnesses, both present at the same time; and there’s only yeself and me for it.’

Mary looked at the dying man, whose features were writhed in pain, and shook her head.

‘Tell her,’ he murmured with bitter despair, and sank down into the pillows, dropping the fountain-pen, which had left a stain of ink on the sheet before Baines could pick it up.

‘Well, then, Miss Beechinor, if ye must know,’ Baines began with sarcasm, ‘the will is as follows: The testator–that’s Mr. Beechinor–leaves twenty guineas to his brother Mark to show that he bears him no ill-will and forgives him. The rest of his estate is to be realized, and the proceeds given to the North Staffordshire Infirmary, to found a bed, which is to be called the Beechinor bed. If there is any surplus, it is to go to the Law Clerks’ Provident Society. That is all.’

‘I shall have nothing to do with it,’ Mary said coldly.

‘Young lady, we don’t want ye to have anything to do with it. We only desire ye to witness the signature.’