The World's Greatest Books — Volume 07 — Fiction eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 373 pages of information about The World's Greatest Books — Volume 07 — Fiction.

The World's Greatest Books — Volume 07 — Fiction eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 373 pages of information about The World's Greatest Books — Volume 07 — Fiction.

He at once put his affairs into a lawyer’s hands, and thought of love alone.  After a violent encounter with his late keepers and a narrow escape from capture, in the midst of Elysium with Julia, her mother returned in despair.  David had completely disappeared.  Again these lovers were separated, and again Edward’s commonsense came to the rescue.  Alfred went back to Oxford to read for his first class, and Julia to her district visiting, while the terrible delays of the law went on.  Alfred had begun to believe trial by jury would never be allowed him, and when at last, after many postponements, the trial did come on, he was being examined in the schools, and refused to come till his counsel had actually opened the case.  Mr. Thomas Hardie, Alfred’s uncle, was the defendant, for it was proved he had authorised Alfred’s arrest.

A detective had been employed to find Mr. Barkington, a little man in Julia’s district, whom the lawyers suspected might be useful; and when the trial was half over, he led them all in great excitement to the back slums of Westminster.  Mr. Barkington, alias Noah Skinner, was wanted by another client of his.

The room was full of an acrid vapour, and a mummified figure sat at the table, dead this many a day of charcoal fumes; in his hand a banker’s receipt to David Dodd, Esq., for L14,000.  The lawyer was handing it to Julia, having just found a will bequeathing all Skinner had in the world to her, with his blessing, when a solemn voice said:  “No; it is mine.”

A keen cry from Julia’s heart, and in an instant she was clinging round her father’s neck.  Edward could only get at his hand.  Instinct told them Heaven had given them back their father, mind and all.

Alfred Hardie slipped out, and ran like a deer to tell Mrs. Dodd.

Husband and wife met alone in Mrs. Dodd’s room.  No eyes ventured to witness a scene so strange, so sacred.

They all thought in their innocence that Hardie v.  Hardie was now at an end, with Captain Dodd ready to prove Alfred’s sanity; but the lawyer advised them not to put the captain to the agitation of the witness-box.

Mr. Thomas Hardie, the defendant, won the case for Alfred by admitting in the witness-box that his brother Richard had declared that “if you don’t put Alfred in a madhouse, I will put you in one.”

The jury found for the plaintiff, Alfred Hardie, and gave the damages at L3,000.  The verdict was received with acclamation by the people, and in the midst of this Alfred’s lawyer announced that the plaintiff had just gained his first class at Oxford.

Mr. Richard Hardie restored the L14,000, and a few years later died a monomaniac, believing himself penniless when he possessed L60,000.

Alfred married Julia, and, with the consent of his wife, took his father to live with them.  Then Alfred determined to pay in full all who had been ruined by the bank failure, and in time the old bank was reopened with Edward Dodd as managing partner.  In the end, no creditor of Richard Hardie was left unpaid.  Alfred went in for politics and became an M.P. for Barkington; whence to dislodge him I pity anyone who tries.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The World's Greatest Books — Volume 07 — Fiction from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.