The Gold Bag eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 249 pages of information about The Gold Bag.

The Gold Bag eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 249 pages of information about The Gold Bag.

And yet she was not strong, for the situation in which she found herself made her trembling and unstrung.

When asked by the coroner to tell her own story of the events of the evening before, she begged that he would question her instead.

Desirous of making it as easy for her as possible, Mr. Monroe acceded to her wishes, and put his questions in a kindly and conversational tone.

“You were at dinner last night, with Miss Lloyd and Mr. Crawford?”

“Yes,” was the almost inaudible reply, and Mrs. Pierce seemed about to break down at the sad recollection.

“You heard the argument between Mr. Crawford and his niece at the dinner table?”

“Yes.”

“This resulted in high words on both sides?”

“Well, I don’t know exactly what you mean by high words.  Mr. Crawford rarely lost his temper and Florence never.”

“What then did Mr. Crawford say in regard to disinheriting Miss Lloyd?”

“Mr. Crawford said clearly, but without recourse to what may be called high words, that unless Florence would consent to break her engagement he would cut her off with a shilling.”

“Did he use that expression?”

“He did at first, when he was speaking more lightly; then when Florence refused to do as he wished he said he would go that very evening to Mr. Randolph’s and have a new will made which should disinherit Florence, except for a small annuity.”

“And what did Miss Lloyd reply to this threat?” asked the coroner.

“She said,” replied Mrs. Pierce, in her plaintive tones, “that her uncle might do as he chose about that; but she would never give up Mr. Hall.”

At this moment Gregory Hall looked more manly than I had yet seen him.

Though he modestly dropped his eyes at this tacit tribute to his worthiness, yet he squared his shoulders, and showed a justifiable pride in the love thus evinced for him.

“Was the subject discussed further?” pursued the coroner.

“No; nothing more was said about it after that.”

“Will the making of a new will by Mr. Crawfard affect yourself in any way, Mrs. Pierce?”

“No,” she replied, “Mr. Crawford left me a small bequest in his earlier will and I had reason to think he would do the same in a later will, even though he changed his intentions regarding Florence.”

“Miss Lloyd thoroughly believed that he intended to carry out his threat last evening?”

“She didn’t say so to me, but Mr. Crawford spoke so decidedly on the matter, that I think both she and I believed he was really going to carry out his threat at last.”

“When Mr. Crawford left the house, did you and Miss Lloyd know where he was going?”

“We knew no more than he had said at the table.  He said nothing when he went away.”

“How did you and Miss Lloyd spend the remainder of the evening?”

“It was but a short evening.  We sat in the music-room for a time, but at about ten o’clock we both went up to our rooms.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Gold Bag from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.