<h3 align="center">CHAPTER LII</h3><br/><br/>
<p>The fact that Gerhardt was dead made no particular
difference to Lester, except as it affected Jennie.
He had liked the old German for his many sterling qualities,
but beyond that he thought nothing of him one
way or the other. He took Jennie to a watering-place
for ten days to help her recover her spirits, and it was
soon after this that he decided to tell her just how things
stood with him; he would put the problem plainly before
her. It would be easier now, for Jennie had been informed
of the disastrous prospects of the real-estate deal.
She was also aware of his continued interest in Mrs.
Gerald. Lester did not hesitate to let Jennie know that
he was on very friendly terms with her. Mrs. Gerald
had, at first, formally requested him to bring Jennie to
see her, but she never had called herself, and Jennie understood
quite clearly that it was not to be. Now that her
father was dead, she was beginning to wonder what was
going to become of her; she was afraid that Lester might
not marry her. Certainly he showed no signs of intending
to do so.</p>
<p>By one of those curious coincidences of thought, Robert
also had reached the conclusion that something
should be done. He did not, for one moment, imagine
that he could directly work upon Lester—he did not care
to try—but he did think that some influence might be
brought to bear on Jennie. She was probably amenable
to reason. If Lester had not married her already, she
must realize full well that he did not intend to do so.
Suppose that some responsible third person were to
approach her, and explain how things were, including,
of course, the offer of an independent income? Might
she not be willing to leave Lester, and end all this trouble?
After all, Lester was his brother, and he ought not to lose
his fortune. Robert had things very much in his own
hands now, and could afford to be generous. He finally
decided that Mr. O'Brien, of Knight, Keatley & O'Brien,
would be the proper intermediary, for O'Brien was suave,
good-natured, and well-meaning, even if he was a lawyer.
He might explain to Jennie very delicately just how the
family felt, and how much Lester stood to lose if he continued
to maintain his connection with her. If Lester
had married Jennie, O'Brien would find it out. A
liberal provision would be made for her—say fifty or one
hundred thousand, or even one hundred and fifty thousand
dollars. He sent for Mr. O'Brien and gave him
his instructions. As one of the executors of Archibald
Kane's estate, it was really the lawyer's duty to look
into the matter of Lester's ultimate decision.</p>
<p>Mr. O'Brien journeyed to Chicago. On reaching the
city, he called up Lester, and found out to his satisfaction
that he was out of town for the day. He went
out to the house in Hyde Park, and sent in his card to
Jennie. She came down-stairs in a few minutes quite
unconscious of the import of his message; he greeted her
most blandly.</p>
<p>"This is Mrs. Kane?" he asked, with an interlocutory
jerk of his head.</p>
<p>"Yes," replied Jennie.</p>
<p>"I am, as you see by my card, Mr. O'Brien, of Knight,
Keatley & O'Brien," he began. "We are the attorneys
and executors of the late Mr. Kane, your—ah—Mr.
Kane's father. You'll think it's rather curious, my coming
to you, but under your husband's father's will there
were certain conditions stipulated which affect you and
Mr. Kane very materially. These provisions are so
important that I think you ought to know about them—that
is if Mr. Kane hasn't already told you. I—pardon
me—but the peculiar nature of them makes me conclude
that—possibly—he hasn't." He paused, a very question-mark
of a man—every feature of his face an interrogation.</p>
<p>"I don't quite understand," said Jennie. "I don't
know anything about the will. If there's anything that
I ought to know, I suppose Mr. Kane will tell me. He
hasn't told me anything as yet."</p>
<p>"Ah!" breathed Mr. O'Brien, highly gratified. "Just
as I thought. Now, if you will allow me I'll go into the
matter briefly. Then you can judge for yourself whether
you wish to hear the full particulars. Won't you sit
down?" They had both been standing. Jennie seated
herself, and Mr. O'Brien pulled up a chair near to hers.</p>
<p>"Now to begin," he said. "I need not say to you, of
course, that there was considerable opposition on the
part of Mr. Kane's father, to this—ah—union between
yourself and his son."</p>
<p>"I know—" Jennie started to say, but checked herself.
She was puzzled, disturbed, and a little apprehensive.</p>
<p>"Before Mr. Kane senior died," he went on, "he
indicated to your—ah—to Mr. Lester Kane, that he
felt this way. In his will he made certain conditions
governing the distribution of his property which made
it rather hard for his son, your—ah—husband, to come
into his rightful share. Ordinarily, he would have inherited
one-fourth of the Kane Manufacturing Company,
worth to-day in the neighborhood of a million dollars,
perhaps more; also one-fourth of the other properties,
which now aggregate something like five hundred thousand
dollars. I believe Mr. Kane senior was really
very anxious that his son should inherit this property.
But owing to the conditions which your—ah—which
Mr. Kane's father made, Mr. Lester Kane cannot possibly
obtain his share, except by complying with a—with
a—certain wish which his father had expressed."</p>
<p>Mr. O'Brien paused, his eyes moving back and forth
side wise in their sockets. In spite of the natural prejudice
of the situation, he was considerably impressed
with Jennie's pleasing appearance. He could see quite
plainly why Lester might cling to her in the face of all
opposition. He continued to study her furtively as he
sat there waiting for her to speak.</p>
<p>"And what was that wish?" she finally asked, her
nerves becoming just a little tense under the strain of
the silence.</p>
<p>"I am glad you were kind enough to ask me that," he
went on. "The subject is a very difficult one for me to
introduce—very difficult. I come as an emissary of the
estate, I might say as one of the executors under the will
of Mr. Kane's father. I know how keenly your—ah—how
keenly Mr. Kane feels about it. I know how keenly
you will probably feel about it. But it is one of those
very difficult things which cannot be helped—which
must be got over somehow. And while I hesitate very
much to say so, I must tell you that Mr. Kane senior
stipulated in his will that unless, unless"—again his
eyes were moving sidewise to and fro—"he saw fit to
separate from—ah—you" he paused to get breath—"he
could not inherit this or any other sum or, at least,
only a very minor income of ten thousand a year; and
that only on condition that he should marry you." He
paused again. "I should add," he went on, "that under
the will he was given three years in which to indicate his
intentions. That time is now drawing to a close."</p>
<p>He paused, half expecting some outburst of feeling
from Jennie, but she only looked at him fixedly, her eyes
clouded with surprise, distress, unhappiness. Now she
understood. Lester was sacrificing his fortune for her.
His recent commercial venture was an effort to rehabilitate
himself, to put himself in an independent position.
The recent periods of preoccupation, of subtle unrest,
and of dissatisfaction over which she had grieved were
now explained. He was unhappy, he was brooding over
this prospective loss, and he had never told her. So his
father had really disinherited him!</p>
<p>Mr. O'Brien sat before her, troubled himself. He was
very sorry for her, now that he saw the expression of her
face. Still the truth had to come out. She ought to
know.</p>
<p>"I'm sorry," he said, when he saw that she was not
going to make any immediate reply, "that I have been
the bearer of such unfortunate news. It is a very painful
situation that I find myself in at this moment, I assure
you. I bear you no ill will personally—of course you
understand that. The family really bears you no ill will
now—I hope you believe that. As I told your—ah—as
I told Mr. Kane, at the time the will was read, I considered
it most unfair, but, of course, as a mere executive
under it and counsel for his father, I could do nothing.
I really think it best that you should know how things
stand, in order that you may help your—your husband"—he
paused, significantly—"if possible, to some
solution. It seems a pity to me, as it does to the various
other members of his family, that he should lose all this
money."</p>
<p>Jennie had turned her head away and was staring at
the floor. She faced him now steadily. "He mustn't
lose it," she said; "it isn't fair that he should."</p>
<p>"I am most delighted to hear you say that, Mrs.—Mrs.
Kane," he went on, using for the first time her improbable
title as Lester's wife, without hesitation. "I
may as well be very frank with you, and say that I feared
you might take this information in quite another spirit.
Of course you know to begin with that the Kane family
is very clannish. Mrs. Kane, your—ah—your husband's
mother, was a very proud and rather distant woman, and
his sisters and brothers are rather set in their notions as
to what constitute proper family connections. They
look upon his relationship to you as irregular, and—pardon
me if I appear to be a little cruel—as not generally
satisfactory. As you know, there had been so much
talk in the last few years that Mr. Kane senior did not
believe that the situation could ever be nicely adjusted,
so far as the family was concerned. He felt that his son
had not gone about it right in the first place. One of the
conditions of his will was that if your husband—pardon
me—if his son did not accept the proposition in regard to
separating from you and taking up his rightful share of
the estate, then to inherit anything at all—the mere ten
thousand a year I mentioned before—he must—ah—he
must pardon me, I seem a little brutal, but not intentionally
so—marry you."</p>
<p>Jennie winced. It was such a cruel thing to say this
to her face. This whole attempt to live together illegally
had proved disastrous at every step. There was only one
solution to the unfortunate business—she could see that
plainly. She must leave him, or he must leave her.
There was no other alternative. Lester living on ten
thousand dollars a year! It seemed silly.</p>
<p>Mr. O'Brien was watching her curiously. He was
thinking that Lester both had and had not made a
mistake. Why had he not married her in the first place?
She was charming.</p>
<p>"There is just one other point which I wish to make in
this connection, Mrs. Kane," he went on softly and
easily. "I see now that it will not make any difference to
you, but I am commissioned and in a way constrained to
make it. I hope you will take it in the manner in which
it is given. I don't know whether you are familiar with
your husband's commercial interests or not?"</p>
<p>"No," said Jennie simply.</p>
<p>"Well, in order to simplify matters, and to make it
easier for you, should you decide to assist your husband
to a solution of this very difficult situation—frankly, in
case you might possibly decide to leave on your own
account, and maintain a separate establishment of your
own I am delighted to say that—ah—any sum, say—ah—"</p>
<p>Jennie rose and walked dazedly to one of the windows,
clasping her hands as she went. Mr. O'Brien rose also.</p>
<p>"Well, be that as it may. In the event of your deciding
to end the connection it has been suggested that any
reasonable sum you might name, fifty, seventy-five, a
hundred thousand dollars"—Mr. O'Brien was feeling
very generous toward her—"would be gladly set aside
for your benefit—put in trust, as it were, so that you
would have it whenever you needed it. You would never
want for anything."</p>
<p>"Please don't," said Jennie, hurt beyond the power
to express herself, unable mentally and physically to
listen to another word. "Please don't say any more.
Please go away. Let me alone now, please. I can go
away. I will. It will be arranged. But please don't
talk to me any more, will you?"</p>
<p>"I understand how you feel, Mrs. Kane," went on Mr.
O'Brien, coming to a keen realization of her sufferings.
"I know exactly, believe me. I have said all I intend to
say. It has been very hard for me to do this—very
hard. I regret the necessity. You have my card.
Please note the name. I will come any time you suggest,
or you can write me. I will not detain you any longer.
I am sorry. I hope you will see fit to say nothing to
your husband of my visit—it will be advisable that you
should keep your own counsel in the matter. I value
his friendship very highly, and I am sincerely sorry."</p>
<p>Jennie only stared at the floor.</p>
<p>Mr. O'Brien went out into the hall to get his coat.
Jennie touched the electric button to summon the maid,
and Jeannette came. Jennie went back into the library,
and Mr. O'Brien paced briskly down the front walk.
When she was really alone she put her doubled hands
to her chin, and stared at the floor, the queer design of
the silken Turkish rug resolving itself into some curious
picture. She saw herself in a small cottage somewhere,
alone with Vesta; she saw Lester living in another world,
and beside him Mrs. Gerald. She saw this house vacant,
and then a long stretch of time, and then—</p>
<p>"Oh," she sighed, choking back a desire to cry. With
her hands she brushed away a hot tear from each eye.
Then she got up.</p>
<p>"It must be," she said to herself in thought. "It
must be. It should have been so long ago." And
then—"Oh, thank God that papa is dead Anyhow, he
did not live to see this."</p>
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