Trapped with the Mob Boss: A Mafia Romance (Petrov Bratva) by Nicole Fox (ebook smartphone TXT) ๐
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- Author: Nicole Fox
Read book online ยซTrapped with the Mob Boss: A Mafia Romance (Petrov Bratva) by Nicole Fox (ebook smartphone TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Nicole Fox
โNow, what could bring Gaeki here?โ said Lewes.
โIt was the horse that Gosford overheated in his race to you,โ replied my father. โI saw him stop in the road where the negro boy was leading the horse about, and then call young Marshall.โ
โIt was no fault of young Marshall, Pendleton,โ said the lawyer. โBut, also, he is no match for Gosford. He is a dilettante. He paints little pictures after the fashion he learned in Paris, and he has no force or vigor in him. His father was a dreamer, a wanderer, one who loved the world and its frivolities, and the son takes that temperament, softened by his mother. He ought to have a guardian.โ
โHe has one,โ replied my father.
โA guardian!โ repeated Lewis. โWhat court has appointed a guardian for young Marshall?โ
โA court,โ replied my father, โthat does not sit under the authority of Virginia. The helpless, Lewis, in their youth and inexperience, are not wholly given over to the spoiler.โ
The boy they talked about was very youngโunder twenty, one would say. He was blue-eyed and fair-haired, with thin, delicate features, which showed good blood long inbred to the loss of vigor. He had the fine, open, generous face of one who takes the world as in a fairy story. But now there was care and anxiety in it, and a furtive shadow, as though the lad's dream of life had got some rude awakening.
At this moment the door behind my father and Lewis was thrown violently open, and a man entered. He was a person with the manner of a barrister, precise and dapper; he had a long, pink face, pale eyes, and a close-cropped beard that brought out the hard lines of his mouth. He bustled to the table, put down a sort of portfolio that held an inkpot, a writing-pad and pens, and drew up a chair like one about to take the minutes of a meeting. And all the while he apologized for his delay. He had important letters to get off in the post, and to make sure, had carried them to the tavern himself.
โAnd now, sirs, let us get about this business,โ he finished, like one who calls his assistants to a labor:
My father turned about and looked at the man.
โIs your name Gosford?โ he said in his cold, level voice.
โIt is, sir,โ replied the Englishman, โโAnthony Gosford.โ
โWell, Mr. Anthony Gosford,โ replied my father, โkindly close the door that you have opened.โ
Lewis plucked out his snuffbox and trumpeted in his many-colored handkerchief to hide his laughter.
The Englishman, thrown off his patronizing manner, hesitated, closed the door as he was biddenโand could not regain his fine air.
โNow, Mr. Gosford,โ my father went on, โwhy was this room violated as we see it?โ
โIt was searched for Peyton Marshall's will, sir,โ replied the man.
โHow did you know that Marshall had a will?โ said my father.
โI saw him write it,โ returned the Englishman, โhere in this very room, on the eighteenth day of October, 1854.โ
โThat was two years ago,โ said my father. โWas the will here at Marshall's death?โ
โIt was. He told me on his deathbed.โ
โAnd it is gone now?โ
โIt is,โ replied the Englishman.
โAnd now, Mr. Gosford,โ said my father, โhow do you know this will is gone unless you also know precisely where it was?โ
โI do know precisely where it was, sir,โ returned the man. โIt was in the row of drawers on the right of the window where you standโthe second drawer from the top. Mr. Marshall put it there when he wrote it, and he told me on his deathbed that it remained there. You can see, sir, that the drawer has been rifled.โ
My father looked casually at the row of mahogany drawers rising along the end of the bookcase. The second one and the one above were open; the others below were closed.
โMr. Gosford,โ he said, โyou would have some interest in this will, to know about it so precisely.โ
โAnd so I have,โ replied the man, โit left me a sum of money.โ
โA large sum?โ
โA very large sum, sir.โ
โMr. Anthony Gosford,โ said my father, โfor what purpose did Peyton Marshall bequeath you a large sum of money? You are no kin; nor was he in your debt.โ
The Englishman sat down and put his fingers together with a judicial air.
โSir,โ he began, โI am not advised that the purpose of a bequest is relevant, when the bequest is direct and unencumbered by the testator with any indicatory words of trust or uses. This will bequeathes me a sum of money. I am not required by any provision of the law to show the reasons moving the testator. Doubtless, Mr. Peyton Marshall had reasons which he deemed excellent for this course, but they are, sir, entombed in the grave with him.โ
My father looked steadily at the man, but he did not seem to consider his explanation, nor to go any further on that line.
โIs there another who would know about this will?โ he said.
โThis effeminate son would know,โ replied Gosford, a sneer in the epithet, โbut no other. Marshall wrote the testament in his own hand, without witnesses, as he had the legal right to do under the laws of Virginia. The lawyer,โ he added, โMr. Lewis, will confirm me in the legality of that.โ
โIt is the law,โ said Lewis. โOne may draw up a holograph will if he likes, in his own hand, and it is valid without a witness in this State, although the law does not so run in every commonwealth.โ
โAnd now, sir,โ continued the Englishman, turning to my father, โwe will inquire into the theft of this testament.โ
But my father did not appear to notice Mr. Gosford. He seemed perplexed and in some concern.
โLewis,โ he said, โwhat is your definition of a crime?โ
โIt is a violation of the law,โ replied the lawyer.
โI do not accept your definition,โ said my father. โIt is, rather, I think, a violation of justiceโa violation of something behind the law that makes an act a crime. I think,โ he went on, โthat God must take a broader view than Mr. Blackstone and Lord Coke. I have seen a murder in the law that was, in fact, only a kind of awful accident, and I have seen your catalogue of crimes gone about by feeble men with no intent except an adjustment of their rights. Their crimes, Lewis, were merely errors of their impractical judgment.โ
Then he seemed
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