Amanda: A Daughter of the Mennonites - Page 101/147

Later in the day, while the nearest relatives were still together in

the little house at Landisville, the lawyer arrived and read the will.

The Millers, who were so eager for their legacies, were impatient with

all the legal phrasing, "Being of sound mind" and so forth. They sat up

more attentively when the lawyer read, "do hereby bequeath."

First came the wish that all real estate be sold, that personal

property be given to her sister, the sum of five hundred dollars be

given to the Mennonite Church at Landisville for the upkeep of the

burial ground. Then the announcement of the sum of five thousand

dollars to be equally divided among the heirs of Jonas Miller,

deceased, the sum of five thousand dollars to her brother Amos Rohrer,

a like amount to her sister, Mrs. Reist, the sum of ten thousand

dollars to Martin Landis, husband of Elizabeth Anders, and the

remainder, if any, to be divided equally between said brother Amos and

sister Mary.

"Martin Landis!" exploded one of the Miller women, "who under the sun

is he? To get ten thousand dollars of Rebecca's money!"

"I'll tell you," spoke up Uncle Amos, "he's an old beau of hers."

"Well, who ever heard of such a thing! And here we are, her own blood,

you might say, close relations of poor Jonas, and we get only five

thousand to be divided into about twenty shares! It's an outrage! Such

a will ought to be broken!"

"I guess not," came Uncle Amos's firm reply. "It was all Rebecca's

money and hers to do with what suited her. She's made me think a whole

lot more of her by this here will. I'm glad to know she didn't forget

her old beau. She was a little prickly on the outside sometimes, but I

guess her heart was soft after all. It's all right, it's all right,

that will is! It ain't for us to fuss about. She could have give the

whole lot of it to some cat home or spent it while she lived. It was

_hers_! If that's all, lawyer, I guess we'll go. Mary and I are

satisfied and the rest got to be. I bet Rebecca got a lot o' good

thinkin' how Martin Landis would get the surprise of his life when she

was in her grave."

In a short time the news spread over the rural community that Rebecca

Miller willed Martin Landis ten thousand dollars! Some said facetiously

that it might be a posthumous thank-offering for what she missed when

she refused to marry him. Others, keen for romance, repeated a

sentimental story about a broken heart and a lifelong sorrow because of

her foolish inability to see what was best for her and how at the close

of her life she conceived the beautiful thought of leaving him the

money so that he might know she had never forgotten him and so that he

might remember his old sweetheart. But in whatever form the incident

was presented it never failed to evoke interest. "Ten thousand dollars

from an old girl! What luck!" exclaimed many.