For obvious reasons Beecot did not
return to Gwynne Street. It was difficult to
swallow this bitter pill which Providence had administered.
In place of an assured future with Sylvia, he found
himself confronted with his former poverty, with no
chance of marrying the girl, and with the obligation
of telling her that she had no right to any name.
Paul was by no means a coward, and his first impulse
was to go at once and inform Sylvia of her reverse
of fortune. But it was already late, and he thought
it would be only kind to withhold the bad news till
the morrow, and thus avoid giving the disinherited
girl a tearful and wakeful night. Therefore,
after walking the Embankment till late, Paul went to
his garret.
To the young man’s credit it
must be said that he cared very little for the loss
of the money, although he grieved on Sylvia’s
account. Had he been able to earn a small income,
he would have married the girl and given her the protection
of his name without the smallest hesitation.
But he was yet unknown to fame; he was at variance
with his father, and he could scarcely bring Sylvia
to share his bitter poverty - which might
grow still more bitter in that cold and cheerless garret.
Then there was another thing to consider.
Paul had written to his father explaining the circumstances
of his engagement to Sylvia, and asking for the paternal
blessing. To gain this, he mentioned that his
promised wife had five thousand a year. Bully
and tyrant as Beecot senior was, he loved money, and
although well off, was always on the alert to have
more brought into the family. With the bribe
of a wealthy wife, Paul had little doubt but what
the breach would be healed, and Sylvia welcomed as
the sweetest and most desirable daughter-in-law in
the world. Then Paul fancied the girl would be
able to subdue with her gentle ways the stubborn heart
of his father, and would also be able to make Mrs.
Beecot happy. Indeed, he had received a letter
from his mother congratulating him on his wealthy
match, for the good lady wished to see Paul independent
of the domestic tyrant. Also Mrs. Beecot had made
many inquiries about Sylvia’s goodness and beauty,
and hoped that he had chosen wisely, and hinted that
no girl living was worthy of her son, after the fashion
of mothers. Paul had replied to this letter setting
forth his own unworthiness and Sylvia’s perfections,
and Mrs. Beecot had accepted the good news with joy.
But the letter written to Beecot senior was yet unanswered,
and Paul began to think that not even the chance of
having a rich daughter-in-law would prevail against
the obstinacy of the old gentleman.
But when he reached his garret, after
that lonely and tormenting walk on the Embankment,
he found a letter from his father, and opened it with
some trepidation. It proved to contain joyful
news. Mr. Beecot thanked Heaven that Paul was
not such a fool as he had been of yore, and hinted
that this sudden access of sense which had led him
to engage himself to a wealthy girl had come from
his father and not from his mother. He - Beecot
senior - was aware that Paul had acted badly,
and had not remembered what was due to the best of
fathers; but since he was prepared to settle down
with a rich wife, Beecot senior nobly forgave the
past and Paul’s many delinquences (mentioned
in detail) and would be glad to welcome his daughter-in-law.
Then Beecot, becoming the tyrant again, insisted that
the marriage should take place in Wargrove, and that
the fact of Sylvia’s father being murdered should
be suppressed. In fact, the old gentleman left
nothing to the young couple, but arranged everything
in his own selfish way, even to choosing, in Wargrove,
the house they would inhabit. The house, he mentioned,
was one of his own which could not be let on account
of some trivial tale of a ghost, and Mr. Beecot would
give this as a marriage gift to Paul, thus getting
rid of an unprofitable property and playing the part
of a generous father at one and the same time.
In spite of his bucolic ways and pig-headed obstinacy
and narrow views, Beecot senior possessed a certain
amount of cunning which Paul read in every line of
the selfish letter before him.
However, the main point was, that
the old gentleman seemed ready to overlook the past
and to receive Sylvia. Paul wanted to return to
his home, not so much on account of his father, as
because he wished to smooth the remaining years of
his mother, and he knew well that Sylvia with her
gentle ways and heart of gold would make Mrs. Beecot
happy. So long as Paul loved the girl he wished
to marry, the mother was happy; but Beecot senior
had an eye to the money, and thus was ready to be
bribed into forgiveness and decent behavior. Now
all this was altered. From the tone of the letter,
Paul knew his father would never consent to his marrying
a girl not only without a name, but lacking the fortune
which alone rendered her desirable in his eyes.
Still, the truth would have to be told, and if Beecot
senior refused to approve of the marriage, the young
couple would have to do without his sanction.
The position, thought Paul, would only make him work
the harder, so that within a reasonable time he might
be able to provide a home for Sylvia.
So, the young man facing the situation,
bravely wrote to his father and explained how the
fortune had passed from Sylvia, but declared, with
all the romance of youth, that he intended to marry
the girl all the same. If Beecot senior, said
Paul, would permit the marriage, and allow the couple
a small income until the husband could earn enough
to keep the pot boiling, the writer would be grateful.
If not, Paul declared firmly that he would work like
a slave to make a home for his darling. But nothing
in the world would make him give up Sylvia. This
was the letter to his father, and then Paul wrote
one to his mother, detailing the circumstances and
imploring her to stand by him, although in his own
sinking heart he felt that Mrs. Beecot was but a frail
reed on which to lean. He finished these letters
and posted them before midnight. Then he went
to bed and dreamed that the bad news was all moonshine,
and that Sylvia and he were a happy rich married pair.
But the cold grey searching light
of dawn brought the actual state of things again to
his mind and so worried him that he could hardly eat
any breakfast. He spent the morning in writing
a short tale, for which he had been promised a couple
of sovereigns, and took it to the office of the weekly
paper which had accepted it, on his way to Gwynne Street.
Paul’s heart was heavy, thinking of what he had
to tell, but he did not intend to let Sylvia see that
he was despondent. On turning down the street
he raised his head, assumed a smile and walked with
a confident step into the shop.
As he entered he heard a heavy woman
plunge down the stairs, and found his arm grasped
by Deborah, very red-faced and very furious, the moment
he crossed the threshold. Bart could be heard
knocking boxes together in the cellar, as he was getting
Deborah’s belongings ready for removal to Jubileetown,
where the cottage, and the drying ground for the laundry,
had already been secured through Pash. But Paul
had no time to ask what was going on. A glance
at the hand-maiden’s tearful face revealed that
she knew the worst, in which case Sylvia must also
have heard the news.
“Yes,” cried Deborah,
seeing the sudden whiteness of Paul’s cheeks,
and shaking him so much as to hurt his injured arm,
“she knows, she do - oh, lor’,
bless us that things should come to this - and
there she’s settin’ a-crying out her beautiful
eyes for you, Mr. Beecot. Thinking of your throwin’
her over, and if you do,” shouted Deborah, with
another shake, “you’d better ha’
bin smashed to a jelly than face me in my presingt
state. Seein’ you from the winder I made
bold to come down and arsk your intentings; for if
them do mean no marriage and the breaking of my pretty’s
’eart, never shall she set eyes agin on a double-faced
Jonah, and - and - ” Here
Deborah gasped for breath and again shook Paul.
“Deborah,” he said, in
a quiet voice, releasing himself, “I love Sylvia
for herself and not for her money.”
Deborah threw her brawny arms in the
air and her apron over her red head. “I
knowed it - oh, yuss, indeed,” she sobbed
in muffled tones. “Ses I, I ses,
Mr. Paul’s a gentleman whatever his frantic par
may be and marry you, my own lovey, he will, though
not able to afford the marriage fees, the same as
will come out of Debby’s pocket, though the laundry
go by the board. ’Eaven knows what we’ll
live on all the same, pore wurkhus ijets as me an’
Bart are, not bein’ able to make you an’
Miss Sylvia ‘appy. Miss Sylvia Krill an’
Norman both,” ended Deborah with emphasis, “whatever
that smooth cat with the grin and the clawses may say,
drat her fur a slimy tabby - yah!”
“I see you know all,”
said Paul, as soon as he could slip in a word.
“Know all,” almost yelled
Deborah, dragging down the apron and revealing flashing
eyes, “and it’s a mussy I ain’t in
Old Bailey this very day for scratching that monkey
of a Pash. Oh, if I’d known wot he wos never
should he ’ave got me the laundry, though
the same may have to go, worse luck. Ho, yuss!
he come, and she come with her kitting, as is almost
as big a cat as she is. Mrs. Krill, bless her,
oh, yuss, Mrs. Krill, the sneakin’, smiling
Jezebel.”
“Did she see Sylvia?” asked Beecot, sharply.
“Yuss, she did,” admitted
Deborah, “me lettin’ her in not knowin’
her scratchin’s. An’ the monkey an’
the kitting come too - a-spyin’ out
the land as you may say. W’en I ’eard
the noos I ’owled Mr. Paul, but my pretty she
turned white like one of them plaster stateys as boys
sell cheap in the streets, and ses she, she ses,
’Oh Paul’ - if you’ll forgive
me mentioning your name, sir, without perliteness.”
“Bless her, my darling.
Did she think of me,” said Beecot, tenderly.
“Ah, when do she not think of
you, sir? ’Eart of gold, though none in
her pocket by means of that Old Bailey woman as is
a good match fur my Old Bailey master. Ho! he
wos a bad ’un, and ’ow Miss Sylvia ever
come to ’ave sich a par beats me.
But I thank ’eaven the cat ain’t my pretty’s
mar, though she do ’ave a daughter of her
own, the painted, stuck-up parcel of bad bargains.”
Paul nodded. “Calling names
won’t do any good, Deborah,” he said sadly;
“we must do the best we can.”
“There ain’t no chance
of the lawr gettin’ that woman to the gallers
I ’spose, sir?”
“The woman is your late master’s
lawful wife. Pash seems to think so and has gone
over to the enemy” - here Deborah clenched
her mighty fists and gasped. “Sylvia’s
mother was married later, and as the former wife is
alive Sylvia is - ”
“No,” shouted Deborah,
flinging out her hand, “don’t say it.”
“Sylvia is poor,” ended
Paul, calmly. “What did you think I was
about to say, Deborah?”
“What that cat said, insulting
of my pretty. But I shoved her out of the door,
tellin’ her what she were. She guv me and
Bart and my own sunbeam notice to quit,” gasped
Deborah, almost weeping, “an’ quit we will
this very day, Bart bein’ a-packin’ at
this momingt. ’Ear ’im knocking, and
I wish he wos a-knockin’ at Mrs. Krill’s
‘ead, that I do, the flauntin’ hussy as
she is, drat her.”
“I’ll go up and see Sylvia.
No, Deborah, don’t you come for a few minutes.
When you do come we’ll arrange what is to be
done.”
Deborah nodded acquiescence.
“Take my lovely flower in your arms, sir,”
she said, following him to the foot of the stairs,
“and tell her as your ’eart is true, which
true I knowed it would be.”
Beecot was soon in the sitting-room
and found Sylvia on the sofa, her face buried in her
hands. She looked up when she recognized the beloved
footsteps and sprang to her feet. The next moment
she was sobbing her heart out on Paul’s faithful
breast, and he was comforting her with all the endearing
names he could think of.
“My own, my sweet, my dearest
darling,” whispered Paul, smoothing the pretty
brown hair, “don’t weep. You have
lost much, but you have me.”
“Dear,” she wept, “do you think
it is true?”
“I am afraid it is, Sylvia.
However, I know a young lawyer, who is a friend of
mine, and I’ll speak to him.”
“But Paul, though my mother
may not have been married to my father - ”
“She was, Sylvia, but
Mrs. Krill was married to him earlier. Your father
committed bigamy, and you, poor child, have to pay
the penalty.”
“Well, even if the marriage
is wrong, the money was left to us.”
“To you, dear,” said Beecot,
leading her to the sofa, “that is, the money
was left in that loosely-worded will to ‘my daughter.’
We all thought it was you, but now this legal wife
has come on the scene, the money must go to her daughter.
Oh, Sylvia,” cried Paul, straining her to his
breast, “how foolish your father was not to say
the money was left to ‘my daughter Sylvia.’
Then everything would have been right. But the
absence of the name is fatal. The law will assume
that the testator meant his true daughter.”
“And am I not his true daughter?”
she asked, her lips quivering.
“You are my own darling, Sylvia,”
murmured Paul, kissing her hair; “don’t
let us talk of the matter. I’ll speak to
my lawyer friend, but I fear from the attitude of
Pash that Mrs. Krill will make good her claim.
Were there a chance of keeping you in possession of
the money, Pash would never have left you so easily.”
“I am so sorry about the money on your account,
Paul.”
“My own,” he said cheerily,
“money is a good thing, and I wish we could
have kept the five thousand a year. But I have
you, and you have me, and although we cannot marry
for a long time yet - ”
“Not marry, Paul! Oh, why not?”
“Dearest, I am poor, I cannot drag you down
to poverty.”
Sylvia looked at him wide-eyed.
“I am poor already.” She looked round
the room. “Nothing here is mine. I
have only a few clothes. Mr. Pash said that Mrs.
Krill would take everything. Let me marry you,
darling,” she whispered coaxingly, “and
we can live in your garret. I will cook and mend,
and be your own little wife.”
Beecot groaned. “Don’t
tempt me, Sylvia,” he said, putting her away,
“I dare not marry you. Why, I have hardly
enough to pay the fees. No, dear, you must go
with Debby to her laundry, and I’ll work night
and day to make enough for us to live on. Then
we’ll marry, and - ”
“But your father, Paul?”
“He won’t do anything.
He consented to our engagement, but solely, I believe,
because he thought you were rich. Now, when he
knows you are poor - and I wrote to tell
him last night - he will forbid the match.”
“Paul!” She clung to him in sick terror.
“My sweetest” - he
caught her in his arms - “do you think
a dozen fathers would make me give you up? No,
my love of loves - my soul, my heart of hearts - come
good, come ill, we will be together. You can stay
with Debby at Jubileetown until I make enough to welcome
you to a home, however humble. Dear, be hopeful,
and trust in the God who brought us together.
He is watching over us, and, knowing that, why need
we fear? Don’t cry, darling heart.”
“I’m not crying for crying,”
sobbed Sylvia, hiding her face on his breast and speaking
incoherently; “but I’m so happy - ”
“In spite of the bad news?” asked Paul,
laughing gently.
“Yes - yes - to
think that you should still wish to marry me.
I am poor - I - I - have - no
name, and - ”
“Dearest, you will soon have my name.”
“But Mrs. Krill said - ”
“I don’t want to hear
what she said,” cried Paul, impetuously; “she
is a bad woman. I can see badness written all
over her smiling face. We won’t think of
her. When you leave here you won’t see her
again. My own dear little sweetheart,”
whispered Paul, tenderly, “when you leave this
unhappy house, let the bad past go. You and I
will begin a new life. Come, don’t cry,
my pet. Here’s Debby.”
Sylvia looked up, and threw herself into the faithful
servant’s arms.
“Oh, Debby, he loves me still; he’s going
to marry me whenever he can.”
Deborah laughed and wiped Sylvia’s
tears away with her coarse apron, tenderly. “You
silly flower,” she cried caressingly; “you
foolish queen of ’oney bees, of course he have
you in his ’eart. You’ll be bride
and I’ll be bridesmaid, though not a pretty
one, and all will be ’oney and sunshine and
gates of pearl, my beauty.”
“Debby - I’m - I’m - so
happy!”
Deborah placed her young mistress
in Paul’s arms. “Then let ’im
make you ‘appier, pretty lily of the valley.
Lor’, as if anything bad ’ud ever come
to you two while silly old Debby have a leg to stan’
on an’ arms to wash. Though the laundry - oh,
lor’!” and she rubbed her nose till it
grew scarlet, “what of it, Mr. Beecot, I do ask?”
“Have you enough money to pay a year’s
rent?”
“Yes, me and Bart have saved
one ’undred between us. Rent and furniture
and taxes can come out of it, sure. And my washin’s
what I call washin’,” said Deborah, emphatically;
“no lost buttings and tored sheets and ragged
collars. I’d wash ag’in the queen
‘erself, tho’ I ses it as shouldn’t.
Give me a tub, and you’ll see if the money don’t
come in.”
“Well, then, Deborah, as I am
too poor to marry Sylvia now, I want her to stop with
you till I can make a home for her.”
“An’ where else should
she stop but with her own silly, foolish Debby, I’d
like to know? My flower, you come an’ be
queen of the laundry.”
“I’ll keep the accounts,
Debby,” said Sylvia, now all smiling.
“You’ll keep nothin’
but your color an’ your dear ’eart up,”
retorted Debby, sniffing; “me an’ Bart
‘ull do all. An’ this blessed day
we’ll go to Jubileetown with our belongings.
And you, Mr. Beecot?”
“I’ll come and see you
settled, Deborah, and then I return to earn an income
for Sylvia. I won’t let you keep her long.”
“She’ll stop as long as
she have the will,” shouted Debby, hugging Sylvia;
“as to that Krill cat - ”
“She can take possession as
soon as she likes. And, Deborah,” added
Paul, significantly, “for all that has happened,
I don’t intend to drop the search for your late
master’s murderer.”
“It’s the Krill cat as
done it,” said Debby, “though I ain’t
got no reason for a-sayin’ of such a think.”