DENIS M’GOVERY’S TIDINGS.
As soon as he had finished his breakfast
on the morning after the night’s events just
recorded, Father John took his hat and stick, and
walked down to Drumsna, still charitably intent on
finding some means to soften, if he could not avert,
the storm which he saw must follow the scenes he had
witnessed on the previous evening. Ussher would
have considered it want of pluck to stay away because
Thady had told him to do so; Feemy also would encourage
his visits, and would lean more to her lover than
her brother especially as her father, if
it were attempted to make him aware of the state of
the case, would be sure to take Feemy’s part.
Father John felt it would be impossible to induce
the old man to desire Ussher to discontinue his visits,
and he was confident that unless he did so, the Captain
would take advantage of the unfortunate state of affairs
at Ballycloran, and consider himself as an invited
guest, in spite of the efforts Thady might make to
induce him to leave it. But what the priest most
feared was, that the unfortunate girl would be induced
to go off with her lover, who he knew under such circumstances
would never marry her; and his present object was
to take her out of the way of such temptation.
Father John gave Feemy credit for principles and feelings
sufficiently high to prevent her from falling immediately
into vice, but he at the same time feared, that with
the strong influence Ussher had over her, he might
easily persuade her to leave her home, partly by promising
at some early time to marry her, and partly by threatening
her with desertion. He thought that if she were
at present domiciled at Mrs. McKeon’s, Ussher
might then be brought to hear reason, and be made
to understand that if he was not contented to propose
for and marry Feemy, in a proper decent manner, he
must altogether drop her acquaintance.
He was not far wrong in the estimate
he formed of both their characters. Though Ussher
loved Feemy, perhaps as well as he was ever likely
to love any woman, circumstances might easily have
induced him to give her up. It was the impediments
in the way, and the opposition he now met with, which
would give the affair a fresh interest in his eyes.
He certainly did not intend to marry the poor girl;
had she had sufficient tact, she might, perhaps, have
persuaded him to do so; but her fervent love and perfect
confidence, though very gratifying to his vanity,
did not inspire him with that feeling of respect which
any man would wish to have for the girl he was going
to marry. I do not say that his premeditated
object had been to persuade her to leave her home,
but Father John was not far wrong in fearing, that
unless steps were taken to prevent it, it would be
the most probable termination to the whole affair.
With regard to Feemy, he was quite
right in thinking that her love of Ussher was strong
enough to induce her to take almost any step that
he might desire; and that that love, joined to her
own obstinacy and determined resistance to the advice
of those to whom she should have listened, was such
as to render it most unlikely that she should be induced
to give him up; but though he so well understood the
weakness of her character, he was not aware of, for
he had had no opportunity of trying, its strength.
As long as Feemy had her own way,
as at the present time she had, she would, as we have
seen, yield entirely to her strong love; but this
was not all; had circumstances enabled her friends
to remove her entirely out of Ussher’s way,
and had they done so, her love would have remained
the same; her passion was so strong, that it could
not be weakened or strengthened by absence or opposition.
When Father John calculated that by good management
Ussher might be brought to relinquish Feemy, he was
right, but he was far from right, when he thought
that Feemy could be taught to forget him. She
literally cared for no one but him; her life had been
so dull before she knew him, and so full of interest
since he so nearly came up to her beau
ideal of what a man should be, for she had seen,
or at any rate had known, no better he
so greatly excelled her brother and father, and was
so much better looking than young Cassidy, and so much
more spirited than Frank McKeon, that to her young
heart he was all perfection.
She had lately been vexed, tormented,
and even frightened; but her fear was merely that
Ussher did not love her as she did him that
he might be made to leave her; and she was learning
to hate her brother for opposing, as she would have
said, the only source of her happiness. As to
being induced by prudence or propriety to be cool
to her lover as to taking the first step
herself towards making a breach between them nothing
that her brother or the priest had said, nothing that
they could ever say, could either make her think of
doing so, or think that it could be advisable, or in
any way proper, that she should do so. For this
strong feeling Father John did not give our heroine
credit; but he still felt that she was headstrong
enough to make it a very difficult task for him to
manage her in any way. But as his charity was
unbounded, so were his zeal and courage great.
His present plan was to induce his
friend, Mrs. McKeon, to ask Feemy to come over and
spend some time with her and her daughters at Drumsna.
There were difficulties in this; for, in the first
place, although Feemy and the Miss McKeons had been
very good friends, still the reports which had lately
been afloat, both about her and the affairs of her
family, might make Mrs. McKeon, a prudent woman, unwilling
to comply with the priest’s wishes though
indeed it was not often that she contradicted him
in anything; then, after he had talked Mrs. McKeon
over, when he had aroused her charitable feelings
and excited the good nature, which, to tell the truth,
was never very dormant in her bosom, he had the more
difficult task of persuading Feemy to accept the invitation.
Not that under ordinary circumstances she would not
be willing enough to go to Mrs. McKeon’s, but
at present she would be likely to suspect a double
meaning in everything. Father John had already
mentioned Mrs. McKeon’s name to her, in reference
to her attachment to Ussher; and it was more than
probable that if he now brought her an invitation from
that lady, she would perceive that the object was
to separate her from her lover, and that she would
obstinately persist in remaining at Ballycloran.
As Father John was entering Drumsna,
he met his curate, Cullen, and McGovery, who, considering
that he had only been married the evening before,
and that if he had not been dancing himself, he had
been kept up by his guests’ doing so till four
or five in the morning, had left his bride rather
early; for, according to custom, he had slept the
first night after his wedding at his wife’s house,
and, though it was only ten o’clock, he had
been on a visit to Father Cullen, with whom he was
now eagerly talking.
On the previous evening, when feigning
to be asleep, he had managed to overhear a small portion
of what had passed between Thady, Joe Reynolds, and
the rest; but what he had overheard had reference
solely to Keegan; for when they began to speak of Ussher,
everything had been said in so low a voice, that he
had been unable to comprehend a word. He had
contrived, however, to pick up something, in which
Ballycloran, rents, Keegan, and a bog-hole were introduced
in marvellous close connection, and he was not slow
in coming to the determination that he had been wrong
when he fancied that Ussher was the object against
whom plots were being formed, and that Keegan was
the doomed man; but what was worse still, he was led
to imagine that the perpetrators of Mr. Keegan’s
future watery grave were instigated by young Macdermot!
He was well aware that Flannelly and Keegan, for they
were all one, had the greater portion of the rents
out of Ballycloran, and he now plainly saw that the
more active of this firm was to be made away with,
while collecting, or attempting to collect, the rent.
Denis was puzzled as to what he should
do; his conscience would not allow the man to be murdered
without his interference; he had no great love for
Mr. Keegan, and his sympathies were not more strongly
excited than they had been when he thought Ussher was
to be the victim. Should he tell Mr. Keegan?
that would be setting the devil in arms against his
wife’s brother against his wife’s
brother’s master and against his
wife’s brother’s master’s tenants;
this was too near cutting his own throat, to be a
line of action agreeable to Denis. Then it occurred
to him to have recourse again to Father John:
but Father John had made light of his former warning.
Besides, the fact of his having been wrong in his
last surmises, would have thrown stronger doubts on
those he now entertained. Father John too was
always quizzing him, and Denis did not like to be quizzed.
After much consideration, McGovery resolved to go
to Father Cullen, and disclose his secret to him;
Father Cullen was a modest, steady man, who would
neither make light of, or ridicule what he heard; and
if after that Keegan was drowned in a bog-hole, it
would be entirely off Denis’s conscience.
When Father John met the pair, they
had just been discussing the subject; Cullen was far
from making light of it; for, in the first place,
he believed every word McGovery told him, and in the
next, he was shocked, and greatly grieved, that one
of his own parishioners, and one also of the most
respectable of them, should be concerned in such a
business: he felt towards Keegan all the abhorrence
which a very bigoted and ignorant Roman Catholic could
feel towards a Protestant convert, but he would have
done anything to prevent his meeting his death by
the hands, or with the connivance, of Thady Macdermot.
As soon as Cullen had heard McGovery’s
statement which, by the by, had been made
without any reference to his previous statement to
Father John, or his warning to Captain Ussher he
determined to tell it all to the parish priest, and
to take McGovery with him. This plan did not,
however, suit Denis at all, and he used all his eloquence
to persuade Father Cullen, that if he told Mr. McGrath
at all, he, Denis, had better not make one of the
party; and he was at the moment considering what excuse
he could give for refusing to go into the priest’s
cottage, when they met Father John on the road coming
into Drumsna.
Denis was greatly disconcerted, but
Cullen, full of his news, and as eager to communicate
it as if it had been arranged definitely that Keegan
was to be put into the bog-hole at noon precisely,
was very glad to see him, and instantly opened his
budget.
“I’m very glad to meet
you this morning, Mr. McGrath,” he began, “and
it’s well since you’re out so early, that
it’s not the other way you went, for
I’d been greatly bothered if I hadn’t found
you.”
“But here I am, you see, and
if it was only after me you were going, I suppose
you can turn, for I’m going to Drumsna.”
“Oh to be sure I can; don’t
you be going, Denis McGovery.” Denis had
taken off his hat, and muttering something about his
wife, and “good morning, yer riverence,”
was decamping towards Ballycloran.
“Why, man,” said Father
John, “what business have you so far from your
wife at this hour of the morning, after your wedding?
Have you been to take the two pigs home?”
“He, he, Father John, you’ll
niver have done with them pigs! But the
wife’ll be waiting for me, and, as yer riverence
says, I mustn’t be baulking her the first morning.”
“Stay a while, as
you’ve come so far without her, you can stop
a moment.”
“Oh yes,” said Cullen,
“wait till you’ve told Mr. McGrath what
you told me.”
Denis was unwillingly obliged to remain,
and repeat to Father John the whole story he had told
Cullen. Though he could hardly tell why himself,
he softened down a little the strong assurance he had
given Cullen that Thady himself had been urging the
boys to make away with Keegan. Father John listened
to all in silence, till Denis ended by wishing “that
the two young men got home safe last night, and that
there war nothing worse nor harder than words betwixt
them.”
“Get home safe, you fool!”
answered Father John, “and why wouldn’t
they? don’t you know the difference
yet, between a few foolish words, said half in fun,
and a quarrel? To be sure they got home safe; and
let me tell you, Denis, for a sensible fellow as you
pretend to be, you’d be a deal better employed
minding your business, than thinking of other people’s
quarrels, or trying to pick up stories of murders,
and heaven knows what filling your own mind
and other people’s too with foolish fears, for
which there are no grounds. And now, if you’d
take my advice, you’ll go home, and leave your
betters to take care of themselves, for you’ll
find it quite enough to take care of yourself; and
mind, McGovery, if I find this cock and bull story
of yours gets through the country, so as to reach
Mr. Keegan’s ears, or to annoy Mr. Macdermot,
I shall know where it came from; and perhaps you’re
not aware, that a person inventing such a story as
you’ve been telling Mr. Cullen, might soon find
himself in Carrick Gaol.”
It would be impossible to say whether
Cullen was most astonished, or McGovery disconcerted,
by Father John’s address.
“But,” began Cullen, “if
the man really heard the plan proposed, Mr. McGrath,
and if Mr. Thady was one of them ”
“Ah, nonsense, Cullen.”
“But I haven’t invented
a word, Father John,” said McGovery; “I
heard it every word; and shure, afther hearing it
all with my own ears, was I to let the man be shot
into a bog-hole, without saying a word to no one about
it, Father John?”
“Ah, you’re a nice boy,
Denis, and why did you pass my gate to come
all the way down to Father Cullen, to tell him the
dreadful tale? why didn’t you come to me, eh when
you knew, not only that I was nearer you than Mr.
Cullen, but also nearer to the place where all this
was to happen?”
“Why then, Father John, not
to tell you a lie, it is because you do be going on
with your gagging at me so.”
“Nonsense, man; how
can you say you are not going to lie, when you know
you’ve a lie in your mouth at the moment.”
“Sorrow a lie is there in it
at all, Father John, I wish the tongue
of me had been blistered this morning, before I said
a word of it.”
“I wish it had been. Why,
Cullen, it was only last night that he wanted to persuade
me that a lot of boys were to meet at the place where
he was married, to agree to murder Ussher; and to hear
the man, you’d think it was all arranged, who
was to strike the blow and all; and now here he is
with you, with a similar story about Keegan! He
was afraid to come to me, because he knew he’d
half humbugged me with his other story last night.”
“But I tell you, Father John,
I heard it all with my own ears this time.”
“And I tell you, you were dreaming.
Do you think you’d make me believe that such
a young gentleman as Mr. Thady would turn murderer
all of a sudden? Now go home, and take my advice;
if you don’t want to find yourself in a worse
scrape than Captain Ussher, or Mr. Keegan, don’t
repeat such a tale as that to any one.”
McGovery sneaked off with his tail,
allegorically speaking, between his legs. He
didn’t exactly know what to make of it; for though,
as has been before said, he did not wish on this occasion
to make Father John the depositary of his fears, he
did not expect even from him to meet with such total
discomfiture. He consoled himself, however, with
the recollection that if anything did happen now, either
to the revenue officer or the attorney, and
he almost hoped there would, he could fairly
say that he had given warning and premonitory tidings
of it to the parish priests, which, if attended to,
might have prevented all harm. With this comfortable
feeling, to atone for Father John’s displeasure,
and now not quite sure whether he had overheard any
allusion last night to Keegan and a bog-hole or not,
he returned to his wife.
As soon as he was gone, Cullen, as
much surprised as McGovery at the manner in which
Father John had received the story, asked him if he
thought it was all a lie.
“Perhaps not all a lie,”
answered the priest; “perhaps he heard something
about Keegan not very flattering to the
attorney; no doubt Thady was asking the boys about
the rent, and threatening them with Keegan as a receiver
over the property, or something of that sort; and
very likely one of those boys from Drumleesh said something
about a bog-hole, which may be Thady didn’t
reprove as he ought to have done. I’ve
no doubt it all came about in that way, but
that fellow with his tales and his stories, will get
his ears cut off some of these days, and serve him
right. Why, he wanted yesterday, to make me believe
that these fellows who are to drown Keegan this morning,
were to shoot Ussher last night! He’s just
the fellow to do more harm in the country than all
the stills, if he were listened to. Well,
Cullen, good day, I’m going into Mr. McKeon’s
here;” and Cullen went away quite
satisfied with Father John’s view of the affair.
Not so, Father John. For Thady’s
sake to screen his character, and because
he did not think there was any immediate danger he
had given the affair the turn which it had just taken;
but he himself feared more than feared felt
sure that there was too much truth in what the man
had said. Thady’s unusual intoxication last
night his brutal conduct to his sister to
Ussher, and to himself the men with whom
he had been drinking his own knowledge of
the feeling the young man entertained towards Keegan,
and the hatred the tenants felt for the attorney all
these things conspired to convince Father John that
McGovery had too surely overheard a conversation, which,
if repeated to Keegan, might probably, considering
how many had been present at it, give him a desperate
hold over young Macdermot, which he would not fail
to use, either by frightening him into measures destructive
to the property, or by proceeding criminally against
him. Father John was not only greatly grieved
that such a meeting should have been held, with reference
to its immediate consequences, but he was shocked
that Thady should so far have forgotten himself and
his duty as to have attended it. But with the
unceasing charity which made the great beauty of Father
John’s character, he, in his heart, instantly
made allowances for him; he remembered all his distress
and misery his want of friends his
grief for his sister his continued attempts
and continued inability to relieve his father from
his difficulties; and he determined to endeavour to
screen him.
His success with McGovery, whom he
had made to disbelieve his own senses, and with Cullen,
who was ready enough to take his superior’s
views in any secular affair, had been complete; and
he did not think that either would now be likely to
repeat the story in a manner that would do any injury.
We shall, in a short time, see what steps he took
in the matter with Thady himself. In the meanwhile,
we will follow him into Mrs. McKeon’s house,
at whose door he had now arrived.