As has before been stated, Dr Graham
had another conversation with his persecuted friend,
in which he advised him to tolerate the presence of
Cargrim until Baltic captured the actual criminal.
It was also at this second interview that the bishop
asked Graham if he should tell George the truth.
This question the little doctor answered promptly in
the negative.
‘For what is the use of telling
him?’ said he, argumentatively; ’doing
so will make you uncomfortable and George very unhappy.’
‘But George must learn the truth sooner or later.’
‘I don’t see that it is
necessary to inform him of it at all,’ retorted
Graham, obstinately, ’and at all events you need
not explain until forced to do so. One thing
at a time, bishop. At present your task is to
baffle Cargrim and kick the scoundrel out of the house
when the murderer is found. Then we can discuss
the matter of the marriage with Mrs Pendle.’
’Graham!’ the
bishop’s utterance of the name was like a cry
of pain ’I cannot I dare
not tell Amy!’
’You must, Pendle, since she
is the principal person concerned in the matter.
You know how Gabriel learned the truth from her casual
description of her first husband. Well, when Mrs
Pendle returns to Beorminster, she may I
don’t say that she will, mind you but
she may speak of Krant again, since, so far as she
is concerned, there is no need for her to keep the
fact of her first marriage secret.’
‘Except that she may not wish
to recall unhappy days,’ put in the bishop,
softly. ’Indeed, I wonder that Amy could
bring herself to speak of Krant to her son and mine.’
‘Women, my friend, do and say
things at which they wonder themselves,’ said
the misogynist, cynically; ’probably Mrs Pendle
acted on the impulse of the moment and regretted it
immediately the words were out of her mouth.
Still, she may describe Krant again when she comes
back, and her listener may be as clever as Gabriel
was in putting two and two together, and connecting
your wife’s first husband with Krant. Should
such a thing occur and it might occur your
secret would become the common property of this scandalmongering
place, and your last condition would be worse than
your first. Also,’ continued Graham, with
the air of a person clinching an argument, ’if
you and Mrs Pendle are to part, my poor friend, she
must be told the reason for such separation.’
‘Part!’ echoed the bishop,
indignantly. ’My dear Amy and I shall never
part, doctor. I wonder that you can suggest such
a thing. Now that Krant is dead beyond all doubt,
I shall marry his widow at once.’
‘Quite so, and quite right,’
assented Graham, emphatically; ’but in that
case, as you can see for yourself, you must tell her
that the first marriage is null and void, so as to
account for the necessity of the second ceremony.’
The doctor paused and reflected. ’Old scatterbrain
that I am,’ said he, with a shrug, ’I quite
forgot that way out of the difficulty. A second
marriage! Of course! and there is your riddle
solved.’
‘No doubt, so far as Amy and
I are concerned,’ said Pendle, gloomily, ’but
so late a ceremony will not make my children legitimate.
In England, marriage is not a retrospective act.’
‘They manage these things better
in France,’ opined Graham, in the manner of
Sterne; ’there a man can legitimise his children
born out of wedlock if he so chooses. There was
a talk of modifying the English Act in the same way;
but, of course, the very nice people with nasty ideas
shrieked out in their usual pig-headed style about
legalised immorality. However,’ pursued
the doctor, in a more cheerful tone, ’I do not
see that you need worry yourself on that point, bishop.
You can depend upon Gabriel and me holding our tongues;
you need not tell Lucy or George, and when you marry
your wife for the second time, all things can go on
as before. “What the eye does not see, the
heart does not grieve at,” you know.’
‘But my eye sees, and my heart
grieves,’ groaned the bishop.
’Pish! don’t make an inquisition
of your conscience, Pendle. You have done no
wrong; like greatness, evil has been thrust upon you.’
‘I am certainly an innocent sinner, Graham.’
’Of course you are; but now
that we have found the remedy, that is all over and
done with. Wait till Jentham’s murderer
is found, then turn Cargrim out of doors, marry Mrs
Krant in some out-of-the-way parish, and make a fresh
will in favour of your children. There you are,
bishop! Don’t worry any more about the
matter.’
‘You don’t think that I should tell Brace
that ?’
’I certainly don’t think
that you should disgrace your daughter in the eyes
of her future husband,’ retorted the doctor,
hotly; ’marry your wife and hold your tongue.
Even the Recording Angel can take no note of so obviously
just a course.’
‘I think you are right, Graham,’
said the bishop, shaking his friend’s hand with
an expression of relief. ’In justice to
my children, I must be silent. I shall act as
you suggest.’
‘Then that being so, you are
a man again,’ said Graham, jocularly, ’and
now you can send for George to pay you a visit.’
‘Do you think there is any necessity,
Graham? The sight of him ’
’Will do you good, Pendle.
Don’t martyrise yourself and look on your children
as so many visible evidences of sin. Bosh!
I tell you, bosh!’ cried the doctor, vigorously
if ungallantly. ’Send for George, send for
Mrs Pendle and Lucy, and throw all these morbid ideas
to the wind. If you do not,’ added Graham,
raising a threatening finger, ’I shall write
out a certificate for the transfer of the cleverest
bishop in England to a lunatic asylum.’
‘Well, well, I won’t risk
that,’ said the bishop, smiling. ’George
shall come back at once.’
’And all will be gas and gaiters,
to quote the immortal Boz. Good-day, bishop!
I have prescribed your medicine; see that you take
it.’
‘You are a tonic in yourself, Graham.’
’All men of sense are, Pendle.
They are the salt of the earth, the oxygen in the
moral atmosphere. If it wasn’t for my common
sense, bishop,’ said the doctor, with a twinkle,
’I believe I should be weak enough to come and
hear you preach.’
Dr Pendle laughed. ’I am
afraid the age of miracles is past, my friend.
As a bishop, I should reprove you, but ’
’But, as a good, sensible fellow,
you’ll take my advice. Well, well, bishop,
I have had more obstinate patients than my college
chum. Good-day, good-day,’ and the little
doctor skipped out of the library with a gay look
and a merry nod, leaving the bishop relieved and smiling,
and devoutly thankful for the solution of his life’s
riddle. At that moment the noble verse of the
Psalmist was in his mind and upon his lips ’God
is our refuge and our strength: a very present
help in trouble.’ Bishop Pendle was proving
the truth of that text.
So the exiled lover was permitted
to return to Beorminster, and very pleased he was
to find himself once more in the vicinity of his beloved.
After congratulating the bishop on his recovered cheerfulness
and placidity, George brought forward the name of
Mab, and was pleased to find that his father was by
no means so opposed to the match as formerly.
Dr Pendle admitted again that Mab was a singularly
charming young lady, and that his son might do worse
than marry her. Late events had humbled the bishop’s
pride considerably; and the knowledge that George
was nameless, induced him to consider Miss Arden more
favourably as a wife for the young man. She was
at least a lady, and not a barmaid like Bell Mosk;
so the painful fact of Gabriel setting his heart so
low made George’s superior choice quite a brilliant
match in comparison. On these grounds, the bishop
intimated to Captain Pendle that, on consideration,
he was disposed to overlook the rumours about Miss
Arden’s disreputable father and accept her as
a daughter-in-law. It was with this joyful news
that George, glowing and eager, as a lover should
be, made his appearance the next morning at the Jenny
Wren house.
‘Thank God the bishop is reasonable,’
cried Miss Whichello, when George explained the new
position. ’I knew that Mab would gain his
heart in the end.’
‘She gained mine in the beginning,’
said Captain George, fondly, ’and that, after
all, is the principal thing.’
‘What! your own heart, egotist!
Does mine then count for nothing?’
‘Oh!’ said George, slipping
his arm round her waist, ’if we begin on that
subject, my litany will be as long as the Athanasian
Creed, and quite as devout.’
‘Captain Pendle!’ exclaimed
Miss Whichello, scandalised both by embrace and speech both
rather trying to a religious spinster.
‘Miss Whichello,’ mimicked
the gay lover, ’am I not to be received into
the family under the name of George?’
’That depends on your behaviour,
Captain Pendle. But I am both pleased and relieved
that the bishop consents to the marriage.’
‘Aunty!’ cried Mab, reddening
a trifle,’don’t talk as though it were
a favour. I do not look upon myself as worthless,
by any means.’
‘Worthless!’ echoed George,
gaily; ’then is gold mere dross, and diamonds
but pebbles. You are the beauty of the universe,
my darling, and I your lowest slave.’ He
threw himself at her feet. ’Set your pretty
foot on my neck, my queen!’
‘Captain Pendle,’ said
Miss Whichello, striving to stifle a laugh, ’if
you don’t get up and behave properly I shall
leave the room.’
‘If you do, aunty, he will get
worse,’ smiled Mab, ruffling what the barber
had left of her lover’s hair. ’Get
up at once, you you mad Romeo.’
George rose obediently, and dusted
his knees. ‘Juliet, I obey,’ said
he, tragically; ’but no, you are not Juliet
of the garden; you are Cleopatra! Semiramis!
the most imperious and queenly of women. Where
did you get your rich eastern beauty from, Mab?
What are you, an Arabian princess, doing in our cold
grey West? You are like some dark-browed queen!
A daughter of Bohemia! A Romany sorceress!’
Mab laughed, but Miss Whichello heaved
a quick, impatient sigh, as though these eastern comparisons
annoyed her. George was unconsciously making
remarks which cut her to the heart; and almost unable
to control her feelings, she muttered some excuse
and glided hastily from the room. With the inherent
selfishness of love, neither George nor Mab paid any
attention to her emotion or departure, but whispered
and smiled and caressed one another, well pleased
at their sweet solitude. George spent one golden
hour in paradise, then unwillingly tore himself away.
Only Shakespeare could have done justice to the passion
of their parting. Kisses and sighs, last looks,
final handclasps, and then George in the sunshine
of the square, with Mab waving her handkerchief from
the open casement. But, alas! workaday prose
always succeeds Arcadian rhyme, and with the sinking
sun dies the glory of the day.
With his mind hanging betwixt a mental
heaven and earth, after the similitude of Mahomet’s
coffin, George walked slowly down the street, until
he was brought like a shot eagle to the ground by a
touch on the shoulder. Now, as there is nothing
more annoying than such a bailiff’s salute,
George wheeled round with some vigorous language on
the tip of his tongue, but did not use it when he
found himself facing Sir Harry Brace.
‘Oh, it’s you!’
said Captain Pendle, lamely. ’Well, with
your experience, you should know better than to pull
up a fellow unawares.’
‘You talk in riddles, my good
George,’ said Harry, staring, as well he might,
at this not very coherent speech.
‘I have just left Miss Arden,’
explained George, quite unabashed, for he did not
care if the whole world knew of his love.
‘Oh, I beg your pardon, I understand,’
replied Brace, with a broad smile; ’but you
must excuse me, old chap. I am I am
out of practice lately, you see. “My love
she is in Germanee,” as the old song says.
I wish to speak with you.’
‘All right. Where shall we go?’
‘To the club. I must see you privately.’
The Beorminster Club was just a short
distance down the street, so George followed Harry
into its hospitable portals and finally accepted a
comfortable chair in the smoking-room, which, luckily
for the purpose of Brace, was empty at that hour.
The two young men each ordered a cool hock-and-soda
and lighted two very excellent cigarettes which came
out of the pocket of extravagant George. Then
they began to talk, and Harry opened the conversation
with a question.
‘George,’ he said, with
a serious look on his usually merry face, ’were
you on Southberry Heath on the night that poor devil
was murdered?’
‘Oh, yes,’ replied Captain
Pendle, with some wonder at the question. ’I
rode over to the gipsy camp to buy a particular ring
from Mother Jael.’
‘For Miss Arden, I suppose?’
‘Yes; I wished for a necromantic symbol of our
engagement.’
‘Did you hear or see anything of the murder?’
‘Good Lord, no!’ cried
the startled George, sitting up straight. ’I
should have been at the inquest had I seen the act,
or even heard the shot.’
‘Did you carry a pistol with you on that night?’
’As I wasn’t riding through
Central Africa, I did not. What is the meaning
of these mysterious questions?’
Brace answered this query by slipping
his hand into his breast-pocket and producing therefrom
a neat little pistol, toy-like, but deadly enough
in the hand of a good marksman. ‘Is this
yours?’ he asked, holding it out for Captain
Pendle’s inspection.
‘Certainly it is,’ said
George, handling the weapon; ’here are my initials
on the butt. Where did you get this?’
‘It was found by Mother Jael
near the spot where Jentham was murdered.’
Captain Pendle clapped down the pistol
on the table with an ejaculation of amazement.
‘Was he shot with this, Harry?’
‘Without doubt!’ replied
Brace, gravely. ’Therefore, as it is your
property, I wish to know how it came to be used for
that purpose.’
‘Great Scott, Brace! you don’t
think that I killed the blackguard?’
‘I think nothing so ridiculous,’
protested Sir Harry, testily.
‘You talk as if you did, though,’
retorted George, smartly.
’I thrashed that Jentham beast
for insulting Mab, but I didn’t shoot him.’
‘But the pistol is yours.’
‘I admit that, but Good
Lord!’ cried Captain Pendle, starting to his
feet.
‘What now?’ asked Brace,
turning pale and cold on the instant.
‘Gabriel! Gabriel! I I
gave this pistol to him.’
‘You gave this pistol to Gabriel? When?
Where?’
‘In London,’ explained
George, rapidly. ’When he was in Whitechapel
I knew that he went among a lot of roughs and thieves,
so I insisted that he should carry this pistol for
his protection. He was unwilling to do so at
first, but in the end I persuaded him to slip it into
his pocket. I have not seen it from that day
to this.’
‘And it was found near Jentham’s corpse,’
said Brace, with a groan.
The two young men looked at one another
in horrified silence, the same thoughts in the mind
of each. The pistol had been in the possession
of Gabriel; and Gabriel on the night of the murder
had been in the vicinity of the crime.
‘It it is impossible,’
whispered George, almost inaudibly, ’Gabriel
can explain.’
‘Gabriel must explain,’
said Brace, firmly; ’it is a matter of life
and death!’