A young woman of about eight-and-twenty,
in tailor-made costume, with unadorned hat of brown
felt, and irreproachable umbrella; a young woman who
walked faster than any one in Wattleborough, yet never
looked hurried; who crossed a muddy street seemingly
without a thought for her skirts, yet somehow was
never splashed; who held up her head like one thoroughly
at home in the world, and frequently smiled at her
own thoughts. Those who did not know her asked
who she was; those who had already made her acquaintance
talked a good deal of the new mistress at the High
School, by name Miss Rodney. In less than a week
after her arrival in the town, her opinions were cited
and discussed by Wattleborough ladies. She brought
with her the air of a University; she knew a great
number of important people; she had a quiet decision
of speech and manner which was found very impressive
in Wattleborough drawing-rooms. The headmistress
spoke of her in high terms, and the incumbent of St.
Luke’s, who knew her family, reported that she
had always been remarkably clever.
A stranger in the town, Miss Rodney
was recommended to the lodgings of Mrs. Ducker, a
churchwarden’s widow; but there she remained
only for a week or two, and it was understood that
she left because the rooms ’lacked character.’
Some persons understood this as an imputation on Mrs.
Ducker, and were astonished; others, who caught a
glimpse of Miss Rodney’s meaning, thought she
must be ‘fanciful.’ Her final choice
of an abode gave general surprise, for though the
street was one of those which Wattleborough opinion
classed as ‘respectable,’ the house itself,
as Miss Rodney might have learnt from the incumbent
of St. Luke’s, in whose parish it was situated,
had objectionable features. Nothing grave could
be alleged against Mrs. Turpin, who regularly attended
the Sunday evening service; but her husband, a carpenter,
spent far too much time at ’The Swan With Two
Necks’; and then there was a lodger, young Mr.
Rawcliffe, concerning whom Wattleborough had for some
time been too well informed. Of such comments
upon her proceeding Miss Rodney made light; in the
aspect of the rooms she found a certain ‘quaintness’
which decidedly pleased her. ’And as for
Mrs. Grundy,’ she added, ’je m’en
fiche? which certain ladies of culture declared
to be a polite expression of contempt.
Miss Rodney never wasted time, and
in matters of business had cultivated a notable brevity.
Her interview with Mrs. Turpin, when she engaged the
rooms, occupied perhaps a quarter of an hour; in that
space of time she had sufficiently surveyed the house,
had learnt all that seemed necessary as to its occupants,
and had stated in the clearest possible way her present
requirements.
‘As a matter of course,’
was her closing remark, ’the rooms will be thoroughly
cleaned before I come in. At present they are
filthy.’
The landlady was too much astonished
to reply; Miss Rodney’s tones and bearing had
so impressed her that she was at a loss for her usual
loquacity, and could only stammer respectfully broken
answers to whatever was asked. Assuredly no one
had ever dared to tell her that her lodgings were
’filthy’ any ordinary person
who had ventured upon such an insult would have been
overwhelmed with clamorous retort. But Miss Rodney,
with a pleasant smile and nod, went her way, and Mrs.
Turpin stood at the open door gazing after her, bewildered
’twixt satisfaction and resentment.
She was an easy-going, wool-witted
creature, not ill-disposed, but sometimes mendacious
and very indolent. Her life had always been what
it was now one of slatternly comfort and
daylong gossip, for she came of a small tradesman’s
family, and had married an artisan who was always in
well-paid work. Her children were two daughters,
who, at seventeen and fifteen, remained in the house
with her doing little or nothing, though they were
supposed to ‘wait upon the lodgers.’
For some months only two of the four rooms Mrs. Turpin
was able to let had been occupied, one by ’young
Mr. Rawcliffe,’ always so called, though his
age was nearly thirty, but, as was well known, he
belonged to the ‘real gentry,’ and Mrs.
Turpin held him in reverence on that account.
No matter for his little weaknesses of which
evil tongues, said Mrs. Turpin, of course made the
most. He might be irregular in payment; he might
come home ‘at all hours,’ and make unnecessary
noise in going upstairs; he might at times grumble
when his chop was ill-cooked; and, to tell the truth,
he might occasionally be ’a little too free’
with the young ladies that is to say, with
Mabel and Lily Turpin; but all these things were forgiven
him because he was ’a real gentleman,’
and spent just as little time as he liked daily in
a solicitor’s office.
Miss Rodney arrived early on Saturday
afternoon. Smiling and silent, she saw her luggage
taken up to the bedroom; she paid the cabman; she beckoned
her landlady into the parlour, which was on the ground-floor
front.
‘You haven’t had time
yet, Mrs. Turpin, to clean the rooms?’
The landlady stammered a half-indignant
surprise. Why, she and her daughters had given
the room a thorough turn out. It was done only
yesterday, and hours had been devoted to it.
‘I see,’ interrupted Miss
Rodney, with quiet decision, ’that our notions
of cleanliness differ considerably. I’m
going out now, and I shall not be back till six o’clock.
You will please to clean the bedroom before
then. The sitting-room shall be done on Monday.’
And therewith Miss Rodney left the house.
On her return she found the bedroom
relatively clean, and, knowing that too much must
not be expected at once, she made no comment.
That night, as she sat reading at eleven o’clock,
a strange sound arose in the back part of the house;
it was a man’s voice, hilariously mirthful and
breaking into rude song. After listening for
a few minutes, Miss Rodney rang her bell, and the
landlady appeared.
‘Whose Voice is that I hear?’
‘Voice, miss?’
‘Who is shouting and singing?’ asked Miss
Rodney, in a disinterested tone.
‘I’m sorry if it disturbs you, miss.
You’ll hear no more.’
‘Mrs. Turpin, I asked who it was.’
’My ‘usband, miss. But ’
‘Thank you. Good night, Mrs. Turpin.’
There was quiet for an hour or more.
At something after midnight, when Miss Rodney had
just finished writing half a dozen letters, there sounded
a latch-key in the front door, and some one entered.
This person, whoever it was, seemed to stumble about
the passage in the dark, and at length banged against
the listener’s door. Miss Rodney started
up and flung the door open. By the light of her
lamp she saw a moustachioed face, highly flushed,
and grinning.
‘Beg pardon,’ cried the
man, in a voice which harmonised with his look and
bearing. ’Infernally dark here; haven’t
got a match. You’re Miss pardon forgotten
the name new lodger. Oblige me with
a light? Thanks awfully.’
Without a word Miss Rodney took a
match-box from her chimney-piece, entered the passage,
entered the second parlour that occupied
by Mr. Rawcliffe and lit a candle which
stood on the table.
‘You’ll be so kind,’
she said, looking her fellow-lodger in the eyes, ’as
not to set the house on fire.’
‘Oh, no fear,’ he replied,
with a high laugh. ’Quite accustomed.
Thanks awfully, Miss pardon forgotten
the name.’
But Miss Rodney was back in her sitting-room,
and had closed the door.
Her breakfast next morning was served
by Mabel Turpin, the elder daughter, a stupidly good-natured
girl, who would fain have entered into conversation.
Miss Rodney replied to a question that she had slept
well, and added that, when she rang her bell, she
would like to see Mrs. Turpin. Twenty minutes
later the landlady entered.
‘You wanted me, miss?’
she began, in what was meant for a voice of dignity
and reserve. ‘I don’t really wait
on lodgers myself.’
’We’ll talk about that
another time, Mrs. Turpin. I wanted to say, first
of all, that you have spoiled a piece of good bacon
and two good eggs. I must trouble you to cook
better than this.’
‘I’m very sorry, miss, that nothing seems
to suit you’
‘Oh, we shall get right in time!’
interrupted Miss Rodney cheerfully. ’You
will find that I have patience. Then I wanted
to ask you whether your husband and your lodger come
home tipsy every night, or only on Saturdays?’
The woman opened her eyes as wide
as saucers, trying hard to look indignant.
‘Tipsy, miss?’
‘Well, perhaps I should have said “drunk”;
I beg your pardon.’
’All I can say, miss, is that
young Mr. Rawcliffe has never behaved himself in this
house excepting as the gentleman he is. You don’t
perhaps know that he belongs to a very high-connected
family, miss, or I’m sure you wouldn’t’
‘I see,’ interposed Miss
Rodney. ’That accounts for it. But
your husband. Is he highly connected?’
’I’m sure, miss, nobody
could ever say that my ’usband took too much not
to say really too much. You may have heard
him a bit merry, miss, but where’s the harm
of a Saturday night?’
’Thank you. Then it is
only on Saturday nights that Mr. Turpin becomes merry.
I’m glad to know that. I shall get used
to these little things.’
But Mrs. Turpin did not feel sure
that she would get used to her lodger. Sunday
was spoilt for her by this beginning. When her
husband woke from his prolonged slumbers, and shouted
for breakfast (which on this day of rest he always
took in bed), the good woman went to him with downcast
visage, and spoke querulously of Miss Rodney’s
behaviour.
’I won’t wait upon
her, so there! The girls may do it, and if she
isn’t satisfied let her give notice. I’m
sure I shan’t be sorry. She’s given
me more trouble in a day than poor Mrs. Brown did
all the months she was here. I won’t
be at her beck and call, so there!’
Before night came this declaration
was repeated times innumerable, and as it happened
that Miss Rodney made no demand for her landlady’s
attendance, the good woman enjoyed a sense of triumphant
self-assertion. On Monday morning Mabel took
in the breakfast, and reported that Miss Rodney had
made no remark; but, a quarter of an hour later, the
bell rang, and Mrs. Turpin was summoned. Very
red in the face, she obeyed. Having civilly greeted
her, Miss Rodney inquired at what hour Mr. Turpin
took his breakfast, and was answered with an air of
surprise that he always left the house on week-days
at half-past seven.
‘In that case,’ said Miss
Rodney, ’I will ask permission to come into your
kitchen at a quarter to eight to-morrow morning, to
show you how to fry bacon and boil eggs. You
mustn’t mind. You know that teaching is
my profession.’
Mrs. Turpin, nevertheless, seemed
to mind very much. Her generally good-tempered
face wore a dogged sullenness, and she began to mutter
something about such a thing never having been heard
of; but Miss Rodney paid no heed, renewed the appointment
for the next morning, and waved a cheerful dismissal.
Talking with a friend that day, the
High School mistress gave a humorous description of
her lodgings, and when the friend remarked that they
must be very uncomfortable, and that surely she would
not stay there, Miss Rodney replied that she had the
firmest intention of staying, and, what was more,
of being comfortable.
‘I’m going to take that
household in hand,’ she added. ’The
woman is foolish, but can be managed, I think, with
a little patience. I’m going to tackle
the drunken husband as soon as I see my way. And
as for the highly connected gentleman whose candle
I had the honour of lighting, I shall turn him out.’
‘You have your work set!’ exclaimed the
friend, laughing.
’Oh, a little employment for
my leisure! This kind of thing relieves the monotony
of a teacher’s life, and prevents one from growing
old.’
Very systematically she pursued her
purpose of getting Mrs. Turpin ’in hand.’
The two points at which she first aimed were the keeping
clean of her room and the decent preparation of her
meals. Never losing temper, never seeming to
notice the landlady’s sullen mood, always using
a tone of legitimate authority, touched sometimes
with humorous compassion, she exacted obedience to
her directions, but was well aware that at any moment
the burden of a new civilisation might prove too heavy
for the Turpin family and cause revolt. A week
went by; it was again Saturday, and Miss Rodney devoted
a part of the morning (there being no school to-day)
to culinary instruction. Mabel and Lily shared
the lesson with their mother, but both young ladies
wore an air of condescension, and grimaced at Miss
Rodney behind her back. Mrs. Turpin was obstinately
mute. The pride of ignorance stiffened her backbone
and curled her lip.
Miss Rodney’s leisure generally
had its task; though as a matter of principle she
took daily exercise, her walking or cycling was always
an opportunity for thinking something out, and this
afternoon, as she sped on wheels some ten miles from
Wattleborough, her mind was busy with the problem
of Mrs. Turpin’s husband. From her clerical
friend of St. Luke’s she had learnt that Turpin
was at bottom a decent sort of man, rather intelligent,
and that it was only during the last year or two that
he had taken to passing his evenings at the public-house.
Causes for this decline could be suggested. The
carpenter had lost his only son, a lad of whom he
was very fond; the boy’s death quite broke him
down at the time, and perhaps he had begun to drink
as a way for forgetting his trouble. Perhaps,
too, his foolish, slatternly wife bore part of the
blame, for his home had always been comfortless, and
such companionship must, in the long-run, tell on
a man. Reflecting upon this, Miss Rodney had an
idea, and she took no time in putting it into practice.
When Mabel brought in her tea, she asked the girl
whether her father was at home.
‘I think he is, miss,’
was the distant reply for Mabel had been
bidden by her mother to ‘show a proper spirit’
when Miss Rodney addressed her.
’You think so? Will you
please make sure, and, if you are right, ask Mr. Turpin
to be so kind as to let me have a word with him.’
Startled and puzzled, the girl left
the room. Miss Rodney waited, but no one came.
When ten minutes had elapsed she rang the bell.
A few minutes more and there sounded a heavy foot
in the passage; then a heavy knock at the door, and
Mr. Turpin presented himself. He was a short,
sturdy man, with hair and beard of the hue known as
ginger, and a face which told in his favour.
Vicious he could assuredly not be, with those honest
grey eyes; but one easily imagined him weak in character,
and his attitude as he stood just within the room,
half respectful, half assertive, betrayed an embarrassment
altogether encouraging to Miss Rodney. In her
pleasantest tone she begged him to be seated.
‘Thank you, miss,’ he
replied, in a deep voice, which sounded huskily, but
had nothing of surliness; ’I suppose you want
to complain about something, and I’d rather
get it over standing.’
‘I was not going to make any complaint, Mr.
Turpin.’
’I’m glad to hear it,
miss; for my wife wished me to say she’d done
about all she could, and if things weren’t to
your liking, she thought it would be best for all
if you suited yourself in somebody else’s lodgings.’
It evidently cost the man no little
effort to deliver his message; there was a nervous
twitching about his person, and he could not look Miss
Rodney straight in the face. She, observant of
this, kept a very steady eye on him, and spoke with
all possible calmness.
’I have not the least desire
to change my lodgings, Mr. Turpin. Things are
going on quite well. There is an improvement in
the cooking, in the cleaning, in everything; and,
with a little patience, I am sure we shall all come
to understand one another. What I wanted to speak
to you about was a little practical matter in which
you may be able to help me. I teach mathematics
at the High School, and I have an idea that I might
make certain points in geometry easier to my younger
girls if I could demonstrate them in a mechanical
way. Pray look here. You see the shapes I
have sketched on this piece of paper; do you think
you could make them for me in wood?’
The carpenter was moved to a show
of reluctant interest. He took the paper, balanced
himself now on one leg, now on the other, and said
at length that he thought he saw what was wanted.
Miss Rodney, coming to his side, explained in more
detail; his interest grew more active.
‘That’s Euclid, miss?’
‘To be sure. Do you remember your Euclid?’
‘My own schooling never went
as far as that,’ he replied, in a muttering
voice; ’but my Harry used to do Euclid at the
Grammar School, and I got into a sort of way of doing
it with him.’
Miss Rodney kept a moment’s
silence; then quietly and kindly she asked one or
two questions about the boy who had died. The
father answered in an awkward, confused way, as if
speaking only by constraint.
‘Well, I’ll see what I
can do, miss,’ he added abruptly, folding the
paper to take away. ‘You’d like them
soon?’
’Yes. I was going to ask
you, Mr. Turpin, whether you could do them this evening.
Then I should have them for Monday morning.’
Turpin hesitated, shuffled his feet,
and seemed to reflect uneasily; but he said at length
that he ‘would see about it,’ and, with
a rough bow, got out of the room. That night
no hilarious sounds came from the kitchen. On
Sunday morning, when Miss Rodney went into her sitting-room,
she found on the table the wooden geometrical forms,
excellently made, just as she wished. Mabel,
who came with breakfast, was bidden to thank her father,
and to say that Miss Rodney would like to speak with
him again, if his leisure allowed, after tea-time
on Monday. At that hour the carpenter did not
fail to present himself, distrustful still, but less
embarrassed. Miss Rodney praised his work, and
desired to pay for it. Oh! that wasn’t worth
talking about, said Turpin; but the lady insisted,
and money changed hands. This piece of business
transacted, Miss Rodney produced a Euclid, and asked
Turpin to show her how far he had gone in it with his
boy Harry. The subject proved fruitful of conversation.
It became evident that the carpenter had a mathematical
bias, and could be readily interested in such things
as geometrical problems. Why should he not take
up the subject again?
‘Nay, miss,’ replied Turpin,
speaking at length quite naturally; ’I shouldn’t
have the heart. If my Harry had lived’
But Miss Rodney stuck to the point,
and succeeded in making him promise that he would
get out the old Euclid and have a look at it in his
leisure time. As he withdrew, the man had a pleasant
smile on his honest face.
On the next Saturday evening the house was again quiet.
Meanwhile, relations between Mrs.
Turpin and her lodger were becoming less strained.
For the first time in her life the flabby, foolish
woman had to do with a person of firm will and bright
intelligence; not being vicious of temper, she necessarily
felt herself submitting to domination, and darkly
surmised that the rule might in some way be for her
good. All the sluggard and the slattern in her,
all the obstinacy of lifelong habits, hung back from
the new things which Miss Rodney was forcing upon her
acceptance, but she was no longer moved by active
resentment. To be told that she cooked badly
had long ceased to be an insult, and was becoming merely
a worrying truism. That she lived in dirt there
seemed no way of denying, and though every muscle
groaned, she began to look upon the physical exertion
of dusting and scrubbing as part of her lot in life.
Why she submitted, Mrs. Turpin could not have told
you. And, as was presently to be seen, there
were regions of her mind still unconquered, instincts
of resistance which yet had to come into play.
For, during all this time, Miss Rodney
had had her eye on her fellow-lodger, Mr. Rawcliffe,
and the more she observed this gentleman, the more
resolute she became to turn him out of the house; but
it was plain to her that the undertaking would be
no easy one. In the landlady’s eyes Mr.
Rawcliffe, though not perhaps a faultless specimen
of humanity, conferred an honour on her house by residing
in it; the idea of giving him notice to quit was inconceivable
to her. This came out very clearly in the first
frank conversation which Miss Rodney held with her
on the topic. It happened that Mr. Rawcliffe
had passed an evening at home, in the company of his
friends. After supping together, the gentlemen
indulged in merriment which, towards midnight, became
uproarious. In the morning Mrs. Turpin mumbled
a shamefaced apology for this disturbance of Miss Rodney’s
repose.
‘Why don’t you take this
opportunity and get rid of him?’ asked the lodger
in her matter-of-fact tone.
‘Oh, miss!’
’Yes, it’s your plain
duty to do so. He gives your house a bad character;
he sets a bad example to your husband; he has a bad
influence on your daughters.’
‘Oh! miss, I don’t think’
’Just so, Mrs. Turpin; you don’t
think. If you had, you would long ago have noticed
that his behaviour to those girls is not at all such
as it should be. More than once I have chanced
to hear bits of talk, when either Mabel or Lily was
in his sitting-room, and didn’t like the tone
of it. In plain English, the man is a blackguard.’
Mrs. Turpin gasped.
‘But, miss, you forget what family he belongs
to.’
’Don’t be a simpleton,
Mrs. Turpin. The blackguard is found in every
rank of life. Now, suppose you go to him as soon
as he gets up, and quietly give him notice. You’ve
no idea how much better you would feel after it.’
But Mrs. Turpin trembled at the suggestion.
It was evident that no ordinary argument or persuasion
would bring her to such a step. Miss Rodney put
the matter aside for the moment.
She had found no difficulty in getting
information about Mr. Rawcliffe. It was true
that he belonged to a family of some esteem in the
Wattleborough neighbourhood, but his father had died
in embarrassed circumstances, and his mother was now
the wife of a prosperous merchant in another town.
To his stepfather Rawcliffe owed an expensive education
and two or three starts in life. He was in his
second year of articles to a Wattle-borough solicitor,
but there seemed little probability of his ever earning
a living by the law, and reports of his excesses which
reached the stepfather’s ears had begun to make
the young man’s position decidedly precarious.
The incumbent of St. Luke’s, whom Rawcliffe
had more than once insulted, took much interest in
Miss Rodney’s design against this common enemy;
he could not himself take active part in the campaign,
but he never met the High School mistress without
inquiring what progress she had made. The conquest
of Turpin, who now for several weeks had kept sober,
and spent his evenings in mathematical study, was
a most encouraging circumstance; but Miss Rodney had
no thought of using her influence over her landlady’s
husband to assail Rawcliffe’s position.
She would rely upon herself alone, in this as in all
other undertakings.
Only by constant watchfulness and
energy did she maintain her control over Mrs. Turpin,
who was ready at any moment to relapse into her old
slatternly ways. It was not enough to hold the
ground that had been gained; there must be progressive
conquest; and to this end Miss Rodney one day broached
a subject which had already been discussed between
her and her clerical ally.
‘Why do you keep both your girls
at home, Mrs. Turpin?’ she asked.
’What should I do with them,
miss? I don’t hold with sending girls into
shops, or else they’ve an aunt in Birmingham,
who’s manageress of ’
‘That isn’t my idea,’
interposed Miss Rodney quietly. ’I have
been asked if I knew of a girl who would go into a
country-house not far from here as second housemaid,
and it occurred to me that Lily ’
A sound of indignant protest escaped
the landlady, which Miss Rodney, steadily regarding
her, purposely misinterpreted.
’No, no, of course, she is not
really capable of taking such a position. But
the lady of whom I am speaking would not mind an untrained
girl, who came from a decent house. Isn’t
it worth thinking of?’
Mrs. Turpin was red with suppressed
indignation, but as usual she could not look her lodger
defiantly in the face.
‘We’re not so poor, miss,’
she exclaimed, ’that we need send our daughters
into service,’
’Why, of course not, Mrs. Turpin,
and that’s one of the reasons why Lily might
suit this lady.’
But here was another rock of resistance
which promised to give Miss Rodney a good deal of
trouble. The landlady’s pride was outraged,
and after the manner of the inarticulate she could
think of no adequate reply save that which took the
form of personal abuse. Restrained from this by
more than one consideration, she stood voiceless,
her bosom heaving.
‘Well, you shall think it over,’
said Miss Rodney, ’and we’ll speak of it
again in a day or two.’
Mrs. Turpin, without another word,
took herself out of the room.
Save for that singular meeting on
Miss Rodney’s first night in the house, Mr.
Rawcliffe and the energetic lady had held no intercourse
whatever. Their parlours being opposite each
other on the ground floor, they necessarily came face
to face now and then, but the High School mistress
behaved as though she saw no one, and the solicitor’s
clerk, after one or two attempts at polite formality,
adopted a like demeanour. The man’s proximity
caused his neighbour a ceaseless irritation; of all
objectionable types of humanity, this loafing and
boozing degenerate was, to Miss Rodney, perhaps the
least endurable; his mere countenance excited her animosity,
for feebleness and conceit, things abhorrent to her,
were legible in every line of the trivial features;
and a full moustache, evidently subjected to training,
served only as emphasis of foppish imbecility.
’I could beat him!’ she exclaimed more
than once within herself, overcome with contemptuous
wrath, when she passed Mr. Rawcliffe. And, indeed,
had it been possible to settle the matter thus simply,
no doubt Mr. Rawcliffe’s rooms would very soon
have been vacant.
The crisis upon which Miss Rodney
had resolved came about, quite unexpectedly, one Sunday
evening. Mrs. Turpin and her daughters had gone,
as usual, to church, the carpenter had gone to smoke
a pipe with a neighbour, and Mr. Rawcliffe believed
himself alone in the house. But Miss Rodney was
not at church this evening; she had a headache, and
after tea lay down in her bedroom for a while.
Soon impatient of repose, she got up and went to her
parlour. The door, to her surprise, was partly
open; entering the tread of her slippered
feet was noiseless she beheld an astonishing
spectacle. Before her writing-table, his back
turned to her, stood Mr. Rawcliffe, engaged in the
deliberate perusal of a letter which he had found
there. For a moment she observed him; then she
spoke.
‘What business have you here?’
Rawcliffe gave such a start that he
almost jumped from the ground. His face, as he
put down the letter and turned, was that of a gibbering
idiot; his lips moved, but no sound came from them.
‘What are you doing in my room?’
demanded Miss Rodney, in her severest tones.
‘I really beg your pardon I really
beg ’
‘I suppose this is not the first visit with
which you have honoured me?’
’The first indeed I
assure you the very first! A foolish
curiosity; I really feel quite ashamed of myself;
I throw myself upon your indulgence.’
The man had become voluble; he approached
Miss Rodney smiling in a sickly way, his head bobbing
forward.
‘It’s something,’
she replied, ’that you have still the grace to
feel ashamed. Well, there’s no need for
us to discuss this matter; it can have, of course,
only one result. To-morrow morning you will oblige
me by giving notice to Mrs. Turpin a week’s
notice.’
‘Leave the house?’ exclaimed Rawcliffe.
‘On Saturday next or as much sooner
as you like.’
‘Oh! but really ’
‘As you please,’ said
Miss Rodney, looking him sternly in the face.
’In that case I complain to the landlady of
your behaviour, and insist on her getting rid of you.
You ought to have been turned out long ago. You
are a nuisance, and worse than a nuisance. Be
so good as to leave the room.’
Rawcliffe, his shoulders humped, moved
towards the door; but before reaching it he stopped
and said doggedly
‘I can’t give notice.’
‘Why not?’
‘I owe Mrs. Turpin money.’
‘Naturally. But you will go, all the same.’
A vicious light flashed into the man’s eyes.
‘If it comes to that, I shall not go!’
‘Indeed?’ said Miss Rodney
calmly and coldly. ’We will see about it.
In the meantime, leave the room, sir!’
Rawcliffe nodded, grinned, and withdrew.
Late that evening there was a conversation
between Miss Rodney and Mrs. Turpin. The landlady,
though declaring herself horrified at what had happened,
did her best to plead for Mr. Rawcliffe’s forgiveness,
and would not be brought to the point of promising
to give him notice.
‘Very well, Mrs. Turpin,’
said Miss Rodney at length, ’either he leaves
the house or I do.’
Resolved, as she was, not to
quit her lodgings, this was a bold declaration.
A meeker spirit would have trembled at the possibility
that Mrs. Turpin might be only too glad to free herself
from a subjection which, again and again, had all
but driven her to extremities. But Miss Rodney
had the soul of a conqueror; she saw only her will,
and the straight way to it.
‘To tell you the truth, miss,’
said the landlady, sore perplexed, ’he’s
rather backward with his rent ’
’Very foolish of you to have
allowed him to get into your debt. The probability
is that he would never pay his arrears; they will only
increase, the longer he stays. But I have no more
time to spare at present. Please understand that
by Saturday next it must be settled which of your
lodgers is to go.’
Mrs. Turpin had never been so worried.
The more she thought of the possibility of Miss Rodney’s
leaving the house, the less did she like it.
Notwithstanding Mr. Rawcliffe’s ‘family,’
it was growing clear to her that, as a stamp of respectability
and a source of credit, the High School mistress was
worth more than the solicitor’s clerk. Then
there was the astonishing change that had come over
Turpin, owing, it seemed, to his talk with Miss Rodney;
the man spent all his leisure time in ’making
shapes and figuring’ just as he used
to do when poor Harry was at the Grammar School.
If Miss Rodney disappeared, it seemed only too probable
that Turpin would be off again to ‘The Swan
With Two Necks.’ On the other hand, the
thought of ‘giving notice’ to Mr. Rawcliffe
caused her something like dismay; how could she have
the face to turn a real gentleman out of her house?
Yes, but was it not true that she had lost money by
him and stood to lose more? She had
never dared to tell her husband of Mr. Rawcliffe’s
frequent shortcomings in the matter of weekly payments.
When the easy-going young man smiled and nodded, and
said, ’It’ll be all right, you know, Mrs.
Turpin; you can trust me, I hope,’ she
could do nothing but acquiesce. And Mr. Rawcliffe
was more and more disposed to take advantage of this
weakness. If she could find courage to go through
with the thing, perhaps she would be glad when it
was over.
Three days went by. Rawcliffe
led an unusually quiet and regular life. There
came the day on which his weekly bill was presented.
Mrs. Turpin brought it in person at breakfast, and
stood with it in her hand, an image of vacillation.
Her lodger made one of his familiar jokes; she laughed
feebly. No; the words would not come to her lips;
she was physically incapable of giving him notice.
‘By the bye, Mrs. Turpin,’
said Rawcliffe in an offhand way, as he glanced at
the bill, ‘how much exactly do I owe you?’
Pleasantly agitated, his landlady mentioned the sum.
’Ah! I must settle that.
I tell you what, Mrs. Turpin. Let it stand over
for another month, and we’ll square things up
at Christmas. Will that suit you?’
And, by way of encouragement, he paid
his week’s account on the spot, without a penny
of deduction. Mrs. Turpin left the room in greater
embarrassment than ever.
Saturday came. At breakfast Miss
Rodney sent for the landlady, who made a timid appearance
just within the room.
’Good morning, Mrs. Turpin.
What news have you for me? You know what I mean?’
The landlady took a step forward,
and began babbling excuses, explanations, entreaties.
She was coldly and decisively interrupted.
‘Thank you, Mrs. Turpin, that
will do. A week to-day I leave.’
With a sound which was half a sob
and half grunt Mrs. Turpin bounced from the room.
It was now inevitable that she should report the state
of things to her husband, and that evening half an
hour’s circumlocution brought her to the point.
Which of the two lodgers should go? The carpenter
paused, pipe in mouth, before him a geometrical figure
over which he had puzzled for a day or two, and about
which, if he could find courage, he wished to consult
the High School mistress. He reflected for five
minutes, and uttered an unhesitating decision.
Mr. Rawcliffe must go. Naturally, his wife broke
into indignant clamour, and the debate lasted for an
hour or two; but Turpin could be firm when he liked,
and he had solid reasons for preferring to keep Miss
Rodney in the house. At four o’clock Mrs.
Turpin crept softly to the sitting-room where her
offended lodger was quietly reading.
’I wanted just to say, miss,
that I’m willing to give Mr. Rawcliffe notice
next Wednesday.’
‘Thank you, Mrs. Turpin,’
was the cold reply. ’I have already taken
other rooms.’
The landlady gasped, and for a moment
could say nothing. Then she besought Miss Rodney
to change her mind. Mr. Rawcliffe should leave,
indeed he should, on Wednesday week. But Miss
Rodney had only one reply; she had found other rooms
that suited her, and she requested to be left in peace.
At eleven Mr. Rawcliffe came home.
He was unnaturally sober, for Saturday night, and
found his way into the parlour without difficulty.
There in a minute or two he was confronted by his
landlady and her husband: they closed the door
behind them, and stood in a resolute attitude.
‘Mr. Rawcliffe,’ began
Turpin, ’you must leave these lodgings, sir,
on Wednesday next.’
‘Hullo! what’s all this
about?’ cried the other. ’What do
you mean, Turpin?’
The carpenter made plain his meaning;
spoke of Miss Rodney’s complaint, of the irregular
payment (for his wife, in her stress, had avowed everything),
and of other subjects of dissatisfaction; the lodger
must go, there was an end of it. Rawcliffe, putting
on all his dignity, demanded the legal week’s
notice; Turpin demanded the sum in arrear. There
was an exchange of high words, and the interview ended
with mutual defiance. A moment after Turpin and
his wife knocked at Miss Rodney’s door, for she
was still in her parlour. There followed a brief
conversation, with the result that Miss Rodney graciously
consented to remain, on the understanding that Mr.
Rawcliffe left the house not later than Wednesday.
Enraged at the treatment he was receiving,
Rawcliffe loudly declared that he would not budge.
Turpin warned him that if he had made no preparations
for departure on Wednesday he would be forcibly ejected,
and the door closed against him.
‘You haven’t the right
to do it,’ shouted the lodger. ’I’ll
sue you for damages.’
‘And I,’ retorted the
carpenter, ‘will sue you for the money you owe
me!’
The end could not be doubtful.
Rawcliffe, besides being a poor creature, knew very
well that it was dangerous for him to get involved
in a scandal; his stepfather, upon whom he depended,
asked but a fair excuse for cutting him adrift, and
more than one grave warning had come from his mother
during the past few months. But he enjoyed a
little blustering, and even at breakfast-time on Wednesday
his attitude was that of contemptuous defiance.
In vain had Mrs. Turpin tried to coax him with maternal
suavity; in vain had Mabel and Lily, when serving
his meals, whispered abuse of Miss Rodney, and promised
to find some way of getting rid of her, so that Rawcliffe
might return. In a voice loud enough to be heard
by his enemy in the opposite parlour, he declared
that no ’cat of a school teacher should get
the better of him.’ As a matter of
fact, however, he arranged on Tuesday evening to take
a couple of cheaper rooms just outside the town, and
ordered a cab to come for him at eleven next morning.
‘You know what the understanding
is, Mr. Rawcliffe,’ said Turpin, putting his
head into the room as the lodger sat at breakfast.
’I’m a man of my word.’
‘Don’t come bawling here!’
cried the other, with a face of scorn.
And at noon the house knew him no more.
Miss Rodney, on that same day, was
able to offer her landlady a new lodger. She
had not spoken of this before, being resolved to triumph
by mere force of will.
‘The next thing,’ she
remarked to a friend, when telling the story, ’is
to pack off one of the girls into service. I
shall manage it by Christmas,’ and she added
with humorous complacency, ’it does one good
to be making a sort of order in one’s own little
corner of the world.’