The Curate went to breakfast next
morning with a little curiosity and a great deal of
painful feeling. He had been inhospitable to his
brother, and a revulsion had happened such as happens
invariably when a generous man is forced by external
circumstances to show himself churlish. Though
his good sense and his pride alike prevented him from
changing his resolution of the previous night, still
his heart had relented toward Jack, and he felt sorry
and half ashamed to meet the brother to whom he had
shown so much temper and so little kindness.
It was much later than usual when he came down-stairs,
and Jack was just coming out of the comfortable chamber
which belonged of right to his brother, when the Curate
entered the sitting-room. Jack was in his dressing-gown,
as on the previous night, and came forth humming an
air out of the ‘Trovatore,’ and looking
as wholesomely fresh and clean and dainty as the most
honest gentleman in England. He gave his brother
a good-humoured nod, and wished him good morning.
“I am glad to see you don’t keep distressingly
early hours,” he said, between the bars of the
air he was humming. He was a man of perfect digestion,
like all the Wentworths, and got up accordingly, in
a good temper, not disposed to make too much of any
little incivility that might have taken place.
On the contrary, he helped himself to his brother’s
favourite omelet with the most engaging cheerfulness,
and entered into such conversation as might be supposed
to suit a Perpetual Curate in a little country town.
“I daresay you have a good many
nice people about here,” said Jack. “I’ve
done nothing but walk about since I came-and
it does a man good to see those fresh little women
with their pink cheeks. There’s one, a
sister of our friend’s, I believe,” he
continued, with a nod towards the door to indicate
Wodehouse-“an uncommonly pretty girl,
I can tell you; and there’s a little rosebud
of a creature at that shop, whom, they tell me, you’re
interested in. Your living is not worth much,
I suppose? It’s unlucky having two clergymen
in a family; but, to be sure, you’re going in
for Skelmersdale. By the way, that reminds me-how
are the aunts? I have not heard anything of them
for ages. Female relations of that description
generally cling to the parsons of the race. I
suppose they are all living-all three?
Some people never seem to die.”
“They are here,” said
the Curate, succinctly, “living in Carlingford.
I wonder nobody has told you.”
A sudden bright spark lighted in the
prodigal’s eyes. “Ah, they are here,
are they?” he said, after a momentary pause;
“so much the better for you; but in justice
you ought to be content with the living. I say
so as your elder brother. Gerald has the best
right to what they’ve got to leave. By
the by, how are Gerald and the rest? you’ve just
been there. I suppose our respected parent goes
on multiplying. To think of so many odious little
wretches calling themselves Wentworth is enough to
make one disgusted with the name.”
“My father was very ill when
I left; he has had another attack,” said the
Curate. “He does not seem able to bear any
agitation. Your telegram upset him altogether.
I don’t know what you’ve been about-he
did not tell me,” continued the younger brother,
with a little emotion, “but he is very uneasy
about you.”
“Ah, I daresay,” said
Jack; “that’s natural; but he’s wonderfully
tough for such an old fellow. I should say it
would take twenty attacks to finish him; and this
is the second, isn’t it? I wonder how long
an interval there was between the two; it would be
a pretty calculation for a post-obit.
Wodehouse seems to have brought his ancestor down
at the first shot almost; but then there’s no
entail in his case, and the old fellow may have made
a will. I beg your pardon; you don’t like
this sort of talk. I forgot you were a clergyman.
I rather like this town of yours, do you know.
Sweet situation, and good for the health, I should
say. I’ll take your advice, I think, about
the-how did you call it?-Black
Boar. Unless, indeed, some charitable family
would take me in,” said the elder brother, with
a glance from under his eyelids. His real meaning
did not in the least degree suggest itself to the
Curate, who was thinking more of what was past than
of what was to come.
“You seem to take a great interest
in Wodehouse?” said Mr Wentworth.
“Yes; and so do you,”
said Jack, with a keen glance of curiosity-“I
can’t tell why. My interest in him is easily
explained. If the affair came to a trial, it
might involve other people who are of retiring dispositions
and dislike publicity. I don’t mind saying,”
continued the heir of the Wentworths, laying down
his knife and fork, and looking across at his brother
with smiling candour, “that I might myself be
brought before the world in a way which would wound
my modesty; so it must not be permitted to go any
further, you perceive. The partner has got a
warrant out, but has not put it into execution as
yet. That’s why I sent for you. You
are the only man, so far as I can see, that can be
of any use.”
“I don’t know what you
mean,” said the Curate, hastily, “nor what
connection you can possibly have with Wodehouse; perhaps
it is better not to inquire. I mean to do my
best for him, independent of you.”
“Do,” said Jack Wentworth,
with a slight yawn; “it is much better not to
inquire. A clergyman runs the risk of hearing
things that may shock him when he enters into worldly
business; but the position of mediator is thoroughly
professional. Now for the Black Boar. I’ll
send for my traps when I get settled,” he said,
rising in his languid way. He had made a very
good breakfast, and he was not at all disposed to make
himself uncomfortable by quarrelling with his brother.
Besides, he had a new idea in his mind. So he
gave the Curate another little good-humoured nod,
and disappeared into the sleeping-room, from which
he emerged a few minutes after with a coat replacing
the dressing-gown, ready to go out. “I
daresay I shall see you again before I leave Carlingford,”
he said, and left the room with the utmost suavity.
As for Mr Wentworth, it is probable that his brother’s
serenity had quite the reverse of a soothing effect
upon his mind and temper. He rose from the table
as soon as Jack was gone, and for a long time paced
about the room composing himself, and planning what
he was to do-so long, indeed, that Sarah,
after coming up softly to inspect, had cleared the
table and put everything straight in the room before
the Curate discovered her presence. It was only
when she came up to him at last, with her little rustical
curtsy, to say that, please, her missis would like
to see him for a moment in the parlour, that Mr Wentworth
found out that she was there. This interruption
roused him out of his manifold and complicated thoughts.
“I am too busy just now, but I will see Mrs
Hadwin to-night,” he said; “and you can
tell her that my brother has gone to get rooms at the
Blue Boar.” After he had thus satisfied
the sympathetic handmaiden, the Curate crossed over
to the closed door of Wodehouse’s room and knocked.
The inmate there was still in bed, as was his custom,
and answered Mr Wentworth through his beard in a recumbent
voice, less sulky and more uncertain than on the previous
night. Poor Wodehouse had neither the nerve nor
the digestion of his more splendid associate.
He had no strength of evil in himself when he was
out of the way of it; and the consequence of a restless
night was a natural amount of penitence and shame
in the morning. He met the Curate with a depressed
countenance, and answered all his questions readily
enough, even giving him the particulars of the forged
bills, in respect to which Thomas Wodehouse the younger
could not, somehow, feel so guilty as if it had been
a name different from his own which he had affixed
to those fatal bits of paper; and he did not hesitate
much to promise that he would go abroad and try to
make a new beginning if this matter could be settled.
Mr Wentworth went out with some satisfaction after
the interview, believing in his heart that his own
remonstrances had had their due effect, as it is so
natural to believe-for he did not know,
having slept very soundly, that it had rained a good
deal during the night, and that Mrs Hadwin’s
biggest tub (for the old lady had a passion for rain-water)
was immediately under poor Wodehouse’s window,
and kept him awake as it filled and ran over all through
the summer darkness. The recollection of Jack
Wentworth, even in his hour of success, was insufficient
to fortify the simple soul of his humble admirer against
that ominous sound of the unseen rain, and against
the flashes of sudden lightning that seemed to blaze
into his heart. He could not help thinking of
his father’s sick-bed in those midnight hours,
and of all the melancholy array of lost years which
had made him no longer “a gentleman, as he used
to be,” but a skulking vagabond in his native
place; and his penitence lasted till after he had
had his breakfast and Mr Wentworth was gone.
Then perhaps the other side of the question recurred
to his mind, and he began to think that if his father
died there might be no need for his banishment; but
Mr Wentworth knew nothing of this change in his protege’s
sentiments, as he went quickly up Grange Lane.
Wharfside and all the district had lain neglected
for three long days, as the Curate was aware, and
he had promised to call at N Prickett’s
Lane, and to look after the little orphan children
whom Lucy had taken charge of. His occupations,
in short, both public and private, were overpowering,
and he could not tell how he was to get through them;
for, in addition to everything else, it was Friday,
and there was a litany service at twelve o’clock
at St Roque’s. So the young priest had little
time to lose as he hurried up once again to Mr Wodehouse’s
green door.
It was Miss Wodehouse who came to
meet the Curate as soon as his presence was known
in the house-Miss Wodehouse, and not Lucy,
who made way for her sister to pass her, and took
no notice of Mr Wentworth’s name. The elder
sister entered very hurriedly the little parlour down-stairs,
and shut the door fast, and came up to him with an
anxious inquiring face. She told him her father
was just the same, in faltering tones. “And
oh, Mr Wentworth, has anything happened?” she
exclaimed, with endless unspeakable questions in her
eyes. It was so hard for the gentle woman to
keep her secret-the very sight of somebody
who knew it was a relief to her heart.
“I want you to give me full
authority to act for you,” said the Curate.
“I must go to Mr Wodehouse’s partner and
discuss the whole matter.”
Here Miss Wodehouse gave a little
cry, and stopped him suddenly. “Oh, Mr
Wentworth, it would kill papa to know you had spoken
to any one. You must send him away,” she
said, breathless with anxiety and terror. “To
think of discussing it with any one when even Lucy
does not know !” She spoke with so much
haste and fright that it was scarcely possible to
make out her last words.
“Nevertheless I must speak to
Mr Waters,” said the Curate; “I am going
there now. He knows all about it already, and
has a warrant for his apprehension; but we
must stop that. I will undertake that it shall
be paid, and you must give me full authority to act
for you.” When Miss Wodehouse met the steady
look he gave her, she veered immediately from her
fright at the thought of having it spoken of, to gratitude
to him who was thus ready to take her burden into
his hands.
“Oh, Mr Wentworth, it is so
good of you-it is like a brother!”
said the trembling woman; and then she made a pause.
“I say a brother,” she said, drawing an
involuntary moral, “though we have never had
any good of ours; and oh, if Lucy only knew !”
The Curate turned away hastily, and
wrung her hand without being aware of it. “No,”
he said, with a touch of bitterness, “don’t
let her know. I don’t want to appeal to
her gratitude;” and with that he became silent,
and fell to listening, standing in the middle of the
room, if perhaps he might catch any sound of footsteps
coming down-stairs.
“She will know better some day,”
said Miss Wodehouse, wiping her eyes; “and oh,
Mr Wentworth, if papa ever gets better !”
Here the poor lady broke down into inarticulate weeping.
“But I know you will stand by us,” she
said, amid her tears; “it is all the comfort
I have-and Lucy-”
There was no sound of any footstep
on the stair-nothing but the ticking of
the timepiece on the mantelshelf, and the rustling
of the curtains in the soft morning breeze which came
through the open window, and Miss Wodehouse’s
crying. The Curate had not expected to see Lucy,
and knew in his heart that it was better they should
not meet just at this moment; but, notwithstanding
this, it was strange how bitter and disappointed he
felt, and what an impatient longing he had for one
look of her, even though it should be a look which
would drive him frantic with mortified love and disappointed
expectation. To know that she was under the same
roof, and that she knew he was here, but kept away,
and did not care to see him, was gall to his excited
mind. He went away hastily, pressing poor Miss
Wodehouse’s hand with a kind of silent rage.
“Don’t talk about Lucy,” he said,
half to himself, his heart swelling and throbbing
at the sound of the name. It was the first time
he had spoken it aloud to any ear but his own, and
he left the house tingling with an indignation and
mortification and bitter fondness which could not
be expressed in words. What he was about to do
was for her sake, and he thought to himself, with a
forlorn pride, that she would never know it, and it
did not matter. He could not tell that Lucy was
glancing out furtively over the blind, ashamed of
herself in her wounded heart for doing so, and wondering
whether even now he was occupied with that unworthy
love which had made an everlasting separation between
them. If it had been any one worthy, it would
have been different, poor Lucy thought, as she pressed
back the tears into her eyes, and looked out wistfully
at him over the blind. She above-stairs in the
sick-room, and he in the fresh garden hastening out
to his work, were both thinking in their hearts how
perverse life was, and how hard it was not to be happy-as
indeed they well might in a general way; though perhaps
one glance of the Curate’s eyes upward, one
meeting of looks, might have resulted quite reasonably
in a more felicitous train of thinking, at least for
that day.