<p>“The thief!” exclaimed my uncle; “we must never allow<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</SPAN></span>
that. The scamp would break her heart. I am determined to
prevent it. I shall let her know my opinion of him. I know
all the villainous lot too well. Don’t be excited, Tonks. I
can’t stand that. Give me her name and address; and I will
go with the van myself, if necessary. I should think myself a
party to it, if I did not stop it. She will soon see what I
am.”</p>
<p>“I was going to tell you, but now I had better not,” Tony
Tonks answered with a sly dry smile; “what good could you
do, Mr. Orchardson? The lady would only laugh at you, even
if she deigned to see you.”</p>
<p>“Nobody ever laughs at me. And as for deigning to see
me,—why, the Queen herself would do it, the way I should
put it.”</p>
<p>“Well, you have a good opinion of yourself. But you
must keep quiet in this matter, unless you want to spoil my
little game. The lady is the Lady Clara Voucher, daughter of
the Earl of Clerinhouse, a very great heiress, and not bad looking.
What more he can want is a puzzle to me. But it goes
against the grain with him.”</p>
<p>“He shall never have her; he may take his oath of that,”
said my uncle, bringing down his hand upon his knee, as if he
were the father of the peerage.</p>
<p>“Well, this is a curious affair,” thought I; “how can he be
taking to anybody else, after having cast his eyes on Kitty?”</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2>CHAPTER XLVIII.<br/> <small>THE DUCHESS.</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">All</span> these things compelled me to think about them, because
they were so different from what might have been expected.
When first I lost my wife, and knew that I had been robbed of
her, I made up my mind for savage work, and nothing could
be too wild for me. The greatest wrong that man can do to
man had been done to me; for a stab to the bodily heart is
better than the destruction of faith and love. But the care for
my dear wife’s good name, (which would have been blasted, if
ever it got abroad that she had eloped with the money), as well
as many other tender thoughts, had kept me quiet, and conduced
to stop me from any acts of violence. And this instinct<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</SPAN></span>
of true love proved quite right; as all will confess who care to
know the end of it.</p>
<p>Straitened as I was with my own cares, and sometimes
buried in them, I could not help trying to lift if it were but
the corner of the burden imposed by Heaven upon a man a
thousandfold better and more noble. The only excuse I could
make to myself, for the different way in which he bore his
grief, was that he was bound to do it as a clergyman, and being
so old, must be getting used to it. But I knew in my heart that
this was paltry stuff; and that the true reason of the difference
was, that he was a large man with faith in God; while I was
a little one relying upon self. There was no way before me to
cure that, for no man can set up his ladder on a cloud; still it
did me good to know that he had found staple support, and was
steadfast upon heaven.</p>
<p>Mr. Golightly was not only a Christian, but a gentleman.
Far as I was below his rank in life, he never let me feel the
difference, either by word, or turn of manner, or even by tone
of silence. He never inquired into my affairs, though no
indifference prevented it; and nothing was further from his
mind than the thought that he was doing good to me. Being
of a nature which requires something to love, I loved this man,
and never could see anything to laugh at in him, as my Uncle
Cornelius made believe to do.</p>
<p>I became restless if any day went by without my seeing
him, and I could not sleep on my two chairs, however tired I
might be, without the remembrance of his—“Good-night, God
bless you, Kit”—which he always gave me, in a gentle voice,
and with a look which was itself a blessing. And now I had
been admitted to the acquaintance of his darling; whom he
loved as I loved Kitty, but with a holier sense and fear. She
was lying on a horsehair sofa, in his poorly furnished room; for
he was poor, as a good man is nearly always somehow. And I
never shall forget the look she gave me from her weary eyes,
quite as if the depth of kindness were enhanced by its want of
power. And she rose upon one wasted arm, and offered me a
hand just like a white kid glove, that has been drawn off.</p>
<p>“You have been very good to father;” she looked at my
sunburnt face, as if she would like to remember it somewhere
else; “and what lovely grapes you bring me! See, how
greedy I have been!”</p>
<p>It was as much as I could do to keep my eyes from being
like grape-stalks; and I tried to drive my sorrow inwards, by<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</SPAN></span>
thinking that all of it was wanted there. But it would not do,
and I turned away.</p>
<p>“What she wants is outdoor air;” I said, as soon as we left
the room, and her father asked me what I thought; and I said
it more to hide my own distress, than from any hope at all.
“Outdoor air without exercise, and with very gentle movement.”</p>
<p>“Sims, the flyman, is very good;” her father’s lips
trembled as he spoke, and he tried to make a smile of it; “he
knows that we cannot afford much carriage-hire, and he comes
at half-price when he has nothing else to do. But since the
other spring broke, she can hardly bear it. She fainted twice,
the last time we went.”</p>
<p>“But the river, the water, the Thames!” I said, almost
fearing to make a suggestion so stale, “what can be more easy
than the gliding of a boat? Is that even too much for her?”</p>
<p>“Bessy has never tried it yet,” said the anxious father,
pondering much; “when I was at Oxford I loved the river;
but I have not found time for it for many years. And I fear it
would be cold upon the water.”</p>
<p>“It is much more likely to be too hot;” I answered, with
some wonder, at the clear unselfishness of this man, who loved
the river, yet lived upon its banks, without ever taking boat,
for fear of slighting duty; “the sun strikes very strong upon
the river; but after four o’clock it is delightful. I know a
boat that would exactly suit her. She can lie upon the cushions
in the stern. The weather is beautifully calm and warm. Will
you let me try it?”</p>
<p>He was loth to consent without leave from Dr. Sippets,
which of course was right enough; but the doctor said it was
the very thing he was going to recommend that very day; and
as soon as the poor girl heard of it, she would scarcely hear of
any other thing. We had an old boat of our own, but it was
not nice enough for her; so I went as far as Shepperton for the
one of which I had spoken to him. This was a very commodious
affair, and the name painted on it was <i>The Duchess</i>, obliterating
the old name <i>Emmy Moggs</i>; for a genuine duchess had been
in it, while staying for her health at Walton. Phil Moggs was
the owner, and he raised his price, as soon as he had painted
out his good wife’s name. And he thought so much of this
boat now—though described by rivals as the washing-tub—that
he always insisted on going with it. However, he was not
a bad sort of fellow, though belonging henceforth by his own<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</SPAN></span>
account, to the higher aristocracy. The cheaper men called
him “the Duke,” and he accepted the title without ill-will.</p>
<p>Regardless of expense, I hired boat and him, under private
agreement that Mr. Golightly should pay him half a crown, and
suppose that all. And we brought the young lady in a bath-chair
to the bank, and shipped her without any difficulty. And
it was worth a lot of money to behold her fair young face,
delicate with dreams of heaven, taking the flush of the firmer air,
and gradually kindling with the joys of earth. She looked at
every tree we glided past, and every fair garden upon either
bank, and every feathered bend of hill and hollow, as if they
were coming to her in a dream, yet so that she could make
friends of them. At first her dear father clasped her hand, as
if she could glide more smoothly so; but soon she became
more independent, and wanted both hands, to point out her
delight. Then the tears of kind pleasure came into his eyes,
and he turned away, and looked at the world for himself, and
thanked God for this little touch of happiness.</p>
<p>“Shall we rest a minute beneath this willow?” he said, as
the sun drew along the stream, and the myriad twinkles of
bright air seemed to be dancing to the silver chord of
waves; then we slid into the silence of a cool arcade, and I
said,—</p>
<p>“It is high time for Moggs to have some beer.”</p>
<p>Mindful of this prime need of every British waterman, I
had brought a little stone jar from my uncle’s tap; and thinking
that the savour of this fine beverage might not be agreeable
to our fair freight, I landed on the island, with a wink to “the
Duke;” and he very kindly followed me. The Pastor knew
well that his flock must be fed, and he extended his knowledge
to the neighbouring parish.</p>
<p>There was lemonade and strawberries for the weaker
vessels; and while they remained afloat, and entered into these,
Moggs and I sat behind a bush, and considered what was good
for us.</p>
<p>“I suppose you don’t often come Sunbury way;” I said,
just to lend a little tongue to tooth-work; for I had bought
some bread and a hunk of bacon.</p>
<p>“Nobs goes mostly up the river, Chertsey, and Laleham,
and the Mead, and that likes,” Mr. Moggs replied, with his
knife upon the bone. “Ain’t been your way, pretty nigh three
months.”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Ah, but you had a nice time then. Very fine ale at the
<i>Flower-pot</i>, Moggs.”</p>
<p>“Well, so there he; but quite as good nigher home. And
I likes my drop of beer, without no water in it. Here’s your
good health, Mr. What’s your name.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, Moggs; and the same to you. But I don’t
understand about water in your beer.”</p>
<p>“Well, did ever you see a young ’ooman cry enough to fill
a bucket, let alone a boat? I pretty nigh wanted one of them
tarpaulins. Just lost her Daddy, the old man said to me.
But he told me not to speak of it; no more I did. But I
found out arterwards all about it. Seems she come from
Molesey, though I took her t’other side.”</p>
<p>“From Molesey? I know a good many of the people
there. The only man who died there this summer, to my
knowledge, was an old bachelor by the name of Powell. What
was this young woman’s name?</p>
<p>“Watson, or Wilson, I won’t be certain which. Never
mind; I dare say she’s all right by now. The more they takes
on at first, the sooner they gets shut.”</p>
<p>“But you took her on our side of the river, as you said.
Did you go to fetch her? What day was it? What was she
like? Who sent you for her? Where did you land her?
How came you—”</p>
<p>“Look here, Mr. What’s your name. You hires my boat,
and you hires me to row; but not to go on about other people’s
business.”</p>
<p>“But it may be my own business, Philip Moggs. And
you may get into desperate trouble, by refusing to tell me all
you know of it.”</p>
<p>“Not a bit feared of that,” the old man answered; “I’ve
a-knowed hundreds get into trouble with too much clacking,
but never one the other way.”</p>
<p>He shut up his mouth, and looked like an old villain of a
horse I had seen at Sam Henderson’s, who had pits above his
eyes, and ears that stuck back like a gun-cock, and a nose that
was as wiry as a twisted toasting-folk. This was a man who
would whistle on his own nails to warm them, but not to warn
another man from going down a weir-pool.</p>
<p>“Well,” I said, “never mind; I don’t suppose it matters”—for
I was able to master my manners now, after three months
of endurance; “only somebody has a bit of money upon
something; and you might cut in for it, if you gave a hand.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</SPAN></span>
But I’ll be bound you know nothing about it, after all. You
fellows, who are always on the water, dream all sorts of stuff,
just as I did this afternoon.”</p>
<p>“Then, Mister, I’ll just keep my dreaming to myself. I
did hear of something queer down your way. But least said,
soonest mended. Time to be shoving off again.”</p>
<p>On the homeward row, I did my best to drive out of my
mind all thought of this ancient mariner, and his story. And
he feigned not to be thinking of it; though I caught his
wrinkled eyelids dropping suddenly at the sudden glances
which I cast upon him. He was watching me narrowly, when
I looked away; and I thought it likely that he would land
again when he had discharged us, and try to learn all about me
in the village. For we at Sunbury knew but little of the
Shepperton people at that time, looking on it rather as a goose-green
sort of place, benighted, and rustic, and adverse to good
manners. Shepperton, without equal ground, despised us, as
a set of half-Cockneys, and truckling for the money of London,
which they very nobly contemned, because they got so little of
it. If anything exciting came to pass at Sunbury, these odd
people shrugged their shoulders, and talked about Bow Street,
and Newgate, and the like; as if they belonged to Middlesex,
and we to London. However, there can be no doubt which is
the finer village.</p>
<p>I was much dissatisfied with myself, when I came to think
of it, for allowing as I did this boatman’s story so to dwell
upon my mind, that even the fair invalid in the stern lost
many little due attentions. But happily she fell fast asleep,
being sweetly lulled by the soft fine air, and the dreamy melody
of waters. Her long eyelashes lay flat in the delicate hollows
of her clear white cheeks, where a faint tinge of rose began to
steal, like the breath of a baby angel.</p>
<p>“How beautiful she looks!” I whispered to her father, as
he gazed at her; and he answered—“Yes. How can I bear
it? It is the beauty of a better world.”</p>
<p>But he was in livelier mood about her, when we took her
gently home; and she rose from the chair with a rally of
strength, and he said, “Well, Bessy, how do you feel now?”</p>
<p>“As if I wanted a good tea,” she answered; “and as if I
never could thank this gentleman for the pleasure he has given
us.”</p>
<p>I wondered whether in trying ever so feebly to give
pleasure, I might have won, without earning, some great good<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</SPAN></span>
for myself; and off I went (after proper words) to follow the
course of the <i>Duchess</i>.</p>
<p>In a minute or two, I had gained a spot which commanded
the course of the river; and there I perceived that the unmistakable
Moggs, instead of hastening home, was resting on
his oars to watch the bank, and make sure that no one was
watching him. I slipped into a quiet niche, which made me
think of Kitty; for here I had seen her surveying the flood,
in the days of my early love for her. It had been a happy
place that day; would it help me once again?</p>
<p>Presently Moggs made up his mind, if haply it had been
wavering; and pulling into the evening shadows, sought a
convenient landing-place. Then he fastened the <i>Duchess</i> to a
stump, and stiffly made his way towards that snug little
hostelry the <i>Blue Anchor</i>, favoured by most of our waterside
folk.</p>
<p>“That will do,” thought I; “he has conquered his contempt
of Sunbury. He is going to pick up all he can about
me. There must be something in it. And now for the Molesey
story.”</p>
<p>Without delay I returned to our village, and through it
hastened to the landing, where our ancient boat was kept.
There was no fear of meeting Moggs down here, for he was a
good half-mile above. Pulling leisurely down stream, I began
to think how stupid we had been in our inquiries, at least if my
present idea proved correct. But the policemen, to whom we
had entrusted the first part of the search, must bear the blame
of this stupidity. They had not failed to make inquiry among
the boatmen, and along the river; although their attention had
been directed chiefly to the roads and railway. But they
had assumed throughout that the fugitive must have gone
towards London, and as regarded the Thames, they had only
cared to inquire much down stream. Up the river there was
as yet no railway, and no important road; and with their
usual density, they had searched but very vaguely hereabout.</p>
<p>At Molesey I had friends who knew every item of what
happened there; and they soon convinced me that no young
woman weeping for her father’s recent loss was likely to have
quitted that good village, east or west, at the time in question.
Therefore Phil Moggs had been deceived, whether by his passenger
or others, as to that part of the story.</p>
<p>I was greatly surprised to find how little the general mind
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />