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<h2> XIII. </h2>
<p>"She loves me! She loves me! She loves me!" The words sang in Philip's
ears like a sweet tune half the way back to Ballure. Then he began to
pluck at the brambles by the wayside, to wound his hand by snatching at
the gorse, and to despise himself for being glad when he should have been
in grief. Still, he was sure of it; there was no making any less of it.
She loved him, he was free to love her, there need be no hypocrisy and no
self-denial; so he wiped the blood from his fingers, and crept into the
blue room of Auntie Nan.</p>
<p>The old lady, in a dainty cap with flying streamers, was sitting by the
fireside spinning. She had heard the news of Pete as Philip passed through
to Sulby, and was now wondering if it was not her duty to acquaint Uncle
Peter. The sweet and natty old gentlewoman, brought up in the odour of
gentility, was thinking on the lines of poor Bridget, Black Tom when dying
under the bare scraas, that a man's son was his son in spite of law or
devil.</p>
<p>She decided against telling the Ballawhaine by remembering an incident in
the life of his father. It was about Philip's father, too; so Philip
stretched his legs from the sofa towards the hearth, and listened to the
old Auntie's voice over the whirr of her wheel, with another voice—a
younger voice, an unheard voice—breaking: in at the back of his ears
when the wheel stopped, and a sweet undersong inside of him always,
saying, "Be sensible; there is no disloyalty; Pete is dead. Poor Pete!
Poor old Pete!"</p>
<p>"Though he had cast your father off, Philip, for threatening to make your
mother his wife, he never believed there was a parson on the island would
dare to marry them against his wish."</p>
<p>"No, really?"</p>
<p>"No; and when Uncle Peter came in at dinner-time a week after and said,
'It's all over,' he said, 'No, sir, no,' and threw down his spoon in the
plate, and the hot broth splashed on my hand, I remember. But Peter said,
'It's past praying for, sir,' and then grandfather cried, 'No, I tell you
no.' 'But I tell you yes, sir,' said Peter. 'Maughold Church yesterday
morning before service.' Then grandfather lost himself, and called Peter
'Liar,' and cried that your father couldn't do it. 'And, besides, he's my
own son after all, and would not,' said grandfather. But I could see that
he believed what Uncle Peter had told him, and, when Peter began to cry,
he said, 'Forgive me, my boy; I'm your father for all, and I've a right to
your forgiveness.' All the same, he wouldn't be satisfied until he had
seen the register, and I had to go with him to the church."</p>
<p>"Poor old grandfather!"</p>
<p>"The vicar in those days was a little dotty man named Kissack, and it was
the joy of his life to be always crushing and stifling somebody, because
somebody was always depriving him of his rights or something."</p>
<p>"I remember him—the Cockatoo. His favourite text was, 'Jesus said,
then follow Me,' only the people declared he always wanted to go first."</p>
<p>"Shocking, Philip. It was evening when we drove up to Maughold, and the
little parson was by the Cross, ordering somebody with a cane. 'I am told
you married my son yesterday; is it true?' said grandfather. 'Quite true,'
said the vicar. 'By banns or special license?' grandfather asked.
'License, of course,' the vicar answered."</p>
<p>"Curt enough, any way."</p>
<p>"'Show me the register,' said grandfather, and his face twitched and his
voice was thick. 'Can't you believe me?' said the vicar. 'The register,'
said grandfather. Then the vicar turned the key in the church door and
strutted up the aisle, humming something. I tried to keep grandfather back
even then. 'What's the use?' I said, for I knew he was only fighting
against belief. But, hat in hand, he followed to the Communion rail, and
there the vicar laid the open book before him. Oh, Philip, shall I ever
forget it? How it all comes back—the little dim church, the smell of
damp and of velvet under the holland covers of the pulpit, and the empty
place echoing. And grandfather fixed his glasses and leaned over the
register, but he could see nothing—only blurr, blurr, blurr.</p>
<p>"'<i>You</i> look at it, child,' he said, over his shoulder. But I daren't
face it; so he rubbed his glasses and leaned over the book again. Oh dear!
he was like one who looks down the list of the slain for the name he prays
he may not find. But the name was there, too surely: 'Thomas Wilson
Christian... to Mona Crellin... signed Wm. Crellin and something
Kissack.'"</p>
<p>Philip's breath came hot and fast.</p>
<p>"The little vicar was swinging his cane to and fro on the other side of
the rail and smiling, and grandfather raised his eyes to him and said, 'Do
you know what you've done, sir? You've robbed me of my first-born son and
ruined him.' 'Nonsense, sir,' said the vicar. 'Your son was of age, and
his wife had the sanction of her father. Was I to go round by Ballawhaine
for permission to do my duty as a clergyman?' 'Duty!' cried grandfather.
'When a young man marries, he marries for heaven or for hell. Your duty as
a clergyman!' he cried, till his voice rang in the roof. 'If a son of
yours had his hand at his throat, would you call it my duty as Deemster to
hand him a knife.' 'Silence, sir,' said the vicar. Remember where you
stand, or, Deemster though you are, you shall repent it.' 'Arrest me for
brawling, will you?' cried grandfather, and he snatched the cane out of
the vicar's hand and struck him across the breast. 'Arrest me now,' he
said, and then tottered and stumbled out of the church by my arm and the
doors of the empty pews."</p>
<p>Philip went to bed that night with burning brow and throbbing throat. He
had made a startling discovery. He was standing where his father had stood
before him; he was doing what his father had done; he was in danger of his
father's fate! Where was his head that he had never thought of this
before?</p>
<p>It was hard—it was terrible. Now that he was free to love the girl,
he realised what it meant to love her. Nevertheless he was young, and he
rebelled, he fought, he would not deliberate, The girl conquered in his
heart that night, and he lay down to sleep.</p>
<p>But next morning he told himself, with a shudder, that it was lucky he had
gone no farther. One step more and all the evil of his father's life might
have been repeated in his own. There had been nothing said, nothing done.
He would go to Sulby no more.</p>
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