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<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XLIV.</h3>
<h4>BROOKE BURGESS TAKES LEAVE OF EXETER.<br/> </h4>
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The time had arrived at which Brooke Burgess was to leave Exeter. He
had made his tour through the county, and returned to spend his two
last nights at Miss Stanbury's house. When he came back Dorothy was
still at Nuncombe, but she arrived in the Close the day before his
departure. Her mother and sister had wished her to stay at Nuncombe.
"There is a bed for you now, and a place to be comfortable in,"
Priscilla had said, laughing, "and you may as well see the last of
us." But Dorothy declared that she had named a day to her aunt, and
that she would not break her engagement. "I suppose you can stay if
you like," Priscilla had urged. But Dorothy was of opinion that she
ought not to stay. She said not a word about Brooke Burgess; but it
may be that it would have been matter of regret to her not to shake
hands with him once more. Brooke declared to her that had she not
come back he would have gone over to Nuncombe to see her; but Dorothy
did not consider herself entitled to believe that.</p>
<p>On the morning of the last day Brooke went over to his uncle's
office. "I've come to say good-bye, Uncle Barty," he said.</p>
<p>"Good-bye, my boy. Take care of yourself."</p>
<p>"I mean to try."</p>
<p>"You haven't quarrelled with the old woman,—have you?" said Uncle
Barty.</p>
<p>"Not yet;—that is to say, not to the knife."</p>
<p>"And you still believe that you are to have her money?"</p>
<p>"I believe nothing one way or the other. You may be sure of this,—I
shall never count it mine till I've got it; and I shall never make
myself so sure of it as to break my heart because I don't get it. I
suppose I've got as good a right to it as anybody else, and I don't
see why I shouldn't take it if it come in my way."</p>
<p>"I don't think it ever will," said the old man, after a pause.</p>
<p>"I shall be none the worse," said Brooke.</p>
<p>"Yes, you will. You'll be a broken-hearted man. And she means to
break your heart. She does it on purpose. She has no more idea of
leaving you her money than I have. Why should she?"</p>
<p>"Simply because she takes the fancy."</p>
<p>"Fancy! Believe me, there is very little fancy about it. There isn't
one of the name she wouldn't ruin if she could. She'd break all our
hearts if she could get at them. Look at me and my position. I'm
little more than a clerk in the concern. By God;—I'm not so well off
as a senior clerk in many a bank. If there came a bad time, I must
lose as the others would lose;—but a clerk never loses. And my share
in the business is almost a nothing. It's just nothing,—compared to
what it would have been, only for her."</p>
<p>Brooke had known that his uncle was a disappointed, or at least a
discontented man; but he had never known much of the old man's
circumstances, and certainly had not expected to hear him speak in
the strain that he had now used. He had heard often that his Uncle
Barty disliked Miss Stanbury, and had not been surprised at former
sharp, biting little words spoken in reference to that lady's
character. But he had not expected such a tirade of abuse as the
banker had now poured out. "Of course I know nothing about the bank,"
said he; "but I did not suppose that she had had anything to do with
it."</p>
<p>"Where do you think the money came from that she has got? Did you
ever hear that she had anything of her own? She never had a
penny,—never a penny. It came out of this house. It is the capital
on which this business was founded, and on which it ought to be
carried on to this day. My brother had thrown her off; by heavens,
yes;—had thrown her off. He had found out what she was, and had got
rid of her."</p>
<p>"But he left her his money."</p>
<p>"Yes;—she got near him when he was dying, and he did leave her his
money;—his money, and my money, and your father's money."</p>
<p>"He could have given her nothing, Uncle Barty, that wasn't his own."</p>
<p>"Of course that's true;—it's true in one way. You might say the same
of a man who was cozened into leaving every shilling away from his
own children. I wasn't in Exeter when the will was made. We none of
us were here. But she was here; and when we came to see him die,
there we found her. She had had her revenge upon him, and she means
to have it on all of us. I don't believe she'll ever leave you a
shilling, Brooke. You'll find her out yet, and you'll talk of her to
your nephews as I do to you."</p>
<p>Brooke made some ordinary answer to this, and bade his uncle adieu.
He had allowed himself to entertain a half chivalrous idea that he
could produce a reconciliation between Miss Stanbury and his uncle
Barty; and since he had been at Exeter he had said a word, first to
the one and then to the other, hinting at the subject; but his hints
had certainly not been successful. As he walked from the bank into
the High Street he could not fail to ask himself whether there were
any grounds for the terrible accusations which he had just heard from
his uncle's lips. Something of the same kind, though in form much
less violent, had been repeated to him very often by others of the
family. Though he had as a boy known Miss Stanbury well, he had been
taught to regard her as an ogress. All the Burgesses had regarded
Miss Stanbury as an ogress since that unfortunate will had come to
light. But she was an ogress from whom something might be
gained,—and the ogress had still persisted in saying that a Burgess
should be her heir. It had therefore come to pass that Brooke had
been brought up half to revere her and half to abhor her. "She is a
dreadful woman," said his branch of the family, "who will not scruple
at anything evil. But as it seems that you may probably reap the
advantage of the evil that she does, it will become you to put up
with her iniquity." As he had become old enough to understand the
nature of her position, he had determined to judge for himself;—but
his judgment hitherto simply amounted to this,—that Miss Stanbury
was a very singular old woman, with a kind heart and good instincts,
but so capricious withal that no sensible man would risk his
happiness on expectations formed on her promises. Guided by this
opinion, he had resolved to be attentive to her and, after a certain
fashion, submissive; but certainly not to become her slave. She had
thrown over her nephew. She was constantly complaining to him of her
niece. Now and again she would say a very bitter word to him about
himself. When he had left Exeter on his little excursion, no one was
so much in favour with her as Mr. Gibson. On his return he found that
Mr. Gibson had been altogether discarded, and was spoken of in terms
of almost insolent abuse. "If I were ever so humble to her," he had
said to himself, "it would do no good; and there is nothing I hate so
much as humility." He had thus determined to take the goods the gods
provided, should it ever come to pass that such godlike provision was
laid before him out of Miss Stanbury's coffers;—but not to alter his
mode of life or put himself out of his way in obedience to her
behests, as a man might be expected to do who was destined to receive
so rich a legacy. Upon this idea he had acted, still believing the
old woman to be good, but believing at the same time that she was
very capricious. Now he had heard what his Uncle Bartholomew Burgess
had had to say upon the matter, and he could not refrain from asking
himself whether his uncle's accusations were true.</p>
<p>In a narrow passage between the High Street and the Close he met Mr.
Gibson. There had come to be that sort of intimacy between the two
men which grows from closeness of position rather than from any
social desire on either side, and it was natural that Burgess should
say a word of farewell. On the previous evening Miss Stanbury had
relieved her mind by turning Mr. Gibson into ridicule in her
description to Brooke of the manner in which the clergyman had
carried on his love affair; and she had at the same time declared
that Mr. Gibson had been most violently impertinent to herself. He
knew, therefore, that Miss Stanbury and Mr. Gibson had become two,
and would on this occasion have passed on without a word relative to
the old lady had Mr. Gibson allowed him to do so. But Mr. Gibson
spoke his mind freely.</p>
<p>"Off to-morrow, are you?" he said. "Good-bye. I hope we may meet
again; but not in the same house, Mr. Burgess."</p>
<p>"There or anywhere I shall be very happy," said Brooke.</p>
<p>"Not there, certainly. While you were absent Miss Stanbury treated me
in such a way that I shall certainly never put my foot in her house
again."</p>
<p>"Dear me! I thought that you and she were such great friends."</p>
<p>"I knew her very well, of course;—and respected her. She is a good
churchwoman, and is charitable in the city; but she has got such a
tongue in her head that there is no bearing it when she does what she
calls giving you a bit of her mind."</p>
<p>"She has been indulgent to me, and has not given me much of it."</p>
<p>"Your time will come, I've no doubt," continued Mr. Gibson.
"Everybody has always told me that it would be so. Even her oldest
friends knew it. You ask Mrs. MacHugh, or Mrs. French, at Heavitree."</p>
<p>"Mrs. French!" said Brooke, laughing. "That would hardly be fair
evidence."</p>
<p>"Why not? I don't know a better judge of character in all Exeter than
Mrs. French. And she and Miss Stanbury have been intimate all their
lives. Ask your uncle at the bank."</p>
<p>"My uncle and Miss Stanbury never were friends," said Brooke.</p>
<p>"Ask Hugh Stanbury what he thinks of her. But don't suppose I want to
say a word against her. I wouldn't for the world do such a thing.
Only, as we've met there and all that, I thought it best to let you
know that she had treated me in such a way, and has been altogether
so violent, that I never will go there again." So saying, Mr. Gibson
passed on, and was of opinion that he had spoken with great
generosity of the old woman who had treated him so badly.</p>
<p>In the afternoon Brooke Burgess went over to the further end of the
Close, and called on Mrs. MacHugh; and from thence he walked across
to Heavitree, and called on the Frenches. It may be doubted whether
he would have been so well behaved to these ladies had they not been
appealed to by Mr. Gibson as witnesses to the character of Miss
Stanbury. He got very little from Mrs. MacHugh. That lady was kind
and cordial, and expressed many wishes that she might see him again
in Exeter. When he said a few words about Mr. Gibson, Mrs. MacHugh
only laughed, and declared that the gentleman would soon find a
plaister for that sore. "There are more fishes than one in the sea,"
she said.</p>
<p>"But I'm afraid they've quarrelled, Mrs. MacHugh."</p>
<p>"So they tell me. What should we have to talk about here if somebody
didn't quarrel sometimes? She and I ought to get up a quarrel for the
good of the public;—only they know that I never can quarrel with
anybody. I never see anybody interesting enough to quarrel with." But
Mrs. MacHugh said nothing about Miss Stanbury, except that she sent
over a message with reference to a rubber of whist for the next night
but one.</p>
<p>He found the two French girls sitting with their mother, and they all
expressed their great gratitude to him for coming to say good-bye
before he went. "It's so very nice of you, Mr. Burgess," said
Camilla, "and particularly just at present."</p>
<p>"Yes, indeed," said Arabella, "because you know things have been so
unpleasant."</p>
<p>"My dears, never mind about that," said Mrs. French. "Miss Stanbury
has meant everything for the best, and it is all over now."</p>
<p>"I don't know what you mean by its being all over, mamma," said
Camilla. "As far as I can understand, it has never been begun."</p>
<p>"My dear, the least said the soonest mended," said Mrs. French.</p>
<p>"That's of course, mamma," said Camilla; "but yet one can't hold
one's tongue altogether. All the city is talking about it, and I dare
say Mr. Burgess has heard as much as anybody else."</p>
<p>"I've heard nothing at all," said Brooke.</p>
<p>"Oh yes, you have," continued Camilla. Arabella conceived herself at
this moment to be situated in so delicate a position, that it was
best that her sister should talk about it, and that she herself
should hold her tongue,—with the exception, perhaps, of a hint here
and there which might be of assistance; for Arabella completely
understood that the prize was now to be hers, if the prize could be
rescued out of the Stanbury clutches. She was aware,—no one better
aware,—how her sister had interfered with her early hopes, and was
sure, in her own mind, that all her disappointment had come from
fratricidal rivalry on the part of Camilla. It had never, however,
been open to her to quarrel with Camilla. There they were, linked
together, and together they must fight their battles. As two pigs may
be seen at the same trough, each striving to take the delicacies of
the banquet from the other, and yet enjoying always the warmth of the
same dunghill in amicable contiguity, so had these young ladies lived
in sisterly friendship, while each was striving to take a husband
from the other. They had understood the position, and, though for
years back they had talked about Mr. Gibson, they had never
quarrelled; but now, in these latter days of the Stanbury
interference, there had come tacitly to be something of an
understanding between them that, if any fighting were still possible
on the subject, one must be put forward and the other must yield.
There had been no spoken agreement, but Arabella quite understood
that she was to be put forward. It was for her to take up the
running, and to win, if possible, against the Stanbury filly. That
was her view, and she was inclined to give Camilla credit for acting
in accordance with it with honesty and zeal. She felt, therefore,
that her words on the present occasion ought to be few. She sat back
in her corner of the sofa, and was intent on her work, and shewed by
the pensiveness of her brow that there were thoughts within her bosom
of which she was not disposed to speak. "You must have heard a great
deal," said Camilla, laughing. "You must know how poor Mr. Gibson has
been abused, because he <span class="nowrap">wouldn't—"</span></p>
<p>"Camilla, don't be foolish," said Mrs. French.</p>
<p>"Because he wouldn't what?" asked Brooke. "What ought he to have done
that he didn't do?"</p>
<p>"I don't know anything about ought," said Camilla. "That's a matter
of taste altogether."</p>
<p>"I'm the worst hand in the world at a riddle," said Brooke.</p>
<p>"How sly you are," continued Camilla, laughing; "as if dear Aunt
Stanbury hadn't confided all her hopes to you."</p>
<p>"Camilla, dear,—don't," said Arabella.</p>
<p>"But when a gentleman is hunted, and can't be caught, I don't think
he ought to be abused to his face."</p>
<p>"But who hunted him, and who abused him?" asked Brooke.</p>
<p>"Mind, I don't mean to say a word against Miss Stanbury, Mr. Burgess.
We've known her and loved her all our lives;—haven't we, mamma?"</p>
<p>"And respected her," said Arabella.</p>
<p>"Quite so," continued Camilla. "But you know, Mr. Burgess, that she
likes her own way."</p>
<p>"I don't know anybody that does not," said Brooke.</p>
<p>"And when she's disappointed, she shows it. There's no doubt she is
disappointed now, Mr. Burgess."</p>
<p>"What's the good of going on, Camilla?" said Mrs. French. Arabella
sat silent in her corner, with a conscious glow of satisfaction, as
she reflected that the joint disappointment of the elder and the
younger Miss Stanbury had been caused by a tender remembrance of her
own charms. Had not dear Mr. Gibson told her, in the glowing language
of truth, that there was nothing further from his thoughts than the
idea of taking Dorothy Stanbury for his wife?</p>
<p>"Well, you know," continued Camilla, "I think that when a person
makes an attempt, and comes by the worst of it, that person should
put up with the defeat, and not say all manner of ill-natured things.
Everybody knows that a certain gentleman is very intimate in this
house."</p>
<p>"Don't, dear," said Arabella, in a whisper.</p>
<p>"Yes, I shall," said Camilla. "I don't know why people should hold
their tongues, when other people talk so loudly. I don't care a bit
what anybody says about the gentleman and us. We have known him for
ever so many years, and mamma is very fond of him."</p>
<p>"Indeed I am, Camilla," said Mrs. French.</p>
<p>"And for the matter of that, so am I,—very," said Camilla, laughing
bravely. "I don't care who knows it."</p>
<p>"Don't be so silly, child," said Arabella. Camilla was certainly
doing her best, and Arabella was grateful.</p>
<p>"We don't care what people may say," continued Camilla again. "Of
course we heard, as everybody else heard too, that a certain
gentleman was to be married to a certain lady. It was nothing to us
whether he was married or not."</p>
<p>"Nothing at all," said Arabella.</p>
<p>"We never spoke ill of the young lady. We did not interfere. If the
gentleman liked the young lady, he was quite at liberty to marry her,
as far as we were concerned. We had been in the habit of seeing him
here, almost as a brother, and perhaps we might feel that a
connection with that particular young lady would take him from us;
but we never hinted so much even as that,—to him or to anyone else.
Why should we? It was nothing to us. Now it turns out that the
gentleman never meant anything of the kind, whereupon he is pretty
nearly kicked out of the house, and all manner of ill-natured things
are said about us everywhere." By this time Camilla had become quite
excited, and was speaking with much animation.</p>
<p>"How can you be so foolish, Camilla?" said Arabella.</p>
<p>"Perhaps I am foolish," said Camilla, "to care what anybody says."</p>
<p>"What can it all be to Mr. Burgess?" said Mrs. French.</p>
<p>"Only this, that as we all like Mr. Burgess, and as he is almost one
of the family in the Close, I think he ought to know why we are not
quite so cordial as we used to be. Now that the matter is over I have
no doubt things will get right again. And as for the young lady, I'm
sure we feel for her. We think it was the aunt who was indiscreet."</p>
<p>"And then she has such a tongue," said Arabella.</p>
<p>Our friend Brooke, of course, knew the whole truth;—knew the nature
of Mr. Gibson's failure, and knew also how Dorothy had acted in the
affair. He was inclined, moreover, to believe that the ladies who
were now talking to him were as well instructed on the subject as was
he himself. He had heard, too, of the ambition of the two young
ladies now before him, and believed that that ambition was not yet
dead. But he did not think it incumbent on him to fight a battle even
on behalf of Dorothy. He might have declared that Dorothy, at least,
had not been disappointed, but he thought it better to be silent
about Dorothy. "Yes," he said, "Miss Stanbury has a tongue; but I
think it speaks as much good as it does evil, and perhaps that is a
great deal to say for any lady's tongue."</p>
<p>"We never speak evil of anybody," said Camilla; "never. It is a rule
with us." Then Brooke took his leave, and the three ladies were
cordial and almost affectionate in their farewell greetings.</p>
<p>Brooke was to start on the following morning before anybody would be
up except Martha, and Miss Stanbury was very melancholy during the
evening. "We shall miss him very much; shall we not?" she said,
appealing to Dorothy. "I am sure you will miss him very much," said
Dorothy. "We are so stupid here alone," said Miss Stanbury. When they
had drank their tea, she sat nearly silent for half an hour, and then
summoned him up into her own room. "So you are going, Brooke?" she
said.</p>
<p>"Yes; I must go now. They would dismiss me if I stayed an hour
longer."</p>
<p>"It was good of you to come to the old woman; and you must let me
hear of you from time to time."</p>
<p>"Of course I'll write."</p>
<p>"And, Brooke,—"</p>
<p>"What is it, Aunt Stanbury?"</p>
<p>"Do you want any money, Brooke?"</p>
<p>"No;—none, thank you. I've plenty for a bachelor."</p>
<p>"When you think of marrying, Brooke, mind you tell me."</p>
<p>"I'll be sure to tell you;—but I can't promise yet when that will
be." She said nothing more to him, though she paused once more as
though she were going to speak. She kissed him and bade him good-bye,
saying that she would not go down-stairs again that evening. He was
to tell Dorothy to go to bed. And so they parted.</p>
<p>But Dorothy did not go to bed for an hour after that. When Brooke
came down into the parlour with his message she intended to go at
once, and put up her work, and lit her candle, and put out her hand
to him, and said good-bye to him. But, for all that, she remained
there for an hour with him. At first she said very little, but by
degrees her tongue was loosened, and she found herself talking with a
freedom which she could hardly herself understand. She told him how
thoroughly she believed her aunt to be a good woman,—how sure she
was that her aunt was at any rate honest. "As for me," said Dorothy,
"I know that I have displeased her about Mr. Gibson;—and I would go
away, only that I think she would be so desolate." Then Brooke begged
her never to allow the idea of leaving Miss Stanbury to enter her
head. Because Miss Stanbury was capricious, he said, not on that
account should her caprices either be indulged or permitted. That was
his doctrine respecting Miss Stanbury, and he declared that, as
regarded himself, he would never be either disrespectful to her or
submissive. "It is a great mistake," he said, "to think that anybody
is either an angel or a devil." When Dorothy expressed an opinion
that with some people angelic tendencies were predominant, and with
others diabolic tendencies, he assented; but declared that it was not
always easy to tell the one tendency from the other. At last, when
Dorothy had made about five attempts to go, Mr. Gibson's name was
mentioned. "I am very glad that you are not going to be Mrs. Gibson,"
said he.</p>
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<span class="caption">Brooke Burgess takes his leave.<br/>
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<p>"I don't know why you should be glad."</p>
<p>"Because I should not have liked your husband,—not as your husband."</p>
<p>"He is an excellent man, I'm sure," said Dorothy.</p>
<p>"Nevertheless I am very glad. But I did not think you would accept
him, and I congratulate you on your escape. You would have been
nothing to me as Mrs. Gibson."</p>
<p>"Shouldn't I?" said Dorothy, not knowing what else to say.</p>
<p>"But now I think we shall always be friends."</p>
<p>"I'm sure I hope so, Mr. Burgess. But indeed I must go now. It is
ever so late, and you will hardly get any sleep. Good night." Then he
took her hand, and pressed it very warmly, and referring to a promise
before made to her, he assured her that he would certainly make
acquaintance with her brother as soon as he was back in London.
Dorothy, as she went up to bed, was more than ever satisfied with
herself, in that she had not yielded in reference to Mr. Gibson.</p>
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