<p><SPAN name="c5" id="c5"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER V.</h3>
<h4>"THEN WE MUST GO."<br/> </h4>
<p><span class="smallcaps">"I thought</span>
you were never going to have done with that old
Jupiter," said Mrs. Peacocke, as she began at that late hour of
the evening to make tea for herself and her husband.</p>
<p>"Why have you waited for me?"</p>
<p>"Because I like company. Did you ever know me go to tea without
you when there was a chance of your coming? What has Jupiter been
talking about all this time?"</p>
<p>"Jupiter has not been talking all this time. Jupiter talked only
for half an hour. Jupiter is a very good fellow."</p>
<p>"I always thought so. Otherwise I should never have consented to
have been one of his satellites, or have been contented to see you
doing chief moon. But you have been with him an hour and a half."</p>
<p>"Since I left him I have walked all round by Bowick Lodge. I had
something to think of before I could talk to you,—something to
decide upon, indeed, before I could return to the house."</p>
<p>"What have you decided?" she asked. Her voice was altogether
changed. Though she was seated in her chair and had hardly moved,
her appearance and her carriage of herself were changed. She
still held the cup in her hand which she had been about to fill,
but her face was turned towards his, and her large brown speaking
eyes were fixed upon him.</p>
<p>"Let me have my tea," he said, "and then I will tell you." While
he drank his tea she remained quite quiet, not touching her own,
but waiting patiently till it should suit him to speak. "Ella,"
he said, "I must tell it all to Dr. Wortle."</p>
<p>"Why, dearest?" As he did not answer at once, she went on with her
question. "Why now more than before?"</p>
<p>"Nay, it is not now more than before. As we have let the before
go by, we can only do it now."</p>
<p>"But why at all, dear? Has the argument, which was strong when we
came, lost any of its force?"</p>
<p>"It should have had no force. We should not have taken the man's
good things, and have subjected him to the injury which may come
to him by our bad name."</p>
<p>"Have we not given him good things in return?"</p>
<p>"Not the good things which he had a right to expect,—not that
respectability which is all the world to such an establishment as
this."</p>
<p>"Let me go," she said, rising from her chair and almost shrieking.</p>
<p>"Nay, Ella, nay; if you and I cannot talk as though we were one
flesh, almost with one soul between us, as though that which is
done by one is done by both, whether for weal or woe,—if you and
I cannot feel ourselves to be in a boat together either for
swimming or for sinking, then I think that no two persons on this
earth ever can be bound together after that fashion. 'Whither
thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge. The
Lord do so to me, and more also, if aught but death part thee and
me."' Then she rose from her chair, and flinging herself on her
knees at his feet, buried her face in his lap.
<ins class="corr" title="Deleted space between
opening double quotation
mark and ‘Ella’">"Ella</ins>," he said,
"the only injury you can do me is to speak of leaving me. And it
is an injury which is surely unnecessary because you cannot carry
it beyond words. Now, if you will sit up and listen to me, I will
tell you what passed between me and the Doctor." Then she raised
herself from the ground and took her seat at the tea-table, and
listened patiently as he began his tale. "They have been talking
about us here in the county."</p>
<p>"Who has found it necessary to talk about one so obscure as I?"</p>
<p>"What does it matter who they might be? The Doctor in his kindly
wrath,—for he is very wroth,—mentions this name and the other.
What does it matter? Obscurity itself becomes mystery, and
mystery of course produces curiosity. It was bound to be so. It
is not they who are in fault, but we. If you are different from
others, of course you will be inquired into."</p>
<p>"Am I so different?"</p>
<p>"Yes;—different in not eating the Doctor's dinners when they are
offered to you; different in not accepting Lady
<ins class="corr" title="‘de Lawle’s’ changed to
‘De Lawle’s’ to conform to majority usage
(11 out of 14 times with uppercase)">De Lawle's</ins>
hospitality; different in contenting yourself simply with your
duties and your husband. Of course we are different. How could
we not be different? And as we are different, so of course there
will be questions and wonderings, and that sifting and searching
which always at last finds out the facts. The Bishop says that he
knows nothing of my American life."</p>
<p>"Why should he want to know anything?"</p>
<p>"Because I have been preaching in one of his churches. It is
natural;—natural that the mothers of the boys should want to know
something. The Doctor says that he hates secrets. So do I."</p>
<p>"Oh, my dearest!"</p>
<p>"A secret is always accompanied by more or less of fear, and
produces more or less of cowardice. But it can no more be avoided
than a sore on the flesh or a broken bone. Who would not go
about, with all his affairs such as the world might know, if it
were possible? But there come gangrenes in the heart, or perhaps
in the pocket. Wounds come, undeserved wounds, as those did to
you, my darling; but wounds which may not be laid bare to all
eyes. Who has a secret because he chooses it?"</p>
<p>"But the Bishop?"</p>
<p>"Well,—yes, the Bishop. The Bishop has told the Doctor to
examine me, and the Doctor has done it. I give him the credit of
saying that the task has been most distasteful to him. I do him
the justice of acknowledging that he has backed out of the work he
had undertaken. He has asked the question, but has said in the
same breath that I need not answer it unless I like."</p>
<p>"And you? You have not answered it yet?"</p>
<p>"No; I have answered nothing as yet. But I have, I think, made up
my mind that the question must be answered."</p>
<p>"That everything should be told?"</p>
<p>"Everything,—to him. My idea is to tell everything to him, and
to leave it to him to decide what should be done. Should he
refuse to repeat the story any further, and then bid us go away
from Bowick, I should think that his conduct had been altogether
straightforward and not uncharitable."</p>
<p>"And you,—what would you do then?"</p>
<p>"I should go. What else?"</p>
<p>"But whither?"</p>
<p>"Ah! on that we must decide. He would be friendly with me.
Though he might think it necessary that I should leave Bowick, he
would not turn against me violently."</p>
<p>"He could do nothing."</p>
<p>"I think he would assist me rather. He would help me, perhaps, to
find some place where I might still earn my bread by such skill as
I possess;—where I could do so without dragging in aught of my
domestic life, as I have been forced to do here."</p>
<p>"I have been a curse to you," exclaimed the unhappy wife.</p>
<p>"My dearest blessing," he said. "That which you call a curse has
come from circumstances which are common to both of us. There
need be no more said about it. That man has been a source of
terrible trouble to us. The trouble must be discussed from time
to time, but the necessity of enduring it may be taken for
granted."</p>
<p>"I cannot be a philosopher such as you are," she said.</p>
<p>"There is no escape from it. The philosophy is forced upon us.
When an evil thing is necessary, there remains only the
consideration how it may be best borne."</p>
<p>"You must tell him, then?"</p>
<p>"I think so. I have a week to consider of it; but I think so.
Though he is very kind at this moment in giving me the option, and
means what he says in declaring that I shall remain even though I
tell him nothing, yet his mind would become uneasy, and he would
gradually become discontented. Think how great is his stake in the
school! How would he feel towards me, were its success to be
gradually diminished because he kept a master here of whom people
believed some unknown evil?"</p>
<p>"There has been no sign of any such falling off?"</p>
<p>"There has been no time for it. It is only now that people are
beginning to talk. Had nothing of the kind been said, had this
Bishop asked no questions, had we been regarded as people simply
obscure, to whom no mystery attached itself, the thing might have
gone on; but as it is, I am bound to tell him the truth."</p>
<p>"Then we must go?"</p>
<p>"Probably."</p>
<p>"At once?"</p>
<p>"When it has been so decided, the sooner the better. How could we
endure to remain here when our going shall be desired?"</p>
<p>"Oh no!"</p>
<p>"We must flit, and again seek some other home. Though he should
keep our secret,—and I believe he will if he be asked,—it will
be known that there is a secret, and a secret of such a nature
that its circumstances have driven us hence. If I could get
literary work in London, perhaps we might live there."</p>
<p>"But how,—how would you set about it? The truth is, dearest,
that for work such as yours you should either have no wife at all,
or else a wife of whom you need not be ashamed to speak the whole
truth before the world."</p>
<p>"What is the use of it?" he said, rising from his chair as in
anger. "Why go back to all that which should be settled between
us, as fixed by fate? Each of us has given to the other all that
each has to give, and the partnership is complete. As far as that
is concerned, I at any rate am contented."</p>
<p>"Ah, my darling!" she exclaimed, throwing her arms round his neck.</p>
<p>"Let there be an end to distinctions and differences, which,
between you and me, can have no effect but to increase
<ins class="corr" title="Original read ‘out’">our</ins>
troubles. You are a woman, and I am a man; and therefore, no
doubt, your name, when brought in question, is more subject to
remark than mine,—as is my name, being that of a clergyman, more
subject to remark than that of one not belonging to a sacred
profession. But not on that account do I wish to unfrock myself;
nor certainly on that account do I wish to be deprived of my wife.
For good or bad, it has to be endured together; and expressions of
regret as to that which is unavoidable, only aggravate our
trouble." After that, he seated himself, and took up a book as
though he were able at once to carry off his mind to other
matters. She probably knew that he could not do so, but she sat
silent by him for a while, till he bade her take herself to bed,
promising that he would follow without delay.</p>
<p>For three days nothing further was said between them on the
subject, nor was any allusion made to it between the Doctor and
his assistant. The school went on the same as ever, and the
intercourse between the two men was unaltered as to its general
mutual courtesy. But there did undoubtedly grow in the Doctor's
mind a certain feverish feeling of insecurity. At any rate, he
knew this, that there was a mystery, that there was something
about the Peacockes,—something referring especially to Mrs.
Peacocke,—which, if generally known, would be held to be
deleterious to their character. So much he could not help
deducing from what the man had already told him. No doubt he had
undertaken, in his generosity, that although the man should
decline to tell his secret, no alteration should be made as to the
school arrangements; but he became conscious that in so promising
he had in some degree jeopardised the well-being of the school.
He began to whisper to himself that persons in such a position as
that filled by this Mr. Peacocke and his wife should not be
subject to peculiar remarks from ill-natured tongues. A weapon
was afforded by such a mystery to the Stantiloups of the world,
which the Stantiloups would be sure to use with all their
virulence. To such an establishment as his school, respectability
was everything. Credit, he said to himself, is a matter so subtle
in its essence, that, as it may be obtained almost without reason,
so, without reason, may it be made to melt away. Much as he liked
Mr. Peacocke, much as he approved of him, much as there was in the
man of manliness and worth which was absolutely dear to
him,—still he was not willing to put the character of his school
in peril for the sake of Mr. Peacocke. Were he to do so, he would
be neglecting a duty much more sacred than any he could owe to Mr.
Peacocke. It was thus that, during these three days, he conversed
with himself on the subject, although he was able to maintain
outwardly the same manner and the same countenance as though all
things were going well between them. When they parted after the
interview in the study, the Doctor, no doubt, had so expressed
himself as rather to dissuade his usher from telling his secret
than to encourage him to do so. He had been free in declaring
that the telling of the secret should make no difference in his
assistant's position at Bowick. But in all that, he had acted
from his habitual impulse. He had since told himself that the
mystery ought to be disclosed. It was not right that his boys
should be left to the charge of one who, however competent, dared
not speak of his own antecedents. It was thus he thought of the
matter, after consideration. He must wait, of course, till the
week should be over before he made up his mind to anything
further.</p>
<p>"So Peacocke isn't going to take the curacy?"</p>
<p>This was said to the Doctor by Mr. Pearson, the squire, in the
course of those two or three days of which we are speaking. Mr.
Pearson was an old gentleman, who did not live often at Bowick,
being compelled, as he always said, by his health, to spend the
winter and spring of every year in Italy, and the summer months by
his family in London. In truth, he did not much care for Bowick,
but had always been on good terms with the Doctor, and had never
opposed the school. Mr. Pearson had been good also as to Church
matters,—as far as goodness can be shown by generosity,—and had
interested himself about the curates. So it had come to pass that
the Doctor did not wish to snub his neighbour when the question
was asked. "I rather think not," said the Doctor. "I fear I
shall have to look out for some one else." He did not prolong the
conversation; for, though he wished to be civil, he did not wish
to be communicative. Mr. Pearson had shown his parochial
solicitude, and did not trouble himself with further questions.</p>
<p>"So Mr. Peacocke isn't going to take the curacy?" This, the very
same question in the very same words, was put to the Doctor on the
next morning by the vicar of the next parish. The Rev. Mr.
Puddicombe, a clergyman without a flaw who did his duty
excellently in every station of life, was one who would preach a
sermon or take a whole service for a brother parson in distress,
and never think of reckoning up that return sermons or return
services were due to him,—one who gave dinners, too, and had
pretty daughters;—but still our Doctor did not quite like him.
He was a little too pious, and perhaps given to ask questions.
"So Mr. Peacocke isn't going to take the curacy?"</p>
<p>There was a certain animation about the asking of this question by
Mr. Puddicombe very different from Mr. Pearson's listless manner.
It was clear to the Doctor that Mr. Puddicombe wanted to know. It
seemed to the Doctor that something of condemnation was implied in
the tone of the question, not only against Mr. Peacocke, but
against himself also, for having employed Mr. Peacocke. "Upon my
word I can't tell you," he said, rather crossly.</p>
<p>"I thought that it had been all settled. I heard that it was
decided."</p>
<p>"Then you have heard more than I have."</p>
<p>"It was the Bishop told me."</p>
<p>Now it certainly was the case that in that fatal conversation
which had induced the Doctor to interrogate Mr. Peacocke about his
past life, the Doctor himself had said that he intended to look
out for another curate. He probably did not remember that at the
moment. "I wish the Bishop would confine himself to asserting
things that he knows," said the Doctor, angrily.</p>
<p>"I am sure the Bishop intends to do so," said Mr. Puddicombe, very
gravely. "But I apologise. I had not intended to touch a subject
on which there may perhaps be some reserve. I was only going to
tell you of an excellent young man of whom I have heard. But,
good morning." Then Mr. Puddicombe withdrew.</p>
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