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<h2> CHAPTER XLV. — A NEW SUSPICION. </h2>
<p>Arthur Channing had been walking leisurely down Close Street. Time hung
heavily on his hands. In leaving the cathedral after morning service, he
had joined Mr. Harper, the lay clerk, and went with him, talking, towards
the town; partly because he had nothing to do elsewhere—partly
because out of doors appeared more desirable than home. In the uncertain
state of suspense they were kept in, respecting Charles, the minds of all,
from Hamish down to Annabel, were in a constant state of unrest. When they
rose in the morning the first thought was, “Shall we hear of Charles
to-day?” When they retired at bedtime, “What may not the river give up
this night?” It appeared to them that they were continually expecting
tidings of some sort or other; and, with this expectation, hope would
sometimes mingle itself.</p>
<p>Hope; where could it spring from? The only faint suspicion of it, indulged
at first, that Charley had been rescued in some providential manner, and
conveyed to a house of shelter, had had time to die out. A few houses
there were, half-concealed near the river, as there are near to most other
rivers of traffic, which the police trusted just as far as they could see,
and whose inmates did not boast of shining reputations; but the police had
overhauled these thoroughly, and found no trace of Charley. Nor was it
likely that they would conceal a child. So long as Charles’s positive fate
remained a mystery, suspense could not cease; and with this suspense there
did mingle some faint glimmer of hope. Suspense leads to exertion;
inaction is intolerable to it. Hamish, Arthur, Tom, all would rather be
out of doors now, than in; there might be something to be heard of, some
information to be gathered, and looking after it was better than staying
at home to wait for it. No wonder, then, that Arthur Channing’s steps
would bend unconsciously towards the town, when he left the cathedral,
morning and afternoon.</p>
<p>It was in passing Mr. Galloway’s office, the window of which stood wide
open, that Arthur had found himself called to by Roland Yorke.</p>
<p>“What is it?” he asked, halting at the window.</p>
<p>“You are the very chap I wanted to see,” cried Roland. “Come in! Don’t be
afraid of meeting Galloway: he’s off somewhere.”</p>
<p>The prospect of meeting Mr. Galloway would not have prevented Arthur from
entering. He was conscious of no wrong, and he did not shrink as though he
had committed one. He went in, and Mr. Harper proceeded on his way.</p>
<p>“Here’s a go!” was Roland’s salutation. “Jenkins is laid up.” It was
nothing but what Arthur had expected. He, like Mr. Galloway, had observed
Jenkins growing ill and more ill. “How shall you manage without him?”
asked Arthur; Mr. Galloway’s dilemma being the first thing that occurred
to his mind.</p>
<p>“Who’s to know?” answered Roland, who was in an explosive temper. “<i>I</i>
don’t. If Galloway thinks to put it all on my back, it’s a scandalous
shame! I never could do it, or the half of it. Jenkins worked like a horse
when we were busy. He’d hang his head down over his desk, and never lift
it for two hours at a stretch!—you know he would not. Fancy my doing
that! I should get brain fever before a week was out.”</p>
<p>Arthur smiled at this. “Is Jenkins much worse?” he inquired.</p>
<p>“I don’t believe he’s worse at all,” returned Roland, tartly. “He’d have
come this morning, as usual, fast enough, only she locked up his clothes.”</p>
<p>“Who?” said Arthur, in surprise.</p>
<p>“She. That agreeable lady who has the felicity of owning Jenkins. She was
here this morning as large as life, giving an account of her doings,
without a blush. She locked up his things, she says, to keep him in bed.
I’d be even with her, I know, were I Jenkins. I’d put on her flounces, but
what I’d come out, if I wanted to. Rather short they’d be for him,
though.”</p>
<p>“I shall go, Roland. My being here only hinders you.”</p>
<p>“As if that made any difference worth counting! Look here!—piles and
piles of parchments! I and Galloway could never get through them, hindered
or not hindered. <i>I</i> am not going to work over hours! <i>I</i> won’t
kill myself with hard labour. There’s Port Natal, thank goodness, if the
screw does get put upon me too much!”</p>
<p>Arthur did not reply. It made little difference to Roland: whether
encouraged or not, talk he would.</p>
<p>“I <i>have</i> heard of folks being worked beyond their strength; and that
will be my case, if one may judge by present appearances. It’s too bad of
Jenkins!”</p>
<p>Arthur spoke up: he did not like to hear blame, even from Roland Yorke,
cast upon patient, hard-working Jenkins. “You should not say it, Roland.
It is not Jenkins’s fault.”</p>
<p>“It is his fault. What does he have such a wife for? She keeps Jenkins
under her thumb, just as Galloway keeps me. She locked up his clothes, and
then told him he might come here without them, if he liked: my belief is,
she’ll be sending him so, some day. Jenkins ought to put her down. He’s
big enough.”</p>
<p>“He would be sure to come here, if he were equal to it,” said Arthur.</p>
<p>“He! Of course he would!” angrily retorted Roland. “He’d crawl here on all
fours, but what he’d come; only she won’t let him. She knows it too. She
said this morning that he’d come when he was in his coffin! I should like
to see it arrive!”</p>
<p>Arthur had been casting a glance at the papers. They were unusually
numerous, and he began to think with Roland that he and Mr. Galloway would
not be able to get through them unaided. Most certainly they would not, at
Roland’s present rate of work. “It is a pity you are not a quick copyist,”
he said.</p>
<p>“I dare say it is!” sarcastically rejoined Roland, beginning to play at
ball with the wafer-box. “I never was made for work; and if—”</p>
<p>“You will have to do it, though, sir,” thundered Mr. Galloway, who had
come up, and was enjoying a survey of affairs through the open window. Mr.
Roland, somewhat taken to, dropped his head and the wafer-box together,
and went on with his writing as meekly as poor Jenkins would have done;
and Mr. Galloway entered.</p>
<p>“Good day,” said he to Arthur, shortly enough.</p>
<p>“Good day, sir,” was the response. Mr. Galloway turned to his idle clerk.</p>
<p>“Roland Yorke, you must either work or say you will not. There is no time
for playing and fooling; no time, sir! do you hear? Who put that window
stark staring open?”</p>
<p>“I did, sir,” said incorrigible Roland. “I thought the office might be the
better for a little air, when there was so much to do in it.”</p>
<p>Mr. Galloway shut it with a bang. Arthur, who would not leave without some
attempt at a passing courtesy, let it be ever so slight, made a remark to
Mr. Galloway, that he was sorry to hear Jenkins was worse.</p>
<p>“He is so much worse,” was the response of Mr. Galloway, spoken sharply,
for the edification of Roland Yorke, “that I doubt whether he will ever
enter this room again. Yes, sir, you may look; but it is the truth!”</p>
<p>Roland did look, looked with considerable consternation. “How on earth
will the work get done, then?” he muttered. With all his grumbling, he had
not contemplated Jenkins being away more than a day or two.</p>
<p>“I do not know how it will get done, considering that the clerk upon whom
I have to depend is Roland Yorke,” answered Mr. Galloway, with severity.
“One thing appears pretty evident, that Jenkins will not be able to help
to do it.”</p>
<p>Mr. Galloway, more perplexed at the news brought by Mrs. Jenkins than he
had allowed to appear (for, although he chose to make a show of depending
upon Roland, he knew how much dependence there was in reality to be placed
upon him—none knew better), had deemed it advisable to see Jenkins
personally, and judge for himself of his state of health. Accordingly, he
proceeded thither, and arrived at an inopportune moment for his hopes.
Jenkins was just recovering from a second fainting fit, and appeared
altogether so ill, so debilitated, that Mr. Galloway was struck with
dismay. There would be no more work from Jenkins—as he believed—for
him. He mentioned this now in his own office, and Roland received it with
blank consternation.</p>
<p>An impulse came to Arthur, and he spoke upon it. “If I can be of any use
to you, sir, in this emergency, you have only to command me.”</p>
<p>“What sort of use?” asked Mr. Galloway.</p>
<p>Arthur pointed to the parchments. “I could draw out these deeds, and any
others that may follow them. My time is my own, sir, except the two hours
devoted to the cathedral, and I am at a loss how to occupy it. I have been
idle ever since I left you.”</p>
<p>“Why don’t you get into an office?” said Mr. Galloway.</p>
<p>Arthur’s colour deepened. “Because, sir, no one will take me.”</p>
<p>“Ah!” said Mr. Galloway, drily, “a good name is easier lost than won.”</p>
<p>“Yes, it is,” freely replied Arthur. “However, sir, to return to the
question. I shall be glad to help you, if you have no one better at hand.
I could devote several hours a day to it, and you know that I am
thoroughly to be trusted with the work. I might take some home now.”</p>
<p>“Home!” returned Mr. Galloway. “Did you mean that you could do it at
home?”</p>
<p>“Certainly, sir; I did not think of doing it here,” was the pointed reply
of Arthur. “I can do it at home just as well as I could here; perhaps
better, for I should shut myself up alone, and there would be nothing to
interrupt me, or to draw off my attention.”</p>
<p>It cannot be denied that this was a most welcome proposition to Mr.
Galloway; indeed, his thoughts had turned to Arthur from the first. Arthur
would be far better than a strange clerk, looked for and brought in on the
spur of the moment—one who might answer well or answer badly,
according to chance. Yet that such must have been his resource, Mr.
Galloway knew.</p>
<p>“It will be an accommodation to me, your taking part of the work,” he
frankly said. “But you had better come to the office and do it.”</p>
<p>“No, sir; I would rather—”</p>
<p>“Do, Channing!” cried out Roland Yorke, springing up as if he were
electrified. “The office will be bearable if you come back again.”</p>
<p>“I would prefer to do it at home, sir,” continued Arthur to Mr. Galloway,
while that gentleman pointed imperiously to Yorke, as a hint to him to
hold his tongue and mind his own business.</p>
<p>“You <i>may</i> come back here and do it,” said Mr. Galloway.</p>
<p>“Thank you, I cannot come back,” was the reply of Arthur.</p>
<p>“Of course you can’t!” said angry Roland, who cared less for Mr.
Galloway’s displeasure than he did for displaying his own feelings when
they were aroused. “You won’t, you mean! I’d not show myself such a duffer
as you, Channing, if I were paid for it in gold!”</p>
<p>“You’ll get paid in something, presently, Roland Yorke, but it won’t be in
gold!” reproved Mr. Galloway. “You will do a full day’s work to-day, sir,
if you stop here till twelve o’clock at night.”</p>
<p>“Oh, of course I expect to do that, sir,” retorted Roland, tartly.
“Considering what’s before me, on this desk and on Jenkins’s, there’s
little prospect of my getting home on this side four in the morning. They
needn’t sit up for me—I can go in with the milk. I wonder who
invented writing? I wish I had the fingering of him just now!”</p>
<p>Arthur turned to the parchments. He was almost as much at home with them
as Jenkins. Mr. Galloway selected two that were most pressing, and gave
them to him, with the requisite materials for copying. “You will keep them
secure, you know,” he remarked.</p>
<p>“Perfectly so, sir; I shall sit quite alone.”</p>
<p>He carried them off with alacrity. Mr. Galloway’s face cleared as he
looked after him, and he made a remark aloud, expressive of his
satisfaction. “There’s some pleasure in giving out work when you know it
will be done. No play—no dilatoriness—finished to the minute
that it’s looked for! You should take a leaf out of his book, Yorke.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” freely answered Roland. “When you drove Arthur Channing out of
this office, you parted with the best clerk you ever had. Jenkins is all
very well for work, but he is nothing but a muff in other things. Arthur’s
a gentleman, and he’d have served you well. Jenkins himself says so. He is
honourable, he is honest, he—”</p>
<p>“I know enough of your sentiments with respect to his honesty,”
interrupted Mr. Galloway. “We need not go over that tale again.”</p>
<p>“I hope every one knows them,” rejoined Roland. “I have never concealed my
opinion that the accusation was infamous; that, of all of us in this
office, from its head down to Jenkins, none was less likely to finger the
note than Arthur Channing. But of course my opinion goes for nothing.”</p>
<p>“You are bold, young man.”</p>
<p>“I fear it is my nature to be so,” cried Roland. “If it should ever turn
up how the note went, you’ll be sorry, no doubt, for having visited it
upon Arthur. Mr. Channing will be sorry; the precious magistrates will be
sorry; that blessed dean, who wanted to turn him from the college, will be
sorry. Not a soul of them but believes him guilty; and I hope they’ll be
brought to repentance for it, in sackcloth and ashes.”</p>
<p>“Go on with your work,” said Mr. Galloway, angrily.</p>
<p>Roland made a show of obeying. But his tongue was like a steam-engine:
once set going, it couldn’t readily be stopped, and he presently looked up
again.</p>
<p>“I am not uncharitable: at least, to individuals. I always said the
post-office helped itself to the note, and I’d lay my last half-crown upon
it. But there <i>are</i> people in the town who think it could only have
gone in another way. You’d go into a passion with me, sir, perhaps, if I
mentioned it.”</p>
<p>Mr. Galloway—it has been before mentioned that he possessed an
unbounded amount of curiosity, and also a propensity to gossip—so
far forgot the force of good example as to ask Roland what he meant.
Roland wanted no further encouragement.</p>
<p>“Well, sir, there are people who, weighing well all the probabilities of
the case, have come to the conclusion that the note could only have been
abstracted from the letter by the person to whom it was addressed. None
but he broke the seal of it.”</p>
<p>“Do you allude to my cousin, Mr. Robert Galloway?” ejaculated Mr.
Galloway, as soon as indignation and breath allowed him to speak.</p>
<p>“Others do,” said Roland. “I say it was the post-office.”</p>
<p>“How dare you repeat so insolent a suspicion to my face, Roland Yorke?”</p>
<p>“I said I should catch it!” cried Roland, speaking partly to himself. “I
am sure to get in for it, one way or another, do what I will. It’s not my
fault, sir, if I have heard it whispered in the town.”</p>
<p>“Apply yourself to your work, sir, and hold your tongue. If you say
another word, Roland Yorke, I shall feel inclined also to turn you away,
as one idle and incorrigible, of whom nothing can be made.”</p>
<p>“Wouldn’t it be a jolly excuse for Port Natal!” exclaimed Roland, but not
in the hearing of his master, who had gone into his own room in much
wrath. Roland laughed aloud; there was nothing he enjoyed so much as to be
in opposition to Mr. Galloway; it had been better for the advancement of
that gentleman’s work, had he habitually kept a tighter rein over his
pupil. It was perfectly true, however, that the new phase of suspicion,
regarding the loss of the note, had been spoken of in the town, and Roland
only repeated what he had heard.</p>
<p>Apparently, Mr. Galloway did not like this gratuitous suggestion. He
presently came back again. A paper was in his hand, and he began comparing
it with one on Roland’s desk. “Where did you hear that unjustifiable piece
of scandal?” he inquired, as he was doing it.</p>
<p>“The first person I heard speak of it was my mother, sir. She came home
one day from calling upon people, and said she had heard it somewhere. And
it was talked of at Knivett’s last night. He had a bachelors’ party, and
the subject was brought up. Some of us ridiculed the notion; others
thought it might have grounds.”</p>
<p>“And pray, which did you favour?” sarcastically asked Mr. Galloway.</p>
<p>“I? I said then, as I have said all along, that there was no one to thank
for it but the post-office. If you ask me, sir, who first set the notion
afloat in the town, I cannot satisfy you. All I know is, the rumour is
circulating.”</p>
<p>“If I could discover the primary author of it, I would take legal
proceedings against him,” warmly concluded Mr. Galloway.</p>
<p>“I’d help,” said undaunted Roland. “Some fun might arise out of that.”</p>
<p>Mr. Galloway carried the probate of a will to his room, and sat down to
examine it. But his thoughts were elsewhere. This suspicion, mentioned by
Roland Yorke, had laid hold of his mind most unpleasantly, in spite of his
show of indignation before Roland. He had no reason to think his cousin
otherwise than honest; it was next to impossible to suppose he could be
guilty of playing him such a trick; but somehow Mr. Galloway could not
feel so sure upon the point as he would have wished. His cousin was a
needy man—one who had made ducks and drakes of his own property, and
was for ever appealing to Mr. Galloway for assistance. Mr. Galloway did
not shut his eyes to the fact that if this <i>should</i> have been the
case, Robert Galloway had had forty pounds from him instead of twenty—a
great help to a man at his wits’ ends for money. He had forwarded a second
twenty-pound note, upon receiving information of the loss of the first.
What he most disliked, looking at it from this point of view, was, not the
feeling that he had been cleverly deceived and laughed at, but that Arthur
Channing should have suffered unjustly. If the lad <i>was</i> innocent,
why, how cruel had been his own conduct towards him! But with these doubts
came back the remembrance of Arthur’s unsatisfactory behaviour with
respect to the loss; his non-denial; his apparent guilt; his strange
shrinking from investigation. Busy as Mr. Galloway was, that day, he could
not confine his thoughts to his business. He would willingly have given
another twenty-pound note out of his pocket to know, beyond doubt, whether
or not Arthur was guilty.</p>
<p>Arthur, meanwhile, had commenced his task. He took possession of the
study, where he was secure from interruption, and applied himself
diligently to it. How still the house seemed! How still it had seemed
since the loss of Charles! Even Annabel and Tom were wont to hush their
voices; ever listening, as it were, for tidings to be brought of him.
Excepting the two servants, Arthur was alone in it. Hamish was abroad, at
his office; Constance and Annabel were at Lady Augusta’s; Tom was in
school; and Charles was not. Judith’s voice would be heard now and then,
wafted from the kitchen regions, directing or reproving Sarah; but there
was no other sound. Arthur thought of the old days when the sun had shone;
when he was free and upright in the sight of men; when Constance was happy
in her future prospects of wedded life; when Tom looked forth certainly to
the seniorship; when Charley’s sweet voice and sweeter face might be seen
and heard; when Hamish—oh, bitter thought, of all!—when Hamish
had not fallen from his pedestal. It had all changed—changed to
darkness and to gloom; and Arthur may be pardoned for feeling gloomy with
it. But in the very midst of this gloom, there arose suddenly, without
effort of his, certain words spoken by the sweet singer of Israel; and
Arthur <i>knew</i> that he had but to trust to them:—</p>
<p>“For his wrath endureth but the twinkling of an eye, and in his pleasure
is life; heaviness may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.”</p>
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