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<h2> CHAPTER LII. — A RELIC FROM THE BURIAL-GROUND. </h2>
<p>When Hamish Channing joined the breakfast-table at home that morning at
nine o’clock, he mentioned his adventure at the station with Lady Augusta
Yorke. It was the first intimation they had received of Roland’s
departure; indeed, the first that some of them had heard of his intention
to depart.</p>
<p>Arthur laid down his knife and fork. To him alone could the full
consequences of the step present themselves, as regarded Mr. Galloway.</p>
<p>“Hamish! he cannot actually have gone?”</p>
<p>“That he is actually off by the train to London, I can certify,” was the
reply of Hamish. “Whether he will be off to Port Natal, is another thing.
He desired me to tell you, Arthur, that he should write his adieu to you
from town.”</p>
<p>“He might have come to see me,” observed Arthur, a shade of resentment in
his tone. “I never thought he would really go.”</p>
<p>“I did,” said Hamish, “funds permitting him. If Lord Carrick will supply
those, he’ll be off by the first comfortable ship that sails. His mind was
so completely bent upon it.”</p>
<p>“What can he think of doing at Port Natal?” inquired Constance,
wonderingly.</p>
<p>“Making his fortune.” But Hamish laughed as he said it. “Wherever I may
have met him latterly, his whole talk has been of Port Natal. Lady Augusta
says he is going to take out frying-pans to begin with.”</p>
<p>“Hamish!”</p>
<p>“She said so, Constance. I have no doubt Roland said so to her. I should
like to see the sort of cargo he will lay in for the start.”</p>
<p>“What does Mr. Galloway say to it, I wonder?” exclaimed Arthur, that
gentleman’s perplexities presenting themselves to his mind above
everything else. “I cannot think what he will do.”</p>
<p>“I have an idea that Mr. Galloway is as yet unaware of it,” said Hamish.
“Roland assured me that no person whatever knew of his departure, except
Jenkins. He called upon him on his way to the station.”</p>
<p>“Unaware of it!” Arthur fell into consternation great as Mr. Galloway’s,
as he repeated the words. Was it possible that Roland had stolen a march
on Mr. Galloway? He relapsed into silence and thought.</p>
<p>“What makes you so sad?” Constance asked of Arthur later, when they were
dispersing to their several occupations.</p>
<p>“I am not sad, Constance; only thoughtful. I have been carrying on an
inward battle,” he added, half laughingly.</p>
<p>“With your conscience?”</p>
<p>“With my spirit. It is a proud one yet, in spite of all I have had to tame
it; a great deal more rebellious than I like it to be.”</p>
<p>“Why, what is the matter, Arthur?”</p>
<p>“Constance, I think I ought to come forward and help Mr. Galloway out of
this strait. I think my duty lies in doing it.”</p>
<p>“To return to his office, you mean?”</p>
<p>“Yes; until he can see his way out of the wood. But it goes against the
grain.”</p>
<p>“Arthur dear, I know you will do it,” she gently said. “Were our duty
always pleasant to us, where would be the merit in fulfilling it?”</p>
<p>“I shall do it,” he answered. “To that I have made up my mind. The
difficulty is, Constance, to do it with a good grace.”</p>
<p>She looked at him with a loving smile. “Only try. A firm will, Arthur,
will conquer even a rebellious spirit.”</p>
<p>Arthur knew it. He knew how to set about it. And a little later, he was on
his way to Close Street, with the best grace in the world. Not only in
appearance, mind you, but inwardly. It is a GREAT thing, reader, to
conquer the risings of a proud spirit! To bring it from its haughty,
rebellious pedestal, down to cordiality and love. Have you learnt the way?</p>
<p>Some parchments under his arm, for he had stayed to collect them together,
Arthur bounded in to Mr. Galloway’s. The first object his eyes fell on was
that shadowy form, coughing and panting. “Oh, Jenkins!” he involuntarily
uttered, “what do you do out of your house?”</p>
<p>“Anxiety for me has brought him out,” said Mr. Galloway. “How can I scold
him?”</p>
<p>“I could not rest, sir, knowing my master was alone in his need,” cried
Jenkins to Arthur. “What is to become of the office, sir, with no one in
it?”</p>
<p>“But he is not alone,” said Arthur; and, if he had wanted a reward for
coming forward, that moment would have supplied it, in satisfying poor
Jenkins. “If you will allow me, sir,” Arthur added, turning frankly to Mr.
Galloway, “I will take my place here, until you shall be suited.”</p>
<p>“Thank you,” emphatically replied Mr. Galloway. “It will relieve me from a
serious embarrassment.”</p>
<p>Arthur went to his old desk, and sat down on his old stool, and began
settling the papers and other things on it, just as though he had not been
absent an hour. “I must still attend the cathedral as usual, sir,” he
observed to Mr. Galloway; “but I can give you the whole of my remaining
time. I shall be better for you than no one.”</p>
<p>“I would rather have you here than any one else, Channing; he”—laying
his hand on Jenkins’s shoulder—“excepted. I offered that you should
return before.”</p>
<p>“I know you did, sir,” replied Arthur, in a brief tone—one that
seemed to intimate he would prefer not to pursue the subject.</p>
<p>“And now are you satisfied?” struck in Mrs. Jenkins to her husband.</p>
<p>“I am more than satisfied,” answered Jenkins, clasping his hands. “With
Mr. Arthur in the office, I shall have no fear of its missing me, and I
can go home in peace, to die.”</p>
<p>“Please just to hold your tongue about dying,” reprimanded Mrs. Jenkins.
“Your business is to get well, if you can. And now I am going to see after
a fly. A pretty dance I should have had here, if he had persisted in
stopping, bringing him messes and cordials every half-hour! Which would
have worn out first, I wonder—the pavement or my shoes?”</p>
<p>“Channing,” said Mr. Galloway, “let us understand each other. Have you
come here to do anything there may be to do—out of doors as well as
in? In short, to be my clerk as heretofore?”</p>
<p>“Of course I have, sir; until”—Arthur spoke very distinctly—“you
shall be able to suit yourself; not longer.”</p>
<p>“Then take this paper round to Deering’s office, and get it signed. You
will have time to do it before college.”</p>
<p>Arthur’s answer was to put on his hat, and vault away with the paper.
Jenkins turned to Mr. Galloway as soon as they were alone. “Oh, sir, keep
him in your office!” he earnestly said. “He will soon be of more value to
you than I have ever been!”</p>
<p>“That he will not, Jenkins. Nor any one else.”</p>
<p>“Yes, he will, sir! He will be able to replace you in the chapter house
upon any emergency, and I never could do that, you know, sir, not being a
gentleman. When you have him to yourself alone, sir, you will see his
value; and I shall not be missed. He is steady and thoughtful beyond his
years, sir, and every day will make him older.”</p>
<p>“You forget the charge against him, Jenkins. Until he shall be cleared of
that—if he can be cleared of it—he will not be of great value
to any one; certainly not to me.”</p>
<p>“Sir,” said Jenkins, raising his wan face, its hectic deepening, find his
eye lighting, while his voice sunk to a whisper, so deep as to savour of
solemnity, “that time will come! He never did it, and he will as surely be
cleared, as that I am now saying it! Sir, I have thought much about this
accusation; it has troubled me in sleep; but I know that God will bring
the right to light for those who trust in Him. If any one ever trusted in
God, it is Mr. Arthur Channing. I lie and think of all this, sir. I seem
to be so near God, now,” Jenkins went on dreamily, “that I know the right
must come to light; that it will come in God’s own good time. And I
believe I shall live to see it!”</p>
<p>“You have certainly firm faith in his innocence, Jenkins. How then do you
account for his very suspicious manner?”</p>
<p>“It does not weigh with me, sir. I could as soon believe a good wholesome
apple-tree would bring forth poison, as that Mr. Arthur would be guilty of
a deliberately bad action. Sometimes I have thought, sir, when puzzling
over it, that he may be screening another. There’s no telling how it was.
I hear, sir, that the money has been returned to you.”</p>
<p>“Yes. Was it he who told you?”</p>
<p>“It was Mr. Roland Yorke who told me, sir. Mr. Roland is another, sir, who
has had firm faith in his innocence from the first.”</p>
<p>“Much his faith goes for!” ejaculated Mr. Galloway, as he came back from
his private room with a letter, which he handed to Jenkins, who was
skilled in caligraphy. “What do you make of it?” he asked. “It is the
letter which came with the returned money.”</p>
<p>“It is a disguised hand, sir—there’s no doubt of that,” replied
Jenkins, when he had surveyed it critically. “I do not remember to have
seen any person write like it.”</p>
<p>Mr. Galloway took it back to his room, and presently a fly drove up with
Mrs. Jenkins inside it. Jenkins stood at the office door, hat in hand, his
face turned upon the room. Mrs. Jenkins came up and seized his arm, to
marshal him to the fly.</p>
<p>“I was but taking a farewell of things, sir,” he observed to Mr. Galloway.
“I shall never see the old spot again.”</p>
<p>Arthur arrived just as Jenkins was safely in. He put his hand over the
door. “Make yourself easy, Jenkins; it will all go on smoothly here.
Good-bye, old fellow! I’ll come and see you very soon.”</p>
<p>“How he breaks, does he not, sir?” exclaimed Arthur to Mr. Galloway.</p>
<p>“Ay! he’s not long for this world!”</p>
<p>The fly proceeded on its way; Mrs. Jenkins, with her snappish manner,
though really not unkind heart, lecturing Jenkins on his various
shortcomings until it drew up at their own door. As Jenkins was being
helped down from it, one of the college boys passed at a great speed; a
railroad was nothing to it. It was Stephen Bywater. Something, legitimate
or illegitimate, had detained him, and now the college bell was going.</p>
<p>He caught sight of Jenkins, and, hurried as he was, much of punishment as
he was bargaining for, it had such an effect upon him, that he pulled up
short. Was it Jenkins, or his ghost? Bywater had never been so struck with
any sight before.</p>
<p>The most appropriate way in which it occurred to him to give vent to his
surprise, was to prop his back against the shop door, and indulge in a
soft, prolonged whistle. He could not take his eyes from Jenkins’s face.
“Is it you, or your shadow, Jenkins?” he asked, making room for the
invalid to pass.</p>
<p>“It’s myself, sir, thank you. I hope you are well, sir.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’m always jolly,” replied Bywater, and then he began to whistle
again.</p>
<p>He followed Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins into the shop with his eyes; that is,
they followed Jenkins. Bywater had heard, as a matter of necessity, of
Jenkins’s illness, and had given as much thought to it as he would have
done if told Jenkins had a headache; but to fancy him like <i>this</i> had
never occurred to Bywater.</p>
<p>Now somewhere beneath Bywater’s waistcoat, there really was a little bit
of heart; and, as he thus looked, a great fear began to thump against it.
He followed Jenkins into the parlour. Mrs. Jenkins, after divesting
Jenkins of his coat, and her boa, planted him right before the fire in his
easy-chair, with a pillow at his back, and was now whisking down into the
kitchen, regardless of certain customers waiting in the shop to be served.</p>
<p>Bywater, unasked, sat himself in a chair near to poor Jenkins and his
panting breath, and indulged in another long stare. “I say, Jenkins,” said
he, “what’s the matter with you?”</p>
<p>Jenkins took the question literally. “I believe it may be called a sort of
decline, sir. I don’t know any other name for it.”</p>
<p>“Shan’t you get well?”</p>
<p>“Oh no, sir! I don’t look for that, now.”</p>
<p>The fear thumped at Bywater’s heart worse than before. A past vision of
locking up old Ketch in the cloisters, through which pastime Jenkins had
come to a certain fall, was uncomfortably present to Bywater just then. He
had been the ringleader.</p>
<p>“What brought it on?” asked he.</p>
<p>“Well, sir, I suppose it was to come,” meekly replied Jenkins. “I have had
a bad cough, spring and autumn, for a long while now, Master Bywater. My
brother went off just the same, sir, and so did my mother.”</p>
<p>Bywater pushed his honest, red face, forward; but it did not look quite so
impudent as usual. “Jenkins,” said he, plunging headlong into the fear,
“DID—THAT—FALL—DO—IT?”</p>
<p>“Fall, sir! What fall?”</p>
<p>“That fall down from the organ loft. Because that was my fault. I had the
most to do with locking up the cloisters, that night.”</p>
<p>“Oh, bless you, sir, no! Never think that. Master Bywater”—lowering
his voice till it was as grave as Bywater’s—“that fall did me good—good,
sir, instead of harm.”</p>
<p>“How do you make out that?” asked Bywater, drawing his breath a little
easier.</p>
<p>“Because, sir, in the few days’ quiet that I had in bed, my thoughts
seemed in an unaccountable manner to be drawn to thinking of heaven. I
can’t rightly describe, sir, how or why it could have been. I remember his
lordship, the bishop, talked to me a little bit in his pleasant, affable
way, about the necessity of always, being prepared; and my wife’s Bible
lay on the drawers by my bed’s head, and I used to pick up that. But I
don’t think it was either of those causes much; I believe, sir, that it
was God Himself working in my heart. I believe He sent the fall in His
mercy. After I got up, I seemed to know that I should soon go to Him; and—I
hope it is not wrong to say it—I seemed to wish to go.”</p>
<p>Bywater felt somewhat puzzled. “I am not speaking about your heart and
religion, and all that, Jenkins. I want to know if the fall helped to
bring on this illness?”</p>
<p>“No, sir; it had nothing to do with it. The fall hurt my head a little—nothing
more; and I got well from it directly. This illness, which has been taking
me off, must have been born with me.”</p>
<p>“Hoo—” Bywater’s shout, as he tossed up his trencher, was broken in
upon by Mrs. Jenkins. She had been beating up an egg with sugar and wine,
and now brought it in in a tumbler.</p>
<p>“My dear,” said Jenkins, “I don’t feel to want it.”</p>
<p>“Not want it!” said Mrs. Jenkins resolutely. And in two seconds she had
taken hold of him, and it was down his throat. “I can’t stop parleying
here all day, with my shop full of customers.” Bywater laughed, and she
retreated.</p>
<p>“If I could eat gold, sir, she’d get it for me,” said Jenkins; “but my
appetite fails. She’s a good wife, Master Bywater.”</p>
<p>“Stunning,” acquiesced Bywater. “I wouldn’t mind a wife myself, if she’d
feed me up with eggs and wine.”</p>
<p>“But for her care, sir, I should not have lasted so long. She has had
great experience with the sick.”</p>
<p>Bywater did not answer. Rising to go, his eyes had fixed themselves upon
some object on the mantelpiece as pertinaciously as they had previously
been fixed upon Jenkins’s face. “I say, Jenkins, where did you get this?”
he exclaimed.</p>
<p>“That, sir? Oh, I remember. My old father brought it in yesterday. He had
cut his hand with it. Where now did he say he found it? In the college
burial-ground, I think, Master Bywater.”</p>
<p>It was part of a small broken phial, of a peculiar shape, which had once
apparently contained ink; an elegant shape, it may be said, not unlike a
vase. Bywater began turning it about in his fingers; he was literally
feasting his eyes upon it.</p>
<p>“Do you want to keep it, Jenkins?”</p>
<p>“Not at all, sir. I wonder my wife did not throw it away before this.”</p>
<p>“I’ll take it, then,” said Bywater, slipping it into his pocket. “And now
I’m off. Hope you’ll get better, Jenkins.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, sir. Let me put the broken bottle in paper, Master Bywater.
You will cut your fingers if you carry it loose in your pocket.”</p>
<p>“Oh, that be bothered!” answered Bywater. “Who cares for cut fingers?”</p>
<p>He pushed himself through Mrs. Jenkins’s customers, with as little
ceremony as Roland Yorke might have used, and went flying towards the
cathedral. The bell ceased as he entered. The organ pealed forth; and the
dean and chapter, preceded by some of the bedesmen, were entering from the
opposite door. Bywater ensconced himself behind a pillar, until they
should have traversed the body, crossed the nave, and were safe in the
choir. Then he came out, and made his way to old Jenkins the bedesman.</p>
<p>The old man, in his black gown, stood near the bell ropes, for he had been
one of the ringers that day. Bywater noticed that his left hand was
partially tied up in a handkerchief.</p>
<p>“Holloa, old Jenkins,” said he, <i>sotte voce</i>, “what have you done
with your hand?”</p>
<p>“I gave it a nasty cut yesterday, sir, just in the ball of the thumb. I
wrapped my handkerchief round it just now, for fear of opening it again,
while I was ringing the bell. See,” said he, taking off the handkerchief
and showing the cut to Bywater.</p>
<p>“What an old muff you must be, to cut yourself like that!”</p>
<p>“But I didn’t do it on purpose,” returned the old man. “We was ordered
into the burial-ground to put it a bit to rights, and I fell down with my
hand on a broken phial. I ain’t as active as I was. I say, though, sir, do
you know that service has begun?”</p>
<p>“Let it begin,” returned careless Bywater. “This was the bottle you fell
over, was it not? I found it on Joe’s mantelpiece, just now.”</p>
<p>“Ay, that was it. It must have laid there some time. A good three months,
I know.”</p>
<p>Bywater nodded his head. He returned the bottle to his pocket, and went to
the vestry for his surplice. Then he slid into college under the severe
eyes of the Reverend Mr. Pye, which were bent upon him from the
chanting-desk, and ascended, his stall just in time to take his part in
the <i>Venite, exultemus Domino</i>.</p>
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