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<h2> CHAPTER LVII. — A GHOST AGAIN. </h2>
<p>Minds are differently constituted: as was exemplified in the case under
our immediate notice. While one of Mr. Galloway’s first thoughts, on the
receipt of Roland Yorke’s letter, was to rush round to Lady Augusta’s with
the news, half in anger, half in a reproachful humour, Arthur Channing was
deliberating how they could contrive to keep it from her. The one was
actuated by an angry, the other by a generous spirit.</p>
<p>Mr. Galloway at length concluded his long-delayed dinner that evening.
Then he put on his hat, and, with Roland’s letter safe in his pocket, went
out again to call on Lady Augusta. It happened, however, that Lady Augusta
was not at home.</p>
<p>She had gone to dine at Colonel Joliffe’s, a family who lived some
distance from Helstonleigh—necessitating an early departure from
home, if she would be in time for their six o’clock dinner-hour. It had
thus occurred that when the afternoon’s post arrived, Lady Augusta was in
the bustle and hurry of dressing; and Lady Augusta was one of those who
are, and must be, in a bustle, even if they are only going to a friendly
dinner-party.</p>
<p>Martha was busily assisting, and the cook brought up two letters. “Both
for my lady,” she said, giving them to Martha.</p>
<p>“I have no time for letters now,” called out my lady. “Put them into my
drawer, Martha.”</p>
<p>Martha did as she was bid, and Lady Augusta departed. She returned home
pretty late, and the letters remained in their receptacle untouched.</p>
<p>Of course, to retire to rest late, necessitated, with Lady Augusta Yorke,
rising late the next morning. About eleven o’clock she came down to
breakfast. A letter on the breakfast-table brought to her remembrance the
letters of the previous night, and she sent Martha for them. Looking at
their addresses, she perceived one of them to be from Roland; the other
from Lord Carrick: and she laid them by her to be opened presently.</p>
<p>“Mr. Galloway called last night, my lady,” observed Martha.</p>
<p>“Oh, did he?” said Lady Augusta.</p>
<p>“He said he wanted to see your ladyship particularly. But I said you were
gone to Colonel Joliffe’s.”</p>
<p>Barely had Lady Augusta tasted her coffee, the letters still lying
unopened at her side, when William Yorke entered, having just left the
cathedral.</p>
<p>“This is a terrible blow, Lady Augusta,” he observed, as he sat down.</p>
<p>“What’s a blow?” returned Lady Augusta. “Will you take some coffee,
William?”</p>
<p>“Have you not heard of it?” he replied, declining the coffee with a
gesture. “I thought it probable that you would have received news from
Roland.”</p>
<p>“A letter arrived from Roland last night,” she said, touching the letter
in question. “What is the matter? Is there bad news in it? What! have you
heard anything?”</p>
<p>Mr. Yorke had not the slightest doubt that the letter before him must
contain the same confession which had been conveyed to Arthur and to Mr.
Galloway. He thought it better that she should hear it from him, than read
it unprepared. He bent towards her, and spoke in a low tone of compassion.</p>
<p>“I fear that the letter does contain bad news; very bad news, indeed. Ro—”</p>
<p>“Good heavens! what has happened to him?” she interrupted, falling into
excitement, just as Roland himself might have done. “Is he ill? Has he got
hurt? Is he killed?”</p>
<p>“Now, pray calm yourself, Lady Augusta. Roland is well in health, and has
sailed for Port Natal, under what he considers favourable auspices. He—”</p>
<p>“Then why in the world do you come terrifying me out of my wits with your
tales, William Yorke?” she broke forth. “I declare you are no better than
a child!”</p>
<p>“Nay, Lady Augusta, you terrified yourself, jumping to conclusions. Though
Roland is safe and sound, there is still some very disagreeable news to be
told concerning him. He has been making a confession of bad behaviour.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” cried Lady Augusta, in a tone which seemed to say, “Is that all?” as
if bad behaviour and Roland might have some affinity for each other.
William Yorke bent his head nearer, and dropped his voice lower.</p>
<p>“In that mysterious affair of the bank-note, when Arthur Channing was
accused—”</p>
<p>“Well? well?” she hastily repeated—for he had made a slight pause—and
a tone of dread, as a shadow of evil, might be detected in her accents.</p>
<p>“It was Roland who took the note.”</p>
<p>Lady Augusta jumped up. She <i>would</i> not receive it. “It is not true;
it cannot be true!” she reiterated. “How dare you so asperse him, William
Yorke? Thoughtless as Roland is, he would not be guilty of dishonour.”</p>
<p>“He has written full particulars both to Arthur Channing and to Mr.
Galloway,” said Mr. Yorke, calmly. “I have no doubt that that letter to
you also relates to it. He confesses that to clear Arthur was a great
motive in taking him from Helstonleigh.”</p>
<p>Lady Augusta seized the letter and tore it open. She was too agitated to
read calmly, but she saw enough to convince her that Roland, and no other,
had appropriated the money. This must have been the matter he had
obscurely hinted at in one of his last conversations with her. The letter
was concluded very much after Roland’s own fashion.</p>
<p>“Now, mother, if you care that anything in the shape of honour should ever
shine round me again, you’ll go off straight to the college school, and
set Tom Channing right with it and with the masters. And if you don’t, and
I get drowned on my voyage, I’ll not say but my ghost will come again and
haunt every one who has had to do with the injustice.”</p>
<p>Ghosts were not agreeable topics to Lady Augusta, and she gave a shriek at
the bare thought. But that was as nothing, compared with her anger.
Honourable in the main—hot, hasty, impulsive, losing all judgment,
all self-control when these fits of excitement came upon her—it is
more than probable that her own course would have been to fly to the
college school, unprompted by Roland. A sense of justice was strong within
her; and in setting Tom right, she would not spare Roland, her own son
though he was.</p>
<p>Before William Yorke knew what she was about, she had flown upstairs, and
was down again with her things on. Before he could catch her up, she was
across the Boundaries, entering the cloisters, and knocking at the door of
the college school.</p>
<p>There she broke in upon that interesting investigation, touching the inked
surplice.</p>
<p>Bywater, who seemed to think she had arrived for the sole purpose of
setting at rest the question of the phial’s ownership, and not being
troubled with any superfluous ideas of circumlocution, eagerly held out
the pieces to her when she was yards from his desk. “Do you know this,
Lady Augusta? Isn’t it Gerald’s?”</p>
<p>“Yes, it is Gerald’s,” replied she. “He took it out of my desk one day in
the summer, though I told him not, and I never could get it back again.
Have you been denying that it was yours?” she sternly added to Gerald.
“Bad luck to you, then, for a false boy. You are going to take a leaf out
of your brother Roland’s pattern, are you? Haven’t I had enough of you bad
boys on my hands, but there must something fresh come up about one or the
other of you every day that the sun rises? Mr. Pye, I have come by
Roland’s wish, and by my own, to set the young Channings right with the
school. You took the seniorship from Tom, believing that it was his
brother Arthur who robbed Mr. Galloway. Not but that I thought some one
else would have had that seniorship, you know!”</p>
<p>In Lady Augusta’s present mood, had any one of her sons committed a
murder, she must have proclaimed it, though it had been to condemn him to
punishment. She had not come to shield Roland; and she did not care, in
her anger, how bad she made him out to be; or whether she did it in Irish
or English. The head-master could only look at her with astonishment. He
also believed her visit must have reference to the matter in hand.</p>
<p>“It is true, Lady Augusta. But for the suspicion cast upon his brother,
Channing would not have lost the seniorship,” said the master, ignoring
the hint touching himself.</p>
<p>“And all of ye”—turning round to face the wondering school—“have
been ready to fling ye’re stones at Tom Channing, like the badly brought
up boys that ye are. <i>I</i> have heard of it. And my two, Gerald and
Tod, the worst of ye at the game. You may look, Mr. Tod, but I’ll be after
giving ye a jacketing for ye’re pains. Let me tell ye all, that it was not
Tom Channing’s brother took the bank-note; it was <i>their</i> brother—Gerald’s
and Tod’s! It was my ill-doing boy, Roland, who took it.”</p>
<p>No one knew where to look. Some looked at her ladyship; some at the
head-master; some at the Reverend William Yorke, who stood pale and
haughty; some at Gerald and Tod; some at Tom Channing. Tom did not appear
to regard it as news: he seemed to have known it before: the excessive
astonishment painted upon every other face was absent from his. But, half
the school did not understand Lady Augusta. None understood her fully.</p>
<p>“I beg your ladyship’s pardon,” said the head-master. “I do not comprehend
what it is that you are talking about.”</p>
<p>“Not comprehend!” repeated her ladyship. “Don’t I speak plainly? My
unhappy son Roland has confessed that it was he who stole the bank-note
that so much fuss has been made about, and that Arthur Channing was taken
up for. You two may look and frown”—nodding to Gerald and Tod—“but
it was your own brother who was the thief; Arthur Channing was innocent.
I’m sure I shan’t look a Channing in the face for months to come! Tell
them about it in a straightforward way, William Yorke.”</p>
<p>Mr. Yorke, thus called upon, stated, in a few concise words, the facts to
the master. His tone was low, but the boys caught the sense, that Arthur
was really innocent, and that poor Tom had been degraded for nothing. The
master beckoned Tom forward.</p>
<p>“Did you know of this, Channing?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir; since the letter came to my brother Arthur last night.”</p>
<p>Lady Augusta rushed up impulsively to Tom. She seized his hands, and shook
them heartily. Tom never afterwards was sure that she didn’t kiss him.
“You’ll live to be an honour to your parents yet, Tom,” she said, “when my
boys are breaking my heart with wilfulness.”</p>
<p>Tom’s face flushed with pleasure; not so much at the words as at the
yearning, repentant faces cast at him from all parts of the room. There
was no mistaking that they were eager to offer reparation. Tom Channing
innocent all this time! How should they make it up to him? He turned to
resume his seat, but Huntley slipped out of the place he occupied as the
head of the school, and would have pushed Tom into it. There was some
slight commotion, and the master lifted his spectacles.</p>
<p>“Silence, there! Huntley, what are you about? Keep your seat.”</p>
<p>“No, sir,” said Huntley, advancing a step forward. “I beg your pardon,
sir, but the place is no longer mine. I never have considered it mine
legally, and I will, with your permission, resign it to its rightful
owner. The place is Channing’s; I have only occupied it for him.”</p>
<p>He quietly pushed Tom into it as he spoke, and the school, finding their
voices, and ignoring the presence of the master and of Lady Augusta,
sprang from their desks at one bound and seized upon Tom, wishing him
luck, asking him to be a good old fellow and forgive them. “Long live Tom
Channing, the senior of Helstonleigh school!” shouted bold Bywater; and
the boys, thus encouraged, took up the shout, and the old walls echoed it.
“Long live Tom Channing, the senior of Helstonleigh school!”</p>
<p>Before the noise had died away, Lady Augusta was gone, and another had
been added to the company, in the person of Mr. Huntley. “Oh,” he said,
taking in a rapid glance of affairs: “I see it is all right. Knowing how
thoughtless Harry is, I feared he might not recollect to do an act of
justice. That he would be the first to do it if he remembered, I knew.”</p>
<p>“As if I should forget that, sir!” responded Mr. Harry. “Why, I could no
more live, with Channing under me now, than I could let any one of the
others be above me. And I am not sorry,” added the young gentleman, <i>sotto
voce</i>. “If the seniorship is a great honour, it is also a great bother.
Here, Channing, take the keys.”</p>
<p>He flung them across the desk as he spoke; he was proceeding to fling the
roll also, and two or three other sundries which belong to the charge of
the senior boy, but was stopped by the head-master.</p>
<p>“Softly, Huntley! I don’t know that I can allow this wholesale changing of
places and functions.”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, you can, sir,” said Harry, with a bright look. “If I committed
any unworthy act, I should be degraded from the seniorship, and another
appointed. The same thing can be done now, without the degradation.”</p>
<p>“He deserves a recompense,” said Mr. Huntley to the master. “But this will
be no recompense; it is Channing’s due. He will make you a better senior
than Harry, Mr. Pye. And now,” added Mr. Huntley, improving upon the
whole, “there will be no necessity to separate the seniorship from the
Oxford exhibition.”</p>
<p>It was rather a free and easy mode of dealing with the master’s
privileges, and Mr. Pye relaxed into a smile. In good truth, his sense of
justice had been inwardly burning since the communication made by Lady
Augusta. Tom, putting aside a little outburst or two of passion, had
behaved admirably throughout the whole season of opprobrium; there was no
denying it. And Mr. Pye felt that he had done so.</p>
<p>“Will you do your duty as senior, Channing?” unnecessarily asked the
master.</p>
<p>“I will try, sir.”</p>
<p>“Take your place, then.”</p>
<p>Mr. Huntley was the first to shake his hand when he was in it. “I told you
to bear up bravely, my boy! I told you better days might be in store.
Continue to do your duty in single-hearted honesty, under God, as I truly
believe you are ever seeking to do it, and you may well leave things in
His hands. God bless you, Tom!”</p>
<p>Tom was a little overcome. But Mr. Bywater made a divertisement. He seized
the roll, with which it was no business of his to meddle, and carried it
to Mr. Pye. “The names have to be altered, sir.” In return for which Mr.
Pye sternly motioned him to his seat, and Bywater favoured the school with
a few winks as he lazily obeyed.</p>
<p>“Who could possibly have suspected Roland Yorke!” exclaimed the master,
talking in an undertone with Mr. Huntley.</p>
<p>“Nay, if we are to compare merits, he was a far more likely subject for
suspicion than Arthur,” was Mr. Huntley’s reply.</p>
<p>“He was, taking them comparatively. What I meant to imply was, that one
could not have suspected that Roland, knowing himself guilty, would suffer
another to lie under the stigma. Roland has his good points—if that
may be said of one who helps himself to bank-notes,” concluded the master.</p>
<p>“Ay, he is not all bad. Witness sending back the money to Galloway;
witness his persistent championship of Arthur; and going away partly to
clear him, as he no doubt has done! I was as sure from the first that
Arthur Channing was not guilty, as that the sun shines in the heavens.”</p>
<p>“Did you suspect Roland?”</p>
<p>“No. I had a peculiar theory of my own upon the matter,” said Mr. Huntley,
smiling, and apparently examining closely the grain of the master’s desk.
“A theory, however, which has proved to be worthless; as so many theories
which obtain favour in this world often are. But I will no longer detain
you, Mr. Pye. You must have had enough hindrance from your legitimate
business for one morning.”</p>
<p>“The hindrance is not at an end yet,” was the master’s reply, as he shook
hands with Mr. Huntley. “I cannot think what has possessed the school
lately: we are always having some unpleasant business or other to upset
it.”</p>
<p>Mr. Huntley went out, nodding cordially to Tom as he passed his desk; and
the master turned his eyes and his attention on Gerald Yorke.</p>
<p>Lady Augusta had hastened from the college school as impetuously as she
had entered it. Her errand now was to the Channings. She was eager to show
them her grieved astonishment, her vexation—to make herself the <i>amende</i>
for Roland, so far as she could do so. She found both Mr. and Mrs.
Channing at home. The former had purposed being in Guild Street early that
morning; but so many visitors had flocked in to offer their
congratulations that he had hitherto been unable to get away. Constance
also was at home. Lady Augusta had insisted upon it that she should not
come to the children on that, the first day after her father and mother’s
return. They were alone when Lady Augusta entered.</p>
<p>Lady Augusta’s first movement was to fling herself into a chair and burst
into tears. “What am I to say to you?” she exclaimed. “What apology can I
urge for my unhappy boy?”</p>
<p>“Nay, dear Lady Augusta, do not let it thus distress you,” said Mr.
Channing. “You are no more to be held responsible for what Roland has
done, than we were for Arthur, when he was thought guilty.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t know,” she sobbed. “Perhaps, if I had been more strict with
him always, he would never have done it. I wish I had made a point of
giving them a whipping every night, all round, from the time they were two
years old!” she continued, emphatically. “Would that have made my children
turn out better, do you think?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Channing could not forbear a smile. “It is not exactly <i>strictness</i>
that answers with children, Lady Augusta.”</p>
<p>“Goodness me! I don’t know what does answer with them, then! I have been
indulgent enough to mine, as every one else knows; and see how they are
turning out! Roland to go and take a bank-note! And, as if that were not
bad enough, to let the odium rest upon Arthur! You will never forgive him!
I am certain that you never can or will forgive him! And you and all the
town will visit it upon me!”</p>
<p>When Lady Augusta fell into this tearful humour of complaint, it was
better to let it run its course; as Mr. and Mrs. Channing knew by past
experience. They both soothed her; telling her that no irreparable wrong
had been done to Arthur; nothing but what would be now made right.</p>
<p>“It all turns contrary together!” exclaimed my lady, drying up her tears
over the first grievance, and beginning upon another. “I suppose,
Constance, you and William Yorke will be making it up now.”</p>
<p>Constance’s self-conscious smile, and her drooping eyelids might have
told, without words, that that was already done.</p>
<p>“And the next thing, of course, will be your getting married!” continued
Lady Augusta. “When is it to be? I suppose you have been settling the
time.”</p>
<p>The question was a direct and pointed one, and Lady Augusta waited for an
answer. Mrs. Channing came to the relief of Constance.</p>
<p>“It would have been very soon indeed, Lady Augusta, but for this dreadful
uncertainty about Charles. In any case, it will not be delayed beyond
early spring.”</p>
<p>“Oh, to be sure! I knew that! Everything goes contrary and cross for me!
What am I to do for a governess? I might pay a thousand a year and not
find another like Constance. They are beginning to improve under you: they
are growing more dutiful girls to me; and now it will all be undone again,
and they’ll just be ruined!”</p>
<p>Constance looked up with her pretty timid blush. “William and I have been
thinking, Lady Augusta, that, if you approved of it, they had better come
for a few months to Hazledon House. I should then have them constantly
under my own eye, and I think I could effect some good. We used to speak
of this in the summer; and last night we spoke of it again.”</p>
<p>Lady Augusta flew into an ecstasy as great as her late grief had been.
“Oh, it would be delightful!” she exclaimed. “Such a relief to me! and I
know it would be the making of them. I shall thank you and William for
ever, Constance; and I don’t care what I pay you. I’d go without shoes to
pay you liberally.”</p>
<p>Constance laughed. “As to payment,” she said, “I shall have nothing to do
with that, on my own score, when once I am at Hazledon. Those things will
lie in William’s department, not in mine. I question if he will allow you
to pay him anything, Lady Augusta. We did not think of it in that light,
but in the hope that it might benefit Caroline and Fanny.”</p>
<p>Lady Augusta turned impulsively to Mrs. Channing. “What good children God
has given you!”</p>
<p>Tears rushed into Mrs. Channing’s eyes; she felt the remark in all its
grateful truth. She was spared a reply; she did not like to contrast them
with Lady Augusta’s, ever so tacitly, and say they were indeed good; for
Sarah entered, and said another visitor was waiting in the drawing-room.</p>
<p>As Mr. Channing withdrew, Lady Augusta rose to depart. She took Mrs.
Channing’s hand. “How dreadful for you to come home and find one of your
children gone!” she uttered. “How can you bear it and be calm!”</p>
<p>Emotion rose then, and Mrs. Channing battled to keep it down. “The same
God who gave me my children, has taught me how to bear,” she presently
said. “For the moment, yesterday, I really was overwhelmed; but it passed
away after a few hours’ struggle. When I left home, I humbly committed my
child to God’s good care, in perfect trust; and I feel, that whether dead
or alive, that care is still over him.”</p>
<p>“I wish to goodness one could learn to feel as you do!” uttered Lady
Augusta. “Troubles don’t seem to touch you and Mr. Channing; you rise
superior to them: but they turn me inside out. And now I must go! And I
wish Roland had never been born before he had behaved so! You must try to
forgive him, Mrs. Channing: you must promise to try and welcome him,
should he ever come back again!”</p>
<p>“Oh yes,” Mrs. Channing answered, with a bright smile. “The one will be as
easy as the other has been. He is already forgiven, Lady Augusta.”</p>
<p>“I have done what I could in it. I have been to the college school, and
told them all, and Tom is put into his place as senior. It’s true, indeed!
and I hope every boy will be flogged for putting upon him; Gerald and Tod
amongst the rest. And now, good-bye.”</p>
<p>Sarah was holding the street door open for Lady Augusta. Lady Augusta, who
generally gave a word of gossip to every one, even as Roland, had her head
turned towards the girl as she passed out of it, and thereby nearly fell
over a boy who at the moment was seeking to enter, being led by a woman,
as if he had no strength to walk alone. A tall, thin, white-faced boy,
with great eyes and little hair, and a red handkerchief tied over his
head, to hide the deficiency; but a beautiful boy in spite of all, for he
bore a strange resemblance to Charles Channing.</p>
<p>Was it Charles? Or was it his shadow? My lady turned again to the hall,
startling the house with her cries, that Charley’s ghost had come, and
bringing forth its inmates in consternation.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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