XIX

“The sum of it all is, that you won’t hear any reason, Gerald,” said the Squire. “What your brother says, and what I say, are nothing; your poor wife is nothing; and all a man’s duties, sir, in life⁠—all your responsibilities, everything that is considered most sacred⁠—”

“You may say what you will to me, father,” said Gerald. “I can’t expect you should speak differently. But you may imagine I have looked at it in every possible light before I came to this resolution. A man does not decide easily when everything he prizes on earth is at stake. I cannot see with Frank’s eyes, or with yours; according to the light God has given me, I must see with my own.”

“But, God bless my soul! what do you mean by seeing with your own eyes?” said the Squire. “Don’t you know that is a Protestant doctrine, sir? Do you think they’ll let you see with any eyes but theirs when you get among a set of Papists? Instead of an easygoing bishop, and friendly fellows for brother clergymen, and parishioners that think everything that’s good of you, how do you suppose you’ll feel as an Englishman when you get into a dead Frenchified system, with everything going by rule and measure, and bound to believe just as you’re told? It’ll kill you, sir⁠—that’s what will be the end of it. If you are in your grave within the year, it will be no wonder to me.”

“Amen!” said Gerald, softly. “If that is to be all, we will not quarrel with the result;” and he got up and went to the window, as if to look for his cedar, which was not there. Perhaps the absence of his silent referee gave him a kind of comfort, though at the same time it disappointed him in some fantastical way, for he turned with a curious look of relief and vexation to his brother. “We need not be always thinking of it, even if this were to be the end,” he said. “Come down the avenue with me, Frank, and let us talk of something else. The girls will grumble, but they can have you later: come, I want to hear about yourself.”

Unfortunately the Squire got up when his sons did, which was by no means their intention; but Mr. Wentworth was vexed and restless, and was not willing to let Gerald off so easily. If he were mad, at least he ought to be made duly wretched in his madness, Mr. Wentworth thought; and he went out with them, and arrested the words on their lips. Somehow everything seemed to concur in hindering any appeal on the part of the Curate. And Gerald, like most imaginative men, had a power of dismissing his troubles after they had taken their will of him. It was he who took the conversation on himself when they went out of doors. Finding Frank slow in his report, Gerald went into all the country news for the instruction of his brother. He had been down to the very depths during the two previous days, and now he had come aloft again; for a man cannot be miserable every moment of his life, however heavy his burden may be. The “girls,” whose anxieties had been much stimulated by the renewed conference held with closed doors in the library, stood watching them from one of the drawing-room windows. The boldest of the two had, indeed, got her hat to follow them, not comprehending why Frank should be monopolised for days together by anybody but herself, his favourite sister; but something in the aspect of the three men, when they first appeared under the lime-trees, had awed even the lively Letty out of her usual courage. “But Gerald is talking and laughing just as usual,” she said, as she stood at the window dangling her hat in her hand⁠—“more than usual, for he has been very glum all this spring. Poor fellow! I daresay Louisa worries him out of his life;” and with this easy conclusion the elder brother was dismissed by the girls. “Perhaps Frank is going to be married,” said the other sister, who, under the lively spur of this idea, came back to the window to gaze at him again, and find out whether any intimation of this alarming possibility could be gathered from the fit of his long clerical coat, or his manner of walk, as he sauntered along under the limes. “As if a Perpetual Curate could marry!” said Letty, with scorn, who knew the world. As for little Janet, who was a tenderhearted little soul, she folded her two hands together, and looked at her brother’s back with a great increase of interest. “If one loved him, one would not mind what he was,” said the little maiden, who had been in some trouble herself, and understood about such matters. So the girls talked at their window, Mrs. Wentworth being, as usual, occupied with her nursery, and nobody else at hand to teach them wisdom, and soon branched off into speculations about the postbag, which was “due,” and which, perhaps, was almost more interesting, to one of them at least, than even a brother who was going to be married.

In the meantime Gerald was talking of Huxtable and Plumstead, the brother-in-law and cousin, who were both clergymen in the same district, and about the people in the village whom they had known when they were boys, and who never grew any older. “There is old Kilweed, for example, who was Methuselah in those days⁠—he’s not eighty yet,” he said, with a smile and a sigh; “it is we who grow older and come nearer to the winter and the sunset. My father even has come down a long way off the awful eminence on which I used to behold him: every year that falls on my head seems to take one off his: if we both live long enough, we shall feel like contemporaries by-and-by,” said Gerald: “just now the advantage of years is all on my side; and you are my junior, sir.” He was switching down the weeds among the grass with his cane as he spoke, like any schoolboy; the air, and perhaps a little excitement, had roused the blood to his cheek. He did not look the same man as the pale martyr in the library⁠—not that he had any reason for appearing different, but only that inalienable poetic waywardness which kept him up through his trouble. As for Mr. Wentworth, he resented the momentary brightening, which he took for levity.

“I thought we came out here to prolong our discussion,” said the Squire. “I don’t understand this light way of talking. If you mean what you have said, sir, I should never expect to see you smile more.”

“The smiling makes little difference,” said Gerald; but he stopped short in his talk, and there was a pause among them till the postboy came up to them with his bag, which Mr. Wentworth, with much importance, paused to open. The young men, who had no special interest in its contents, went on. Perhaps the absence of their father was a relief to them. They were nearer to each other, understood each other better than he could do; and they quickened their pace insensibly as they began to talk. It is easy to imagine what kind of talk it was⁠—entire sympathy, yet disagreement wide as the poles⁠—here for a few steps side by side, there darting off at the most opposite tangent; but they had begun to warm to it, and to forget everything else, when a succession of lusty hollos from the Squire brought them suddenly to themselves, and to a dead stop. When they looked round, he was making up to them with choleric strides. “What the deuce do you mean, sir, by having telegrams sent here?” cried Mr. Wentworth, pitching at his son Frank an ominous ugly envelope, in blue and red, such as the unsophisticated mind naturally trembles at. “Beg your pardon, Gerald; but I never can keep my temper when I see a telegraph. I daresay it’s something about Charley,” said the old man, in a slightly husky voice⁠—“to make up to us for inventing troubles.” The Squire was a good deal disturbed by the sight of that ill-omened message; and it was the better way, as he knew by experience, to throw his excitement into the shape of anger rather than that of grief.

“It’s nothing about Charley,” said Frank; and Mr. Wentworth blew his nose violently and drew a long breath. “I don’t understand it,” said the Curate, who looked scared and pale; “it seems to be from Jack; though why he is in Carlingford, or what he has to do⁠—”

“He’s ill, sir, I suppose⁠—dying; nothing else was to be looked for,” said the Squire, and held out his hand, which trembled, for the telegram. “Stuff! why shouldn’t I be able to bear it? Has he been any comfort to me? Can’t you read it, one of you?” cried the old man.

“ ‘John Wentworth to the Reverend⁠—’ ”

“God bless my soul! can’t you come to what he says?”

“ ‘Come back directly⁠—you are wanted here; I am in trouble, as usual; and T. W.⁠—’ ”

Here the Squire took a step backwards, and set himself against a tree. “The sun comes in one’s eyes,” he said, rather feebly. “There’s something poisonous in the air today. Here’s Gerald going out of the Church; and here’s Frank in Jack’s secrets. God forgive him! Lads, it seems you think I’ve had enough of this world’s good. My heir’s a swindling villain, and you know it; and here’s Frank going the same road too.”

The Squire did not hear the words that both the brothers addressed to him; he was unconscious of the Curate’s disclaimer and eager explanation that he knew nothing about Jack, and could not understand his presence in Carlingford. The blow he had got the previous day had confused his brain outside, and these accumulated vexations had bewildered it within. “And I could have sworn by Frank!” said the old man, piteously, to himself, as he put up his hand unawares and tugged at the dainty starched cravat which was his pride. If they had not held him in their arms, he would have slid down at the foot of the tree, against which he had instinctively propped himself. The attack was less alarming to Gerald, who had seen it before, than to Frank, who had only heard of it; but the postboy was still within call, by good fortune, and was sent off for assistance. They carried him to the Hall, gasping for breath, and in a state of partial unconsciousness, but still feebly repeating those words which went to the Curate’s heart⁠—“I could have sworn by Frank!” The house was in a great fright and tumult, naturally, before they reached it, Mrs. Wentworth fainting, the girls looking on in dismay, and the whole household moved to awe and alarm, knowing that one time or other Death would come so. As for the Curate of St. Roque’s, he had already made up his mind, with unexpected anguish, not only that his father was dying, but that his father would die under a fatal misconception about himself; and between this overwhelming thought, and the anxiety which nobody understood or could sympathise with respecting Jack’s message, the young man was almost beside himself. He went away in utter despair from the anxious consultations of the family after the doctor had come, and kept walking up and down before the house, waiting to hear the worst, as he thought; but yet unable, even while his father lay dying, to keep from thinking what miserable chance, what folly or crime, had taken Jack to Carlingford, and what his brother could have to do with the owner of the initials named in his telegram. He was lost in this twofold trouble when Gerald came out to him with brightened looks.

“He is coming round, and the doctor says there is no immediate danger,” said Gerald; “and it is only immediate danger one is afraid of. He was as well as ever last time in a day or two. It is the complaint of the Wentworths, you know⁠—we all die of it; but, Frank, tell me what is this about Jack?”

“I know no more than you do,” said the Curate, when he had recovered himself a little. “I must go back, not having done much good here, to see.”

“And T. W.?” said Gerald. The elder brother looked at the younger suspiciously, as if he were afraid for him; and it was scarcely in human nature not to feel a momentary flash of resentment.

“I tell you I know nothing about it,” said Frank, “except what is evident to anyone, that Jack has gone to Carlingford in my absence, being in trouble somehow. I suppose he always is in trouble. I have not heard from him since I went there; but as it don’t seem I can be of any use here, as soon as my father is safe, I will go back. Louisa imagined, you know⁠—; but she was wrong.”

“Yes,” said Gerald, quietly. That subject was concluded, and there was no more to say.

The same evening, as the Squire continued to improve, and had been able to understand his energetic explanation that he was entirely ignorant of Jack’s secrets, Frank Wentworth went back again with a very disturbed mind. He went into the Rectory as he passed down to the station, to say goodbye to Louisa, who was sitting in the drawing-room with her children round her, and her trouble considerably lightened, though there was no particular cause for it. Dressing for dinner had of itself a beneficial effect upon Louisa: she could not understand how a life could ever be changed which was so clearly ordained of Heaven; for if Gerald was not with her, what inducement could she possibly have to dress for dinner? and then what would be the good of all the pretty wardrobe with which Providence had endowed her? Must not Providence take care that its gifts were not thus wasted? So the world was once more set fast on its foundations, and the pillars of earth remained unshaken, when Frank glanced in on his way to the station to say goodbye.

“Don’t be afraid, Louisa; I don’t believe he would be allowed to do it,” said the Curate in her ear. “The Church of Rome does not go in the face of nature. She will not take him away from you. Keep your heart at ease as much as you can. Goodbye.”

“You mean about Gerald. Oh, you don’t really think he could ever have had the heart?” said Mrs. Wentworth. “I am so sorry you are going away without any dinner or anything comfortable; and it was so good of you to come, and I feel so much better. I shall always be grateful to you, dear Frank, for showing Gerald his mistake; and tell dear aunt Dora I am so much obliged to her for thinking of the blanket for the bassinet. I am sure it will be lovely. Must you go? Goodbye. I am sure you have always been like my own brother⁠—Frank, dear, goodbye. Come and kiss your dear uncle, children, and say goodbye.”

This was how Louisa dismissed him after all his efforts on her behalf. The girls were waiting for him on the road, still full of anxiety to know why he had come so suddenly, and was going away so soon. “We have not had half a peep of you,” said Letty; “and it is wicked of you not to tell us; as if anybody could sympathise like your sisters⁠—your very own sisters, Frank,” said the young lady, with a pressure on his arm. In such a mixed family the words meant something.

“We had made up our minds you had come to tell papa,” said Janet, with her pretty shy look; “that was my guess⁠—you might tell us her name, Frank.”

“Whose name?” said the unfortunate Curate; and the dazzling vision of Lucy Wodehouse’s face, which came upon him at the moment, was such, that the reluctant blood rose high in his cheeks⁠—which, of course, the girls were quick enough to perceive.

“It is about some girl, after all,” said Letty; “oh me! I did not think you had been like all the rest. I thought you had other things to think of. Janet may say what she likes⁠—but I do think it’s contemptible always to find out, when a man, who can do lots of things, is in trouble, that it’s about some girl or other like one’s self! I did not expect it of you, Frank⁠—but all the same, tell us who she is?” said the favourite sister, clasping his arm confidentially, and dropping her voice.

“There is the train. Goodbye, girls, and be sure you write to me tomorrow how my father is,” said the Curate. He had taken his seat before they could ask further questions, and in a minute or two more was dashing out of the little station, catching their smiles and adieus as he went, and turning back last of all for another look at Gerald, who stood leaning on his stick, looking after the train, with the mist of preoccupation gathering again over his smiling eyes. The Curate went back to his corner after that, and lost himself in thoughts and anxieties still more painful. What had Jack to do in Carlingford? what connection had he with those initials, or how did he know their owner? All sorts of horrible fears came over the Curate of St. Roque’s. He had not seen his elder brother for years, and Jack’s career was not one for the family to be proud of. Had he done something too terrible to be hidden⁠—too clamorous to let his name drop out of remembrance, as was to be desired for the credit of the Wentworths? This speculation whiled the night away but drearily, as the Perpetual Curate went back to the unknown tide of cares which had surged in his absence into his momentarily abandoned place.