‘Of the high romantic strain? I should think it was as much as ever the salt of life to her. Her last letter described her contrivances to make a knapsack for Norman on his visitation tour. Oh, fancy old June a venerable archdeacon!’
‘You don’t think a colonial archdeacon is like one of your great portly swells in a shovel hat.’
‘It must be something remarkable that made Norman portly. But as for the shovel hat, Mrs. Meta has insisted on having it sent out. I was going to tell you that she says, “I do like such a good tough bit of stitchery, to fit my knight out for the cause.”’
‘Marriage and distance have not frozen up her effusions.’
‘No; when people carry souls in their pens, they are worth a great deal more, if they are to go to a distance.’
Ah! by the bye, I suppose Cheviot has put a fresh lock on Mary’s writing-case.’
‘I suspect some of Mary’s correspondence will devolve on me. Harry has asked me already.’
‘I wished you had mentioned more about the letters of late. Leonard wanted to know more than I could tell him.’
‘You don’t mean that you have seen him? O, Tom, how kind of you! Papa has been trying hard to get a day now that these first six months are up; but there are two or three cases that wanted so much watching that he has not been able to stir.’
‘I know how he lets himself be made a prisoner, and that it was a chance whether any one saw the poor fellow at all.’
‘I am so glad’—and Ethel turned on him a face still flushed, but now with gratitude. ‘How was he looking?’
‘The costume is not becoming, and he has lost colour and grown hollow-eyed; but I saw no reason for being uneasy about him; he looked clear and in health, and has not got to slouch yet. It is shocking to see such a grand face and head behind a grating.’
‘Could he talk’?
‘Why, the presence of a warder is against conversation, and six months of shoemaking in a cell does not give much range of ideas. There was nothing to be done but to talk on right ahead and judge by his eyes if he liked it.’
‘I suppose you could find out nothing about himself?’
‘He said he got on very well; but one does not know that means. I asked if he got books; and he said there was a very good library, and he could get what gave him something to think of; and he says they give interesting lectures in school.’
‘You could not gather what is thought of him?’
‘No; I saw but a couple of officers of the place, and could only get out of them “good health and good conduct.” I do not expect even his conduct makes much impression as to his innocence, for I saw it stated the other day that the worst prisoners are those that are always getting convicted for petty offences; those that have committed one great crime are not so depraved, and are much more amenable. However, he has only three months more at Pentonville, and then he will go to Portland, Chatham, or Gibraltar.’
‘Oh, I hope it will not be Gibraltar! But at least that terrible solitude will be over.’
‘At any rate, his spirit is not broken. I could see his eye light up after I had talked a little while, and he fell into his natural tone again. He would not try to put out his hand to me when he came down; but when I went away, he put it through and we had a good hearty shake. Somehow it made one feel quite small.’
Ethel could have pledged herself for the soundness of Tom’s nature after those words; but all she did was in an unwonted tone to utter the unwonted exclamation—’Dear Tom.’
‘If my father does not come up, I shall see him once more before he leaves Pentonville,’ added Tom; ‘and so you must mind and let me know all about his people in America. I found he had no notion of the row that is beginning there, so I said not a word of it. But what is all this about going to Indiana?’
‘They are going at the end of April to settle in a place called Massissauga, where Henry is to farm till practice comes to him. It is towards the north of the State, in the county of Pulaski.’
‘Ay, in one of the pestilential swamps that run up out of Lake Michigan. All the fertile ground there breeds as many fevers and agues as it does stalks of corn.’
‘Indeed! how did you hear that?’
‘I looked up the place after Leonard told me of it. It is as unlucky a location as the ill luck of that fellow Henry could have pitched on. Some friend Leonard spoke of—a Yankee, I suppose, meaning to make a prey of them.’
‘The father of their young lady friend at the boarding-house.’
‘Oh! a Yankee edition of Mrs. Pugh!’
‘And the worst of it is that this is to be done with poor Averil’s fortune. She has written to Mr. Bramshaw to sell out for her, and send her the amount, and he is terribly vexed; but she is of age, and there are no trustees nor any one to stop it.’
‘All of a piece,’ muttered Tom; then presently he swung the basket round on the ground with a vehement exclamation—’If any man on this earth deserved to be among the robbers and murderers, I know who it is.’ Then he shouldered his load again, and walked on in silence by his sister’s side to the school door.
Richard had been obliged to go to a benefit club entertainment; and Ethel, knowing the limited literary resources of the parsonage, was surprised to find Tom still waiting for her, when the distribution and fitting of the blue-ribboned hats was over, and matters arranged for the march of the children to see the wedding, and to dine afterwards at the Grammar-school hall.
‘O, Tom, I did not expect to find you here.’
‘It is not fit for you to be walking about alone on a Whit Monday.’
‘I am very glad to have you, but I am past that.’
‘Don’t talk nonsense; girls are girls till long past your age,’ said Tom.
‘It is not so much age, as living past things,’ said Ethel.
‘It was not only that, added Tom; ‘but I’ve more to say to you, while one can be sure of a quiet moment. Have you heard anything about that place?’ and he pointed in the direction of the Vintry Mill.
‘I heard something of an intention to part with it, and have been watching for an advertisement; but I can see none in the Courant, or on the walls.’
‘Mind he does not slip off unawares.’
‘I don’t know what to do now that old Hardy is cut off from us. I tried to stir up Dr. Spencer to go and investigate, but I could not tell him why, and he has not the same interest in going questing about as he used to have. People never will do the one thing one wants particularly!’
Tom’s look and gesture made her ask if he knew of anything wrong with their old friend; and in return, she was told that Dr. Spencer’s recent visit to London had been to consult Sir Matthew Fleet. The foundations of mortal disease had been laid in India, and though it might long remain in abeyance, there were from time to time symptoms of activity; and tedious lingering infirmity was likely to commence long before the end.
‘And what do you think the strange old fellow charged me as we walked away from dining at Fleet’s?’
‘Secrecy, of course,’ returned the much-shocked Ethel.
‘One does keep a secret by telling you. It was to have my eye on some lodging with a decent landlady, where, when it is coming to that, he can go up to be alone, out of the way of troubling Dick, and of all of you.’
‘Tom, how dreadful!’
‘I fancy it is something of the animal instinct of creeping away alone, and partly his law to himself not to trouble Dick.’
‘An odd idea of what would trouble Dick!’
‘So I told him; but he said, after seeing what it cost my father to watch dear Margaret’s long decay, he would never entail the like on him. It is queer, and it is beautiful, the tender way he has about my father, treating him like a pet to be shielded and guarded—a man that has five times the force and vigour of body and mind that he has now, whatever they may have been.’