“You might have paid it in there?” said Johnny.
“I suppose I might, but I didn’t. I gave it to poor Mr. Crawley instead—like a fool, as I know now that I was. And so I have brought all this trouble on him and on her; and now I must rush home, without waiting for the dean, as fast as the trains will carry me.”
Eames offered to accompany her, and this offer was accepted. “It is hard upon you, though,” she said; “you will see nothing of Florence. Three hours in Venice, and six in Florence, and no hours at all anywhere else, will be a hard fate to you on your first trip to Italy.” But Johnny said “Excelsior” to himself once more, and thought of Lily Dale, who was still in London, hoping that she might hear of his exertions; and he felt, perhaps, also that it would be pleasant to return with a dean’s wife, and never hesitated. Nor would it do, he thought, for him to be absent in the excitement caused by the news of Mr. Crawley’s innocence and injuries. “I don’t care a bit about that,” he said. “Of course, I should like to see Florence, and, of course, I should like to go to bed; but I will live in hopes that I may do both some day.” And so there grew to be a friendship between him and Mrs. Arabin even before they had started.
He had driven through Florence; he saw the Venus de’ Medici, and he saw the Seggiolia; he looked up from the side of the Duomo to the top of the Campanile, and he walked round the back of the cathedral itself; he tried to inspect the doors of the Baptistry, and declared that the “David” was very fine. Then he went back to the hotel, dined with Mrs. Arabin, and started for England.
The dean was to have joined his wife at Venice, and then they were to have returned together, coming round by Florence. Mrs. Arabin had not, therefore, taken her things away from Florence when she left it, and had been obliged to return to pick them up on her journey homewards. He—the dean—had been delayed in his Eastern travels. Neither Syria or Constantinople had got themselves done as quickly as he had expected, and he had, consequently, twice written to his wife, begging her to pardon the transgression of his absence for even yet a few days longer. “Everything, therefore,” as Mrs. Arabin said, “has conspired to perpetuate this mystery, which a word from me would have solved. I owe more to Mr. Crawley than I can ever pay him.”
“He will be very well paid, I think,” said John, “when he hears the truth. If you could see the inside his mind at this moment, I’m sure you’d find that he thinks he stole the cheque.”
“He cannot think that, Mr. Eames. Besides, at this moment I hope he has heard the truth.”
“That may be, but he did think so. I do believe that he had not the slightest notion where he got it; and, which is more, not a single person in the whole county had a notion. People thought that he had picked it up, and used it in his despair. And the bishop has been so hard upon him.”
“Oh, Mr. Eames, that is the worst of all.”
“So I am told. The bishop has a wife, I believe.”
“Yes, he has a wife, certainly,” said Mrs. Arabin.
“And people say that she is not very good-natured.”
“There are some of us at Barchester who do not love her very dearly. I cannot say that she is one of my own especial friends.”
“I believe she has been hard to Mr. Crawley,” said John Eames.
“I should not be in the least surprised,” said Mrs. Arabin.
Then they reached Turin, and there, taking up
Galignani’s Messenger
in the reading-room of Trompetta’s Hotel, John Eames saw that Mrs. Proudie was dead. “Look at that,” said he, taking the paragraph to Mrs. Arabin; “Mrs. Proudie is dead!” “Mrs. Proudie dead!” she exclaimed. “Poor woman! Then there will be peace at Barchester!” “I never knew her very intimately,” she afterwards said to her companion, “and I do not know that I have a right to say that she ever did me an injury. But I remember well her first coming into Barchester. My sister’s father-in-law, the late bishop, was just dead. He was a mild, kind, dear old man, whom my father loved beyond all the world, except his own children. You may suppose we were all a little sad. I was not specially connected with the cathedral then, except through my father,”—and Mrs. Arabin, as she told all this, remembered that in the days of which she was speaking she was a young mourning widow—”but I think I can never forget the sort of harsh-toned pæan of low-church trumpets with which that poor woman made her entry into the city. She might have been more lenient, as we had never sinned by being very high. She might, at any rate, have been more gentle with us at first. I think we had never attempted much beyond decency, good-will and comfort. Our comfort she utterly destroyed. Good-will was not to her taste. And as for decency, when I remember some things, I must say that when the comfort and good-will went, the decency went along with them. And now she is dead! I wonder how the bishop will get on without her.”
“Like a house on fire, I should think,” said Johnny.
“Fie, Mr. Eames; you shouldn’t speak in such a way on such a subject.”
Mrs. Arabin and Johnny became fast friends as they journeyed home. There was a sweetness in his character which endeared him readily to women; though, as we have seen, there was a want of something to make one woman cling to him. He could be soft and pleasant-mannered. He was fond of making himself useful, and was a perfect master of all those little caressing modes of behaviour in which the caress is quite impalpable, and of which most women know the value and appreciate the comfort. By the time that they had reached Paris John had told the whole story of Lily Dale and Crosbie, and Mrs. Arabin had promised to assist him, if any assistance might be in her power.
“Of course I have heard of Miss Dale,” she said, “because we know the De Courcys.” Then she turned away her face, almost blushing, as she remembered the first time that she had seen that Lady Alexandrina De Courcy whom Mr. Crosbie had married. It had been at Mr. Thorne’s house at Ullathorne, and on that day she had done a thing which she had never since remembered without blushing. But it was an old story now, and a story of which her companion knew nothing—of which he never could know anything. That day at Ullathorne Mrs. Arabin, the wife of the Dean of Barchester, than whom there was no more discreet clerical matron in the diocese, had—boxed a clergyman’s ears!
“Yes,” said John, speaking of Crosbie, “he was a wise fellow; he knew what he was about; he married an earl’s daughter.”
“And now I remember hearing that somebody gave him a terrible beating. Perhaps it was you?”
“It wasn’t terrible at all,” said Johnny.
“Then it was you?”
“Oh, yes; it was I.”
“Then it was you who saved poor old Lord De Guest from the bull?”
“Go on, Mrs. Arabin. There is no end to the grand things I’ve done.”
“You’re quite a hero of romance.”
He bit his lip as he told himself that he was not enough of a hero. “I don’t know about that,” said Johnny. “I think what a man ought to do in these days is to seem not to care what he eats and drinks, and to have his linen very well got up. Then he’ll be a hero.” But that was hard upon Lily.
“Is that what Miss Dale requires?” said Mrs. Arabin.
“I was not thinking about her particularly,” said Johnny, lying.
They slept a night in Paris, as they had done also at Turin—Mrs. Arabin not finding herself able to accomplish such marvels in the way of travelling as her companion had achieved—and then arrived in London in the evening. She was taken to a certain quiet clerical hotel at the top of Suffolk Street, much patronised by bishops and deans of the better sort, expecting to find a message there from her husband. And there was a message—just arrived. The dean had reached Florence three days after her departure; and as he would do the journey home in twenty-four hours less than she had taken, he would be there, at the hotel, on the day after to-morrow. “I suppose I may wait for him, Mr. Eames?” said Mrs. Arabin.
“I will see Mr. Toogood to-night, and I will call here to-morrow, whether I see him or not. At what hour will you be in?”
“Don’t trouble yourself to do that. You must take care of Sir Raffle Buffle, you know.”
“I shan’t go near Sir Raffle Buffle to-morrow, nor yet the next day. You mustn’t suppose that I am afraid of Sir Raffle Buffle.”
“You are only afraid of Lily Dale.” From all which it may be seen that Mrs. Arabin and John Eames had become very intimate on their way home.
It was then arranged that he should call on Mr. Toogood that same night or early next morning, and that he should come to the hotel at twelve o’clock on the next day. Going along one of the passages he passed two gentlemen in shovel hats, with very black new coats, and knee-breeches; and Johnny could not but hear a few words which one clerical gentleman said to the other. “She was a woman of great energy, of wonderful spirit, but a firebrand, my lord—a complete firebrand!” Then Johnny knew that the Dean of A. was talking to the Bishop of B. about the late Mrs. Proudie.
CHAPTER LXXI
Mr. Toogood at Silverbridge
We will now go back to Mr. Toogood as he started for Silverbridge, on the receipt of Mrs. Arabin’s telegram from Venice. “I gave cheque to Mr. Crawley. It was part of a sum of money. Will write to Archdeacon Grantly to-day, and return home at once.” That was the telegram which Mr. Toogood received at his office, and on receiving which he resolved that he must start to Barchester immediately. “It isn’t certainly what you may call a paying business,” he said to his partner, who continued to grumble; “but it must be done all the same. If it don’t get into the ledger in one way it will in another.” So Mr. Toogood started for Silverbridge, having sent to his house in Tavistock Square for a small bag, a clean shirt, and a toothbrush. And as he went down in the railway-carriage, before he went to sleep, he turned it all over in his mind. “Poor devil! I wonder whether any man ever suffered so much before. And as for that woman—it’s ten thousand pities that she should have died before she heard it. Talk of heart-complaint; she’d have had a touch of heart-complaint if she had known this!” Then, as he was speculating how Mrs. Arabin could have become possessed of the cheque, he went to sleep.
He made up his mind that the first person to be seen was Mr. Walker, and after that he would, if possible, go to Archdeacon Grantly. He was at first minded to go at once out to Hogglestock; but when he remembered how very strange Mr. Crawley was in all his ways, and told himself professionally that telegrams were but bad sources of evidence on which to depend for details, he thought that it would be safer if he were first to see Mr. Walker. There would be very little delay. In a day or two the archdeacon would receive his letter, and in a day or two after that Mrs. Arabin would probably be at home.
It was late in the evening before Mr. Toogood reached the house of the Silverbridge solicitor, having the telegram carefully folded in his pocket; and he was shown into the dining-room while the servant took his name up to Mr. Walker. The clerks were gone, and the office was closed; and persons coming on business at such times—as they often did come to that house—were always shown into the parlour. “I don’t know whether master can see you to-night,” said the girl; “but if he can, he’ll come down.”
When the card was brought up to Mr. Walker he was sitting alone with his wife. “It’s Toogood,” said he; “poor Crawley’s cousin.”
“I wonder whether he has found anything out,” said Mrs. Walker. “May he not come up here?” Then Mr. Toogood was summoned into the drawing-room, to the maid’s astonishment; for Mr. Toogood had made no toilet sacrifices to the goddess of grace who presides over evening society in provincial towns—and presented himself with the telegram in his hand. “We have found out all about poor Crawley’s cheque,” he said, before the maid-servant had closed the door. “Look at that,” and he handed the telegram to Mr. Walker. The poor girl was obliged to go, though she would have given one her ears to know the exact contents of that bit of paper.
“Walker, what is it?” said his wife, before Walker had had time to make the contents of the document his own.
“He got it from Mrs. Arabin,” said Toogood.
“No!” said Mrs. Walker. “I thought that was it all along.”
“It’s a pity you didn’t say so before,” said Mr. Walker.
“So I did; but a lawyer thinks that nobody can ever see anything but himself—begging your pardon, Mr. Toogood, but I forgot you were one of us. But, Walker, do read it.” Then the telegram was read; “I gave the cheque to Mr. Crawley. It was part of a sum of money,”—with the rest of it. “I knew it would come out,” said Mrs. Walker. “I was quite sure of it.”
“But why the mischief didn’t he say so?” said Walker.
“He did say that he got it from the dean,” said Toogood.
“But he didn’t get it from the dean; and the dean clearly knew nothing about it.”
“I’ll tell you what it is,” said Mrs. Walker; “it has been some private transaction between Mr. Crawley and Mrs. Arabin, which the dean was to know nothing about; and so he wouldn’t tell. I must say I honour him.”
“I don’t think it has been that,” said Walker. “Had he known all through that it had come from Mrs. Arabin, he would never have said that Mr. Soames gave it to him, and then that the dean gave it to him.”
“The truth has been that he has known nothing about it,” said Toogood; “and we shall have to tell him.”
At that moment Mary Walker came into the room, and Mrs. Walker could not constrain herself. “Mary, Mr. Crawley is right. He didn’t steal the cheque. Mrs. Arabin gave it to him.”
“Who says so? How do you know? Oh, dear; I am so happy, if it’s true.” Then she saw Mr. Toogood and curtseyed.
“It is quite true, my dear,” said Mr. Walker. “Mr. Toogood has had a message by the wires from Mrs. Arabin at Venice. She is coming home at once, and no doubt everything will be put right. In the meantime, it may be a question whether we should not hold our tongues. Mr. Crawley himself, I suppose, knows nothing of it yet?”
“Not a word,” said Toogood.
“Papa, I must tell Miss Prettyman,” said Mary.
“I should think that probably all Silverbridge knows it by this time,” said Mrs. Walker, “because Jane was in the room when the announcement was made. You may be sure that every servant in the house has been told.” Mary Walker, not waiting for any further command from her father, hurried out of the room to convey the secret to her special circle of friends.
It was known throughout Silverbridge that night, and indeed it made so much commotion that it kept many people for an hour out of their beds. Ladies who were not in the habit of going out late at night without the fly from the “George and Vulture”, tied their heads up in their handkerchiefs, and hurried up and down the street to tell each other that the great secret had been discovered, and that in truth Mr. Crawley had not stolen the cheque. The solution of the mystery was not known to all—was known on that night only to the very select portion of the aristocracy of Silverbridge to whom it was communicated by Mary Walker or Miss Anne Prettyman. For Mary Walker, when earnestly entreated by Jane, the parlour-maid, to tell her something more of the great news, had so far respected her father’s caution as to say not a word about Mrs. Arabin. “Is it true, Miss Mary, that he didn’t steal it?” Jane asked imploringly. “It is true. He did not steal it.” “And who did, Miss Mary? Indeed I won’t tell anybody.” “Nobody. But don’t ask any more questions, for I won’t answer them. Get me my hat at once, for I want to go up to Miss Prettyman’s.” Then Jane got Miss Walker’s hat, and immediately afterwards scampered into the kitchen with the news. “Oh, law, cook, it’s all come out! Mr. Crawley’s as innocent as the unborn babe. The gentleman upstairs what’s just come, and was here once before—for I know’d him immediate—I heard him say so. And master said so too.”
“Did master say so his own self?” asked the cook.
“Indeed he did; and Miss Mary told me the same this moment.”
“If master said so, then there ain’t a doubt as they’ll find him innocent. And who took’d it, Jane?”
“Miss Mary says as nobody didn’t steal it.”
“That’s nonsense, Jane. It stands to reason as somebody had it as hadn’t ought to have had it. But I’m glad as anything as how that poor reverend gent’ll come off—I am. They tells me it’s weeks sometimes before a bit of butcher’s meat finds its way into his house.” Then the groom and the housemaid and the cook, one after another, took occasion to slip out of the back-door, and poor Jane, who had really been the owner of the news, was left alone to answer the bell.
Miss Walker found the two Miss Prettymans sitting together over their accounts in the elder Miss Prettyman’s private room. And she could see at once by signs which were not unfamiliar to her that Miss Anne Prettyman was being scolded. It often happened that Miss Anne Prettyman was scolded, especially when the accounts were brought out upon the table. “Sister, they are illegible,” Mary Walker heard, as the servant opened the door for her.
“I don’t think it’s quite so bad as that,” said Miss Anne, unable to restrain her defence. Then, as Mary entered the room, Miss Prettyman the elder laid her hands down on certain books and papers as though to hide them from profane eyes.
“I am glad to see you, Mary,” said Miss Prettyman gravely.
“I’ve brought such a piece of news,” said Mary. “I knew you’d be glad to hear it, so I ventured to disturb you.”
“Is it good news?” said Anne Prettyman.
“Very good news. Mr. Crawley is innocent.”
Both the ladies sprang on to their legs. Even Miss Prettyman herself jumped up on to her legs. “No!” said Anne. “Your father has discovered it?” said Miss Prettyman.
“Not exactly that. Mr. Toogood has come down from London to tell him. Mr. Toogood, you know, is Mr. Crawley’s cousin; and he is a lawyer, like papa.” It may be observed that ladies belonging to the families of solicitors always talk about lawyers, and never about attorneys or barristers.
“And does Mr. Toogood say that Mr. Crawley is innocent?” asked Miss Prettyman.
“He has heard it by a message from Mrs. Arabin. But you mustn’t mention this. You won’t, please, because papa asked me not. I told him that I should tell you.” Then, for the first time, the frown passed away entirely from Miss Prettyman’s face, and the papers and account books were pushed aside, as being of no moment. The news had been momentous enough to satisfy her. Mary continued her story almost in a whisper. “It was Mrs. Arabin who sent the cheque to Mr. Crawley. She says so herself. So that makes Mr. Crawley quite innocent. I am so glad.”
“But isn’t it odd he didn’t say so?” said Miss Prettyman.
“Nevertheless, it’s true.” said Mary.
“Perhaps he forgot,” said Anne Prettyman.
“Men don’t forget such things as that,” said the elder sister.
“I really do think that Mr. Crawley could forget anything,” said the younger sister.
“You may be sure it’s true,” said Mary Walker, “because papa said so.”
“If he said so, it must be true,” said Miss Prettyman; “and I am rejoiced. I really am rejoiced. Poor man! Poor ill-used man! And nobody has ever believed that he has really been guilty, even though they may have thought that he spent the money without any proper right to it. And now he will get off. But, dear me, Mary, Mr. Smithe told me yesterday that he had already given up his living, and that Mr. Spooner, the minor canon, was trying to get it from the dean. But that was because Mr. Spooner and Mrs. Proudie had quarrelled; and as Mrs. Proudie is gone, Mr. Spooner very likely won’t want to move now.”
“They’ll never go and put anybody into Hogglestock, Annabella, over Mr. Crawley’s head,” said Anne.
“I didn’t say that they would. Surely I may be allowed to repeat what I hear, like another person, without being snapped up.”
“I didn’t mean to snap you up, Annabella.”
“You’re always snapping me up. But if this is true, I cannot say how glad I am. My poor Grace! Now, I suppose, there will be no difficulty, and Grace will become a great lady.” Then they discussed very minutely the chances of Grace Crawley’s promotion.
John Walker, Mr. Winthrop, and several others of the chosen spirits of Silverbridge, were playing whist at a provincial club, which had established itself in the town, when the news was brought to them. Though Mr. Winthrop was the partner of the great Walker, and though John Walker was the great man’s son, I fear that the news reached their ears in but an underhand sort of way. As for the great man himself, he never went near the club, preferring his slippers and tea at home. The Walkerian groom, rushing up the street to the “George and Vulture”, paused a moment to tell his tidings to the club porter; from the club porter it was whispered respectfully to the Silverbridge apothecary, who, by special grace, was a member of the club—and was by him repeated with much cautious solemnity over the card-table. “Who told you that, Balsam?” said John Walker, throwing down his cards.
“I’ve just heard it,” said Balsam.
“I don’t believe it,” said John.
“I shouldn’t wonder if it’s true,” said Winthrop. “I always said that something would turn up.”
“Will you bet three to one he is not found guilty?” said John Walker.
“Done,” said Winthrop; “in pounds.” That morning the odds in the club against the event had been only two to one. But as the matter was discussed, the men in the club began to believe the tidings, and before he went home, John Walker would have been glad to hedge his bet on any terms. After he had spoken to his father, he gave his money up for lost.
But Mr. Walker—the great Walker—had more to do that night before his son came home from the club. He and Mr. Toogood agreed that it would be right that they should see Dr. Tempest at once, and they went over together to the rectory. It was past ten at this time, and they found the doctor almost in the act of putting out the candles for the night. “I could not but come to you, doctor,” said Mr. Walker, “with the news my friend has brought. Mrs. Arabin gave the cheque to Crawley. Here is a telegram from her saying so.” And the telegram was handed to the doctor.
He stood perfectly silent for a few minutes, reading it over and over again. “I see it all,” he said, when he spoke at last. “I see it all now; and I must own I was never before so much puzzled in my life.”
“I own I can’t see why she should have given him Mr. Soames’s cheque,” said Mr. Walker.
“I can’t say where she got it, and I own I don’t much care,” said Dr. Tempest. “But I don’t doubt but what she gave it him without telling the dean, and that Crawley thought it came from the dean. I’m very glad. I am, indeed, very glad. I do not know that I ever pitied a man so much in my life as I have pitied Mr. Crawley.”
“It must have been a hard case when it has moved him,” said Mr. Walker to Mr. Toogood as they left the clergyman’s house; and then the Silverbridge attorney saw the attorney from London home to his inn.
It was the general opinion at Silverbridge that the news from Venice ought to be communicated to the Crawleys by Major Grantly. Mary Walker had expressed this opinion very strongly, and her mother had agreed with her. Miss Prettyman also felt that poetical justice, or, at least, the romance of justice, demanded this; and, as she told her sister Anne after Mary Walker left her, she was of opinion that such an arrangement might tend to make things safe. “I do think he is an honest man and a fine fellow,” said Miss Prettyman; “but, my dear, you know what the proverb says, ‘There’s many a slip ‘twixt the cup and the lip.’” Miss Prettyman thought than anything which might be done to prevent a slip ought to be done. The idea that the pleasant task of taking the news out to Hogglestock ought to be confided to Major Grantly was very general; but then Mr. Walker was of the opinion that the news ought not to be taken to Hogglestock at all till something more certain than the telegram had reached them. Early on the following morning the two lawyers again met, and it was arranged between them that the London lawyer should go over at once to Barchester, and that the Silverbridge lawyer should see Major Grantly. Mr. Toogood was still of the opinion that with due diligence something might yet be learned as to the cheque by inquiry among the denizens of “The Dragon of Wantly”; and his opinion to this effect was stronger than ever when he learned from Mr. Walker that the “Dragon of Wantly” belonged to Mrs. Arabin.