Part 60 (1/2)
”Now, Mr Wilton,” he said, shortly, ”you have achieved your purpose and tracked me home.”
”And no thanks to you,” said Claud, with one of his broad grins. ”Won't ask me in, I suppose?”
”No, sir, I shall not.”
”All right I didn't expect you would. Of course I should have found you out some time from the directories.”
”My name is not in them, sir.”
”Oh, but it soon would be, Doctor. I say, shall you tell her you have seen me?”
”For cool impudence, Mr Claud Wilton,” said Leigh, by way of answer, ”I have never seen your equal.”
”'Tisn't impudence, Doctor,” said Claud, earnestly; ”it's pluck and bull-dog. I haven't been much account, and I don't come up to what you think a fellow should be.”
”You certainly do not,” said Leigh, unable to repress a smile.
”I know that, but I've got some stuff in me, after all, and when I take hold I don't let go.”
He gave Leigh a quick nod, and thrusting his hands into his pockets, walked right on, without looking back, Leigh watching him till he turned a corner, before taking out a latch-key and letting himself into the house.
”The devil does not seem so black as he is painted, after all,” he said, as he wiped his feet, and at the sound Jenny, quite without crutches, came hurrying down the stairs.
”Oh, Pierce, dear, have you been to those people in Bedford Street?
They've been again twice, and I told them you'd gone.”
”Ugh!” e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Leigh. ”What a head I have! Someone met me on the way, and diverted my thoughts. I'll go at once.”
And he hurried out.
CHAPTER THIRTY FIVE.
It was a splendid grand piano whose tones rang, through the house, and brought poor Becky, with her pale, anaemic, tied-up face, from the lower regions, to stand peering round corners and listening till the final chords of some sonata rang out, when she would dart back into hiding, but only to steal up again as slowly and cautiously as a serpent, and thrust out her head from the gloom which hung forever upon the kitchen stairs, when Kate's low, sweet voice was heard singing some sad old ballad, a favourite of her father's, one which brought up the happy past, and ended often enough in the tears dropping silently upon the ivory keys.
Such a song will sometimes draw tears from many a listener; the melody, the words, recollections evoked, the expression given by the singer, all have their effect; and perhaps it was a memory of the baker (or milkman) which floated into poor, timid, shrinking Becky, for almost invariably she melted into tears.
”She says it's like being in heaven, ma'am,” said Sarah Plant, giving voice upstairs to her child's strained ideas of happiness. ”And really the place don't seem like the same, for, G.o.d bless you! you have made us all so happy here.”
Kate sighed, for she did not share the happy feeling. There were times when her lot seemed too hard to bear. Garstang was kindness itself; he seemed to be constantly striving to make her content. Books, music, papers, fruit, and flowers--violets constantly as soon as he saw the brightening of her eyes whenever he brought her a bunch. Almost every expressed wish was gratified. But there was that intense longing for communion with others. If she could only have written to poor, amiable, faithful Eliza or to Jenny Leigh, she would have borne her imprisonment better; but she had religiously studied her new guardian's wishes upon that point, yielding to his advice whenever he reiterated the dangers which would beset their path if James Wilton discovered where she was.
”As it is, my dear child,” he would say again and again, ”it is sanctuary; and I'm on thorns whenever I am absent, for fear you should be tempted by the bright suns.h.i.+ne out of the gloom of this dull house, be seen by one or other of James Wilton's emissaries, and I return to find the cage I have tried so hard to gild, empty--the bird taken away to another kind of captivity, one which surely would not be so easy to bear.”
”No, no, no; I could not bear it!” she cried, wildly. ”I do not murmur.
I will not complain, guardian; but there are times when I would give anything to be out somewhere in the bright open air, with the beautiful blue sky overhead, the soft gra.s.s beneath my feet, and the birds singing in my ears.”
”Yes, yes, I know, my poor dear child,” he said, tenderly. ”It is cruelly hard upon you, but what can I do? I am waiting and hoping that James Wilton on finding his helplessness will become more open to making some kind of reasonable terms. I am sure you would be willing to meet him.”
”To meet him again? Oh, no, I could not. The thought is horrible,” she cried. ”He seems to have broken faith so, after all his promises to my dying father.”