Part 28 (1/2)
CHAPTER XVI
THE BATTLE OF THE LORD
Among the audience, or rather the congregation, which had a.s.sembled to hear Joseph in St. Elwyn's Church, all those people who were intimately connected with him had been present.
It had been arranged beforehand, although Mr. Persse had known nothing of it, that Joseph's followers, Sir Augustus and Lady Kirwan, Marjorie, and Mary, accompanied by Sir Thomas Ducaine and Hampson, the journalist, should all have seats reserved for them by ticket in the church.
Accordingly they had all been there. After the Teacher's solemn exhortation to private prayer, the whole congregation had awoke as if from a dream. The influence, the magnetic influence of Joseph's presence, was removed. Every one sat up in their places with grave and tired eyes, wearing the aspect of people who had come back to life after a sojourn in that strange country of the soul which lies between this world and the next.
The vicar, very pale and agitated, had descended from the chancel in his surplice and biretta, and had gone among the people, whispering here and there, frowning, faintly smiling, and only too obviously upset and frightened in body, mind, and spirit.
Over all the great congregation of wealthy and fas.h.i.+onable people there had lain that same manner of uneasiness, that hidden influence of fear.
After a few minutes the majority of them rose and went silently from the church. As they walked down the broad and lighted aisle it was obvious enough, both in their walk and in their faces, that they were trying to call back their self-respect and that mental att.i.tude which ruled their lives, and was but an insolent defiance of all claims upon conduct, save only the imperial insistence of their own self-will.
But it was an attempt, and nothing more, upon the part of those who thronged and hurried to be quit of the sacred building in which, for the first time in their lives, a man inspired by G.o.d had told them the truth about themselves.
Nevertheless, a considerable residue of people was left. They sat in their seats, whispering brokenly to each other, glancing at the vicar, and especially at two pews where a company of countrymen in black were still kneeling with their heads bowed in prayer.
It had already been bruited about in society that Sir Augustus and Lady Kirwan, together with Sir Thomas Ducaine, were intimately connected with the Teacher. The regard and attention of those who still stayed in the church were, therefore, also directed to the pew which held the baronet, his wife, and their daughter, Sir Thomas, the beautiful girl in the costume of a hospital nurse who was recognized by some of them as the niece of Lady Kirwan, and a little, meagre-looking man whom no one knew--Hampson, the editor of the _Sunday Friend_, in fact.
Mr. Persse seemed oddly ill at ease. He was unable to answer the queries which were constantly addressed to him, but his embarra.s.sment was presently relieved. Sir Thomas Ducaine, followed by Mary Lys, rose from his seat and went round about among the people.
”If you will come to my house,” Sir Thomas whispered to this or that friend; ”if you care to come, of course, Joseph is to be there to meet us all at eleven o'clock. He will make the first p.r.o.nouncement as to what he intends to do, as to why he has come to London, and of the message which the future holds.”
On Sunday night, about half-past ten, the squares and the street thoroughfares of the West End of London are not thronged. The exodus of the crowds from the East End which takes place earlier every evening, so that the poor may catch a single holiday glimpse of those more fortunate, is by that time over and done with.
The rats have gone back to their holes, and the s.p.a.cious streets of the wealthy are clear and empty, save only for the swift and silent carriages of those who have supper parties, to end and alleviate the dulness of the first day of the week in town.
The walk from Mayfair to Piccadilly is not a long one, and Joseph, with his companion, met few wayfarers as they walked swiftly among the swept and lighted streets, wound in and out among the palaces of the West End.
Eric Black strode by the side of the Teacher with never a word. His heart was beating within him like sudden drums at midnight. His mind and thoughts were swirling in mult.i.tudinous sensations. What he had seen he had seen, and what to make of it he did not know. Where he was going, he was going, and what new marvel he was about to experience he was unable to conceive or guess.
Yet, as he moved swiftly towards the house of Sir Thomas Ducaine, he knew in a strange, sub-conscious fas.h.i.+on, that all his life was altered, all his ideas of the future were overthrown.
Something had come into the life of the brilliant young man, something had fallen upon him like a sword--it would never be the same any more!
Meanwhile, as he walked with Joseph, he walked with a man who warmed his whole being with awe and reverence. Speculation ceased within him. He was content to be taken where the other would--dominated, captive, and glad.
And in his mental vision there still remained the vivid memory of the miracle which he had seen--the piercing cries of joy and thankfulness, the picture of the poor old man and his recovered son, drowned all other thought within him!
He felt, as Moses must have felt on Sinai, the rapture and fear of one who has been very near to G.o.d.
They came to the door of the house in Piccadilly.
A row of carriages lined the pavement, and the butler was standing in the hall, surrounded by his satellites. The door was half ajar, held by a footman, and as the two men entered there was a sudden stir and movement of the people who were expectant there.
Sir Thomas Ducaine, who had been talking earnestly and in a low voice to Mary Lys, came forward quickly as the two men entered.
His face was charged with a great reverence and affection as he took Joseph by both hands.