Part 15 (1/2)
Do you think as I've shut my eyes because it's my clergyman?” cried the injured man, pa.s.sionately. ”I want my little girl--my little Rosa--as is flesh of my flesh and bone of my bone. If Mr Wentworth didn't know nothing about it, as he says,” cried Elsworthy, with sudden insight, ”he has a feelin' heart, and he'd be grieved about the child; but he aint grieved, nor concerned, nor nothing in the world but angry; and will you tell me there aint nothing to be drawn from that? But it's far from my intention to raise a talk,” said the clerk, drawing closer and touching the arm of the Perpetual Curate; ”let her come back, and if you're a man of your word, and behave honourable by her, there shan't be nothing said in Carlingford. I'll stand up for you, sir, against the world.”
Mr Wentworth shook off his a.s.sailant's hand with a mingled sense of exasperation and sympathy. ”I tell you, upon my honour, I know nothing about her,” he said. ”But it is true enough I have been thinking only of myself,” he continued, addressing the other. ”How about the girl?
When was she lost? and can't you think of any place she can have gone to? Elsworthy, hear reason,” cried the Curate anxiously. ”I a.s.sure you, on my word, that I have never seen her since I closed this garden-gate upon her last night.”
”And I would ask you, sir, what had Rosa to do at your garden-gate?”
cried the clerk of St Roque's. ”He aint denying it, Hayles; you can see as he aint a-denying of it. What was it as she came here for but you? Mr Wentworth, I've always had a great respect for you,” said Elsworthy. ”I've respected you as my clergyman, sir, as well as for other things; but you're a young man, and human nature is frail. I say again as you needn't have no fear of me. I aint one as likes to make a talk, and no more is Hayles. Give up the girl, and give me your promise, and there aint a man living as will be the wiser; Mr Wentworth--”
”Hold your tongue, sir!” cried the Curate, furious with indignation and resentment. ”Leave this place instantly! If you don't want me to pitch you into the middle of the road, hold your tongue and go away.
The man is mad!” said Mr Wentworth, turning towards the spectator, Hayles, and pausing to take breath. But it was evident that this third person was by no means on the Curate's side.
”I don't know, sir, I'm sure,” said Hayles, with a blank countenance.
”It appears to me, sir, as it's an awkward business for all parties.
Here's the girl gone, and no one knows where. When a girl don't come back to her own 'ome all night, things look serious, sir; and it has been said as the last place she was seen was at your door.”
”Who says so?” cried Mr Wentworth.
”Well--it was--a party, sir--a highly respectable party--as I have good reason to believe,” said Hayles, ”being a constant customer--one as there's every confidence to be put in. It's better not to name no names, being at this period of the affair.”
And at that moment, unluckily for Mr Wentworth, there suddenly floated across his mind the clearest recollection of the Miss Hemmings, and the look they gave him in pa.s.sing. He felt a hot flush rush over his face as he recalled it. They, then, were his accusers in the first place; and for the first time he began to realise how the tide of accusation would surge through Carlingford, and how circ.u.mstances would be patched together, and very plausible evidence concocted out of the few facts which were capable of an inference totally opposed to the truth. The blood rushed to his face in an overpowering glow, and then he felt the warm tide going back upon his heart, and realised the position in which he stood for the first time in its true light.
”And if you'll let me say it, sir,” said the judicious Hayles, ”though a man may be in a bit of a pa.s.sion, and speak more strong that is called for, it aint unnatural in the circ.u.mstances; things may be better than they appear,” said the druggist, mildly; ”I don't say nothing against that; it may be as you've took her away, sir (if so be as you have took her away), for to give her a bit of education, or suchlike, before making her your wife; but folks in general aint expected to know that; and when a young girl is kep' out of her 'ome for a whole night, it aint wonderful if her friends take fright. It's a sad thing for Rosa whoever's taken her away, and wherever she is.”
Now, Mr Wentworth, notwithstanding the indignant state of mind which he was in, was emphatically of the tolerant temper which is so curiously characteristic of his generation. He could not be unreasonable even in his own cause; he was not partisan enough, even in his own behalf, to forget that there was another side to the question, nor to see how hard and how sad was that other side. He was moved in spite of himself to grieve over Rosa Elsworthy's great misfortune.
”Poor little deluded child,” he said, sadly; ”I acknowledge it is very dreadful for her and for her friends. I can excuse a man who is mad with grief and wretchedness and anxiety, and doesn't know what he is saying. As for any man in his senses imagining,” said the Curate again, with a flush of sudden colour, ”that I could possibly be concerned in anything so base, that is simply absurd. When Elsworthy returns to reason, and acknowledges the folly of what he has said, I will do anything in the world to help him. It is unnecessary for you to wait,” said Mr Wentworth, turning to Sarah, who had stolen up behind, and caught some of the conversation, and who was staring with round eyes of wonder, partly guessing, partly inquiring, what had happened--”these people want me; go indoors and never mind.”
”La, sir! Missis is a-ringing all the bells down to know what 'as 'appened,” said Sarah, holding her ground.
This was how it was to be--the name of the Curate of St Roque's was to be linked to that of Rosa Elsworthy, let the truth be what it might, in the mouths of every maid and every mistress in Carlingford. He was seized with a sudden apprehension of this aspect of the matter, and it was not wonderful if Mr Wentworth drew his breath hard and set his teeth, as he ordered the woman away, in a tone which could not be disobeyed.
”I don't want to make no talk,” said Elsworthy, who during this time had made many efforts to speak; ”I've sait it before, and I say it again--it's Mr Wentworth's fault if there's any talk. She was seen here last night,” he went on rapidly, ”and afore six o'clock this blessed morning, you, as are never known to be stirring early, meets us at the door, all shaved and dressed; and it aint very difficult to see, to them as watches the clergyman's countenance,” said Elsworthy, turning from one to another, ”as everything isn't as straight as it ought to be; but I aint going to make no talk, Mr Wentworth,” he went on, drawing closer, and speaking with conciliatory softness; ”me and her aunt, sir, loves her dearly, but we're not the folks to stand in her way, if a gentleman was to take a fancy to Rosa. If you'll give me your word to make her your wife honourable, and tell me where she is, tortures wouldn't draw no complaints from me. One moment, sir; it aint only that she's pretty, but she's good as well--she won't do you no discredit, Mr Wentworth. Put her to school, or what you please, sir,”
said Rosa's uncle; ”me and my wife will never interfere, so be as you make her your wife honourable; but I aint a worm to be trampled on,”
cried Elsworthy, as the Curate, finding him approach very closely, thrust him away with vehement indignation; ”I aint a slave to be pushed about. Them as brings Rosa to shame shall come to shame by me; I'll ruin the man as ruins that child. You may turn me out,” he cried, as the Curate laid his powerful hand upon his shoulder and forced him towards the door, ”but I'll come back, and I'll bring all Carlingford.
There shan't be a soul in the town as doesn't know. Oh, you young viper, as I thought was a pious clergyman! you aint got rid of me. My child--where's my child?” cried the infuriated clerk, as he found himself ejected into the road outside, and the door suddenly closed upon him. He turned round to beat upon it in blind fury, and kept calling upon Rosa, and wasting his threats and arguments upon the calm air outside. Some of the maid-servants in the other houses came out, broom in hand, to the green doors, to see what was the matter, but they were not near enough to hear distinctly, and no early wayfarers had as yet invaded the morning quiet of Grange Lane.
Mr Wentworth, white with excitement, and terribly calm and self-possessed, turned to the amazed and trembling druggist, who still stood inside.
”Look here, Hayles,” said the Curate; ”I have never seen Rosa Elsworthy since I closed this door upon her last night. What had brought her here I don't know--at least she came with no intention of seeing me--and I reproved her sharply for being out so late. This is all I know about the affair, and all I intend to say to any one. If that idiot outside intends to make a disturbance, he must do it; I shall take no further trouble to clear myself of such an insane accusation. I think it right to say as much to you, because you seem to have your senses about you,”
said the Curate, pausing, out of breath. He was perfectly calm, but it was impossible to ignore the effect of such a scene upon ordinary flesh and blood. His heart was beating loudly, and his breath came short and quick. He turned away and walked up to the house-door, and then came back again. ”You understand me, I suppose?” he said; ”and if Elsworthy is not mad, you had better suggest to him not to lose his only chance of recovering Rosa by vain bl.u.s.ter with me, who know nothing about her.
I shan't be idle in the mean time,” said Mr Wentworth. All this time Elsworthy was beating against the door, and shouting his threats into the quiet of the morning; and Mrs Hadwin had thrown up her window, and stood there visibly in her nightcap, trying to find out what the noise was about, and trembling for the respectability of her house--all which the Curate apprehended with that extraordinary swiftness and breadth of perception which comes to men at the eventful moments of life.
”I'll do my best, sir,” said Hayles, who felt that his honour was appealed to; ”but it's an awkward business for all parties, that's what it is;” and the druggist backed out in a state of great bewilderment, having a little struggle at the door with Elsworthy to prevent his re-entrance. ”There aint nothing to be got out of _him_,”
said Mr Hayles, as he succeeded at last in leading his friend away.
Such was the conclusion of Mr Wentworth's morning studies, and the sermon which was to have been half written before breakfast upon that eventful Sat.u.r.day. He went back to the house, as was natural, with very different thoughts in his mind.
CHAPTER XXVI.