Part 81 (2/2)
”Have I ever failed when you have accepted my a.s.sistance?”
”No: that's true. Well, I shall be glad of your a.s.sistance now, heaven knows; only I can't imagine--”
”Never mind: will you take Grace Carden if I throw her into your arms?”
”Oh, mother, can you ask me?”
Mrs. Little rang the bell, and ordered a fly. Henry offered to accompany her. She declined. ”Go to bed early,” said she, ”and trust to your mother. We are harder to beat sometimes than a good many Mr. Bolts.”
She drove to Dr. Amboyne's house, and sent in her name. She was ushered into the doctor's study, and found him s.h.i.+vering over an enormous fire.
”Influenza.”
”Oh dear,” said she, ”I'm afraid you are very ill.”
”Never mind that. Sit down. You will not make me any worse, you may be sure of that.” And he smiled affectionately on her.
”But I came to intrude my own troubles on you.”
”All the better. That will help me forget mine.”
Mrs. Little seated herself, and, after a slight hesitation, opened her battery thus:--”Well, my good friend, I am come to ask you a favor. It is to try and reconcile my brother and me. If any one can do it, you can.”
”Praise the method, not the man. If one could only persuade you to put yourself in his place, and him to put himself in yours, you would be both reconciled in five minutes.”
”You forget we have been estranged this five-and-twenty years.”
”No I don't. The only question is, whether you can and will deviate from the practice of the world into an obese lunatic's system, both of you.”
”Try ME, to begin.”
The doctor's eyes sparkled with satisfaction. ”Well, then,” said he, ”first you must recollect all the differences you have seen between the male and female mind, and imagine yourself a man.”
”Oh, dear! that is so hard. But I have studied Henry. Well, there--I have uns.e.xed myself--in imagination.”
”You are not only a man but a single-minded man, with a high and clear sense of obligation. You are a trustee, bound by honor to protect the interests of a certain woman and a certain child. The lady, under influence, wishes to borrow her son's money, and risk it on rotten security. You decline, and the lady's husband affronts you. In spite of that affront, being a high-minded man not to be warped by petty irritation, you hurry to your lawyers to get two thousand pounds of your own, for the man who had affronted you.”
”Is that so?” said Mrs. Little. ”I was not aware of that.”
”I have just learned it, accidentally, from the son of the solicitor Raby went to that fatal night.”
A tear stole down Mrs. Little's cheek.
”Now, remember, you are not a woman, but a brave, high-minded man. In that character you pity poor Mr. Little, but you blame him a little because he fled from trouble, and left his wife and child in it. To you, who are Guy Raby--mind that, please--it seems egotistical and weak to desert your wife and child even for the grave.” (The widow buried her face and wept. Twenty-five years do something to withdraw the veil the heart has cast over the judgment.) ”But, whatever you feel, you utter only regret, and open your arms to your sister. She writes back in an agony, for which, being a man, you can not make all the allowance you would if you were a woman, and denounces you as her husband's murderer, and bids you speak to her and write to her no more, and with that she goes to the Littles. Can you blame yourself that, after all this, you wait for her to review your conduct more soberly, and to invite a reconciliation.”
Mrs. Little gave Dr. Amboyne her hand, ”Bitter, but wholesome medicine!”
she murmured, and then was too overcome to speak for a little while.
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