Part 18 (1/2)

While Meynell was pa.s.sing through the woods of Forked Pond a very different scene, vitally connected with the Rector and his fortunes, was pa.s.sing a mile away, in a workman's cottage at Upcote Minor.

Barron had spent an agitated day. After his interview with the Bishop, in which he was rather angrily conscious that his devotion and his zeal were not rewarded with as much grat.i.tude or as complete a confidence on the Bishop's part as he might have claimed, he called on Canon France.

To him he talked long and emphatically on the situation, on the excessive caution of the Bishop, who had entirely refused to inhibit any one of the eighteen, at present, lest there should be popular commotions; on the measures that he and his friends were taking, and on the strong feeling that he believed to be rising against the Modernists. It was evident that he was discontented with the Bishop, and believed himself the only saviour of the situation.

Canon France watched him, sunk deep in his armchair, the plump fingers of one hand playing with certain charter rolls of the fourteenth century, with their seals attached, which lay in a tray beside him. He had just brought them over from the Cathedral Library, and was longing to be at work on them. Barron's conversation did not interest him in the least, and he even grudged him his second cup of tea. But he did not show his impatience. He prophesied a speedy end to a ridiculous movement; wondered what on earth would happen to some of the men, who had nothing but their livings, and finally said, with a humorous eye, and no malicious intention:

”The Romanists have always an easy way of settling these things. They find a scandal or invent one. But Meynell, I suppose, is immaculate.”

Barron shook his head.

”Meynell's life is absolutely correct, outwardly,” he said slowly. ”Of course the Upcote people whom he has led away think him a saint.”

”Ah, well,” said the Canon, smiling, ”no hope then--that way. I rejoice, of course, for Meynell's sake. But the goodness of the unbeliever is becoming a great puzzle to mankind.”

”Apparent goodness,” said Barron hotly.

The Canon smiled again. He wished--and this time more intensely--that Barron would go, and let him get to his charters.

And in a few minutes Barron did take his departure. As he walked to the inn to find his carriage he pondered the problem of the virtuous unbeliever. A certain Bampton lecture by a well-known and learned Bishop recurred to him, which most frankly and drastically connected ”Unbelief”

with ”Sin.” Yet somehow the view was not borne out, as in the interests of a sound theology it should have been, by experience.

After all, he reached Upcote in good time before dinner, and remembering that he had to inflict a well-deserved lecture on the children who had been caught injuring trees and stealing wood in his plantations, he dismissed the carriage and made his way, before going home, to the cottage, which stood just outside the village, on the way from Maudeley to the Rectory and the church.

He knocked peremptorily. But no one came. He knocked again, chafing at the delay. But still no one came, and after going round the cottage, tapping at one of the windows, and getting no response, he was just going away, in the belief that the cottage was empty, when there was a rattling sound at the front door. It opened, and an old woman stood in the doorway.

”You've made a pretty noise,” she said grimly, ”but there's no one in but me.”

”I am Mr. Barron,” said her visitor, sharply. ”And I want to see John Broad. My keepers have been complaining to me about his children's behaviour in the woods.”

The woman before him shook her head irritably.

”What's the good of asking me? I only came off the cars here last night.”

”You're a lodger, I suppose?” said Barron, eyeing her suspiciously. He did not allow his tenants to take in lodgers.

And the more he examined her the stranger did her aspect seem. She was evidently a woman of seventy or upward, and it struck him that she looked haggard and ill. Her grayish-white hair hung untidily about a thin, bony face; the eyes, hollow and wavering, infected the spectator with their own distress; yet the distress was so angry that it rather repelled than appealed. Her dress was quite out of keeping with the labourer's cottage in which she stood. It was a shabby blue silk, fas.h.i.+onably cut, and set off by numerous lockets and bangles.

She smiled scornfully at Barron's questions.

”A lodger? Well, I daresay I am. I'm John's mother.”

”His mother?” said Barron, astonished. ”I didn't know he had a mother alive.” But as he spoke some vague recollection of Theresa's talk in the morning came back upon him.

The strange person in the doorway looked at him oddly.

”Well, I daresay you didn't. There's a many as would say the same. I've been away this eighteen year, come October.”

Barron, as she spoke, was struck with her accent, and recalled her mention of ”the cars.”

”Why, you've been in the States,” he said.