On the following Sunday morning, Mr.
Mordaunt had a large congregation. Indeed, he
could scarcely remember any Sunday on which the church
had been so crowded. People appeared upon the
scene who seldom did him the honor of coming to hear
his sermons.
There were even people from Hazelton,
which was the next parish. There were hearty,
sunburned farmers, stout, comfortable, apple-cheeked
wives in their best bonnets and most gorgeous shawls,
and half a dozen children or so to each family.
The doctor’s wife was there, with her four daughters.
Mrs. Kimsey and Mr. Kimsey, who kept the druggist’s
shop, and made pills, and did up powders for everybody
within ten miles, sat in their pew; Mrs. Dibble in
hers; Miss Smiff, the village dressmaker, and her
friend Miss Perkins, the milliner, sat in theirs;
the doctor’s young man was present, and the druggist’s
apprentice; in fact, almost every family on the county
side was represented, in one way or another.
In the course of the preceding week,
many wonderful stories had been told of little Lord
Fauntleroy. Mrs. Dibble had been kept so busy
attending to customers who came in to buy a pennyworth
of needles or a ha’porth of tape and to hear
what she had to relate, that the little shop bell
over the door had nearly tinkled itself to death over
the coming and going. Mrs. Dibble knew exactly
how his small lordship’s rooms had been furnished
for him, what expensive toys had been bought, how
there was a beautiful brown pony awaiting him, and
a small groom to attend it, and a little dog-cart,
with silver-mounted harness. And she could tell,
too, what all the servants had said when they had caught
glimpses of the child on the night of his arrival;
and how every female below stairs had said it was
a shame, so it was, to part the poor pretty dear from
his mother; and had all declared their hearts came
into their mouths when he went alone into the library
to see his grandfather, for “there was no knowing
how he’d be treated, and his lordship’s
temper was enough to fluster them with old heads on
their shoulders, let alone a child.”
“But if you’ll believe
me, Mrs. Jennifer, mum,” Mrs. Dibble had said,
“fear that child does not know—so
Mr. Thomas hisself says; an’ set an’ smile
he did, an’ talked to his lordship as if they’d
been friends ever since his first hour. An’
the Earl so took aback, Mr. Thomas says, that he couldn’t
do nothing but listen and stare from under his eyebrows.
An’ it’s Mr. Thomas’s opinion, Mrs.
Bates, mum, that bad as he is, he was pleased in his
secret soul, an’ proud, too; for a handsomer
little fellow, or with better manners, though so old-fashioned,
Mr. Thomas says he’d never wish to see.”
And then there had come the story
of Higgins. The Reverend Mr. Mordaunt had told
it at his own dinner table, and the servants who had
heard it had told it in the kitchen, and from there
it had spread like wildfire.
And on market-day, when Higgins had
appeared in town, he had been questioned on every
side, and Newick had been questioned too, and in response
had shown to two or three people the note signed “Fauntleroy.”
And so the farmers’ wives had
found plenty to talk of over their tea and their shopping,
and they had done the subject full justice and made
the most of it. And on Sunday they had either
walked to church or had been driven in their gigs
by their husbands, who were perhaps a trifle curious
themselves about the new little lord who was to be
in time the owner of the soil.
It was by no means the Earl’s
habit to attend church, but he chose to appear on
this first Sunday—it was his whim to present
himself in the huge family pew, with Fauntleroy at
his side.
There were many loiterers in the churchyard,
and many lingerers in the lane that morning.
There were groups at the gates and in the porch, and
there had been much discussion as to whether my lord
would really appear or not. When this discussion
was at its height, one good woman suddenly uttered
an exclamation.
“Eh,” she said, “that
must be the mother, pretty young thing.”
All who heard turned and looked at the slender figure
in black coming up the path. The veil was thrown
back from her face and they could see how fair and
sweet it was, and how the bright hair curled as softly
as a child’s under the little widow’s
cap.
She was not thinking of the people
about; she was thinking of Cedric, and of his visits
to her, and his joy over his new pony, on which he
had actually ridden to her door the day before, sitting
very straight and looking very proud and happy.
But soon she could not help being attracted by the
fact that she was being looked at and that her arrival
had created some sort of sensation. She first
noticed it because an old woman in a red cloak made
a bobbing courtesy to her, and then another did the
same thing and said, “God bless you, my lady!”
and one man after another took off his hat as she
passed. For a moment she did not understand,
and then she realized that it was because she was little
Lord Fauntleroy’s mother that they did so, and
she flushed rather shyly and smiled and bowed too,
and said, “Thank you,” in a gentle voice
to the old woman who had blessed her. To a person
who had always lived in a bustling, crowded American
city this simple deference was very novel, and at
first just a little embarrassing; but after all, she
could not help liking and being touched by the friendly
warm-heartedness of which it seemed to speak.
She had scarcely passed through the stone porch into
the church before the great event of the day happened.
The carriage from the Castle, with its handsome horses
and tall liveried servants, bowled around the corner
and down the green lane.
“Here they come!” went from one looker-on
to another.
And then the carriage drew up, and
Thomas stepped down and opened the door, and a little
boy, dressed in black velvet, and with a splendid mop
of bright waving hair, jumped out.
Every man, woman, and child looked curiously upon
him.
“He’s the Captain over
again!” said those of the on-lookers who remembered
his father. “He’s the Captain’s
self, to the life!”
He stood there in the sunlight looking
up at the Earl, as Thomas helped that nobleman out,
with the most affectionate interest that could be
imagined. The instant he could help, he put out
his hand and offered his shoulder as if he had been
seven feet high. It was plain enough to every
one that however it might be with other people, the
Earl of Dorincourt struck no terror into the breast
of his grandson.
“Just lean on me,” they
heard him say. “How glad the people are
to see you, and how well they all seem to know you!”
“Take off your cap, Fauntleroy,”
said the Earl. “They are bowing to you.”
“To me!” cried Fauntleroy,
whipping off his cap in a moment, baring his bright
head to the crowd and turning shining, puzzled eyes
on them as he tried to bow to every one at once.
“God bless your lordship!”
said the courtesying, red-cloaked old woman who had
spoken to his mother; “long life to you!”
“Thank you, ma’am,”
said Fauntleroy. And then they went into the church,
and were looked at there, on their way up the aisle
to the square, red-cushioned and curtained pew.
When Fauntleroy was fairly seated, he made two discoveries
which pleased him: the first that, across the
church where he could look at her, his mother sat and
smiled at him; the second, that at one end of the
pew, against the wall, knelt two quaint figures carven
in stone, facing each other as they kneeled on either
side of a pillar supporting two stone missals, their
pointed hands folded as if in prayer, their dress
very antique and strange. On the tablet by them
was written something of which he could only read the
curious words:
“Here lyeth ye bodye of Gregorye
Arthure Fyrst Earle of Dorincourt Allsoe of Alisone
Hildegarde hys wyfe.”
“May I whisper?” inquired
his lordship, devoured by curiosity.
“What is it?” said his grandfather.
“Who are they?”
“Some of your ancestors,”
answered the Earl, “who lived a few hundred
years ago.”
“Perhaps,” said Lord Fauntleroy,
regarding them with respect, “perhaps I got
my spelling from them.” And then he proceeded
to find his place in the church service. When
the music began, he stood up and looked across at
his mother, smiling. He was very fond of music,
and his mother and he often sang together, so he joined
in with the rest, his pure, sweet, high voice rising
as clear as the song of a bird. He quite forgot
himself in his pleasure in it. The Earl forgot
himself a little too, as he sat in his curtain-shielded
corner of the pew and watched the boy. Cedric
stood with the big psalter open in his hands, singing
with all his childish might, his face a little uplifted,
happily; and as he sang, a long ray of sunshine crept
in and, slanting through a golden pane of a stained
glass window, brightened the falling hair about his
young head. His mother, as she looked at him
across the church, felt a thrill pass through her
heart, and a prayer rose in it too,—a prayer
that the pure, simple happiness of his childish soul
might last, and that the strange, great fortune which
had fallen to him might bring no wrong or evil with
it. There were many soft, anxious thoughts in
her tender heart in those new days.
“Oh, Ceddie!” she had
said to him the evening before, as she hung over him
in saying good-night, before he went away; “oh,
Ceddie, dear, I wish for your sake I was very clever
and could say a great many wise things! But only
be good, dear, only be brave, only be kind and true
always, and then you will never hurt any one, so long
as you live, and you may help many, and the big world
may be better because my little child was born.
And that is best of all, Ceddie,—it is better
than everything else, that the world should be a little
better because a man has lived—even ever
so little better, dearest.”
And on his return to the Castle, Fauntleroy
had repeated her words to his grandfather.
“And I thought about you when
she said that,” he ended; “and I told her
that was the way the world was because you had lived,
and I was going to try if I could be like you.”
“And what did she say to that?”
asked his lordship, a trifle uneasily.
“She said that was right, and
we must always look for good in people and try to
be like it.”
Perhaps it was this the old man remembered
as he glanced through the divided folds of the red
curtain of his pew. Many times he looked over
the people’s heads to where his son’s wife
sat alone, and he saw the fair face the unforgiven
dead had loved, and the eyes which were so like those
of the child at his side; but what his thoughts were,
and whether they were hard and bitter, or softened
a little, it would have been hard to discover.
As they came out of church, many of
those who had attended the service stood waiting to
see them pass. As they neared the gate, a man
who stood with his hat in his hand made a step forward
and then hesitated. He was a middle-aged farmer,
with a careworn face.
“Well, Higgins,” said the Earl.
Fauntleroy turned quickly to look at him.
“Oh!” he exclaimed, “is it Mr. Higgins?”
“Yes,” answered the Earl
dryly; “and I suppose he came to take a look
at his new landlord.”
“Yes, my lord,” said the
man, his sunburned face reddening. “Mr.
Newick told me his young lordship was kind enough
to speak for me, and I thought I’d like to say
a word of thanks, if I might be allowed.”
Perhaps he felt some wonder when he
saw what a little fellow it was who had innocently
done so much for him, and who stood there looking up
just as one of his own less fortunate children might
have done—apparently not realizing his
own importance in the least.
“I’ve a great deal to
thank your lordship for,” he said; “a great
deal. I——”
“Oh,” said Fauntleroy;
“I only wrote the letter. It was my grandfather
who did it. But you know how he is about always
being good to everybody. Is Mrs. Higgins well
now?”
Higgins looked a trifle taken aback.
He also was somewhat startled at hearing his noble
landlord presented in the character of a benevolent
being, full of engaging qualities.
“I—well, yes, your
lordship,” he stammered, “the missus is
better since the trouble was took off her mind.
It was worrying broke her down.”
“I’m glad of that,”
said Fauntleroy. “My grandfather was very
sorry about your children having the scarlet fever,
and so was I. He has had children himself. I’m
his son’s little boy, you know.”
Higgins was on the verge of being
panic-stricken. He felt it would be the safer
and more discreet plan not to look at the Earl, as
it had been well known that his fatherly affection
for his sons had been such that he had seen them about
twice a year, and that when they had been ill, he
had promptly departed for London, because he would
not be bored with doctors and nurses. It was
a little trying, therefore, to his lordship’s
nerves to be told, while he looked on, his eyes gleaming
from under his shaggy eyebrows, that he felt an interest
in scarlet fever.
“You see, Higgins,” broke
in the Earl with a fine grim smile, “you people
have been mistaken in me. Lord Fauntleroy understands
me. When you want reliable information on the
subject of my character, apply to him. Get into
the carriage, Fauntleroy.”
And Fauntleroy jumped in, and the
carriage rolled away down the green lane, and even
when it turned the corner into the high road, the Earl
was still grimly smiling.