The Plots begin to fail, and Doubts
and Dangers to disturb the Plotter
Ralph sat alone, in the solitary room
where he was accustomed to take his meals, and to
sit of nights when no profitable occupation called
him abroad. Before him was an untasted breakfast,
and near to where his fingers beat restlessly upon
the table, lay his watch. It was long past the
time at which, for many years, he had put it in his
pocket and gone with measured steps downstairs to the
business of the day, but he took as little heed of
its monotonous warning, as of the meat and drink before
him, and remained with his head resting on one hand,
and his eyes fixed moodily on the ground.
This departure from his regular and
constant habit, in one so regular and unvarying in
all that appertained to the daily pursuit of riches,
would almost of itself have told that the usurer was
not well. That he laboured under some mental
or bodily indisposition, and that it was one of no
slight kind so to affect a man like him, was sufficiently
shown by his haggard face, jaded air, and hollow languid
eyes: which he raised at last with a start and
a hasty glance around him, as one who suddenly awakes
from sleep, and cannot immediately recognise the place
in which he finds himself.
‘What is this,’ he said,
’that hangs over me, and I cannot shake off?
I have never pampered myself, and should not be ill.
I have never moped, and pined, and yielded to fancies;
but what can a man do without rest?’
He pressed his hand upon his forehead.
’Night after night comes and
goes, and I have no rest. If I sleep, what rest
is that which is disturbed by constant dreams of the
same detested faces crowding round me—of
the same detested people, in every variety of action,
mingling with all I say and do, and always to my defeat?
Waking, what rest have I, constantly haunted by this
heavy shadow of—I know not what—which
is its worst character? I must have rest.
One night’s unbroken rest, and I should be a
man again.’
Pushing the table from him while he
spoke, as though he loathed the sight of food, he
encountered the watch: the hands of which were
almost upon noon.
‘This is strange!’ he
said; ’noon, and Noggs not here! What drunken
brawl keeps him away? I would give something
now—something in money even after that
dreadful loss—if he had stabbed a man in
a tavern scuffle, or broken into a house, or picked
a pocket, or done anything that would send him abroad
with an iron ring upon his leg, and rid me of him.
Better still, if I could throw temptation in his
way, and lure him on to rob me. He should be
welcome to what he took, so I brought the law upon
him; for he is a traitor, I swear! How, or when,
or where, I don’t know, though I suspect.’
After waiting for another half-hour,
he dispatched the woman who kept his house to Newman’s
lodging, to inquire if he were ill, and why he had
not come or sent. She brought back answer that
he had not been home all night, and that no one could
tell her anything about him.
‘But there is a gentleman, sir,’
she said, ’below, who was standing at the door
when I came in, and he says—’
‘What says he?’ demanded
Ralph, turning angrily upon her. ’I told
you I would see nobody.’
‘He says,’ replied the
woman, abashed by his harshness, ’that he comes
on very particular business which admits of no excuse;
and I thought perhaps it might be about—’
‘About what, in the devil’s
name?’ said Ralph. ’You spy and
speculate on people’s business with me, do you?’
’Dear, no, sir! I saw
you were anxious, and thought it might be about Mr
Noggs; that’s all.’
‘Saw I was anxious!’ muttered
Ralph; ’they all watch me, now. Where
is this person? You did not say I was not down
yet, I hope?’
The woman replied that he was in the
little office, and that she had said her master was
engaged, but she would take the message.
‘Well,’ said Ralph, ’I’ll
see him. Go you to your kitchen, and keep there.
Do you mind me?’
Glad to be released, the woman quickly
disappeared. Collecting himself, and assuming
as much of his accustomed manner as his utmost resolution
could summon, Ralph descended the stairs. After
pausing for a few moments, with his hand upon the
lock, he entered Newman’s room, and confronted
Mr Charles Cheeryble.
Of all men alive, this was one of
the last he would have wished to meet at any time;
but, now that he recognised in him only the patron
and protector of Nicholas, he would rather have seen
a spectre. One beneficial effect, however, the
encounter had upon him. It instantly roused
all his dormant energies; rekindled in his breast
the passions that, for many years, had found an improving
home there; called up all his wrath, hatred, and malice;
restored the sneer to his lip, and the scowl to his
brow; and made him again, in all outward appearance,
the same Ralph Nickleby whom so many had bitter cause
to remember.
‘Humph!’ said Ralph, pausing
at the door. ’This is an unexpected favour,
sir.’
‘And an unwelcome one,’
said brother Charles; ’an unwelcome one, I know.’
‘Men say you are truth itself,
sir,’ replied Ralph. ’You speak
truth now, at all events, and I’ll not contradict
you. The favour is, at least, as unwelcome as
it is unexpected. I can scarcely say more.’
‘Plainly, sir—’ began brother
Charles.
‘Plainly, sir,’ interrupted
Ralph, ’I wish this conference to be a short
one, and to end where it begins. I guess the
subject upon which you are about to speak, and I’ll
not hear you. You like plainness, I believe;
there it is. Here is the door as you see.
Our way lies in very different directions. Take
yours, I beg of you, and leave me to pursue mine in
quiet.’
‘In quiet!’ repeated brother
Charles mildly, and looking at him with more of pity
than reproach. ‘To pursue his way
in quiet!’
’You will scarcely remain in
my house, I presume, sir, against my will,’
said Ralph; ’or you can scarcely hope to make
an impression upon a man who closes his ears to all
that you can say, and is firmly and resolutely determined
not to hear you.’
‘Mr Nickleby, sir,’ returned
brother Charles: no less mildly than before,
but firmly too: ’I come here against my
will, sorely and grievously against my will.
I have never been in this house before; and, to speak
my mind, sir, I don’t feel at home or easy in
it, and have no wish ever to be here again.
You do not guess the subject on which I come to speak
to you; you do not indeed. I am sure of that,
or your manner would be a very different one.’
Ralph glanced keenly at him, but the
clear eye and open countenance of the honest old merchant
underwent no change of expression, and met his look
without reserve.
‘Shall I go on?’ said Mr Cheeryble.
‘Oh, by all means, if you please,’
returned Ralph drily. ’Here are walls
to speak to, sir, a desk, and two stools: most
attentive auditors, and certain not to interrupt you.
Go on, I beg; make my house yours, and perhaps by
the time I return from my walk, you will have finished
what you have to say, and will yield me up possession
again.’
So saying, he buttoned his coat, and
turning into the passage, took down his hat.
The old gentleman followed, and was about to speak,
when Ralph waved him off impatiently, and said:
’Not a word. I tell you,
sir, not a word. Virtuous as you are, you are
not an angel yet, to appear in men’s houses whether
they will or no, and pour your speech into unwilling
ears. Preach to the walls I tell you; not to
me!’
‘I am no angel, Heaven knows,’
returned brother Charles, shaking his head, ’but
an erring and imperfect man; nevertheless, there is
one quality which all men have, in common with the
angels, blessed opportunities of exercising, if they
will; mercy. It is an errand of mercy that brings
me here. Pray let me discharge it.’
‘I show no mercy,’ retorted
Ralph with a triumphant smile, ’and I ask none.
Seek no mercy from me, sir, in behalf of the fellow
who has imposed upon your childish credulity, but
let him expect the worst that I can do.’
‘He ask mercy at your hands!’
exclaimed the old merchant warmly; ’ask it at
his, sir; ask it at his. If you will not hear
me now, when you may, hear me when you must, or anticipate
what I would say, and take measures to prevent our
ever meeting again. Your nephew is a noble lad,
sir, an honest, noble lad. What you are, Mr Nickleby,
I will not say; but what you have done, I know.
Now, sir, when you go about the business in which
you have been recently engaged, and find it difficult
of pursuing, come to me and my brother Ned, and Tim
Linkinwater, sir, and we’ll explain it for you—and
come soon, or it may be too late, and you may have
it explained with a little more roughness, and a little
less delicacy—and never forget, sir, that
I came here this morning, in mercy to you, and am still
ready to talk to you in the same spirit.’
With these words, uttered with great
emphasis and emotion, brother Charles put on his broad-brimmed
hat, and, passing Ralph Nickleby without any other
remark, trotted nimbly into the street. Ralph
looked after him, but neither moved nor spoke for some
time: when he broke what almost seemed the silence
of stupefaction, by a scornful laugh.
‘This,’ he said, ’from
its wildness, should be another of those dreams that
have so broken my rest of late. In mercy to me!
Pho! The old simpleton has gone mad.’
Although he expressed himself in this
derisive and contemptuous manner, it was plain that,
the more Ralph pondered, the more ill at ease he became,
and the more he laboured under some vague anxiety
and alarm, which increased as the time passed on and
no tidings of Newman Noggs arrived. After waiting
until late in the afternoon, tortured by various apprehensions
and misgivings, and the recollection of the warning
which his nephew had given him when they last met:
the further confirmation of which now presented itself
in one shape of probability, now in another, and haunted
him perpetually: he left home, and, scarcely
knowing why, save that he was in a suspicious and
agitated mood, betook himself to Snawley’s house.
His wife presented herself; and, of her, Ralph inquired
whether her husband was at home.
‘No,’ she said sharply,
’he is not indeed, and I don’t think he
will be at home for a very long time; that’s
more.’
‘Do you know who I am?’ asked Ralph.
’Oh yes, I know you very well;
too well, perhaps, and perhaps he does too, and sorry
am I that I should have to say it.’
’Tell him that I saw him through
the window-blind above, as I crossed the road just
now, and that I would speak to him on business,’
said Ralph. ‘Do you hear?’
‘I hear,’ rejoined Mrs
Snawley, taking no further notice of the request.
’I knew this woman was a hypocrite,
in the way of psalms and Scripture phrases,’
said Ralph, passing quietly by, ’but I never
knew she drank before.’
‘Stop! You don’t
come in here,’ said Mr Snawley’s better-half,
interposing her person, which was a robust one, in
the doorway. ’You have said more than enough
to him on business, before now. I always told
him what dealing with you and working out your schemes
would come to. It was either you or the schoolmaster—one
of you, or the two between you—that got
the forged letter done; remember that! That
wasn’t his doing, so don’t lay it at his
door.’
‘Hold your tongue, you Jezebel,’
said Ralph, looking fearfully round.
‘Ah, I know when to hold my
tongue, and when to speak, Mr Nickleby,’ retorted
the dame. ’Take care that other people
know when to hold theirs.’
‘You jade,’ said Ralph,
’if your husband has been idiot enough to trust
you with his secrets, keep them; keep them, she-devil
that you are!’
‘Not so much his secrets as
other people’s secrets, perhaps,’ retorted
the woman; ’not so much his secrets as yours.
None of your black looks at me! You’ll
want ’em all, perhaps, for another time.
You had better keep ’em.’
‘Will you,’ said Ralph,
suppressing his passion as well as he could, and clutching
her tightly by the wrist; ’will you go to your
husband and tell him that I know he is at home, and
that I must see him? And will you tell me what
it is that you and he mean by this new style of behaviour?’
‘No,’ replied the woman,
violently disengaging herself, ’I’ll do
neither.’
‘You set me at defiance, do you?’ said
Ralph.
‘Yes,’ was the answer. I do.’
For an instant Ralph had his hand
raised, as though he were about to strike her; but,
checking himself, and nodding his head and muttering
as though to assure her he would not forget this, walked
away.
Thence, he went straight to the inn
which Mr Squeers frequented, and inquired when he
had been there last; in the vague hope that, successful
or unsuccessful, he might, by this time, have returned
from his mission and be able to assure him that all
was safe. But Mr Squeers had not been there
for ten days, and all that the people could tell about
him was, that he had left his luggage and his bill.
Disturbed by a thousand fears and
surmises, and bent upon ascertaining whether Squeers
had any suspicion of Snawley, or was, in any way,
a party to this altered behaviour, Ralph determined
to hazard the extreme step of inquiring for him at
the Lambeth lodging, and having an interview with
him even there. Bent upon this purpose, and
in that mood in which delay is insupportable, he repaired
at once to the place; and being, by description, perfectly
acquainted with the situation of his room, crept upstairs
and knocked gently at the door.
Not one, nor two, nor three, nor yet
a dozen knocks, served to convince Ralph, against
his wish, that there was nobody inside. He reasoned
that he might be asleep; and, listening, almost persuaded
himself that he could hear him breathe. Even
when he was satisfied that he could not be there,
he sat patiently on a broken stair and waited; arguing,
that he had gone out upon some slight errand, and
must soon return.
Many feet came up the creaking stairs;
and the step of some seemed to his listening ear so
like that of the man for whom he waited, that Ralph
often stood up to be ready to address him when he reached
the top; but, one by one, each person turned off into
some room short of the place where he was stationed:
and at every such disappointment he felt quite chilled
and lonely.
At length he felt it was hopeless
to remain, and going downstairs again, inquired of
one of the lodgers if he knew anything of Mr Squeers’s
movements—mentioning that worthy by an assumed
name which had been agreed upon between them.
By this lodger he was referred to another, and by
him to someone else, from whom he learnt, that, late
on the previous night, he had gone out hastily with
two men, who had shortly afterwards returned for the
old woman who lived on the same floor; and that, although
the circumstance had attracted the attention of the
informant, he had not spoken to them at the time,
nor made any inquiry afterwards.
This possessed him with the idea that,
perhaps, Peg Sliderskew had been apprehended for the
robbery, and that Mr Squeers, being with her at the
time, had been apprehended also, on suspicion of being
a confederate. If this were so, the fact must
be known to Gride; and to Gride’s house he directed
his steps; now thoroughly alarmed, and fearful that
there were indeed plots afoot, tending to his discomfiture
and ruin.
Arrived at the usurer’s house,
he found the windows close shut, the dingy blinds
drawn down; all was silent, melancholy, and deserted.
But this was its usual aspect. He knocked—gently
at first—then loud and vigorously.
Nobody came. He wrote a few words in pencil
on a card, and having thrust it under the door was
going away, when a noise above, as though a window-sash
were stealthily raised, caught his ear, and looking
up he could just discern the face of Gride himself,
cautiously peering over the house parapet from the
window of the garret. Seeing who was below, he
drew it in again; not so quickly, however, but that
Ralph let him know he was observed, and called to
him to come down.
The call being repeated, Gride looked
out again, so cautiously that no part of the old man’s
body was visible. The sharp features and white
hair appearing alone, above the parapet, looked like
a severed head garnishing the wall.
‘Hush!’ he cried. ‘Go away,
go away!’
‘Come down,’ said Ralph, beckoning him.
‘Go a—way!’
squeaked Gride, shaking his head in a sort of ecstasy
of impatience. ’Don’t speak to me,
don’t knock, don’t call attention to the
house, but go away.’
‘I’ll knock, I swear,
till I have your neighbours up in arms,’ said
Ralph, ’if you don’t tell me what you mean
by lurking there, you whining cur.’
’I can’t hear what you
say—don’t talk to me—it
isn’t safe—go away—go
away!’ returned Gride.
‘Come down, I say. Will
you come down?’ said Ralph fiercely.
‘No—o—o—oo,’
snarled Gride. He drew in his head; and Ralph,
left standing in the street, could hear the sash closed,
as gently and carefully as it had been opened.
‘How is this,’ said he,
’that they all fall from me, and shun me like
the plague, these men who have licked the dust from
my feet? Is my day past, and is this indeed
the coming on of night? I’ll know what
it means! I will, at any cost. I am firmer
and more myself, just now, than I have been these
many days.’
Turning from the door, which, in the
first transport of his rage, he had meditated battering
upon until Gride’s very fears should impel him
to open it, he turned his face towards the city, and
working his way steadily through the crowd which was
pouring from it (it was by this time between five
and six o’clock in the afternoon) went straight
to the house of business of the brothers Cheeryble,
and putting his head into the glass case, found Tim
Linkinwater alone.
‘My name’s Nickleby,’ said Ralph.
‘I know it,’ replied Tim, surveying him
through his spectacles.
‘Which of your firm was it who
called on me this morning?’ demanded Ralph.
‘Mr Charles.’
‘Then, tell Mr Charles I want to see him.’
‘You shall see,’ said
Tim, getting off his stool with great agility, ‘you
shall see, not only Mr Charles, but Mr Ned likewise.’
Tim stopped, looked steadily and severely
at Ralph, nodded his head once, in a curt manner which
seemed to say there was a little more behind, and
vanished. After a short interval, he returned,
and, ushering Ralph into the presence of the two brothers,
remained in the room himself.
‘I want to speak to you, who
spoke to me this morning,’ said Ralph, pointing
out with his finger the man whom he addressed.
‘I have no secrets from my brother
Ned, or from Tim Linkinwater,’ observed brother
Charles quietly.
‘I have,’ said Ralph.
‘Mr Nickleby, sir,’ said
brother Ned, ’the matter upon which my brother
Charles called upon you this morning is one which is
already perfectly well known to us three, and to others
besides, and must unhappily soon become known to a
great many more. He waited upon you, sir, this
morning, alone, as a matter of delicacy and consideration.
We feel, now, that further delicacy and consideration
would be misplaced; and, if we confer together, it
must be as we are or not at all.’
‘Well, gentlemen,’ said
Ralph with a curl of the lip, ’talking in riddles
would seem to be the peculiar forte of you two, and
I suppose your clerk, like a prudent man, has studied
the art also with a view to your good graces.
Talk in company, gentlemen, in God’s name.
I’ll humour you.’
‘Humour!’ cried Tim Linkinwater,
suddenly growing very red in the face. ’He’ll
humour us! He’ll humour Cheeryble Brothers!
Do you hear that? Do you hear him? Do
you hear him say he’ll humour Cheeryble Brothers?’
‘Tim,’ said Charles and
Ned together, ‘pray, Tim, pray now, don’t.’
Tim, taking the hint, stifled his
indignation as well as he could, and suffered it to
escape through his spectacles, with the additional
safety-valve of a short hysterical laugh now and then,
which seemed to relieve him mightily.
‘As nobody bids me to a seat,’
said Ralph, looking round, ’I’ll take
one, for I am fatigued with walking. And now,
if you please, gentlemen, I wish to know—I
demand to know; I have the right—what you
have to say to me, which justifies such a tone as you
have assumed, and that underhand interference in my
affairs which, I have reason to suppose, you have
been practising. I tell you plainly, gentlemen,
that little as I care for the opinion of the world
(as the slang goes), I don’t choose to submit
quietly to slander and malice. Whether you suffer
yourselves to be imposed upon too easily, or wilfully
make yourselves parties to it, the result to me is
the same. In either case, you can’t expect
from a plain man like myself much consideration or
forbearance.’
So coolly and deliberately was this
said, that nine men out of ten, ignorant of the circumstances,
would have supposed Ralph to be really an injured
man. There he sat, with folded arms; paler than
usual, certainly, and sufficiently ill-favoured, but
quite collected—far more so than the brothers
or the exasperated Tim—and ready to face
out the worst.
‘Very well, sir,’ said
brother Charles. ’Very well. Brother
Ned, will you ring the bell?’
‘Charles, my dear fellow! stop
one instant,’ returned the other. ’It
will be better for Mr Nickleby and for our object that
he should remain silent, if he can, till we have said
what we have to say. I wish him to understand
that.’
‘Quite right, quite right,’ said brother
Charles.
Ralph smiled, but made no reply.
The bell was rung; the room-door opened; a man came
in, with a halting walk; and, looking round, Ralph’s
eyes met those of Newman Noggs. From that moment,
his heart began to fail him.
‘This is a good beginning,’
he said bitterly. ’Oh! this is a good
beginning. You are candid, honest, open-hearted,
fair-dealing men! I always knew the real worth
of such characters as yours! To tamper with
a fellow like this, who would sell his soul (if he
had one) for drink, and whose every word is a lie.
What men are safe if this is done? Oh, it’s
a good beginning!’
‘I will speak,’ cried
Newman, standing on tiptoe to look over Tim’s
head, who had interposed to prevent him. ’Hallo,
you sir—old Nickleby!—what do
you mean when you talk of “a fellow like this”?
Who made me “a fellow like this”?
If I would sell my soul for drink, why wasn’t
I a thief, swindler, housebreaker, area sneak, robber
of pence out of the trays of blind men’s dogs,
rather than your drudge and packhorse? If my
every word was a lie, why wasn’t I a pet and
favourite of yours? Lie! When did I ever
cringe and fawn to you. Tell me that!
I served you faithfully. I did more work, because
I was poor, and took more hard words from you because
I despised you and them, than any man you could have
got from the parish workhouse. I did.
I served you because I was proud; because I was a
lonely man with you, and there were no other drudges
to see my degradation; and because nobody knew, better
than you, that I was a ruined man: that I hadn’t
always been what I am: and that I might have
been better off, if I hadn’t been a fool and
fallen into the hands of you and others who were knaves.
Do you deny that?’
‘Gently,’ reasoned Tim; ‘you said
you wouldn’t.’
‘I said I wouldn’t!’
cried Newman, thrusting him aside, and moving his
hand as Tim moved, so as to keep him at arm’s
length; ’don’t tell me! Here, you
Nickleby! Don’t pretend not to mind me;
it won’t do; I know better. You were talking
of tampering, just now. Who tampered with Yorkshire
schoolmasters, and, while they sent the drudge out,
that he shouldn’t overhear, forgot that such
great caution might render him suspicious, and that
he might watch his master out at nights, and might
set other eyes to watch the schoolmaster? Who
tampered with a selfish father, urging him to sell
his daughter to old Arthur Gride, and tampered with
Gride too, and did so in the little office, with
A closet in the room?’
Ralph had put a great command upon
himself; but he could not have suppressed a slight
start, if he had been certain to be beheaded for it
next moment.
‘Aha!’ cried Newman, ’you
mind me now, do you? What first set this fag
to be jealous of his master’s actions, and to
feel that, if he hadn’t crossed him when he
might, he would have been as bad as he, or worse?
That master’s cruel treatment of his own flesh
and blood, and vile designs upon a young girl who
interested even his broken-down, drunken, miserable
hack, and made him linger in his service, in the hope
of doing her some good (as, thank God, he had done
others once or twice before), when he would, otherwise,
have relieved his feelings by pummelling his master
soundly, and then going to the Devil. He would—mark
that; and mark this—that I’m here
now, because these gentlemen thought it best.
When I sought them out (as I did; there was no tampering
with me), I told them I wanted help to find you out,
to trace you down, to go through with what I had begun,
to help the right; and that when I had done it, I’d
burst into your room and tell you all, face to face,
man to man, and like a man. Now I’ve said
my say, and let anybody else say theirs, and fire
away!’
With this concluding sentiment, Newman
Noggs, who had been perpetually sitting down and getting
up again all through his speech, which he had delivered
in a series of jerks; and who was, from the violent
exercise and the excitement combined, in a state of
most intense and fiery heat; became, without passing
through any intermediate stage, stiff, upright, and
motionless, and so remained, staring at Ralph Nickleby
with all his might and main.
Ralph looked at him for an instant,
and for an instant only; then, waved his hand, and
beating the ground with his foot, said in a choking
voice:
’Go on, gentlemen, go on!
I’m patient, you see. There’s law
to be had, there’s law. I shall call you
to an account for this. Take care what you say;
I shall make you prove it.’
‘The proof is ready,’
returned brother Charles, ’quite ready to our
hands. The man Snawley, last night, made a confession.’
‘Who may “the man Snawley”
be,’ returned Ralph, ’and what may his
“confession” have to do with my affairs?’
To this inquiry, put with a dogged
inflexibility of manner, the old gentleman returned
no answer, but went on to say, that to show him how
much they were in earnest, it would be necessary to
tell him, not only what accusations were made against
him, but what proof of them they had, and how that
proof had been acquired. This laying open of
the whole question brought up brother Ned, Tim Linkinwater,
and Newman Noggs, all three at once; who, after a vast
deal of talking together, and a scene of great confusion,
laid before Ralph, in distinct terms, the following
statement.
That, Newman, having been solemnly
assured by one not then producible that Smike was
not the son of Snawley, and this person having offered
to make oath to that effect, if necessary, they had
by this communication been first led to doubt the claim
set up, which they would otherwise have seen no reason
to dispute, supported as it was by evidence which
they had no power of disproving. That, once
suspecting the existence of a conspiracy, they had
no difficulty in tracing back its origin to the malice
of Ralph, and the vindictiveness and avarice of Squeers.
That, suspicion and proof being two very different
things, they had been advised by a lawyer, eminent
for his sagacity and acuteness in such practice, to
resist the proceedings taken on the other side for
the recovery of the youth as slowly and artfully as
possible, and meanwhile to beset Snawley (with whom
it was clear the main falsehood must rest); to lead
him, if possible, into contradictory and conflicting
statements; to harass him by all available means; and
so to practise on his fears, and regard for his own
safety, as to induce him to divulge the whole scheme,
and to give up his employer and whomsoever else he
could implicate. That, all this had been skilfully
done; but that Snawley, who was well practised in
the arts of low cunning and intrigue, had successfully
baffled all their attempts, until an unexpected circumstance
had brought him, last night, upon his knees.
It thus arose. When Newman Noggs
reported that Squeers was again in town, and that
an interview of such secrecy had taken place between
him and Ralph that he had been sent out of the house,
plainly lest he should overhear a word, a watch was
set upon the schoolmaster, in the hope that something
might be discovered which would throw some light upon
the suspected plot. It being found, however,
that he held no further communication with Ralph,
nor any with Snawley, and lived quite alone, they
were completely at fault; the watch was withdrawn,
and they would have observed his motions no longer,
if it had not happened that, one night, Newman stumbled
unobserved on him and Ralph in the street together.
Following them, he discovered, to his surprise, that
they repaired to various low lodging-houses, and taverns
kept by broken gamblers, to more than one of whom Ralph
was known, and that they were in pursuit—so
he found by inquiries when they had left—of
an old woman, whose description exactly tallied with
that of deaf Mrs Sliderskew. Affairs now appearing
to assume a more serious complexion, the watch was
renewed with increased vigilance; an officer was procured,
who took up his abode in the same tavern with Squeers:
and by him and Frank Cheeryble the footsteps of the
unconscious schoolmaster were dogged, until he was
safely housed in the lodging at Lambeth. Mr Squeers
having shifted his lodging, the officer shifted his,
and lying concealed in the same street, and, indeed,
in the opposite house, soon found that Mr Squeers
and Mrs Sliderskew were in constant communication.
In this state of things, Arthur Gride
was appealed to. The robbery, partly owing to
the inquisitiveness of the neighbours, and partly to
his own grief and rage, had, long ago, become known;
but he positively refused to give his sanction or
yield any assistance to the old woman’s capture,
and was seized with such a panic at the idea of being
called upon to give evidence against her, that he shut
himself up close in his house, and refused to hold
communication with anybody. Upon this, the pursuers
took counsel together, and, coming so near the truth
as to arrive at the conclusion that Gride and Ralph,
with Squeers for their instrument, were negotiating
for the recovery of some of the stolen papers which
would not bear the light, and might possibly explain
the hints relative to Madeline which Newman had overheard,
resolved that Mrs Sliderskew should be taken into
custody before she had parted with them: and Squeers
too, if anything suspicious could be attached to him.
Accordingly, a search-warrant being procured, and
all prepared, Mr Squeers’s window was watched,
until his light was put out, and the time arrived when,
as had been previously ascertained, he usually visited
Mrs Sliderskew. This done, Frank Cheeryble and
Newman stole upstairs to listen to their discourse,
and to give the signal to the officer at the most
favourable time. At what an opportune moment
they arrived, how they listened, and what they heard,
is already known to the reader. Mr Squeers,
still half stunned, was hurried off with a stolen
deed in his possession, and Mrs Sliderskew was apprehended
likewise. The information being promptly carried
to Snawley that Squeers was in custody—he
was not told for what—that worthy, first
extorting a promise that he should be kept harmless,
declared the whole tale concerning Smike to be a fiction
and forgery, and implicated Ralph Nickleby to the
fullest extent. As to Mr Squeers, he had, that
morning, undergone a private examination before a
magistrate; and, being unable to account satisfactorily
for his possession of the deed or his companionship
with Mrs Sliderskew, had been, with her, remanded
for a week.
All these discoveries were now related
to Ralph, circumstantially, and in detail. Whatever
impression they secretly produced, he suffered no
sign of emotion to escape him, but sat perfectly still,
not raising his frowning eyes from the ground, and
covering his mouth with his hand. When the narrative
was concluded; he raised his head hastily, as if about
to speak, but on brother Charles resuming, fell into
his old attitude again.
‘I told you this morning,’
said the old gentleman, laying his hand upon his brother’s
shoulder, ’that I came to you in mercy.
How far you may be implicated in this last transaction,
or how far the person who is now in custody may criminate
you, you best know. But, justice must take its
course against the parties implicated in the plot
against this poor, unoffending, injured lad.
It is not in my power, or in the power of my brother
Ned, to save you from the consequences. The
utmost we can do is, to warn you in time, and to give
you an opportunity of escaping them. We would
not have an old man like you disgraced and punished
by your near relation; nor would we have him forget,
like you, all ties of blood and nature. We entreat
you—brother Ned, you join me, I know, in
this entreaty, and so, Tim Linkinwater, do you, although
you pretend to be an obstinate dog, sir, and sit there
frowning as if you didn’t—we entreat
you to retire from London, to take shelter in some
place where you will be safe from the consequences
of these wicked designs, and where you may have time,
sir, to atone for them, and to become a better man.’
‘And do you think,’ returned
Ralph, rising, ’and do you think, you will so
easily crush me? Do you think that a hundred
well-arranged plans, or a hundred suborned witnesses,
or a hundred false curs at my heels, or a hundred
canting speeches full of oily words, will move me?
I thank you for disclosing your schemes, which I am
now prepared for. You have not the man to deal
with that you think; try me! and remember that I spit
upon your fair words and false dealings, and dare
you—provoke you—taunt you—to
do to me the very worst you can!’
Thus they parted, for that time; but
the worst had not come yet.