Ralph makes one last Appointment—and keeps
it
Creeping from the house, and slinking
off like a thief; groping with his hands, when first
he got into the street, as if he were a blind man;
and looking often over his shoulder while he hurried
away, as though he were followed in imagination or
reality by someone anxious to question or detain him;
Ralph Nickleby left the city behind him, and took
the road to his own home.
The night was dark, and a cold wind
blew, driving the clouds, furiously and fast, before
it. There was one black, gloomy mass that seemed
to follow him: not hurrying in the wild chase
with the others, but lingering sullenly behind, and
gliding darkly and stealthily on. He often looked
back at this, and, more than once, stopped to let
it pass over; but, somehow, when he went forward again,
it was still behind him, coming mournfully and slowly
up, like a shadowy funeral train.
He had to pass a poor, mean burial-ground—a
dismal place, raised a few feet above the level of
the street, and parted from it by a low parapet-wall
and an iron railing; a rank, unwholesome, rotten spot,
where the very grass and weeds seemed, in their frouzy
growth, to tell that they had sprung from paupers’
bodies, and had struck their roots in the graves of
men, sodden, while alive, in steaming courts and drunken
hungry dens. And here, in truth, they lay, parted
from the living by a little earth and a board or two—lay
thick and close—corrupting in body as they
had in mind—a dense and squalid crowd.
Here they lay, cheek by jowl with life: no deeper
down than the feet of the throng that passed there
every day, and piled high as their throats.
Here they lay, a grisly family, all these dear departed
brothers and sisters of the ruddy clergyman who did
his task so speedily when they were hidden in the
ground!
As he passed here, Ralph called to
mind that he had been one of a jury, long before,
on the body of a man who had cut his throat; and that
he was buried in this place. He could not tell
how he came to recollect it now, when he had so often
passed and never thought about him, or how it was
that he felt an interest in the circumstance; but
he did both; and stopping, and clasping the iron railings
with his hands, looked eagerly in, wondering which
might be his grave.
While he was thus engaged, there came
towards him, with noise of shouts and singing, some
fellows full of drink, followed by others, who were
remonstrating with them and urging them to go home
in quiet. They were in high good-humour; and
one of them, a little, weazen, hump-backed man, began
to dance. He was a grotesque, fantastic figure,
and the few bystanders laughed. Ralph himself
was moved to mirth, and echoed the laugh of one who
stood near and who looked round in his face.
When they had passed on, and he was left alone again,
he resumed his speculation with a new kind of interest;
for he recollected that the last person who had seen
the suicide alive, had left him very merry, and he
remembered how strange he and the other jurors had
thought that at the time.
He could not fix upon the spot among
such a heap of graves, but he conjured up a strong
and vivid idea of the man himself, and how he looked,
and what had led him to do it; all of which he recalled
with ease. By dint of dwelling upon this theme,
he carried the impression with him when he went away;
as he remembered, when a child, to have had frequently
before him the figure of some goblin he had once seen
chalked upon a door. But as he drew nearer and
nearer home he forgot it again, and began to think
how very dull and solitary the house would be inside.
This feeling became so strong at last,
that when he reached his own door, he could hardly
make up his mind to turn the key and open it.
When he had done that, and gone into the passage, he
felt as though to shut it again would be to shut out
the world. But he let it go, and it closed with
a loud noise. There was no light. How very
dreary, cold, and still it was!
Shivering from head to foot, he made
his way upstairs into the room where he had been last
disturbed. He had made a kind of compact with
himself that he would not think of what had happened
until he got home. He was at home now, and suffered
himself to consider it.
His own child, his own child!
He never doubted the tale; he felt it was true; knew
it as well, now, as if he had been privy to it all
along. His own child! And dead too.
Dying beside Nicholas, loving him, and looking upon
him as something like an angel. That was the
worst!
They had all turned from him and deserted
him in his very first need. Even money could
not buy them now; everything must come out, and everybody
must know all. Here was the young lord dead,
his companion abroad and beyond his reach, ten thousand
pounds gone at one blow, his plot with Gride overset
at the very moment of triumph, his after-schemes discovered,
himself in danger, the object of his persecution and
Nicholas’s love, his own wretched boy; everything
crumbled and fallen upon him, and he beaten down beneath
the ruins and grovelling in the dust.
If he had known his child to be alive;
if no deceit had been ever practised, and he had grown
up beneath his eye; he might have been a careless,
indifferent, rough, harsh father—like enough—he
felt that; but the thought would come that he might
have been otherwise, and that his son might have been
a comfort to him, and they two happy together.
He began to think now, that his supposed death and
his wife’s flight had had some share in making
him the morose, hard man he was. He seemed to
remember a time when he was not quite so rough and
obdurate; and almost thought that he had first hated
Nicholas because he was young and gallant, and perhaps
like the stripling who had brought dishonour and loss
of fortune on his head.
But one tender thought, or one of
natural regret, in his whirlwind of passion and remorse,
was as a drop of calm water in a stormy maddened sea.
His hatred of Nicholas had been fed upon his own
defeat, nourished on his interference with his schemes,
fattened upon his old defiance and success.
There were reasons for its increase; it had grown
and strengthened gradually. Now it attained
a height which was sheer wild lunacy. That his,
of all others, should have been the hands to rescue
his miserable child; that he should have been his
protector and faithful friend; that he should have
shown him that love and tenderness which, from the
wretched moment of his birth, he had never known;
that he should have taught him to hate his own parent
and execrate his very name; that he should now know
and feel all this, and triumph in the recollection;
was gall and madness to the usurer’s heart.
The dead boy’s love for Nicholas, and the attachment
of Nicholas to him, was insupportable agony.
The picture of his deathbed, with Nicholas at his
side, tending and supporting him, and he breathing
out his thanks, and expiring in his arms, when he
would have had them mortal enemies and hating each
other to the last, drove him frantic. He gnashed
his teeth and smote the air, and looking wildly round,
with eyes which gleamed through the darkness, cried
aloud:
’I am trampled down and ruined.
The wretch told me true. The night has come!
Is there no way to rob them of further triumph, and
spurn their mercy and compassion? Is there no
devil to help me?’
Swiftly, there glided again into his
brain the figure he had raised that night. It
seemed to lie before him. The head was covered
now. So it was when he first saw it. The
rigid, upturned, marble feet too, he remembered well.
Then came before him the pale and trembling relatives
who had told their tale upon the inquest—the
shrieks of women—the silent dread of men—the
consternation and disquiet—the victory
achieved by that heap of clay, which, with one motion
of its hand, had let out the life and made this stir
among them—
He spoke no more; but, after a pause,
softly groped his way out of the room, and up the
echoing stairs—up to the top—to
the front garret—where he closed the door
behind him, and remained.
It was a mere lumber-room now, but
it yet contained an old dismantled bedstead; the one
on which his son had slept; for no other had ever
been there. He avoided it hastily, and sat down
as far from it as he could.
The weakened glare of the lights in
the street below, shining through the window which
had no blind or curtain to intercept it, was enough
to show the character of the room, though not sufficient
fully to reveal the various articles of lumber, old
corded trunks and broken furniture, which were scattered
about. It had a shelving roof; high in one part,
and at another descending almost to the floor.
It was towards the highest part that Ralph directed
his eyes; and upon it he kept them fixed steadily
for some minutes, when he rose, and dragging thither
an old chest upon which he had been seated, mounted
on it, and felt along the wall above his head with
both hands. At length, they touched a large iron
hook, firmly driven into one of the beams.
At that moment, he was interrupted
by a loud knocking at the door below. After
a little hesitation he opened the window, and demanded
who it was.
‘I want Mr Nickleby,’ replied a voice.
‘What with him?’
‘That’s not Mr Nickleby’s voice,
surely?’ was the rejoinder.
It was not like it; but it was Ralph who spoke, and
so he said.
The voice made answer that the twin
brothers wished to know whether the man whom he had
seen that night was to be detained; and that although
it was now midnight they had sent, in their anxiety
to do right.
‘Yes,’ cried Ralph, ’detain
him till tomorrow; then let them bring him here—him
and my nephew—and come themselves, and be
sure that I will be ready to receive them.’
‘At what hour?’ asked the voice.
‘At any hour,’ replied
Ralph fiercely. ’In the afternoon, tell
them. At any hour, at any minute. All times
will be alike to me.’
He listened to the man’s retreating
footsteps until the sound had passed, and then, gazing
up into the sky, saw, or thought he saw, the same
black cloud that had seemed to follow him home, and
which now appeared to hover directly above the house.
‘I know its meaning now,’
he muttered, ’and the restless nights, the dreams,
and why I have quailed of late. All pointed to
this. Oh! if men by selling their own souls
could ride rampant for a term, for how short a term
would I barter mine tonight!’
The sound of a deep bell came along the wind.
One.
‘Lie on!’ cried the usurer,
’with your iron tongue! Ring merrily for
births that make expectants writhe, and marriages that
are made in hell, and toll ruefully for the dead whose
shoes are worn already! Call men to prayers
who are godly because not found out, and ring chimes
for the coming in of every year that brings this cursed
world nearer to its end. No bell or book for
me! Throw me on a dunghill, and let me rot there,
to infect the air!’
With a wild look around, in which
frenzy, hatred, and despair were horribly mingled,
he shook his clenched hand at the sky above him, which
was still dark and threatening, and closed the window.
The rain and hail pattered against
the glass; the chimneys quaked and rocked; the crazy
casement rattled with the wind, as though an impatient
hand inside were striving to burst it open. But
no hand was there, and it opened no more.
‘How’s this?’ cried
one. ’The gentleman say they can’t
make anybody hear, and have been trying these two
hours.’
‘And yet he came home last night,’
said another; ’for he spoke to somebody out
of that window upstairs.’
They were a little knot of men, and,
the window being mentioned, went out into the road
to look up at it. This occasioned their observing
that the house was still close shut, as the housekeeper
had said she had left it on the previous night, and
led to a great many suggestions: which terminated
in two or three of the boldest getting round to the
back, and so entering by a window, while the others
remained outside, in impatient expectation.
They looked into all the rooms below:
opening the shutters as they went, to admit the fading
light: and still finding nobody, and everything
quiet and in its place, doubted whether they should
go farther. One man, however, remarking that
they had not yet been into the garret, and that it
was there he had been last seen, they agreed to look
there too, and went up softly; for the mystery and
silence made them timid.
After they had stood for an instant,
on the landing, eyeing each other, he who had proposed
their carrying the search so far, turned the handle
of the door, and, pushing it open, looked through the
chink, and fell back directly.
‘It’s very odd,’
he whispered, ‘he’s hiding behind the door!
Look!’
They pressed forward to see; but one
among them thrusting the others aside with a loud
exclamation, drew a clasp-knife from his pocket, and
dashing into the room, cut down the body.
He had torn a rope from one of the
old trunks, and hung himself on an iron hook immediately
below the trap-door in the ceiling—in the
very place to which the eyes of his son, a lonely,
desolate, little creature, had so often been directed
in childish terror, fourteen years before.