THE PASSING BELL
The following morning Sir Nigel did
not appear at the breakfast table. He breakfasted
in his own room, and it became known throughout the
household that he had suddenly decided to go away,
and his man was packing for the journey. What
the journey or the reason for its being taken happened
to be were things not explained to anyone but Lady
Anstruthers, at the door of whose dressing room he
appeared without warning, just as she was leaving
it.
Rosalie started when she found herself
confronting him. His eyes looked hot and hollow
with feverish sleeplessness.
“You look ill,” she exclaimed
involuntarily. “You look as if you had not
slept.”
“Thank you. You always
encourage a man. I am not in the habit of sleeping
much,” he answered. “I am going away
for my health. It is as well you should know.
I am going to look up old Broadmorlands. I want
to know exactly where he is, in case it becomes necessary
for me to see him. I also require some trifling
data connected with Ffolliott. If your father
is coming, it will be as well to be able to lay my
hands on things. You can explain to Betty.
Good-morning.” He waited for no reply,
but wheeled about and left her.
Betty herself wore a changed face
when she came down. A cloud had passed over her
blooming, as clouds pass over a morning sky and dim
it. Rosalie asked herself if she had not noticed
something like this before. She began to think
she had. Yes, she was sure that at intervals there
had been moments when she had glanced at the brilliant
face with an uneasy and yet half-unrealising sense
of looking at a glowing light temporarily waning.
The feeling had been unrealisable, because it was not
to be explained. Betty was never ill, she was
never low-spirited, she was never out of humour or
afraid of things—that was why it was so
wonderful to live with her. But—yes,
it was true—there had been days when the
strong, fine light of her had waned. Lady Anstruthers’
comprehension of it arose now from her memory of the
look she had seen the night before in the eyes which
suddenly had gazed straight before her, as into an
unknown place.
“Yes, I know—I know—I
know!” And the tone in the girl’s voice
had been one Rosy had not heard before.
Slight wonder—if you knew—at
any outward change which showed itself, though in
your own most desperate despite. It would be so
even with Betty, who, in her sister’s eyes,
was unlike any other creature. But perhaps it
would be better to make no comment. To make comment
would be almost like asking the question she had been
forbidden to ask.
While the servants were in the room
during breakfast they talked of common things, resorting
even to the weather and the news of the village.
Afterwards they passed into the morning room together,
and Betty put her arm around Rosalie and kissed her.
“Nigel has suddenly gone away,
I hear,” she said. “Do you know where
he has gone?”
“He came to my dressing-room
to tell me.” Betty felt the whole slim body
stiffen itself with a determination to seem calm.
“He said he was going to find out where the
old Duke of Broadmorlands was staying at present.”
“There is some forethought in
that,” was Betty’s answer. “He
is not on such terms with the Duke that he can expect
to be received as a casual visitor. It will require
apt contrivance to arrange an interview. I wonder
if he will be able to accomplish it?”
“Yes, he will,” said Lady
Anstruthers. “I think he can always contrive
things like that.” She hesitated a moment,
and then added: “He said also that he wished
to find out certain things about Mr. Ffolliott—’trifling
data,’ he called it—that he might
be able to lay his hands on things if father came.
He told me to explain to you.”
“That was intended for a taunt—but
it’s a warning,” Betty said, thinking
the thing over. “We are rather like ladies
left alone to defend a besieged castle. He wished
us to feel that.” She tightened her enclosing
arm. “But we stand together—together.
We shall not fail each other. We can face siege
until father comes.”
“You wrote to him last night?”
“A long letter, which I wish
him to receive before he sails. He might decide
to act upon it before leaving New York, to advise with
some legal authority he knows and trusts, to prepare
our mother in some way—to do some wise
thing we cannot foresee the value of. He has known
the outline of the story, but not exact details—particularly
recent ones. I have held back nothing it was
necessary he should know. I am going out to post
the letter myself. I shall send a cable asking
him to prepare to come to us after he has reflected
on what I have written.”
Rosalie was very quiet, but when,
having left the room to prepare to go to the village,
Betty came back to say a last word, her sister came
to her and laid her hand on her arm.
“I have been so weak and trodden
upon for years that it would not be natural for you
to quite trust me,” she said. “But
I won’t fail you, Betty—I won’t.”
The winter was drawing in, the last
autumn days were short and often grey and dreary;
the wind had swept the leaves from the trees and scattered
them over park lands and lanes, where they lay a mellow-hued,
rustling carpet, shifting with each chill breeze that
blew. The berried briony garlands clung to the
bared hedges, and here and there flared scarlet, still
holding their red defiantly until hard frosts should
come to shrivel and blacken them. The rare hours
of sunshine were amber hours instead of golden.
As she passed through the park gate
Betty was thinking of the first morning on which she
had walked down the village street between the irregular
rows of red-tiled cottages with the ragged little enclosing
gardens. Then the air and sunshine had been of
the just awakening spring, now the sky was brightly
cold, and through the small-paned windows she caught
glimpses of fireglow. A bent old man walking very
slowly, leaning upon two sticks, had a red-brown woollen
muffler wrapped round his neck. Seeing her, he
stopped and shuffled the two sticks into one hand
that he might leave the other free to touch his wrinkled
forehead stiffly, his face stretching into a slow smile
as she stopped to speak to him.
“Good-morning, Marlow,”
he said. “How is the rheumatism to-day?”
He was a deaf old man, whose conversation
was carried on principally by guesswork, and it was
easy for him to gather that when her ladyship’s
handsome young sister had given him greeting she had
not forgotten to inquire respecting the “rheumatics,”
which formed the greater part of existence.
“Mornin’, miss—mornin’,”
he answered in the high, cracked voice of rural ancientry.
“Winter be nigh, an’ they damp days be
full of rheumatiz. ’T’int easy to
get about on my old legs, but I be main thankful for
they warm things you sent, miss. This ’ere,”
fumbling at his red-brown muffler proudly, “’tis
a comfort on windy days, so ‘tis, and warmth
be a good thing to a man when he be goin’ down
hill in years.”
“All of you who are not able
to earn your own fires shall be warm this winter,”
her ladyship’s handsome sister said, speaking
closer to his ear. “You shall all be warm.
Don’t be afraid of the cold days coming.”
He shuffled his sticks and touched
his forehead again, looking up at her admiringly and
chuckling.
“’T’will be a new
tale for Stornham village,” he cackled. “’T’will
be a new tale. Thank ye, miss. Thank ye.”
As she nodded smilingly and passed
on, she heard him cackling still under his breath
as he hobbled on his slow way, comforted and elate.
How almost shamefully easy it was; a few loads of
coal and faggots here and there, a few blankets and
warm garments whose cost counted for so little when
one’s hands were full, could change a gruesome
village winter into a season during which labour-stiffened
and broken old things, closing their cottage doors,
could draw their chairs round the hearth and hover
luxuriously over the red glow, which in its comforting
fashion of seeming to have understanding of the dull
dreams in old eyes, was more to be loved than any
human friend.
But she had not needed her passing
speech with Marlow to stimulate realisation of how
much she had learned to care for the mere living among
these people, to whom she seemed to have begun to belong,
and whose comfortably lighting faces when they met
her showed that they knew her to be one who might
be turned to in any hour of trouble or dismay.
The centuries which had trained them to depend upon
their “betters” had taught the slowest
of them to judge with keen sight those who were to
be trusted, not alone as power and wealth holders,
but as creatures humanly upright and merciful with
their kind.
“Workin’ folk allus knows
gentry,” old Doby had once shrilled to her.
“Gentry’s gentry, an’ us knows ’em
wheresoever they be. Better’n they know
theirselves. So us do!”
Yes, they knew. And though they
accepted many things as being merely their natural
rights, they gave an unsentimental affection and appreciation
in return. The patriarchal note in the life was
lovable to her. Each creature she passed was
a sort of friend who seemed almost of her own blood.
It had come to that. This particular existence
was more satisfying to her than any other, more heart-filling
and warmly complete.
“Though I am only an impostor,”
she thought; “I was born in Fifth Avenue; yet
since I have known this I shall be quite happy in no
other place than an English village, with a Norman
church tower looking down upon it and rows of little
gardens with spears of white and blue lupins and Canterbury
bells standing guard before cottage doors.”
And Rosalie—on the evening
of that first strange day when she had come upon her
piteous figure among the heather under the trees near
the lake—Rosalie had held her arm with a
hot little hand and had said feverishly:
“If I could hear the roar of
Broadway again! Do the stages rattle as they
used to, Betty? I can’t help hoping that
they do.”
She carried her letter to the post
and stopped to talk a few minutes with the postmaster,
who transacted his official business in a small shop
where sides of bacon and hams hung suspended from the
ceiling, while groceries, flannels, dress prints,
and glass bottles of sweet stuff filled the shelves.
“Mr. Tewson’s” was the central point
of Stornham in a commercial sense. The establishment
had also certain social qualifications.
Mr. Tewson knew the secrets of all
hearts within the village radius, also the secrets
of all constitutions. He knew by some occult means
who had been “taken bad,” or who had “taken
a turn,” and was aware at once when anyone was
“sinkin’ fast.” With such differences
of opinion as occasionally arose between the vicar
and his churchwardens he was immediately familiar.
The history of the fever among the hop pickers at
Dunstan village he had been able to relate in detail
from the moment of its outbreak. It was he who
had first dramatically revealed the truth of the action
Miss Vanderpoel had taken in the matter, which revelation
had aroused such enthusiasm as had filled The Clock
Inn to overflowing and given an impetus to the sale
of beer. Tread, it was said, had even made a
speech which he had ended with vague but excellent
intentions by proposing the joint healths of her ladyship’s
sister and the “President of America.”
Mr. Tewson was always glad to see Miss Vanderpoel cross
his threshold. This was not alone because she
represented the custom of the Court, which since her
arrival had meant large regular orders and large bills
promptly paid, but that she brought with her an exotic
atmosphere of interest and excitement.
He had mentioned to friends that somehow
a talk with her made him feel “set up for the
day.” Betty was not at all sure that he
did not prepare and hoard up choice remarks or bits
of information as openings to conversation.
This morning he had thrilling news
for her and began with it at once.
“Dr. Fenwick at Stornham is
very low, miss,” he said. “He’s
very low, you’ll be sorry to hear. The
worry about the fever upset him terrible and his bronchitis
took him bad. He’s an old man, you know.”
Miss Vanderpoel was very sorry to
hear it. It was quite in the natural order of
things that she should ask other questions about Dunstan
village and the Mount, and she asked several.
The fever was dying out and pale convalescents
were sometimes seen in the village or strolling about
the park. His lordship was taking care of the
people and doing his best for them until they should
be strong enough to return to their homes.
“But he’s very strict
about making it plain that it’s you, miss, they
have to thank for what he does.”
“That is not quite just,”
said Miss Vanderpoel. “He and Mr. Penzance
fought on the field. I only supplied some of the
ammunition.”
“The county doesn’t think
of him as it did even a year ago, miss,” said
Tewson rather smugly. “He was very ill thought
of then among the gentry. It’s wonderful
the change that’s come about. If he should
fall ill there’ll be a deal of sympathy.”
“I hope there is no question
of his falling ill,” said Miss Vanderpoel.
Mr. Tewson lowered his voice confidentially.
This was really his most valuable item of news.
“Well, miss,” he admitted,
“I have heard that he’s been looking very
bad for a good bit, and it was told me quite private,
because the doctors and the vicar don’t want
the people to be upset by hearing it—that
for a week he’s not been well enough to make
his rounds.”
“Oh!” The exclamation
was a faint one, but it was an exclamation. “I
hope that means nothing really serious,” Miss
Vanderpoel added. “Everyone will hope so.”
“Yes, miss,” said Mr.
Tewson, deftly twisting the string round the package
he was tying up for her. “A sad reward it
would be if he lost his life after doing all he has
done. A sad reward! But there’d be
a good deal of sympathy.”
The small package contained trifles
of sewing and knitting materials she was going to
take to Mrs. Welden, and she held out her hand for
it. She knew she did not smile quite naturally
as she said her good-morning to Tewson. She went
out into the pale amber sunshine and stood a few moments,
glad to find herself bathed in it again. She suddenly
needed air and light. “A sad reward!”
Sometimes people were not rewarded. Brave men
were shot dead on the battlefield when they were doing
brave things; brave physicians and nurses died of
the plagues they faithfully wrestled with. Here
were dread and pain confronting her—Betty
Vanderpoel—and while almost everyone else
seemed to have faced them, she was wholly unused to
their appalling clutch. What a life hers had been—that
in looking back over it she should realise that she
had never been touched by anything like this before!
There came back to her the look of almost awed wonder
in G. Selden’s honest eyes when he said:
“What it must be to be you—just you!”
He had been thinking only of the millions and of the
freedom from all everyday anxieties the millions gave.
She smiled faintly as the thought crossed her brain.
The millions! The rolling up of them year by
year, because millions were breeders! The newspaper
stories of them—the wonder at and belief
in their power! It was all going on just as before,
and yet here stood a Vanderpoel in an English village
street, of no more worth as far as power to aid herself
went than Joe Buttle’s girl with the thick waist
and round red cheeks. Jenny Buttle would have
believed that her ladyship’s rich American sister
could do anything she chose, open any door, command
any presence, sweep aside any obstacle with a wave
of her hand. But of the two, Jenny Buttle’s
path would have laid straighter before her. If
she had had “a young man” who had fallen
ill she would have been free if his mother had cherished
no objection to their “walking out”—to
spend all her spare hours in his cottage, making gruel
and poultices, crying until her nose and eyes were
red, and pouring forth her hopes and fears to any
neighbour who came in or out or hung over the dividing
garden hedge. If the patient died, the deeper
her mourning and the louder her sobs at his funeral
the more respectable and deserving of sympathy and
admiration would Jenny Buttle have been counted.
Her ladyship’s rich American sister had no “young
man”; she had not at any time been asked to “walk
out.” Even in the dark days of the fever,
each of which had carried thought and action of hers
to the scene of trouble, there had reigned unbroken
silence, except for the vicar’s notes of warm
and appreciative gratitude.
“You are very obstinate, Fergus,” Mr.
Penzance had said.
And Mount Dunstan had shaken his head fiercely and
answered:
“Don’t speak to me about
it. Only obstinacy will save me from behaving
like—other blackguards.”
Mr. Penzance, carefully polishing
his eyeglasses as he watched him, was not sparing
in his comment.
“That is pure folly,”
he said, “pure bull-necked, stubborn folly,
charging with its head down. Before it has done
with you it will have made you suffer quite enough.”
“Be sure of that,” Mount
Dunstan had said, setting his teeth, as he sat in
his chair clasping his hands behind his head and glowering
into space.
Mr. Penzance quietly, speculatively,
looked him over, and reflected aloud—or,
so it sounded.
“It is a big-boned and big-muscled
characteristic, but there are things which are stronger.
Some one minute will arrive—just one minute—which
will be stronger. One of those moments when the
mysteries of the universe are at work.”
“Don’t speak to me like
that, I tell you!” Mount Dunstan broke out passionately.
And he sprang up and marched out of the room like an
angry man.
Miss Vanderpoel did not go to Mrs.
Welden’s cottage at once, but walked past its
door down the lane, where there were no more cottages,
but only hedges and fields on either side of her.
“Not well enough to make his rounds” might
mean much or little. It might mean a temporary
breakdown from overfatigue or a sickening for deadly
illness. She looked at a group of cropping sheep
in a field and at a flock of rooks which had just
alighted near it with cawing and flapping of wings.
She kept her eyes on them merely to steady herself.
The thoughts she had brought out with her had grown
heavier and were horribly difficult to control.
One must not allow one’s self to believe the
worst will come—one must not allow it.
She always held this rule before herself,
and now she was not holding it steadily. There
was nothing to do. She could write a mere note
of inquiry to Mr. Penzance, but that was all.
She could only walk up and down the lanes and think—whether
he lay dying or not. She could do nothing, even
if a day came when she knew that a pit had been dug
in the clay and he had been lowered into it with creaking
ropes, and the clods shovelled back upon him where
he lay still—never having told her that
he was glad that her being had turned to him and her
heart cried aloud his name. She recalled with
curious distinctness the effect of the steady toll
of the church bell—the “passing bell.”
She could hear it as she had heard
it the first time it fell upon her ear, and she had
inquired what it meant. Why did they call it the
“passing bell”? All had passed before
it began to toll—all had passed. If
it tolled at Dunstan and the pit was dug in the churchyard
before her father came, would he see, the moment they
met, that something had befallen her—that
the Betty he had known was changed—gone?
Yes, he would see. Affection such as his always
saw. Then he would sit alone with her in some
quiet room and talk to her, and she would tell him
the strange thing that had happened. He would
understand—perhaps better than she.
She stopped abruptly in her walk and
stood still. The hand holding her package was
quite cold. This was what one must not allow one’s
self. But how the thoughts had raced through
her brain! She turned and hastened her steps
towards Mrs. Welden’s cottage.
In Mrs. Welden’s tiny back yard
there stood a “coal lodge” suited to the
size of the domicile and already stacked with a full
winter’s supply of coal. Therefore the
well-polished and cleanly little grate in the living-room
was bright with fire.
Old Doby, who had tottered round the
corner to pay his fellow gossip a visit, was sitting
by it, and old Mrs. Welden, clean as to cap and apron
and small purple shoulder shawl, had evidently been
allaying his natural anxiety as to the conduct of
foreign sovereigns by reading in a loud voice the
“print” under the pictures in an illustrated
paper.
This occupation had, however, been
interrupted a few moments before Miss Vanderpoel’s
arrival. Mrs. Bester, the neighbour in the next
cottage, had stepped in with her youngest on her hip
and was talking breathlessly. She paused to drop
her curtsy as Betty entered, and old Doby stood up
and made his salute with a trembling hand,
“She’ll know,” he
said. “Gentry knows the ins an’ outs
of gentry fust. She’ll know the rights.”
“What has happened?”
Mrs. Bester unexpectedly burst into
tears. There was an element in the female villagers’
temperament which Betty had found was frequently unexpected
in its breaking forth.
“He’s down, miss,”
she said. “He’s down with it crool
bad. There’ll be no savin’ of him—none.”
Betty laid her package of sewing cotton
and knitting wool quietly on the blue and white checked
tablecloth.
“Who—is he?” she asked.
“His lordship—and
him just saved all Dunstan parish from death—to
go like this!”
In Stornham village and in all others
of the neighbourhood the feminine attitude towards
Mount Dunstan had been one of strongly emotional admiration.
The thwarted female longing for romance—the
desire for drama and a hero had been fed by him.
A fine, big young man, one that had been “spoke
ill of” and regarded as an outcast, had suddenly
turned the tables on fortune and made himself the
central figure of the county, the talk of gentry in
their grand houses, of cottage women on their doorsteps,
and labourers stopping to speak to each other by the
roadside. Magic stories had been told of him,
beflowered with dramatic detail. No incident
could have been related to his credit which would
not have been believed and improved upon. Shut
up in his village working among his people and unseen
by outsiders, he had become a popular idol. Any
scrap of news of him—any rumour, true or
untrue, was seized upon and excitedly spread abroad.
Therefore Mrs. Bester wept as she talked, and, if
the truth must be told, enjoyed the situation.
She was the first to tell the story to her ladyship’s
sister herself, as well as to Mrs. Welden and old
Doby.
“It’s Tom as brought it
in,” she said. “He’s my brother,
miss, an’ he’s one of the ringers.
He heard it from Jem Wesgate, an’ he heard it
at Toomy’s farm. They’ve been keepin’
it hid at the Mount because the people that’s
ill hangs on his lordship so that the doctors daren’t
let them know the truth. They’ve been told
he had to go to London an’ may come back any
day. What Tom was sayin’, miss, was that
we’d all know when it was over, for we’d
hear the church bell toll here same as it’d
toll at Dunstan, because they ringers have talked it
over an’ they’re goin’ to talk it
over to-day with the other parishes—Yangford
an’ Meltham an’ Dunholm an’ them.
Tom says Stornham ringers met just now at The Clock
an’ said that for a man that’s stood by
labouring folk like he has, toll they will, an’
so ought the other parishes, same as if he was royalty,
for he’s made himself nearer. They’ll
toll the minute they hear it, miss. Lord help
us!” with a fresh outburst of crying. “It
don’t seem like it’s fair as it should
be. When we hear the bell toll, miss——”
“Don’t!” said her
ladyship’s handsome sister suddenly. “Please
don’t say it again.”
She sat down by the table, and resting
her elbows on the blue and white checked cloth, covered
her face with her hands. She did not speak at
all. In this tiny room, with these two old souls
who loved her, she need not explain. She sat
quite still, and Mrs. Welden after looking at her
for a few seconds was prompted by some sublimely simple
intuition, and gently sidled Mrs. Bester and her youngest
into the little kitchen, where the copper was.
“Her helpin’ him like
she did, makes it come near,” she whispered.
“Dessay it seems as if he was a’most like
a relation.”
Old Doby sat and looked at his goddess.
In his slowly moving old brain stirred far-off memories
like long-dead things striving to come to life.
He did not know what they were, but they wakened his
dim eyes to a new seeing of the slim young shape leaning
a little forward, the soft cloud of hair, the fair
beauty of the cheek. He had not seen anything
like it in his youth, but—it was Youth
itself, and so was that which the ringers were so
soon to toll for; and for some remote and unformed
reason, to his scores of years they were pitiful and
should be cheered. He bent forward himself and
put out his ancient, veined and knotted, gnarled and
trembling hand, to timorously touch the arm of her
he worshipped and adored.
“God bless ye!” he said,
his high, cracked voice even more shrill and thin
than usual. “God bless ye!” And as
she let her hands slip down, and, turning, gently
looked at him, he nodded to her speakingly, because
out of the dimness of his being, some part of Nature’s
working had strangely answered and understood.