Complete works of hall c.., p.61
Complete Works of Hall Caine, page 61
Paul rose to his feet. “That is impossible. I cannot promise it,” he said.
“Why?”
“Honor and justice require that my brother Hugh, and not I, should be my father’s heir — he, at least, must know.”
“What honor, and what justice?”
“The honor of a true man — the justice of the law of England.”
Mrs. Ritson dropped her head. “So much for your honor,” she said. “But what of mine?”
“Mother, what do you mean?”
“That if you allow your younger brother to inherit, the world by that act will be told all — your father’s sin, your mother’s shame.”
Mrs. Ritson raised her hands to her face, and turned aside. Paul stepped up to her and kissed her forehead reverently.
“You are right,” he said. “Forgive me — I thought only of myself. The world that loves to tarnish a pure name would like to gloat over your sorrow. That it shall never! Man’s law may have been outraged, but God’s law is still inviolate. Whatever my birth, I am as much your son in the light of Heaven as Jacob was the son of Isaac, or David of Jesse. Come, let us go to him — he may yet live to acknowledge me.”
It had been a terrible moment, but it was past. To live to manhood in ignorance of the dishonor of his birth, and then to learn the truth under the shadow of death — this had been a tragic experience. The love he had borne his father — the reverence he had learned at his mother’s knee — to what bitter test had they been put! Had all the past been but as the marble image of a happy life! Was all the future shattered before him! Pshaw! he was the unconscious slave of a superstition — a phantasm, a gingerbread superstition!
And a mightier touch awoke his sensibilities — the touch of nature. Before God at that moment he was his father’s son. If the world, or the world’s law, said otherwise, then they were of the devil, and deserving to be damned. What rite, what jabbering ceremony, what priestly ordinance, what legal mummery, stood between him and his claim to his father’s name?
Paul took in love the hand of his mother. “Let us go in to him,” he repeated, and together they walked across the room.
The outer door was flung open, and Greta entered, flushed and with wide-open eyes. At the same instant the inner door swung noiselessly back, and Hugh Ritson stood on the threshold. Greta was about to speak, but Hugh motioned her to silence. His face was pale, his hand trembled. “Too late,” he said, huskily; “he is dead!”
Greta sunk on to the settle in the window recess. Hugh walked to the hearth and paused with rigid features before the haunting mirror.
Paul stood for a moment hand in hand with his mother, motionless, speechless, cold at his heart. Then he hurried into the inner room. Mrs. Ritson followed him, closing the door behind him.
The little oak-bound room was dusky; the lamp that burned low was shaded. Across the bed lay Allan Ritson, in his habit as he lived. But his lips were white and cold.
Paul stood and looked down. There lay his father — his father still! His father by right of nature — of love — of honor — let the world say what it would.
And he knew the truth at last: too late to look into those glassy eyes and read the secret of their long years of suffering love.
“Father,” Paul whispered, and fell to his knees by the deaf ear.
Mrs. Ritson, strangely quiet, strangely calm, stepped to the opposite side of the bed, and placed one hand on the dead man’s breast.
“Paul,” she said, “come here.”
He rose to his feet and walked to her side.
“Lay your hand with mine, and pledge to me your solemn word never to speak of what you have heard to-night until that great day when we three shall stand together before the great white throne.”
Paul placed his hand side by side with hers, and lifted his eyes to heaven.
“On my father’s body, by my mother’s honor — never to reveal to any human soul, by word or deed, his act or her shame — always to bear myself as their lawful son before man, even as I am their rightful son before God — I swear it! I swear it!”
His voice was cold and clear, but the words were scarcely uttered when he fell to his knees again, with a subdued cry of overwrought feeling.
Mrs. Ritson staggered back, caught the curtains of the bed, and covered her face. All was still.
Then a shuffling footfall was heard on the floor. Hugh Ritson was in the darkened room. He lifted the shaded lamp from the table, approached the bedside, and held the lamp with one hand above his head. The light fell on the outstretched body of his father and the bowed head of his brother.
BOOK II. THE COIL OF THE TEMPTATION.
CHAPTER I.
It was late in November, and the day was dark and drear. Hoar-frost lay on the ground. The atmosphere was pallid with haze and dense with mystery. Gaunt specters of white mist swept across the valley and gathered at the sides of every open door. The mountains were gone. Only a fibrous vagueness was visible.
In an old pasture field by the bridge a man was plowing. He was an elderly man, sturdy and stolid of figure, and clad in blue homespun. There was nothing clerical in his garb or manner, yet he was the vicar and school-master of the parish. His low-crowned hat was drawn deep over his slumberous gray eyes. The mobile mouth beneath completed the expression of gentleness and easy good-nature. It was a fine old face, with the beauty of simplicity and the sweetness of content.
A boy in front led the horses, and whistled. The parson hummed a tune as he turned his furrows. Sometimes he sung in a drawling tone —
“Bonny lass, canny lass, wilta be mine?
Thou’s nowder wesh dishes nor sarra the swine.”
At the turn-rows he paused, and rested on his plow handles. He rested longest at the turn-rows on the roadside of the field. Like the shivering mists that grouped about the open doors, he was held there by light and warmth.
The smithy stood at the opposite side of the road, cut into the rock of the fell on three sides, and having a roof of thatch. The glare of the fire, now rising, now falling, streamed through the open door. It sent a long vista of light through the blank and pulsating haze. The vibrations of the anvil were all but the only sounds on the air; the alternate thin clink of the smith’s hand-hammer and the thick thud of the striker’s sledge echoed in unseen recesses of the hills beyond.
This smithy of Newlands filled the function which under a higher propitiousness of circumstance is answered by a club. Girded with his leather apron, his sleeves rolled tightly over his knotty arms, the smith, John Proudfoot, stood waiting for his heat. His striker, Geordie Moore, had fallen to at the bellows. On the tool chest sat Gubblum Oglethorpe, leisurely smoking. His pony was tied to the hasp of the gate. The miller, Dick of the Syke, sat on a pile of iron rods. Tom o’ Dint, the little bow-legged fiddler and postman, was sharpening at the grindstone a penknife already worn obliquely to a point by many similar applications.
“Nay, I can make nowt of him. He’s a changed man for sure,” said the blacksmith.
Gubblum removed his pipe and muttered sententiously:
“It’s die-spensy, I tell thee.”
“Dandering and wandering about at all hours of the day and night,” continued the blacksmith.
“It’s all die-spensy,” repeated the peddler.
“And as widderful and wizzent as a polecat nailed up on a barn door,” said Tom o’ Dint, lifting his grating knife from the grindstone and speaking with a voice as hoarse.
“Eh, and as weak as watter with it,” added the blacksmith.
“His as was as strong as rum punch,” rejoined the fiddler.
“It’s die-spensy, John — nowt else,” said Gubblum.
The miller broke in testily.
“What’s die-spensy?”
“What ails Paul Ritson?” answered Gubblum.
“Shaf on your balderdash,” said Dick of the Syke; “die-spensying and die-spensying. You’ve no’ but your die-spensy for everything. Tommy’s rusty throat, and John’s big toe, and lang Geordie’s broken nose, as Giles Raisley gave him a’ Saturday neet at the Pack Horse — it’s all die-spensy.”
The miller was a blusterous fellow, who could swear in lusty anger and laugh in boisterous sport in a single breath.
Gubblum puffed placidly.
“It is die-spensy. I know it by exper’ence,” he observed, persistently.
The blacksmith’s little eyes twinkled mischievously.
“To be sure you do, Gubblum. You had it bad the day you crossed in the packet from Whitehebben. That was die-spensy — a cute bout too.”
“I’ve heard as it were amazing rough on the watter that day,” said Tom, in a pause of the wheel, glancing up knowingly at the blacksmith.
“Heard, had you? Must have been tolerable deaf else. Rough? Why, them do say as the packet were wrecked, and only two planks saved. Gubblum was washed ashore cross-legged on one of them, and his pack on the other.”
The long, labored breathings of the bellows ended, the iron was thrown white hot out of the glowing coals on to the anvil, and the clank of the hand-hammer and thud of the sledge were all that could be heard. Then the iron cooled, and was lifted back into the palpitating blaze. The blacksmith stepped to the door, wiped his streaming forehead with one hand and waved the other to the parson plowing in the opposite field.
“A canny morning, Mr. Christian,” he shouted. “Bad luck for the parson’s young lady, anyhow — her sweetheart is none to keen for the wedding,” he said, turning again to the fire.
“She’s a fine like lass, yon,” said Tom o’ Dint.
An old man, iron gray, with a pair of mason’s mallets swung front and back across his shoulders, stepped into the smithy.
“How fend ye, John?” he said.
“Middling weel, Job,” answered the blacksmith; “and what’s your errand now?”
“A chisel or two for tempering.”
“Cutting in the church-yard to-day, Job? Cold wark, eh?”
“Ey, auld Ritson’s stone as they’ve putten over him.”
The blacksmith tapped the peddler on the arm.
“Gubblum, shall I tell you what’s a-matter with Paul?”
“Never you bother, John, it’s die-spensy.”
“It’s fretting — that’s it — fretting for his father.”
“Fretting for his fiddlesticks!” shouted Dick, the miller; “Allan’s dead this half a year.”
“John’s reet,” said Job, the stone-cutter; “it is fretting.”
Dick of the Syke got up off the iron rods.
“Because a young fellow has given you a job of wark to cut his father’s headstone and tell a lie or two in letters half an inch deep and two shillings a dozen — does that show ‘at he’s fretting?”
“He didn’t do nowt of the sort,” said Job, hotly.
“Dusta mean as it were the other one — Hugh?” inquired the miller.
“Maybe that’s reet,” said Job.
Dick of the Syke was not to be beaten for lack of the logic of circumlocution.
“Then what for do you say as Paul is weeping his insides out about his father, when he leaves it to other folks to put a bit of stone over him and a few scrats on it?”
“Because I do say so,” said Job, conclusively.
“And maybe you’ve got your reasons, Job,” said the blacksmith with insinuating suavity.
“Maybe I have,” said the mason. Then softening, he added, “I don’t mind telling you, neither. Yesterday morning when I went to wark I found Paul Ritson lying full length across his father’s grave. His clothes were soaking with dew, and his face was as white as a Feb’uary mist, and stiff and set like, and his hair was frosted over same as a pane in the church window.”
“Never!”
“He was like to take no note of me, but I gave him a shake, and called out, ‘What, Mr. Paul! why, what, man! what’s this?’”
“And what ever did he say?”
“Say! Nowt. He get hissel’ up — and gay stiff in the limbs he looked, to be sure — and walked off without a word.”
Gubblum on the tool chest had removed his pipe from between his lips during the mason’s narrative, and listened with a face of blank amazement.
“Weel, that is a stiffener,” he said, drawing a long breath.
“What’s a stiffener?” said Job, sharply.
“That ‘at you’re telling for gospel truth.” Then, turning to the blacksmith, the peddler pointed the shank of his pipe at the mason, and said: “What morning was it as he found Paul Ritson taking a bath to hissel’ in the kirk-yard?”
“Why, yesterday morning,” said the smith.
“Well, he bangs them all at lying!” said Gubblum.
“What dusta say?” shouted Job, with sudden fury.
“As you’ve telt us a lie,” answered Gubblum.
“Sista, Gubblum, if you don’t take that word back I’ll — I’ll throw you into the water-butt!”
“And what would I do while you were thrang at that laal job?” asked the peddler.
The blacksmith interposed.
“Sec a rumpus!” he said; “you’re too sudden in your temper, Job.”
“Some folks are ower much like their namesakes in the Bible,” said Gubblum, resuming his pipe.
“Then what for did he say it worn’t true as I found young Ritson yesterday morning wet to the skin in the church-yard?” said Job, ignoring the peddler.
“Because he warn’t there,” said Gubblum.
Job lost all patience.
“Look here,” he said, “if you’re not hankering for a cold bath on a frosty morning, laal man, I don’t know as you’ve got any call to say that again!”
“He warn’t there,” the “laal man” muttered doggedly.
The blacksmith had plunged his last heat into the water trough to cool, and a cloud of vapor filled the smithy.
“Lord A’mighty!” he said, laughing, “that’s the way some folks go off — all of a hiss and a smoke.”
“He warn’t there,” mumbled the peddler again, impervious to the homely similitude.
“How are you so certain sure?” said Dick of the Syke. “You warn’t there yourself, I reckon.”
“No; but I was somewhere else, and so was Paul Ritson. I slept at the Pack House in Kezzick night afore last, and he did the same.”
“Did you see him there?” said the blacksmith.
“No; but Giles Raisley saw him, and he warn’t astir when Giles went on his morning shift at eight o’clock.”
The blacksmith broke into a loud guffaw.
“Tell us how he was at the Hawk and Heron in London at midsummer.”
“And so he was,” said Gubblum, unabashed.
“Willy-nilly, ey?” said the blacksmith, pausing over the anvil with uplifted hammer, the lurid reflection of the hot iron on his face.
“Maybe he had his reasons for denying hisself,” said Gubblum.
The blacksmith laughed again, tapped the iron with the hand-hammer, down came the sledge, and the flakes flew.
Two miners entered the smithy.
“Good-morning, John; are ye gayly?” said one of them.
“Gayly, gayly! Why, it’s Giles hissel’!”
“Giles,” said the peddler, “where was Paul Ritson night afore last?”
“Abed, I reckon,” chuckled one of the new-comers.
“Where abed?”
“Nay, don’t ax me. Wait — night afore last? That was the night he slept at Janet’s, wasn’t it?”
Gubblum’s eyes twinkled with triumph.
“What, did I tell you?”
“What call had he to sleep at Keswick?” said the blacksmith; “it’s no’but four miles from his own bed at the Ghyll.”
“Nay, now, when ye ax the like o’ that—”
Tom, the postman, stopped his grindstone and snuckered huskily:
“Maybe he’s had a fratch with yon brother — yon Hugh.”
“I’m on the morning shift this week, and Mother Janet she said: ‘Giles,’ she said, ‘the brother of your young master came late last night for a bed.’”
“Job, what do you say to that?” shouted the blacksmith above the pulsating of the bellows, and with the sharp white lights of the leaping flames on his laughing face.
“Say! That they’re a pack of liars!” said the mason, catching up his untempered chisels and flinging out of the smithy.
When he had gone, Gubblum removed his pipe and said calmly: “He’s ower much like his Bible namesake in temper — that’s the on’y fault of Job.”
The parson, in the field outside, had stood in the turn-rows, resting on his plow-handles. He had been drawling “Bonny lass, canny lass;” but, catching the sound of angry words, he had paused and listened. When Job, the mason, flung away, he returned to his plowing, and disappeared down the furrow, the boy whistling at his horse’s head.
“Why, Mattha, it is thee?” said the blacksmith, observing for the first time the second of the new-comers; “and how fend ye?”
“Middling weel, John, middling weel,” said Matthew, in a low voice, resting on the edge of the trough.
It was Laird Fisher, more bent than of old, with deeper lines in his grave face and with yet more listless eyes. He had brought two picks for sharpening.
“Got your smelting-house at wark down at the pit, Mattha?” asked the blacksmith.
“Ey, John, it’s at wark — it’s at wark.”
The miller had turned to go, but he faced about with ready anger.
“Lord, yes, and a pretty pickle you and your gaffer’s like to make of me. Wad ye credit it, John? they’ve built their smelting-house within half a rod of my mill. Half a rod; not a yard mair. When your red-hot rubbish is shot down your bank, where’s it going to go, ey? That’s what I want to know — where’s it going to go?”
“Why, into your mill, of course,” said Gubblum, with a wink, from the tool-chest. “That’ll maybe help you to go by fire when you can’t raise the wind.”
“Verra good for thee, Gubblum,” laughed the blacksmith.
“I’ll have the law on them safe enough,” said the miller.
“And where’s your damages to come from?”
“From the same spot as all the rest of the brass — that’s good enough for me.”
