<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>MISS CATHERINE.</h3>
<p>Poor Mr. Rule rushed out into the night in a
state of despair. It was a summer night, and the
streets of Redborough were still full of the murmur
of life and movement. He came down from the
slope on which Mr. John Vernon's grand new house
was situated, into the town, turning over everything
that it was possible to do. Should he go to the Old
Bank, the life-long rival of Vernon's, and ask their
help to pull through? Even such a humiliation he
would have endured had there been any chance of
success. Should he go to the agent of the Bank of
England? He could not but feel that it was quite
doubtful whether between them they could make up
enough to meet the rush he expected; and were
they likely to do it? Would not the first question
be, "Where is Mr. Vernon?" And where was Mr.
Vernon? Perhaps gone to Bath; perhaps to France,
his wife said. Why should he go to France without
letting any one at the bank know, saying he was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span>
only to be absent for a day? There was no telegraph
in those days, and if he confided Mr. Vernon's story
to the other banks, what would they think of him?
They would say that Vernon was mad, or that he
had—gone away. There could be no doubt of what
they would say. Rule was faithful to his old service,
and to the honour of the house which had trained
him. He would say nothing about France or Bath.
He would allow it to be understood that Mr. Vernon
had gone to London to get the assistance necessary,
and would come back in a post-chaise before the
offices were open in the morning. And perhaps, he
said to himself, perhaps it was so. God grant it
might be so! Very likely he had not thought it
necessary to enter into the matter to a lady. Poor
thing, with her twenty pounds! that showed how
much she knew of business; but it was very high-minded
and innocent of her to offer all she had. It
showed there was at least no harm in her thoughts.
It gave a momentary ease to the clerk's mind to
think that perhaps this was what Mr. Vernon must
mean. He must have known for some time how
badly things were going, and who could tell that the
sudden expedition of which he had made so little,
only saying when he left the bank the day before
"I shall not be here to-morrow," who could tell that
it was not to help to surmount the crisis, that he
had gone away? Rule turned towards his own
house under the solace of this thought, feeling that
anyhow it was better to get a night's rest, and be
strong for whatever was to happen to-morrow. It<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</SPAN></span>
would be a miserable to-morrow if Mr. Vernon did
not bring help. Not only the bank that would go,
but so many men with families that would be thrown
upon the world. God help them! and that money
which stood to his own credit, that balance of which
two or three days before he had been so proud, to
see it standing in his name on those well-kept
beautiful books! All this hanging upon the chance
that Mr. Vernon might have gone to town to get
money! No, he could not go in, and sit down at the
peaceful table where Mrs. Rule perhaps would be
hemming a cambric ruffle for his shirt, or plaiting it
delicately with her own fingers, a thing no laundress
could do to please her—and the children learning
their lessons. He felt sure that he could not rest;
he would only make her anxious, and why should
she be made anxious as long as he could keep it
from her. It is difficult to say how it was that the
first suggestion of a new possibility took hold of Mr.
Rule's mind. He turned away when he was within a
stone's throw of his own house, saying to himself that
he could not go in, that it was impossible, and walked
in the opposite direction, where he had not gone
far until he came in sight of the bank, that centre of
so many years' hard work, that pride of Redborough,
and of everybody connected with it. Vernon's! To
think that Ruin should be possible, that so dark a
shadow could hover over that sacred place. What
would old Mr. Vernon have said, he who received it
from his father and handed it down always flourishing,
always prosperous to—not to his son. If his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</SPAN></span>
son had lived, the eldest one, not he who had gone
wrong, but the eldest, who was John too, called
after his grandfather, he who was the father of—— It
was at this point that Mr. Rule came to a dead stop,
and then after a pause wheeled right round, and
without saying another word to himself walked
straight up Wilton Street, which as everybody knows
was quite out of his way.</p>
<p>The father of —— Yes, indeed, indeed, and that
was true! The recollection which called forth this
fervour of affirmation was a pleasant one. All the
youth of Redborough at one time had been in love
with Catherine Vernon. The bank clerks to a man
adored her. When she used to come and go with
her grandfather—and she did so constantly, bringing
him down in the morning in her pony carriage,
calling for him in the afternoon, running in in the
middle of the day to see that the old gentleman had
taken his biscuits and his wine—she walked over
their hearts as she crossed the outer office, but so
lightly, so smoothly, that the hearts were only
thrilled, not crushed by her footfall, so firm and
swift, but so airy as it was. She knew them all in
the office, and would give her hand to the head
clerk, and send a friendly glance all round, unaware
of the harm she was doing to the hapless young
men. But after all it was not harm. It was a
generous love they felt for her, like the love of
chivalry for a lady unapproachable. That young
princess was not for them. None of them grew
mad with foolish hopes, but they thought of her as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</SPAN></span>
they never thought of any one else. Mr. Rule was
at the end of Wilton Street, just where it meanders
out towards the edge of the common, before he took
breath, and began to ask himself what Miss Vernon
could do for him. Was not one lady enough to
appeal to? She whom he had already seen had
nothing for him—no help, no advice, not a suggestion
even. And yet she was more closely connected with
the bank than Catherine Vernon, who had disappeared
from all visible connection with it at her
grandfather's death, notwithstanding that a great
deal of her money was in it, and that she had in
fact a right to be consulted as a partner. So it had
been settled, it was said, by the old man in his will.
But she had never, so far as anybody knew, taken up
this privilege. She had never come to the bank,
never given a sign of having any active interest in
it. What then could she be expected to do? What
could she do even if she wished to help them? Mr.
Rule was aware that there was no very cordial
feeling between her cousin's house and hers. They
were friends, perfectly good friends, but they were
not cordial. While he turned over these thoughts
in his mind, however, he walked on steadily and
quickly without the least hesitation in his step.
There was even a sort of exhilarated excitement in
him, a sentiment quite different from that with
which he had been disconsolately straying about,
and painfully turning over possibilities, or rather
impossibilities. Perhaps it was a half romantic
pleasure in the idea of speaking to Miss Vernon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</SPAN></span>
again, but really there was something besides that, a
sense of satisfaction in finding a new and capable
mind to consult with at least, if no more.</p>
<p>Miss Vernon lived in the house which her grandfather
had lived in and his father before him. To
reach it you had to make your way through the
delta of little streets into which Wilton Street ran,
and across a corner of the common. The Grange
was an old house with dark red gables appearing
out of the midst of a clump of trees. In winter
you saw the whole mass of it, chiefly old bricks,
though these were thrown up and made picturesque
by the fact that the oldest part was in grey stone.
Broad large Elizabethan windows glimmered, lighted
up, through the thick foliage this evening; for by
this time the summer night was beginning to get
dark, and a good deal too late for a visit. Mr. Rule
thought as he knocked at the door that it was very
likely she would not see him. But this was not the
case. When he sent in his name as the head clerk
at the bank he was received immediately, and shown
into the room with the Elizabethan windows where
she was sitting. By this time she was of mature
years, and naturally much changed from the young
girl he had known. He had been one of the young
clerks in the outer office, whom she would recognise
with a friendly smiling look, and a nod of her head
all round. Now, however, Miss Vernon came up to
him, and held out her hand to Mr. Rule. "You
need not have sent me word who you were," she said
with a smile. "I knew quite well who you were.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</SPAN></span>
I never forget faces nor names. You have not come
to me at this time of night on a mere visit of civility.
Don't be afraid to tell me at once whatever there
may be to say."</p>
<p>"From the way you speak, ma'am," said Mr. Rule,
"I conclude that you have heard some of the wicked
reports that are flying about?"</p>
<p>"That is exactly what I want to know," she said,
with all her old vivacity. "Are they wicked
reports?"</p>
<p>"A report is always wicked," said Mr. Rule
sententiously, "which is likely to bring about the
evil it imagines."</p>
<p>"Ah!" she cried. "Then it is no further gone
than that; and yet it is as far gone as that?" she
added, looking anxiously in his face.</p>
<p>"Miss Vernon," said Rule solemnly, "I expect a
run upon the bank to-morrow."</p>
<p>"Good God!" she said, clasping her hands; which
was not a profane exclamation, but the kind of half-conscious
appeal which nature makes instinctively.
"But you have made all preparations? Surely you
can meet that."</p>
<p>He shook his head solemnly. The credit of the
bank was so much to him that when thus face to
face with the event he dreaded, poor Rule could
not articulate anything, and the water stood in his
eyes.</p>
<p>"Good God!" she said again: but her face was
not awe-stricken; it was that of a soldier springing
instantly to the alert, rallying all his resources at the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</SPAN></span>
first word of danger; "but you don't mean to say
that my cousin—does not John know this? They
say everybody knows these things before the person
concerned. Why, why did you not warn him,
Mr. Rule?"</p>
<p>Rule shook his head.</p>
<p>"It isn't possible that he could have been ignorant.
How could he be ignorant, ma'am? God
knows I have not a word to say against Mr. Vernon—but
to think he should forsake us in our moment
of trial!"</p>
<p>"Forsake you!" A sudden flush flew over Miss
Vernon's face—a spark shot out of her eyes. Indignation
and yet doubt was in her face. "That is
not possible," she cried, holding her head high; and
then she said anxiously, "Mr. Rule, tell me what
you mean?"</p>
<p>"I dare say it is the falsity of appearances," said
poor Rule. "I am sure I hope so. I hope Mr.
Vernon has gone away to get help, personally: you
can do that so much better than writing: and that
he may be back in time to-morrow."</p>
<p>"Has he gone away?" she said in a low tone.</p>
<p>"Unfortunately, Miss Vernon—I can't help saying
unfortunately, for it paralyses everybody else. We
can do nothing at the bank. But I cling to the
hope that he will be back before the bank is opened.
Oh, yes, I cling to the hope. Without that——"</p>
<p>"Everything will be lost?"</p>
<p>"Everything!" cried he, who was so proud of being
the head clerk at Vernon's, with tears in his eyes.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>And then there was a pause. For a minute or
two not a word was said. The daughter of the
house was as much overcome by the thought as was
its faithful servant. At last she said faintly, but
firmly—</p>
<p>"Mr. Rule, I cannot believe but that you will see
John to-morrow when the bank is opened, with
means to meet every demand."</p>
<p>"Yes, Miss Vernon, that is my conviction too."</p>
<p>But in what a faltering voice was this conviction
stated! The room was not very light, and they did
not distinguish very clearly each other's faces.</p>
<p>"But in case of any failure—" she said, "for of
course one never can tell, the most tiresome nothings
may detain you just when speed is most important;
or he might not have succeeded as he hoped. In
case of any—delay—I shall be there, Mr. Rule; you
may calculate upon me, with every penny I can
muster——"</p>
<p>"You, Miss Vernon!" the clerk said, with a cry
of relief and joy.</p>
<p>"Certainly; who else, when the credit of the bank
is at stake? I have been living very quietly, you
know. I spend next to nothing; my mother's money
has accumulated till it is quite a little fortune, I
believe. What had I best do? send to Mr. Sellon
and ask him to help us on that security? I don't
think he will refuse."</p>
<p>"If you do that we are saved," said Rule, half
crying. "That is the thing to do. What a head
for business you have!"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She smiled, and gave him a little nod, like one of
those happy nods she used to give to the young
clerks in her fine youthful days, in which there was
a kind acknowledgment of their admiration, a friendly
good fellowship with themselves.</p>
<p>"I hope I am not old Edward Vernon's grand-daughter
for nothing," she said, beginning to walk
up and down the room with a buoyant impatience,
as though longing for the moment of exertion to
come. "I had better write to Mr. Sellon at once;
there is no time to lose."</p>
<p>"And if you will let me I will take the note
directly, and bring you an answer."</p>
<p>"Bravo! that is promptitude," cried Miss Vernon;
and she went up to him and held out her hand.
"Between us we will keep the old place going," she
said, "whoever may give in."</p>
<p>If Mr. Rule had not been the steady, bashful
Englishman he was, he would have kissed that hand.
He felt that there was in it enough to save everything—the
bank first, and then his own little bit of
money, and his situation, and his children's bread.
He had not allowed himself to think of these things
in the greatness of his anxiety in respect to Vernon's;
but he did think of them now, and was ready to cry
in the relief of his soul.</p>
<p>Never was an evening more full of occupation.
Mr. Sellon, who was the agent of the Bank of England
in Redborough, was fortunately at home, and
responded at once to Miss Vernon's appeal. Mr.
Rule had the gratification of walking back with him<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</SPAN></span>
to the Grange, whither he hastened to reply in
person, and of assisting at the interview afterwards
with a sense of pride and personal advancement
which heightened the satisfaction of his soul. Miss
Vernon insisted strongly on the point that all
these preparations were by way of precaution
merely.</p>
<p>"My cousin will no doubt be back in time, fully
provided; but of course you never can be perfectly
certain. Horses may break down, shafts be broken;
the least little accident may spoil everything. Of
course John put off such a step till the last moment,
and thought it better to keep it entirely to himself."</p>
<p>"Of course," cried Rule, speaking out of his
corner; and "Of course," but much more faintly,
Mr. Sellon said.</p>
<p>"That is so evident that it requires no repetition:
but just as naturally Mr. Rule was alarmed, and had
the good sense to come to me."</p>
<p>All this was by way of convincing Mr. Sellon that
the whole matter was perfectly simple, and that
probably his resources would not be called upon at
all. To be sure, as in every case of a similar kind,
Miss Vernon might have saved herself the trouble,
the circumstances being far more clearly known to
Mr. Sellon than to herself. He was very sure that
John Vernon would not return, and that his intention
was to get himself out of it. Everybody had
known it was coming. It was just as well to humour
a lady, and accept her version as the right one; but
he was not for a moment deceived.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Of course the bank," he said, "will make it up
to you afterwards."</p>
<p>"Of course," she said; "and if not, I don't know
who is to stop me from doing what I like with
my own."</p>
<p>He asked a few questions further, in which there
was a good deal of significance, as for instance something
about Mrs. John Vernon's marriage settlements,
which neither of the others for the moment understood.
Rule saw Mr. Sellon to the door, by Miss
Vernon's request, with great pride, and went back
to her afterwards, "as if he were one of the family,"
he described to his wife afterwards.</p>
<p>"Well," she said, "are you satisfied?"</p>
<p>"Oh, more than satisfied, happier than I can tell
you," cried the clerk. "The bank is saved!"</p>
<p>And then she, so triumphant, buoyant, inspired as
she was, sank down upon a chair, and put her head in
her hands, and he thought cried; but Rule was not a
man to spy upon a lady in the revulsion of her feelings.
When she looked up again she said to him quickly—</p>
<p>"In any case, Mr. Rule, we are both sure that
my cousin is doing all he can for the bank; if he
succeeds or not is in other hands."</p>
<p>"Oh yes, Miss Vernon, quite sure," Rule replied
promptly. He understood that she meant it to be
understood so, and determined within himself that
he was ready to go to the stake for the new dogma.
And then he related to her his interview with Mrs.
John, and her willingness to give him up her twenty
pounds to save the bank.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Miss Vernon's first flush of indignation soon yielded
to amusement and sympathy. She laughed and she
cried.</p>
<p>"That shall always be remembered to her credit,"
she said. "I did not think she had any feeling for
the bank. Let us always remember it to her credit.
She was ready to give all she had, and who can do
any more?"</p>
<p>Mr. Rule was somewhat intoxicated with all these
confidences, and with the way in which Miss Vernon
said "we"—his head was a little turned by it. She
was a woman who understood what it was to have
a faithful servant. No doubt, after the sacrifice she
was making, she would, in future, have more to do
with the business, and Rule could scarcely keep his
imagination from straying into a consideration of
changes that might be. Instead of merely being
head clerk, it was quite possible that a manager
might be required; but he pulled himself up, and
would not allow his thoughts to carry him so far.</p>
<p>Next day everything happened as had been foreseen.
There was a run on the bank, and a moment of great
excitement; but when Miss Vernon was seen at the
door of the inner office smiling, with her smile of
triumphant energy and capability, upon the crowd,
and when the Bank of England porters appeared
bringing in those heavy boxes, the run and all the
excitement subsided as by magic. The bank was
saved; but not by John Vernon. The outside world
never was aware how the matter was settled. But
John did not come back. He would have met<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</SPAN></span>
nothing but averted looks and biting words, for there
could be no doubt that he had abandoned his post,
and left Vernon's to its fate. Messrs. Pounce and
Seeling had a good deal to do about the matter, and
new deeds were drawn, and old deeds cancelled to a
serious extent; but the bank ever after remained in
the hands of Miss Vernon, who, it turned out, had
more than her grandfather's steady power of holding
on, and was, indeed, the heir of her great-grandfather's
genius for business. The bank throve in
her hands as it had done in his days, and everything
it touched prospered. She deserved it, to be sure,
but everybody who deserves does not get this fine
reward. There is something beyond, which we call
good luck or good fortune, or the favour of Heaven;
but as Heaven does not favour all, or even most of
the best people in this way, we have to fall back
upon a less pious phraseology. Is it, perhaps, genius
for business, as distinct as genius in poetry, which
makes everything succeed? But this is more than any
man can be expected to understand. Rule attained
all the heights of those hopes which had vaguely
dawned on him out of the mist on that July evening
when his good angel suggested to him Catherine
Vernon's name. He was raised to the dignity of
manager as he had foreseen. His salary was doubled,
his sons were provided for, and he grew old in such
comfort and general esteem as he had never dreamed
of. "This is the man that saved the bank," Miss
Vernon would say. And though, of course, he deprecated
such high praise, and declared that he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</SPAN></span>
was nothing but the humblest instrument, yet there
can be no doubt that he came to believe it in the
end, as his wife and all his children did from the
beginning.</p>
<p>Miss Vernon's was a reign of great benevolence,
of great liberality, but of great firmness too. As
she got older she became almost the most important
person in Redborough. The people spoke of her,
as they sometimes do of a very popular man, by
her Christian name. Catherine Vernon did this
and that, they said. Catherine Vernon was the first
thought when anything was wanted either by the
poor who needed help, or the philanthropist who
wanted to give it. The Vernon Almshouses, which
had been established a hundred years before, but
had fallen into great decay till she took them in
hand, were always known as Catherine Vernon's
Almshouses. Her name was put to everything.
Catherine Street, Catherine Square, Catherine places
without number. The people who built little houses
on the outskirts exhausted their invention in varying
the uses of it. Catherine Villas, Catherine Cottage,
Catherine Mansion, were on all sides; and when it
occurred to the High Church rector to dedicate the
new church to St. Catherine of Alexandria, the common
people, with one accord, transferred the invocation
to their living patroness. She was, at least, a
saint more easily within reach, and more certain to
lend a favourable ear.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />