it—so to the Lorings he resolved to apply. <SPAN name="linkCH0020" id="linkCH0020"></SPAN></p>
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<h2> CHAPTER III. </h2>
<h3> FATHER BENWELL AND THE BOOK. </h3>
<p>ROMAYNE'S first errand in London was to see his wife, and to make
inquiries at Mrs. Eyrecourt's house. The report was more favorable than
usual. Stella whispered, as she kissed him, "I shall soon come back to
you, I hope!"</p>
<p>Leaving the horses to rest for a while, he proceeded to Lord Loring's
residence on foot. As he crossed a street in the neighborhood, he was
nearly run over by a cab, carrying a gentleman and his luggage. The
gentleman was Mr. Winterfield, on his way to Derwent's Hotel.</p>
<p>Lady Loring very kindly searched her card-basket, as the readiest means of
assisting Romayne. Penrose had left his card, on his departure from
London, but no address was written on it. Lord Loring, unable himself to
give the required information, suggested the right person to consult.</p>
<p>"Father Benwell will be here later in the day," he said. "If you will
write to Penrose at once, he will add the address. Are you sure, before
the letter goes, that the book you want is not in my library?"</p>
<p>"I think not," Romayne answered; "but I will write down the title, and
leave it here with my letter."</p>
<p>The same evening he received a polite note from Father Benwell, informing
him that the letter was forwarded, and that the book he wanted was not in
Lord Loring's library. "If there should be any delay or difficulty in
obtaining this rare volume," the priest added, "I only wait the expression
of your wishes, to borrow it from the library of a friend of mine,
residing in the country."</p>
<p>By return of post the answer, affectionately and gratefully written,
arrived from Penrose. He regretted that he was not able to assist Romayne
personally. But it was out of his power (in plain words, he had been
expressly forbidden by Father Benwell) to leave the service on which he
was then engaged. In reference to the book that was wanted, it was quite
likely that a search in the catalogues of the British Museum might
discover it. He had only met with it himself in the National Library at
Paris.</p>
<p>This information led Romayne to London again, immediately. For the first
time he called at Father Benwell's lodgings. The priest was at home,
expecting the visit. His welcome was the perfection of unassuming
politeness. He asked for the last news of "poor Mrs. Eyrecourt's health,"
with the sympathy of a true friend.</p>
<p>"I had the honor of drinking tea with Mrs. Eyrecourt, some little time
since," he said. "Her flow of conversation was never more delightful—it
seemed impossible to associate the idea of illness with so bright a
creature. And how well she kept the secret of your contemplated marriage!
May I offer my humble congratulations and good wishes?"</p>
<p>Romayne thought it needless to say that Mrs. Eyrecourt had not been
trusted with the secret until the wedding day was close at hand. "My wife
and I agreed in wishing to be married as quietly as possible," he
answered, after making the customary acknowledgments.</p>
<p>"And Mrs. Romayne?" pursued Father Benwell. "This is a sad trial for her.
She is in attendance on her mother, I suppose?"</p>
<p>"In constant attendance; I am quite alone now. To change the subject, may
I ask you to look at the reply which I have received from Penrose? It is
my excuse for troubling you with this visit."</p>
<p>Father Benwell read the letter with the closest attention. In spite of his
habitual self-control, his vigilant eyes brightened as he handed it back.</p>
<p>Thus far, the priest's well-planned scheme, (like Mr. Bitrake's clever
inquiries) had failed. He had not even entrapped Mrs. Eyrecourt into
revealing the marriage engagement. Her unconquerable small-talk had foiled
him at every point. Even when he had deliberately kept his seat after the
other guests at the tea-table had taken their departure, she rose with the
most imperturbable coolness, and left him. "I have a dinner and two
parties to-night, and this is just the time when I take my little
restorative nap. Forgive me—and do come again!" When he sent the
fatal announcement of the marriage to Rome, he had been obliged to confess
that he was indebted for the discovery to the newspaper. He had accepted
the humiliation; he had accepted the defeat—but he was not beaten
yet. "I counted on Romayne's weakness; and Miss Eyrecourt counted on
Romayne's weakness; and Miss Eyrecourt has won. So let it be. My turn will
come." In that manner he had reconciled himself to his position. And now—he
knew it when he handed back the letter to Romayne—his turn <i>had</i>
come!</p>
<p>"You can hardly go to Paris to consult the book," he said, "in the present
state of Mrs. Eyrecourt's health?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not!"</p>
<p>"Perhaps you will send somebody to search the catalogue at the British
Museum?"</p>
<p>"I should have done that already, Father Benwell, but for the very kind
allusion in your note to your friend in the country. Even if the book is
in the Museum Library, I shall be obliged to go to the Reading Room to get
my information. It would be far more convenient to me to have the volume
at home to consult, if you think your friend will trust me with it."</p>
<p>"I am certain he will trust you with it. My friend is Mr. Winterfield, of
Beaupark House, North Devon. Perhaps you may have heard of him?"</p>
<p>"No; the name is quite new to me."</p>
<p>"Then come and see the man himself. He is now in London—and I am
entirely at your service."</p>
<p>In half an hour more, Romayne was presented to a well-bred, amiable
gentleman in the prime of life, smoking, and reading the newspaper. The
bowl of his long pipe rested on the floor, on one side of him, and a
handsome red and white spaniel reposed on the other. Before his visitors
had been two minutes in the room, he understood the motive which had
brought them to consult him, and sent for a telegraphic form.</p>
<p>"My steward will find the book and forward it to your address by passenger
train this afternoon," he said. "I will tell him to put my printed
catalogue of the library into the parcel, in case I have any other books
which may be of use to you."</p>
<p>With those words, he dispatched the telegram to the office. Romayne
attempted to make his acknowledgments. Mr. Winterfield would hear no
acknowledgments.</p>
<p>"My dear sir," he said, with a smile that brightened his whole face, "you
are engaged in writing a great historical work; and I am an obscure
country gentleman, who is lucky enough to associate himself with the
production of a new book. How do you know that I am not looking forward to
a complimentary line in the preface? I am the obliged person, not you.
Pray consider me as a handy little boy who runs on errands for the Muse of
History. Do you smoke?"</p>
<p>Not even tobacco would soothe Romayne's wasted and irritable nerves.
Father Benwell—"all things to all men"—cheerfully accepted a
cigar from the box on the table.</p>
<p>"Father Benwell possesses all the social virtues," Mr. Winterfield ran on.
"He shall have his coffee, and the largest sugar-basin that the hotel can
produce. I can quite understand that your literary labors have tried your
nerves," he said to Romayne, when he had ordered the coffee. "The mere
title of your work overwhelms an idle man like me. 'The Origin of
Religions'—what an immense subject! How far must we look back to
find out the first worshipers of the human family?—Where are the
hieroglyphics, Mr. Romayne, that will give you the earliest information?
In the unknown center of Africa, or among the ruined cities of Yucatan? My
own idea, as an ignorant man, is that the first of all forms of worship
must have been the worship of the sun. Don't be shocked, Father Benwell—I
confess I have a certain sympathy with sun-worship. In the East
especially, the rising of the sun is surely the grandest of all objects—the
visible symbol of a beneficent Deity, who gives life, warmth and light to
the world of his creation."</p>
<p>"Very grand, no doubt," remarked Father Benwell, sweetening his coffee.
"But not to be compared with the noble sight at Rome, when the Pope
blesses the Christian world from the balcony of St. Peter's."</p>
<p>"So much for professional feeling!" said Mr. Winterfield. "But, surely,
something depends on what sort of man the Pope is. If we had lived in the
time of Alexander the Sixth, would you have called <i>him</i> a part of
that noble sight?"</p>
<p>"Certainly—at a proper distance," Father Benwell briskly replied.
"Ah, you heretics only know the worst side of that most unhappy pontiff!
Mr. Winterfield, we have every reason to believe that he felt (privately)
the truest remorse."</p>
<p>"I should require very good evidence to persuade me of it."</p>
<p>This touched Romayne on a sad side of his own personal experience.
"Perhaps," he said, "you don't believe in remorse?"</p>
<p>"Pardon me," Mr. Winterfield rejoined, "I only distinguish between false
remorse and true remorse. We will say no more of Alexander the Sixth,
Father Benwell. If we want an illustration, I will supply it, and give no
offense. True remorse depends, to my mind, on a man's accurate knowledge
of his own motives—far from a common knowledge, in my experience.
Say, for instance, that I have committed some serious offense—"</p>
<p>Romayne could not resist interrupting him. "Say you have killed one of
your fellow-creatures," he suggested.</p>
<p>"Very well. If I know that I really meant to kill him, for some vile
purpose of my own; and if (which by no means always follows) I am really
capable of feeling the enormity of my own crime—that is, as I think,
true remorse. Murderer as I am, I have, in that case, some moral worth
still left in me. But if I did <i>not</i> mean to kill the man—if
his death was my misfortune as well as his—and if (as frequently
happens) I am nevertheless troubled by remorse, the true cause lies in my
own inability fairly to realize my own motives—before I look to
results. I am the ignorant victim of false remorse; and if I will only ask
myself boldly what has blinded me to the true state of the case, I shall
find the mischief due to that misdirected appreciation of my own
importance which is nothing but egotism in disguise."</p>
<p>"I entirely agree with you," said Father Benwell; "I have had occasion to
say the same thing in the confessional."</p>
<p>Mr. Winterfield looked at his dog, and changed the subject. "Do you like
dogs, Mr. Romayne?" he asked. "I see my spaniel's eyes saying that he
likes you, and his tail begging you to take some notice of him."</p>
<p>Romayne caressed the dog rather absently.</p>
<p>His new friend had unconsciously presented to him a new view of the darker
aspect of his own life. Winterfield's refined, pleasant manners, his
generous readiness in placing the treasures of his library at a stranger's
disposal, had already appealed irresistibly to Romayne's sensitive nature.
The favorable impression was now greatly strengthened by the briefly bold
treatment which he had just heard of a subject in which he was seriously
interested. "I must see more of this man," was his thought, as he patted
the companionable spaniel.</p>
<p>Father Benwell's trained observation followed the vivid changes of
expression on Romayne's face, and marked the eager look in his eyes as he
lifted his head from the dog to the dog's master. The priest saw his
opportunity and took it.</p>
<p>"Do you remain long at Ten Acres Lodge?" he said to Romayne.</p>
<p>"I hardly know as yet. We have no other plans at present."</p>
<p>"You inherit the place, I think, from your late aunt, Lady Berrick?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>The tone of the reply was not encouraging; Romayne felt no interest in
talking of Ten Acres Lodge. Father Benwell persisted.</p>
<p>"I was told by Mrs. Eyrecourt," he went on "that Lady Berrick had some
fine pictures. Are they still at the Lodge?"</p>
<p>"Certainly. I couldn't live in a house without pictures."</p>
<p>Father Benwell looked at Winterfield. "Another taste in common between you
and Mr. Romayne," he said, "besides your liking for dogs."</p>
<p>This at once produced the desired result. Romayne eagerly invited
Winterfield to see his pictures. "There are not many of them," he said.
"But they are really worth looking at. When will you come?"</p>
<p>"The sooner the better," Winterfield answered, cordially. "Will to-morrow
do—by the noonday light?"</p>
<p>"Whenever you please. Your time is mine."</p>
<p>Among his other accomplishments, Father Benwell was a chess-player. If his
thoughts at that moment had been expressed in language, they would have
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