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<h2> CHAPTER V. </h2>
<h3> FATHER BENWELL'S CORRESPONDENCE. </h3>
<p><i>To the Secretary, S. J., Rome.</i></p>
<p>In my last few hasty lines I was only able to inform you of the unexpected
arrival of Mrs. Romayne while Winterfield was visiting her husband. If you
remember, I warned you not to attach any undue importance to my absence on
that occasion. My present report will satisfy my reverend brethren that
the interests committed to me are as safe as ever in my hands.</p>
<p>I have paid three visits, at certain intervals. The first to Winterfield
(briefly mentioned in my last letter); the second to Romayne; the third to
the invalid lady, Mrs. Eyrecourt. In every case I have been rewarded by
important results.</p>
<p>We will revert to Winterfield first. I found him at his hotel, enveloped
in clouds of tobacco smoke. Having led him, with some difficulty, into
talking of his visit to Ten Acres Lodge, I asked how he liked Romayne's
pictures.</p>
<p>"I envy him his pictures." That was the only answer.</p>
<p>"And how do you like Mrs. Romayne?" I inquired next.</p>
<p>He laid down his pipe, and looked at me attentively. My face (I flatter
myself) defied discovery. He inhaled another mouthful of tobacco, and
began to play with his dog. "If I must answer your question," he burst out
suddenly, "I didn't get a very gracious reception from Mrs. Romayne."
There he abruptly stopped. He is a thoroughly transparent man; you see
straight into his mind, through his eyes. I perceived that he was only
telling me a part (perhaps a very small part) of the truth.</p>
<p>"Can you account for such a reception as you describe?" I asked. He
answered shortly, "No."</p>
<p>"Perhaps I can account for it," I went on. "Did Mr. Romayne tell his wife
that I was the means of introducing you to him?"</p>
<p>He fixed another searching look on me. "Mr. Romayne might have said so
when he left me to receive his wife at the door."</p>
<p>"In that case, Mr. Winterfield, the explanation is as plain as the sun at
noonday. Mrs. Romayne is a strong Protestant, and I am a Catholic priest."</p>
<p>He accepted this method of accounting for his reception with an alacrity
that would not have imposed on a child. You see I had relieved him from
all further necessity of accounting for the conduct of Mrs. Romayne!</p>
<p>"A lady's religious prejudices," I proceeded in the friendliest way, "are
never taken seriously by a sensible man. You have placed Mr. Romayne under
obligations to your kindness—he is eager to improve his acquaintance
with you. You will go again to Ten Acres Lodge?"</p>
<p>He gave me another short answer. "I think not."</p>
<p>I said I was sorry to hear it. "However," I added, "you can always see him
here, when you are in London." He puffed out a big volume of smoke, and
made no remark. I declined to be put down by silence and smoke. "Or
perhaps," I persisted, "you will honor me by meeting him at a simple
little dinner at my lodgings?" Being a gentleman, he was of course obliged
to answer this. He said, "You are very kind; I would rather not. Shall we
talk of something else, Father Benwell?"</p>
<p>We talked of something else. He was just as amiable as ever—but he
was not in good spirits. "I think I shall run over to Paris before the end
of the month," he said. "To make a long stay?" I asked. "Oh, no! Call in a
week or ten days—and you will find me here again."</p>
<p>When I got up to go, he returned of his own accord to the forbidden
subject. He said, "I must beg you to do me two favors. The first is, not
to let Mr. Romayne know that I am still in London. The second is, not to
ask me for any explanations."</p>
<p>The result of our interview may be stated in very few words. It has
advanced me one step nearer to discovery. Winterfield's voice, look, and
manner satisfied me of this—the true motive for his sudden change of
feeling toward Romayne is jealousy of the man who has married Miss
Eyrecourt. Those compromising circumstances which baffled the inquiries of
my agent are associated, in plain English, with a love affair. Remember
all that I have told you of Romayne's peculiar disposition—and
imagine, if you can, what the consequences of such a disclosure will be
when we are in a position to enlighten the master of Vange Abbey!</p>
<p>As to the present relations between the husband and wife, I have only to
tell you next what passed, when I visited Romayne a day or two later. I
did well to keep Penrose at our disposal. We shall want him again.</p>
<hr />
<p>On arriving at Ten Acres Lodge, I found Romayne in his study. His
manuscript lay before him—but he was not at work. He looked worn and
haggard. To this day I don't know from what precise nervous malady he
suffers; I could only guess that it had been troubling him again since he
and I last met.</p>
<p>My first conventional civilities were dedicated, of course, to his wife.
She is still in attendance on her mother. Mrs. Eyrecourt is now considered
to be out of danger. But the good lady (who is ready enough to recommend
doctors to other people) persists in thinking that she is too robust a
person to require medical help herself. The physician in attendance trusts
entirely to her daughter to persuade her to persevere with the necessary
course of medicine. Don't suppose that I trouble you by mentioning these
trumpery circumstances without a reason. We shall have occasion to return
to Mrs. Eyrecourt and her doctor.</p>
<p>Before I had been five minutes in his company, Romayne asked me if I had
seen Winterfield since his visit to Ten Acres Lodge.</p>
<p>I said I had seen him, and waited, anticipating the next question. Romayne
fulfilled my expectations. He inquired if Winterfield had left London.</p>
<p>There are certain cases (as I am told by medical authorities) in which the
dangerous system of bleeding a patient still has its advantages. There are
other cases in which the dangerous system of telling the truth becomes
equally judicious. I said to Romayne, "If I answer you honestly, will you
consider it as strictly confidential? Mr. Winterfield, I regret to say,
has no intention of improving his acquaintance with you. He asked me to
conceal from you that he is still in London."</p>
<p>Romayne's face plainly betrayed that he was annoyed and irritated.
"Nothing that you say to me, Father Benwell, shall pass the walls of this
room," he replied. "Did Winterfield give any reason for not continuing his
acquaintance with me?"</p>
<p>I told the truth once more, with courteous expressions of regret. "Mr.
Winterfield spoke of an ungracious reception on the part of Mrs. Romayne."</p>
<p>He started to his feet, and walked irritably up and down the room. "It is
beyond endurance!" he said to himself.</p>
<p>The truth had served its purpose by this time. I affected not to have
heard him. "Did you speak to me?" I asked.</p>
<p>He used a milder form of expression. "It is most unfortunate," he said. "I
must immediately send back the valuable book which Mr. Winterfield has
lent to me. And that is not the worst of it. There are other volumes in
his library which I have the greatest interest in consulting—and it
is impossible for me to borrow them now. At this time, too, when I have
lost Penrose, I had hoped to find in Winterfield another friend who
sympathized with my pursuits. There is something so cheering and
attractive in his manner—and he has just the boldness and novelty of
view in his opinions that appeal to a man like me. It was a pleasant
future to look forward to; and it must be sacrificed—and to what? To
a woman's caprice."</p>
<p>From our point of view this was a frame of mind to be encouraged. I tried
the experiment of modestly taking the blame on myself. I suggested that I
might be (quite innocently) answerable for Romayne's disappointment.</p>
<p>He looked at me thoroughly puzzled. I repeated what I had said to
Winterfield. "Did you mention to Mrs. Romayne that I was the means of
introducing you—?"</p>
<p>He was too impatient to let me finish the sentence. "I did mention it to
Mrs. Romayne," he said. "And what of it?"</p>
<p>"Pardon me for reminding you that Mrs. Romayne has Protestant prejudices,"
I rejoined. "Mr. Winterfield would, I fear, not be very welcome to her as
the friend of a Catholic priest."</p>
<p>He was almost angry with me for suggesting the very explanation which had
proved so acceptable to Winterfield.</p>
<p>"Nonsense!" he cried. "My wife is far too well-bred a woman to let her
prejudices express themselves in <i>that</i> way. Winterfield's personal
appearance must have inspired her with some unreasonable antipathy, or—"</p>
<p>He stopped, and turned away thoughtfully to the window. Some vague
suspicion had probably entered his mind, which he had only become aware of
at that moment, and which he was not quite able to realize as yet. I did
my best to encourage the new train of thought.</p>
<p>"What other reason <i>can</i> there be?" I asked.</p>
<p>He turned on me sharply. "I don't know. Do you?"</p>
<p>I ventured on a courteous remonstrance. "My dear sir! if you can't find
another reason, how can I? It must have been a sudden antipathy, as you
say. Such things do happen between strangers. I suppose I am right in
assuming that Mrs. Romayne and Mr. Winterfield are strangers?"</p>
<p>His eyes flashed with a sudden sinister brightness—the new idea had
caught light in his mind. "They <i>met</i> as strangers," he said.</p>
<p>There he stopped again, and returned to the window. I felt that I might
lose the place I had gained in his confidence if I pressed the subject any
further. Besides, I had my reasons for saying a word about Penrose next.
As it happened, I had received a letter from him, relating to his present
employment, and sending kindest regards to his dear friend and master in
the postscript.</p>
<p>I gave the message. Romayne looked round, with an instant change in his
face. The mere sound of Penrose's name seemed to act as a relief to the
gloom and suspicion that had oppressed him the moment before. "You don't
know how I miss the dear gentle little fellow," he said, sadly.</p>
<p>"Why not write to him?" I suggested. "He would be so glad to hear from you
again."</p>
<p>"I don't know where to write."</p>
<p>"Did I not send you his address when I forwarded your letter to him?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"Then let me atone for my forgetfulness at once."</p>
<p>I wrote down the address, and took my leave.</p>
<p>As I approached the door I noticed on a side table the Catholic volumes
which Penrose left with Romayne. One of them was open, with a pencil lying
beside it. I thought that a good sign—but I said nothing.</p>
<p>Romayne pressed my hand at parting. "You have been very kind and friendly,
Father Benwell," he said. "I shall be glad to see you again."</p>
<p>Don't mention it in quarters where it might do me harm. Do you know, I
really pitied him. He has sacrificed everything to his marriage—and
his marriage has disappointed him. He was even reduced to be friendly with
Me.</p>
<p>Of course when the right time comes I shall give Penrose leave of absence.
Do you foresee, as I do, the speedy return of "the dear gentle little
fellow" to his old employment; the resumed work of conversion advancing
more rapidly than ever; and the jealousy of the Protestant wife
aggravating the false position in which she is already placed by her
equivocal reception of Winterfield? You may answer this by reminding me of
the darker side of the prospect. An heir may be born; and the heir's
mother, backed by general opinion, may insist—if there is any
hesitation in the matter—on asserting the boy's natural right to
succeed his father.</p>
<p>Patience, my reverend colleague! There is no threatening of any such
calamity yet. And, even if it happens, don't forget that Romayne has
inherited a second fortune. The Vange estate has an estimated value. If
the act of restitution represented that value in ready money, do you think
the Church would discourage a good convert by refusing his check? You know
better than that—and so do I.</p>
<hr />
<p>The next day I called to inquire how Mrs. Eyrecourt was getting on. The
report was favorable. Three days later I called again. The report was
still more encouraging. I was also informed that Mrs. Romayne had returned
to Ten Acres Lodge.</p>
<p>Much of my success in life has been achieved by never being in a hurry. I
was not in a hurry now. Time sometimes brings opportunities—and
opportunities are worth waiting for.</p>
<p>Let me make this clear by an example.</p>
<p>A man of headlong disposition, in my place, would have probably spoken of
Miss Eyrecourt's marriage to Romayne at his first meeting with
Winterfield, and would have excited their distrust, and put them
respectively on their guard, without obtaining any useful result. I can,
at any time, make the disclosure to Romayne which informs him that his
wife had been Winterfield's guest in Devonshire, when she affected to meet
her former host on the footing of a stranger. In the meanwhile, I give
Penrose ample opportunity for innocently widening the breach between
husband and wife.</p>
<p>You see, I hope, that if I maintain a passive position, it is not from
indolence or discouragement. Now we may get on.</p>
<p>After an interval of a few days more I decided on making further inquiries
at Mrs. Eyrecourt's house. This time, when I left my card, I sent a
message, asking if the lady could receive me. Shall I own my weakness? She
possesses all the information that I want, and she has twice baffled my
inquiries. Under these humiliating circumstances, it is part of the
priestly pugnacity of my disposition to inquire again.</p>
<p>I was invited to go upstairs.</p>
<p>The front and back drawing-rooms of the house were thrown into one. Mrs.
Eyrecourt was being gently moved backward and forward in a chair on
wheels, propelled by her maid; two gentlemen being present, visitors like
myself. In spite of rouge and loosely folded lace and flowing draperies,
she presented a deplorable spectacle. The bodily part of her looked like a
dead woman, painted and revived—while the moral part, in the
strongest contrast, was just as lively as ever.</p>
<p>"So glad to see you again, Father Benwell, and so much obliged by your
kind inquiries. I am quite well, though the doctor won't admit it. Isn't
it funny to see me being wheeled about, like a child in a perambulator?
Returning to first principles, I call it. You see it's a law of my nature
that I must go about. The doctor won't let me go about outside the house,
so I go about inside the house. Matilda is the nurse, and I am the baby
who will learn to walk some of these days. Are you tired, Matilda? No?
Then give me another turn, there's a good creature. Movement, perpetual
movement, is a law of Nature. Oh, dear no, doctor; I didn't make that
discovery for myself. Some eminent scientific person mentioned it in a
lecture. The ugliest man I ever saw. Now back again, Matilda. Let me
introduce you to my friends, Father Benwell. Introducing is out of
fashion, I know. But I am one of the few women who can resist the tyranny
of fashion. I like introducing people. Sir John Drone—Father
Benwell. Father Benwell—Doctor Wybrow. Ah, yes, you know the doctor
by reputation? Shall I give you his character? Personally charming;
professionally detestable. Pardon my impudence, doctor, it is one of the
consequences of the overflowing state of my health. Another turn, Matilda—and
a little faster this time. Oh, how I wish I was traveling by railway!"</p>
<p>There, her breath failed her. She reclined in her chair, and fanned
herself silently—for a while.</p>
<p>I was now able to turn my attention to the two visitors. Sir John Drone,
it was easy to see, would be no obstacle to confidential conversation with
Mrs. Eyrecourt. An excellent country gentleman, with the bald head, the
ruddy complexion, and the inexhaustible capacity for silence, so familiar
to us in English society—there you have the true description of Sir
John. But the famous physician was quite another sort of man. I had only
to look at him, and to feel myself condemned to small talk while <i>he</i>
was in the room.</p>
<p>You have always heard of it in my correspondence, whenever I have been in
the wrong. I was in the wrong again now—I had forgotten the law of
chances. Capricious Fortune, after a long interval, was about to declare
herself again in my favor, by means of the very woman who had twice
already got the better of me. What a recompense for my kind inquiries
after Mrs. Eyrecourt! She recovered breath enough to begin talking again.</p>
<p>"Dear me, how dull you are!" she said to us. "Why don't you amuse a poor
prisoner confined to the house? Rest a little, Matilda, or you will be
falling ill next. Doctor! is this your last professional visit?"</p>
<p>"Promise to take care of yourself, Mrs. Eyrecourt, and I will confess that
the professional visits are over. I come here to-day only as a friend."</p>
<p>"You best of men! Do me another favor. Enliven our dullness. Tell us some
interesting story about a patient. These great doctors, Sir John, pass
their lives in a perfect atmosphere of romance. Dr. Wybrow's
consulting-room is like your confessional, Father Benwell. The most
fascinating sins and sorrows are poured into his ears. What is the last
romance in real life, doctor, that has asked you to treat it medically? We
don't want names and places—we are good children; we only want a
story."</p>
<p>Dr. Wybrow looked at me with a smile.</p>
<p>"It is impossible to persuade ladies," he said, "that we, too, are
father-confessors in our way. The first duty of a doctor, Mrs. Eyrecourt—"</p>
<p>"Is to cure people, of course," she interposed in her smartest manner.</p>
<p>The doctor answered seriously. "No, indeed. That is only the second duty.
Our first duty is invariably to respect the confidence of our patients.
However," he resumed in his easier tone, "I happen to have seen a patient
to-day, under circumstances which the rules of professional honor do not
forbid me to mention. I don't know, Mrs. Eyrecourt, whether you will quite
like to be introduced to the scene of the story. The scene is in a
madhouse."</p>
<p>Mrs. Eyrecourt burst out with a coquettish little scream, and shook her
fan at the doctor. "No horrors!" she cried. "The bare idea of a madhouse
distracts me with terror. Oh, fie, fie! I won't listen to you—I
won't look at you—I positively refuse to be frightened out of my
wits. Matilda! wheel me away to the furthest end of the room. My vivid
imagination, Father Benwell, is my rock ahead in life. I declare I can <i>smell</i>
the odious madhouse. Go straight to the window, Matilda; I want to bury my
nose among the flowers."</p>
<p>Sir John, upon this, spoke for the first time. His language consisted
entirely of beginnings of sentences, mutely completed by a smile. "Upon my
word, you know. Eh, Doctor Wybrow? A man of your experience. Horrors in
madhouses. A lady in delicate health. No, really. Upon my honor, now, I
cannot. Something funny, oh yes. But such a subject, oh no."</p>
<p>He rose to leave us. Dr. Wybrow gently stopped him. "I had a motive, Sir
John," he said, "but I won't trouble you with needless explanations. There
is a person, unknown to me, whom I want to discover. You are a great deal
in society when you are in London. May I ask if you have ever met with a
gentleman named Winterfield?"</p>
<p>I have always considered the power of self-control as one of the strongest
points in my character. For the future I shall be more humble. When I
heard that name, my surprise so completely mastered me that I sat
self-betrayed to Dr. Wybrow as the man who could answer his question.</p>
<p>In the meanwhile, Sir John took his time to consider, and discovered that
he had never heard of a person named Winterfield. Having acknowledged his
ignorance, in his own eloquent language, he drifted away to the window-box
in the next room, and gravely contemplated Mrs. Eyrecourt, with her nose
buried in flowers.</p>
<p>The doctor turned to me. "Am I wrong, Father Benwell, in supposing that I
had better have addressed myself to <i>you?"</i></p>
<p>I admitted that I knew a gentleman named Winterfield.</p>
<p>Dr. Wybrow got up directly. "Have you a few minutes to spare?" he asked.
It is needless to say that I was at the doctor's disposal. "My house is
close by, and my carriage is at the door," he resumed. "When you feel
inclined to say good-by to our friend Mrs. Eyrecourt, I have something to
say to you which I think you ought to know."</p>
<p>We took our departure at once. Mrs. Eyrecourt (leaving some of the color
of her nose among the flowers) patted me encouragingly with her fan, and
told the doctor that he was forgiven, on the understanding that he would
"never do it again." In five minutes more we were in Dr. Wybrow's study.</p>
<p>My watch tells me that I cannot hope to finish this letter by post time.
Accept what I have written thus far—and be assured that the
conclusion of my report shall follow a day later.</p>
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II.</p>
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