<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
<p>I am ashamed to say what feeling became strongest in my mind about this time;
next to the sympathy we all of us felt for my dear lady in her deep sorrow, I
mean; for that was greater and stronger than anything else, however
contradictory you may think it, when you hear all.</p>
<p>It might arise from my being so far from well at the time, which produced a
diseased mind in a diseased body; but I was absolutely jealous for my
father’s memory, when I saw how many signs of grief there were for my
lord’s death, he having done next to nothing for the village and parish,
which now changed, as it were, its daily course of life, because his lordship
died in a far-off city. My father had spent the best years of his manhood in
labouring hard, body and soul, for the people amongst whom he lived. His
family, of course, claimed the first place in his heart; he would have been
good for little, even in the way of benevolence, if they had not. But close
after them he cared for his parishioners, and neighbours. And yet, when he
died, though the church bells tolled, and smote upon our hearts with hard,
fresh pain at every beat, the sounds of every-day life still went on, close
pressing around us,—carts and carriages, street-cries, distant
barrel-organs (the kindly neighbours kept them out of our street): life,
active, noisy life, pressed on our acute consciousness of Death, and jarred
upon it as on a quick nerve.</p>
<p>And when we went to church,—my father’s own church,—though
the pulpit cushions were black, and many of the congregation had put on some
humble sign of mourning, yet it did not alter the whole material aspect of the
place. And yet what was Lord Ludlow’s relation to Hanbury, compared to my
father’s work and place in—?</p>
<p>O! it was very wicked in me! I think if I had seen my lady,—if I had
dared to ask to go to her, I should not have felt so miserable, so
discontented. But she sat in her own room, hung with black, all, even over the
shutters. She saw no light but that which was artificial—candles, lamps,
and the like—for more than a month. Only Adams went near her. Mr. Gray
was not admitted, though he called daily. Even Mrs. Medlicott did not see her
for near a fortnight. The sight of my lady’s griefs, or rather the
recollection of it, made Mrs. Medlicott talk far more than was her wont. She
told us, with many tears, and much gesticulation, even speaking German at
times, when her English would not flow, that my lady sat there, a white figure
in the middle of the darkened room; a shaded lamp near her, the light of which
fell on an open Bible,—the great family Bible. It was not open at any
chapter or consoling verse; but at the page whereon were registered the births
of her nine children. Five had died in infancy,—sacrificed to the cruel
system which forbade the mother to suckle her babies. Four had lived longer;
Urian had been the first to die, Ughtred-Mortimar, Earl Ludlow, the last.</p>
<p>My lady did not cry, Mrs. Medlicott said. She was quite composed; very still,
very silent. She put aside everything that savoured of mere business: sent
people to Mr. Horner for that. But she was proudly alive to every possible form
which might do honour to the last of her race.</p>
<p>In those days, expresses were slow things, and forms still slower. Before my
lady’s directions could reach Vienna, my lord was buried. There was some
talk (so Mrs. Medlicott said) about taking the body up, and bringing him to
Hanbury. But his executors,—connections on the Ludlow
side,—demurred to this. If he were removed to England, he must be carried
on to Scotland, and interred with his Monkshaven forefathers. My lady, deeply
hurt, withdrew from the discussion, before it degenerated to an unseemly
contest. But all the more, for this understood mortification of my
lady’s, did the whole village and estate of Hanbury assume every outward
sign of mourning. The church bells tolled morning and evening. The church
itself was draped in black inside. Hatchments were placed everywhere, where
hatchments could be put. All the tenantry spoke in hushed voices for more than
a week, scarcely daring to observe that all flesh, even that of an Earl Ludlow,
and the last of the Hanburys, was but grass after all. The very Fighting Lion
closed its front door, front shutters it had none, and those who needed drink
stole in at the back, and were silent and maudlin over their cups, instead of
riotous and noisy. Miss Galindo’s eyes were swollen up with crying, and
she told me, with a fresh burst of tears, that even hump-backed Sally had been
found sobbing over her Bible, and using a pocket-handkerchief for the first
time in her life; her aprons having hitherto stood her in the necessary stead,
but not being sufficiently in accordance with etiquette to be used when
mourning over an earl’s premature decease.</p>
<p>If it was this way out of the Hall, “you might work it by the rule of
three,” as Miss Galindo used to say, and judge what it was in the Hall.
We none of us spoke but in a whisper: we tried not to eat; and indeed the shock
had been so really great, and we did really care so much for my lady, that for
some days we had but little appetite. But after that, I fear our sympathy grew
weaker, while our flesh grew stronger. But we still spoke low, and our hearts
ached whenever we thought of my lady sitting there alone in the darkened room,
with the light ever falling on that one solemn page.</p>
<p>We wished, O how I wished that she would see Mr. Gray! But Adams said, she
thought my lady ought to have a bishop come to see her. Still no one had
authority enough to send for one.</p>
<p>Mr. Horner all this time was suffering as much as any one. He was too faithful
a servant of the great Hanbury family, though now the family had dwindled down
to a fragile old lady, not to mourn acutely over its probable extinction. He
had, besides, a deeper sympathy and reverence with, and for, my lady, in all
things, than probably he ever cared to show, for his manners were always
measured and cold. He suffered from sorrow. He also suffered from wrong. My
lord’s executors kept writing to him continually. My lady refused to
listen to mere business, saying she intrusted all to him. But the
“all” was more complicated than I ever thoroughly understood. As
far as I comprehended the case, it was something of this kind:—There had
been a mortgage raised on my lady’s property of Hanbury, to enable my
lord, her husband, to spend money in cultivating his Scotch estates, after some
new fashion that required capital. As long as my lord, her son, lived, who was
to succeed to both the estates after her death, this did not signify; so she
had said and felt; and she had refused to take any steps to secure the
repayment of capital, or even the payment of the interest of the mortgage from
the possible representatives and possessors of the Scotch estates, to the
possible owner of the Hanbury property; saying it ill became her to calculate
on the contingency of her son’s death.</p>
<p>But he had died childless, unmarried. The heir of the Monkshaven property was
an Edinburgh advocate, a far-away kinsman of my lord’s: the Hanbury
property, at my lady’s death, would go to the descendants of a third son
of the Squire Hanbury in the days of Queen Anne.</p>
<p>This complication of affairs was most grievous to Mr. Horner. He had always
been opposed to the mortgage; had hated the payment of the interest, as
obliging my lady to practise certain economies which, though she took care to
make them as personal as possible, he disliked as derogatory to the family.
Poor Mr. Horner! He was so cold and hard in his manner, so curt and decisive in
his speech, that I don’t think we any of us did him justice. Miss Galindo
was almost the first, at this time, to speak a kind word of him, or to take
thought of him at all, any farther than to get out of his way when we saw him
approaching.</p>
<p>“I don’t think Mr. Horner is well,” she said one day; about
three weeks after we had heard of my lord’s death. “He sits resting
his head on his hand, and hardly hears me when I speak to him.”</p>
<p>But I thought no more of it, as Miss Galindo did not name it again. My lady
came amongst us once more. From elderly she had become old; a little, frail,
old lady, in heavy black drapery, never speaking about nor alluding to her
great sorrow; quieter, gentler, paler than ever before; and her eyes dim with
much weeping, never witnessed by mortal.</p>
<p>She had seen Mr. Gray at the expiration of the month of deep retirement. But I
do not think that even to him she had said one word of her own particular
individual sorrow. All mention of it seemed buried deep for evermore. One day,
Mr. Horner sent word that he was too much indisposed to attend to his usual
business at the Hall; but he wrote down some directions and requests to Miss
Galindo, saying that he would be at his office early the next morning. The next
morning he was dead.</p>
<p>Miss Galindo told my lady. Miss Galindo herself cried plentifully, but my lady,
although very much distressed, could not cry. It seemed a physical
impossibility, as if she had shed all the tears in her power. Moreover, I
almost think her wonder was far greater that she herself lived than that Mr.
Horner died. It was almost natural that so faithful a servant should break his
heart, when the family he belonged to lost their stay, their heir, and their
last hope.</p>
<p>Yes! Mr. Horner was a faithful servant. I do not think there are many so
faithful now; but perhaps that is an old woman’s fancy of mine. When his
will came to be examined, it was discovered that, soon after Harry
Gregson’s accident, Mr. Horner had left the few thousands (three, I
think,) of which he was possessed, in trust for Harry’s benefit, desiring
his executors to see that the lad was well educated in certain things, for
which Mr. Horner had thought that he had shown especial aptitude; and there was
a kind of implied apology to my lady in one sentence where he stated that
Harry’s lameness would prevent his being ever able to gain his living by
the exercise of any mere bodily faculties, “as had been wished by a lady
whose wishes” he, the testator, “was bound to regard.”</p>
<p>But there was a codicil in the will, dated since Lord Ludlow’s
death—feebly written by Mr. Horner himself, as if in preparation only for
some more formal manner of bequest: or, perhaps, only as a mere temporary
arrangement till he could see a lawyer, and have a fresh will made. In this he
revoked his previous bequest to Harry Gregson. He only left two hundred pounds
to Mr. Gray to be used, as that gentleman thought best, for Henry
Gregson’s benefit. With this one exception, he bequeathed all the rest of
his savings to my lady, with a hope that they might form a nest-egg, as it
were, towards the paying off of the mortgage which had been such a grief to him
during his life. I may not repeat all this in lawyer’s phrase; I heard it
through Miss Galindo, and she might make mistakes. Though, indeed, she was very
clear-headed, and soon earned the respect of Mr. Smithson, my lady’s
lawyer from Warwick. Mr. Smithson knew Miss Galindo a little before, both
personally and by reputation; but I don’t think he was prepared to find
her installed as steward’s clerk, and, at first, he was inclined to treat
her, in this capacity, with polite contempt. But Miss Galindo was both a lady
and a spirited, sensible woman, and she could put aside her self-indulgence in
eccentricity of speech and manner whenever she chose. Nay more; she was usually
so talkative, that if she had not been amusing and warm-hearted, one might have
thought her wearisome occasionally. But to meet Mr. Smithson she came out daily
in her Sunday gown; she said no more than was required in answer to his
questions; her books and papers were in thorough order, and methodically kept;
her statements of matters-of-fact accurate, and to be relied on. She was
amusingly conscious of her victory over his contempt of a woman-clerk and his
preconceived opinion of her unpractical eccentricity.</p>
<p>“Let me alone,” said she, one day when she came in to sit awhile
with me. “That man is a good man—a sensible man—and I have no
doubt he is a good lawyer; but he can’t fathom women yet. I make no doubt
he’ll go back to Warwick, and never give credit again to those people who
made him think me half-cracked to begin with. O, my dear, he did! He showed it
twenty times worse than my poor dear master ever did. It was a form to be gone
through to please my lady, and, for her sake, he would hear my statements and
see my books. It was keeping a woman out of harm’s way, at any rate, to
let her fancy herself useful. I read the man. And, I am thankful to say, he
cannot read me. At least, only one side of me. When I see an end to be gained,
I can behave myself accordingly. Here was a man who thought that a woman in a
black silk gown was a respectable, orderly kind of person; and I was a woman in
a black silk gown. He believed that a woman could not write straight lines, and
required a man to tell her that two and two made four. I was not above ruling
my books, and had Cocker a little more at my fingers’ ends than he had.
But my greatest triumph has been holding my tongue. He would have thought
nothing of my books, or my sums, or my black silk gown, if I had spoken
unasked. So I have buried more sense in my bosom these ten days than ever I
have uttered in the whole course of my life before. I have been so curt, so
abrupt, so abominably dull, that I’ll answer for it he thinks me worthy
to be a man. But I must go back to him, my dear, so good-bye to conversation
and you.”</p>
<p>But though Mr. Smithson might be satisfied with Miss Galindo, I am afraid she
was the only part of the affair with which he was content. Everything else went
wrong. I could not say who told me so—but the conviction of this seemed
to pervade the house. I never knew how much we had all looked up to the silent,
gruff Mr. Horner for decisions, until he was gone. My lady herself was a pretty
good woman of business, as women of business go. Her father, seeing that she
would be the heiress of the Hanbury property, had given her a training which
was thought unusual in those days, and she liked to feel herself queen regnant,
and to have to decide in all cases between herself and her tenantry. But,
perhaps, Mr. Horner would have done it more wisely; not but what she always
attended to him at last. She would begin by saying, pretty clearly and
promptly, what she would have done, and what she would not have done. If Mr.
Horner approved of it, he bowed, and set about obeying her directly; if he
disapproved of it, he bowed, and lingered so long before he obeyed her, that
she forced his opinion out of him with her “Well, Mr. Horner! and what
have you to say against it?” For she always understood his silence as
well as if he had spoken. But the estate was pressed for ready money, and Mr.
Horner had grown gloomy and languid since the death of his wife, and even his
own personal affairs were not in the order in which they had been a year or two
before, for his old clerk had gradually become superannuated, or, at any rate,
unable by the superfluity of his own energy and wit to supply the spirit that
was wanting in Mr. Horner.</p>
<p>Day after day Mr. Smithson seemed to grow more fidgety, more annoyed at the
state of affairs. Like every one else employed by Lady Ludlow, as far as I
could learn, he had an hereditary tie to the Hanbury family. As long as the
Smithsons had been lawyers, they had been lawyers to the Hanburys; always
coming in on all great family occasions, and better able to understand the
characters, and connect the links of what had once been a large and scattered
family, than any individual thereof had ever been.</p>
<p>As long as a man was at the head of the Hanburys, the lawyers had simply acted
as servants, and had only given their advice when it was required. But they had
assumed a different position on the memorable occasion of the mortgage: they
had remonstrated against it. My lady had resented this remonstrance, and a
slight, unspoken coolness had existed between her and the father of this Mr.
Smithson ever since.</p>
<p>I was very sorry for my lady. Mr. Smithson was inclined to blame Mr. Horner for
the disorderly state in which he found some of the outlying farms, and for the
deficiencies in the annual payment of rents. Mr. Smithson had too much good
feeling to put this blame into words; but my lady’s quick instinct led
her to reply to a thought, the existence of which she perceived; and she
quietly told the truth, and explained how she had interfered repeatedly to
prevent Mr. Horner from taking certain desirable steps, which were discordant
to her hereditary sense of right and wrong between landlord and tenant. She
also spoke of the want of ready money as a misfortune that could be remedied,
by more economical personal expenditure on her own part; by which individual
saving, it was possible that a reduction of fifty pounds a year might have been
accomplished. But as soon as Mr. Smithson touched on larger economies, such as
either affected the welfare of others, or the honour and standing of the great
House of Hanbury, she was inflexible. Her establishment consisted of somewhere
about forty servants, of whom nearly as many as twenty were unable to perform
their work properly, and yet would have been hurt if they had been dismissed;
so they had the credit of fulfilling duties, while my lady paid and kept their
substitutes. Mr. Smithson made a calculation, and would have saved some
hundreds a year by pensioning off these old servants. But my lady would not
hear of it. Then, again, I know privately that he urged her to allow some of us
to return to our homes. Bitterly we should have regretted the separation from
Lady Ludlow; but we would have gone back gladly, had we known at the time that
her circumstances required it: but she would not listen to the proposal for a
moment.</p>
<p>“If I cannot act justly towards every one, I will give up a plan which
has been a source of much satisfaction; at least, I will not carry it out to
such an extent in future. But to these young ladies, who do me the favour to
live with me at present, I stand pledged. I cannot go back from my word, Mr.
Smithson. We had better talk no more of this.”</p>
<p>As she spoke, she entered the room where I lay. She and Mr. Smithson were
coming for some papers contained in the bureau. They did not know I was there,
and Mr. Smithson started a little when he saw me, as he must have been aware
that I had overheard something. But my lady did not change a muscle of her
face. All the world might overhear her kind, just, pure sayings, and she had no
fear of their misconstruction. She came up to me, and kissed me on the
forehead, and then went to search for the required papers.</p>
<p>“I rode over the Connington farms yesterday, my lady. I must say I was
quite grieved to see the condition they are in; all the land that is not waste
is utterly exhausted with working successive white crops. Not a pinch of manure
laid on the ground for years. I must say that a greater contrast could never
have been presented than that between Harding’s farm and the next
fields—fences in perfect order, rotation crops, sheep eating down the
turnips on the waste lands—everything that could be desired.”</p>
<p>“Whose farm is that?” asked my lady.</p>
<p>“Why, I am sorry to say, it was on none of your ladyship’s that I
saw such good methods adopted. I hoped it was, I stopped my horse to inquire. A
queer-looking man, sitting on his horse like a tailor, watching his men with a
couple of the sharpest eyes I ever saw, and dropping his h’s at every
word, answered my question, and told me it was his. I could not go on asking
him who he was; but I fell into conversation with him, and I gathered that he
had earned some money in trade in Birmingham, and had bought the estate (five
hundred acres, I think he said,) on which he was born, and now was setting
himself to cultivate it in downright earnest, going to Holkham and Woburn, and
half the country over, to get himself up on the subject.”</p>
<p>“It would be Brooke, that dissenting baker from Birmingham,” said
my lady in her most icy tone. “Mr. Smithson, I am sorry I have been
detaining you so long, but I think these are the letters you wished to
see.”</p>
<p>If her ladyship thought by this speech to quench Mr. Smithson she was mistaken.
Mr. Smithson just looked at the letters, and went on with the old subject.</p>
<p>“Now, my lady, it struck me that if you had such a man to take poor
Horner’s place, he would work the rents and the land round most
satisfactorily. I should not despair of inducing this very man to undertake the
work. I should not mind speaking to him myself on the subject, for we got
capital friends over a snack of luncheon that he asked me to share with
him.”</p>
<p>Lady Ludlow fixed her eyes on Mr. Smithson as he spoke, and never took them off
his face until he had ended. She was silent a minute before she answered.</p>
<p>“You are very good, Mr. Smithson, but I need not trouble you with any
such arrangements. I am going to write this afternoon to Captain James, a
friend of one of my sons, who has, I hear, been severely wounded at Trafalgar,
to request him to honour me by accepting Mr. Horner’s situation.”</p>
<p>“A Captain James! A captain in the navy! going to manage your
ladyship’s estate!”</p>
<p>“If he will be so kind. I shall esteem it a condescension on his part;
but I hear that he will have to resign his profession, his state of health is
so bad, and a country life is especially prescribed for him. I am in some hopes
of tempting him here, as I learn he has but little to depend on if he gives up
his profession.”</p>
<p>“A Captain James! an invalid captain!”</p>
<p>“You think I am asking too great a favour,” continued my lady. (I
never could tell how far it was simplicity, or how far a kind of innocent
malice, that made her misinterpret Mr. Smithson’s words and looks as she
did.) “But he is not a post-captain, only a commander, and his pension
will be but small. I may be able, by offering him country air and a healthy
occupation, to restore him to health.”</p>
<p>“Occupation! My lady, may I ask how a sailor is to manage land? Why, your
tenants will laugh him to scorn.”</p>
<p>“My tenants, I trust, will not behave so ill as to laugh at any one I
choose to set over them. Captain James has had experience in managing men. He
has remarkable practical talents, and great common-sense, as I hear from every
one. But, whatever he may be, the affair rests between him and myself. I can
only say I shall esteem myself fortunate if he comes.”</p>
<p>There was no more to be said, after my lady spoke in this manner. I had heard
her mention Captain James before, as a middy who had been very kind to her son
Urian. I thought I remembered then, that she had mentioned that his family
circumstances were not very prosperous. But, I confess, that little as I knew
of the management of land, I quite sided with Mr. Smithson. He, silently
prohibited from again speaking to my lady on the subject, opened his mind to
Miss Galindo, from whom I was pretty sure to hear all the opinions and news of
the household and village. She had taken a great fancy to me, because she said
I talked so agreeably. I believe it was because I listened so well.</p>
<p>“Well, have you heard the news,” she began, “about this
Captain James? A sailor,—with a wooden leg, I have no doubt. What would
the poor, dear, deceased master have said to it, if he had known who was to be
his successor! My dear, I have often thought of the postman’s bringing me
a letter as one of the pleasures I shall miss in heaven. But, really, I think
Mr. Horner may be thankful he has got out of the reach of news; or else he
would hear of Mr. Smithson’s having made up to the Birmingham baker, and
of his one-legged captain, coming to dot-and-go-one over the estate. I suppose
he will look after the labourers through a spy-glass. I only hope he
won’t stick in the mud with his wooden leg; for I, for one, won’t
help him out. Yes, I would,” said she, correcting herself; “I
would, for my lady’s sake.”</p>
<p>“But are you sure he has a wooden leg?” asked I. “I heard
Lady Ludlow tell Mr. Smithson about him, and she only spoke of him as
wounded.”</p>
<p>“Well, sailors are almost always wounded in the leg. Look at Greenwich
Hospital! I should say there were twenty one-legged pensioners to one without
an arm there. But say he has got half a dozen legs: what has he to do with
managing land? I shall think him very impudent if he comes, taking advantage of
my lady’s kind heart.”</p>
<p>However, come he did. In a month from that time, the carriage was sent to meet
Captain James; just as three years before it had been sent to meet me. His
coming had been so much talked about that we were all as curious as possible to
see him, and to know how so unusual an experiment, as it seemed to us, would
answer. But, before I tell you anything about our new agent, I must speak of
something quite as interesting, and I really think quite as important. And this
was my lady’s making friends with Harry Gregson. I do believe she did it
for Mr. Horner’s sake; but, of course, I can only conjecture why my lady
did anything. But I heard one day, from Mary Legard, that my lady had sent for
Harry to come and see her, if he was well enough to walk so far; and the next
day he was shown into the room he had been in once before under such unlucky
circumstances.</p>
<p>The lad looked pale enough, as he stood propping himself up on his crutch, and
the instant my lady saw him, she bade John Footman place a stool for him to sit
down upon while she spoke to him. It might be his paleness that gave his whole
face a more refined and gentle look; but I suspect it was that the boy was apt
to take impressions, and that Mr. Horner’s grave, dignified ways, and Mr.
Gray’s tender and quiet manners, had altered him; and then the thoughts
of illness and death seem to turn many of us into gentlemen, and gentlewomen,
as long as such thoughts are in our minds. We cannot speak loudly or angrily at
such times; we are not apt to be eager about mere worldly things, for our very
awe at our quickened sense of the nearness of the invisible world, makes us
calm and serene about the petty trifles of to-day. At least, I know that was
the explanation Mr. Gray once gave me of what we all thought the great
improvement in Harry Gregson’s way of behaving.</p>
<p>My lady hesitated so long about what she had best say, that Harry grew a little
frightened at her silence. A few months ago it would have surprised me more
than it did now; but since my lord her son’s death, she had seemed
altered in many ways,—more uncertain and distrustful of herself, as it
were.</p>
<p>At last she said, and I think the tears were in her eyes: “My poor little
fellow, you have had a narrow escape with your life since I saw you
last.”</p>
<p>To this there was nothing to be said but “Yes;” and again there was
silence.</p>
<p>“And you have lost a good, kind friend, in Mr. Horner.”</p>
<p>The boy’s lips worked, and I think he said, “Please,
don’t.” But I can’t be sure; at any rate, my lady went on:</p>
<p>“And so have I,—a good, kind friend, he was to both of us; and to
you he wished to show his kindness in even a more generous way than he has
done. Mr. Gray has told you about his legacy to you, has he not?”</p>
<p>There was no sign of eager joy on the lad’s face, as if he realised the
power and pleasure of having what to him must have seemed like a fortune.</p>
<p>“Mr. Gray said as how he had left me a matter of money.”</p>
<p>“Yes, he has left you two hundred pounds.”</p>
<p>“But I would rather have had him alive, my lady,” he burst out,
sobbing as if his heart would break.</p>
<p>“My lad, I believe you. We would rather have had our dead alive, would we
not? and there is nothing in money that can comfort us for their loss. But you
know—Mr. Gray has told you—who has appointed all our times to die.
Mr. Horner was a good, just man; and has done well and kindly, both by me and
you. You perhaps do not know” (and now I understood what my lady had been
making up her mind to say to Harry, all the time she was hesitating how to
begin) “that Mr. Horner, at one time, meant to leave you a great deal
more; probably all he had, with the exception of a legacy to his old clerk,
Morrison. But he knew that this estate—on which my forefathers had lived
for six hundred years—was in debt, and that I had no immediate chance of
paying off this debt; and yet he felt that it was a very sad thing for an old
property like this to belong in part to those other men, who had lent the
money. You understand me, I think, my little man?” said she, questioning
Harry’s face.</p>
<p>He had left off crying, and was trying to understand, with all his might and
main; and I think he had got a pretty good general idea of the state of
affairs; though probably he was puzzled by the term “the estate being in
debt.” But he was sufficiently interested to want my lady to go on; and
he nodded his head at her, to signify this to her.</p>
<p>“So Mr. Horner took the money which he once meant to be yours, and has
left the greater part of it to me, with the intention of helping me to pay off
this debt I have told you about. It will go a long way, and I shall try hard to
save the rest, and then I shall die happy in leaving the land free from
debt.” She paused. “But I shall not die happy in thinking of you. I
do not know if having money, or even having a great estate and much honour, is
a good thing for any of us. But God sees fit that some of us should be called
to this condition, and it is our duty then to stand by our posts, like brave
soldiers. Now, Mr. Horner intended you to have this money first. I shall only
call it borrowing from you, Harry Gregson, if I take it and use it to pay off
the debt. I shall pay Mr. Gray interest on this money, because he is to stand
as your guardian, as it were, till you come of age; and he must fix what ought
to be done with it, so as to fit you for spending the principal rightly when
the estate can repay it you. I suppose, now, it will be right for you to be
educated. That will be another snare that will come with your money. But have
courage, Harry. Both education and money may be used rightly, if we only pray
against the temptations they bring with them.”</p>
<p>Harry could make no answer, though I am sure he understood it all. My lady
wanted to get him to talk to her a little, by way of becoming acquainted with
what was passing in his mind; and she asked him what he would like to have done
with his money, if he could have part of it now? To such a simple question,
involving no talk about feelings, his answer came readily enough.</p>
<p>“Build a cottage for father, with stairs in it, and give Mr. Gray a
school-house. O, father does so want Mr. Gray for to have his wish! Father saw
all the stones lying quarried and hewn on Farmer Hale’s land; Mr. Gray
had paid for them all himself. And father said he would work night and day, and
little Tommy should carry mortar, if the parson would let him, sooner than that
he should be fretted and frabbed as he was, with no one giving him a helping
hand or a kind word.”</p>
<p>Harry knew nothing of my lady’s part in the affair; that was very clear.
My lady kept silence.</p>
<p>“If I might have a piece of my money, I would buy land from Mr. Brooks;
he has got a bit to sell just at the corner of Hendon Lane, and I would give it
to Mr. Gray; and, perhaps, if your ladyship thinks I may be learned again, I
might grow up into the schoolmaster.”</p>
<p>“You are a good boy,” said my lady. “But there are more
things to be thought of, in carrying out such a plan, than you are aware of.
However, it shall be tried.”</p>
<p>“The school, my lady?” I exclaimed, almost thinking she did not
know what she was saying.</p>
<p>“Yes, the school. For Mr. Horner’s sake, for Mr. Gray’s sake,
and last, not least, for this lad’s sake, I will give the new plan a
trial. Ask Mr. Gray to come up to me this afternoon about the land he wants. He
need not go to a Dissenter for it. And tell your father he shall have a good
share in the building of it, and Tommy shall carry the mortar.”</p>
<p>“And I may be schoolmaster?” asked Harry, eagerly.</p>
<p>“We’ll see about that,” said my lady, amused. “It will
be some time before that plan comes to pass, my little fellow.”</p>
<p>And now to return to Captain James. My first account of him was from Miss
Galindo.</p>
<p>“He’s not above thirty; and I must just pack up my pens and my
paper, and be off; for it would be the height of impropriety for me to be
staying here as his clerk. It was all very well in the old master’s days.
But here am I, not fifty till next May, and this young, unmarried man, who is
not even a widower! O, there would be no end of gossip. Besides he looks as
askance at me as I do at him. My black silk gown had no effect. He’s
afraid I shall marry him. But I won’t; he may feel himself quite safe
from that. And Mr. Smithson has been recommending a clerk to my lady. She would
far rather keep me on; but I can’t stop. I really could not think it
proper.”</p>
<p>“What sort of a looking man is he?”</p>
<p>“O, nothing particular. Short, and brown, and sunburnt. I did not think
it became me to look at him. Well, now for the nightcaps. I should have grudged
any one else doing them, for I have got such a pretty pattern!”</p>
<p>But when it came to Miss Galindo’s leaving, there was a great
misunderstanding between her and my lady. Miss Galindo had imagined that my
lady had asked her as a favour to copy the letters, and enter the accounts, and
had agreed to do the work without the notion of being paid for so doing. She
had, now and then, grieved over a very profitable order for needlework passing
out of her hands on account of her not having time to do it, because of her
occupation at the Hall; but she had never hinted this to my lady, but gone on
cheerfully at her writing as long as her clerkship was required. My lady was
annoyed that she had not made her intention of paying Miss Galindo more clear,
in the first conversation she had had with her; but I suppose that she had been
too delicate to be very explicit with regard to money matters; and now Miss
Galindo was quite hurt at my lady’s wanting to pay her for what she had
done in such right-down good-will.</p>
<p>“No,” Miss Galindo said; “my own dear lady, you may be as
angry with me as you like, but don’t offer me money. Think of
six-and-twenty years ago, and poor Arthur, and as you were to me then! Besides,
I wanted money—I don’t disguise it—for a particular purpose;
and when I found that (God bless you for asking me!) I could do you a service,
I turned it over in my mind, and I gave up one plan and took up another, and
it’s all settled now. Bessy is to leave school and come and live with me.
Don’t, please, offer me money again. You don’t know how glad I have
been to do anything for you. Have not I, Margaret Dawson? Did you not hear me
say, one day, I would cut off my hand for my lady; for am I a stick or a stone,
that I should forget kindness? O, I have been so glad to work for you. And now
Bessy is coming here; and no one knows anything about her—as if she had
done anything wrong, poor child!”</p>
<p>“Dear Miss Galindo,” replied my lady, “I will never ask you
to take money again. Only I thought it was quite understood between us. And you
know you have taken money for a set of morning wrappers, before now.”</p>
<p>“Yes, my lady; but that was not confidential. Now I was so proud to have
something to do for you confidentially.”</p>
<p>“But who is Bessy?” asked my lady. “I do not understand who
she is, or why she is to come and live with you. Dear Miss Galindo, you must
honour me by being confidential with me in your turn!”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />