<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>CHAPTER X.</h2>
<h3>MRS. MOWBRAY CONSULTS MR. CARTWRIGHT UPON THE SUBJECT OF HER LATE HUSBAND'S WILL.</h3>
<p>The first person they encountered on entering the house was Fanny.</p>
<p>"Where <i>have</i> you been!" she exclaimed. "My mother is half frightened to
death. Do go to her this moment, Helen, to set her heart at ease."</p>
<p>"Where is she, Fanny?" inquired Helen, with a sigh, as she remembered
how little the answers she must necessarily give to the questions she
would be sure to ask were likely to produce that effect.</p>
<p>"In her dressing-room, Helen. But where <i>have</i> you been?"</p>
<p>"To Oakley."</p>
<p>"Good gracious, Helen!—and without asking mamma's leave?"</p>
<p>"I did it with a good intention, Fanny. Do you think I was wrong in
endeavouring to restore the intimacy that has been so cruelly
interrupted? Do you think mamma will be very angry? I am sure it was
chiefly for her sake that I went."</p>
<p>"No, I am sure she will not when you tell her that. But come directly: I
do assure you she has been seriously uneasy.—Did you find Sir Gilbert
very savage, Rosalind?"</p>
<p>"<i>Pas mal</i>, my dear."</p>
<p>Another moment brought them to Mrs. Mowbray. "Thank Heaven!" was her
first exclamation on seeing them; and the repetition of Fanny's emphatic
"Where <i>have</i> you been?" followed it.</p>
<p>"Dearest mother!" said Helen, fondly embracing her, "do not chide us
very severely, even if we have been wrong; for indeed we meant to be
very, very right; and when we set out the expedition appeared to us
anything but a pleasant one. We have been to Oakley."</p>
<p>"I am too thankful at seeing you returned in safety, my dear girls, to
be very angry at any thing. But do tell me, Helen, what could have
induced you to volunteer a visit to the only people who have been unkind
to us since your poor father's death?"</p>
<p>"In the hope, mamma, of putting an end to an estrangement which I
thought was very painful to you."</p>
<p>"Dearest Helen! it was just like you! And have you succeeded, my love?"</p>
<p>"No, mamma, I have not."</p>
<p>Mrs. Mowbray coloured.</p>
<p>"And pray, Helen, have they explained to you the cause of their
extraordinary and most unfeeling conduct?"</p>
<p>"Do not say <i>they</i>, dearest mother! Lady Harrington is greatly
distressed at Sir Gilbert's conduct: so is the colonel, who is just come
home. Whatever fault there may be, it is Sir Gilbert's alone."</p>
<p>"Did he, then, explain himself to you?"</p>
<p>Helen remained silent.</p>
<p>"I must request, Helen," resumed her mother, "that you make no farther
mystery about the Harringtons. I am willing to excuse the strange step
you took this morning; but I shall be seriously displeased if you refuse
to tell me what passed during your visit. Of what is it that Sir Gilbert
accuses me?"</p>
<p>"I pointed out to him, mamma, the injustice of being angry with you
because papa made a will that he did not approve."</p>
<p>"Well, Helen! and what did he say to that?"</p>
<p>"Upon my word, mamma, I could not find a shadow of reason in any thing
he said."</p>
<p>"You evade my questions, Helen. I insist upon knowing what it is that
Sir Gilbert lays to my charge.—Helen!—do you refuse to answer me?"</p>
<p>"Oh no, mamma!—but you cannot think how painful it would be for me to
repeat it!"</p>
<p>"I cannot help it, Helen: you have brought this pain on yourself by your
very unadvised visit of this morning. But since you have gone to the
house of one who has declared himself my enemy, you must let me know
exactly what it is he has chosen to accuse me of; unless you mean that I
should imagine you wish to shield him from my resentment because you
think him right."</p>
<p>"Oh, my mother!" cried Helen; "what a word is that!"</p>
<p>"Well, then, do not trifle with me any longer, but repeat at once all
that you heard him say."</p>
<p>Thus urged, poor Helen stated Sir Gilbert's very unjust suspicions
respecting the influence used to induce Mr. Mowbray to make the will he
had left. It was in vain she endeavoured to modify and soften the
accusation,—the resentment and indignation of Mrs. Mowbray were
unbounded; and Helen had the deep mortification of perceiving that the
only result of her enterprise was to have rendered the breach she so
greatly wished to repair a hundred times wider than before.</p>
<p>"And this man, with these base and vile suspicions, is the person your
father has left as joint executor with me!—What a situation does this
place me in! Did he make any allusion to this, Helen?—did he say any
thing of the necessary business that we have, most unfortunately, to
transact together?"</p>
<p>"No, mamma, he did not."</p>
<p>A long silence followed this question and answer. Mrs. Mowbray appeared
to suffer greatly, and in fact she did so. Nothing could be farther from
the truth than the idea Sir Gilbert Harrington had conceived, and its
injustice revolted and irritated her to a degree that she never before
experienced against any human being. That Helen should have listened to
such an accusation, pained her extremely; and a feeling in some degree
allied to displeasure against her mingled with the disagreeable
meditations in which she was plunged.</p>
<p>"My head aches dreadfully!" she said at last. "Fanny, give me my shawl
and parasol: I will try what a walk in the fresh air will do for me."</p>
<p>"May I go with you, mamma?" said Helen.</p>
<p>"No, my dear; you have had quite walking enough. Fanny has not been out
at all: she may come with me."</p>
<p>These words were both natural and reasonable, but there was something in
them that smote Helen to the heart. She fondly loved her mother, and,
for the first time, she suspected that her heart and feelings were not
understood.</p>
<p>Mrs. Mowbray and Fanny had just walked through the library windows into
the garden, when they perceived Mr. Cartwright approaching the house.
They both uttered an exclamation of pleasure at perceiving him, and
Fanny said eagerly, "He must see us, mamma! Do not let him go all the
way round to the hall-door! May we not walk across and meet him?"</p>
<p>"To be sure. Run forward, Fanny; and when he sees you coming to him, he
will turn this way."</p>
<p>She was not mistaken: Fanny had not made three steps in advance of her
mother, before Mr. Cartwright turned from the road, and passing through
a gate in the invisible fence, joined her in a moment.</p>
<p>"How kind this is of you!" said he as he drew near;—"to appear thus
willing to receive again an intruder, whose quick return must lead you
to suspect that you are in danger of being haunted by him! And so I
think you are, Miss Fanny; and I will be generous enough to tell you at
once, that if you greet me thus kindly, I shall hardly know how to keep
away from Mowbray Park."</p>
<p>"But mamma is so glad to see you," said Fanny, blushing beautifully,
"that I am sure you need not try to keep away!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Mowbray now drew near to answer for herself; which she did very
cordially, assuring him that she considered these friendly and
unceremonious visits as the greatest kindness he could show her.</p>
<p>"It will be long, I think," said she, "before I shall have courage
sufficient to invite any one to this mournful and sadly-altered mansion:
but those whose friendship I really value will, I trust, have the
charity to come to us without waiting for an invitation."</p>
<p>"I wish I could prove to you, my dear madam," replied Mr. Cartwright
with respectful tenderness, "how fervently I desire to serve you: but,
surrounded by old and long-tried friends as you must be, how can a
new-comer and a stranger hope to be useful?"</p>
<p>This was touching a very tender point—and it is just possible that Mr.
Cartwright was aware of it, as he was present at the reading of the
will, and heard Sir Gilbert Harrington's first burst of rage on becoming
acquainted with its contents. But Mrs. Mowbray had either forgotten this
circumstance, or, feeling deeply disturbed at the fresh proof which
Helen had brought her of the falling off of an old friend, was disposed
to revert anew to it, in the hope of moving the compasssion and
propitiating the kindness of a new one.</p>
<p>"Alas! my dear sir," she said feelingly, "even old friends will
sometimes fail us; and then it is that we ought to thank God for such
happy accidents as that which has placed near us one so able and kindly
willing to supply their place as yourself.—Fanny, my love, the business
on which I have to speak is a painful one: go to your sister, dearest,
while I ask our kind friend's advice respecting this unhappy business."</p>
<p>"Good-b'ye then, Mr. Cartwright," said Fanny, holding out her hand to
him.—"But perhaps I shall see you again as you go away, for I shall be
in the garden."</p>
<p>"Bless you, my dear child!" said he fervently, as he led her a few steps
towards the shrubberies; "God bless, and have you in his holy keeping!"</p>
<p>"What an especial blessing have you, my dear friend," he said, returning
to Mrs. Mowbray, "in that charming child!—Watch over her, and guard her
from all evil! for she is one who, if guided in that only path which
leads to good, will be a saving and a precious treasure to all who
belong to her: but if led astray—alas! the guilt that the downfall of
so pure a spirit would entail on those whose duty it is to watch over
her!"</p>
<p>"She is indeed an excellent young creature!" said the proud mother,
whose darling the lovely Fanny had ever been; "but I think she wants
less guiding than any child I ever saw,—and it has always been so. She
learned faster than she could be taught; and her temper is so sweet, and
her heart so affectionate, that I really do not remember that she has
ever deserved a reprimand in her life."</p>
<p>"May the precepts of her admirable mother ever keep her thus!" said Mr.
Cartwright, as they seated themselves in the library, into which they
had entered. "But, oh! my dear lady! know you not that it is just such
sweet and gifted creatures as your Fanny that the Evil One seeks for his
own?—Nay, look not thus terrified, my excellent, my exemplary
friend,—look not thus terrified: if it be thus, as most surely it
is—think you that we are left without help to resist? My dear, my
admirable Mrs. Mowbray! yours is the hand appointed to lead this fair
and attractive being unspotted through the world. If great—awfully
great, as assuredly it is, be the responsibility, great—unspeakably
great, will be the reward. Then tremble not, dear friend! watch and
pray, and this unmeasurable reward shall be yours!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Mowbray, however, did tremble; but her trembling was accompanied by
a sweet and well-pleased consciousness of being considered by the
excellent man beside her as capable of leading this darling child to
eternal happiness and glory. The look, the accent of Mr. Cartwright went
farther than his words to convince her that he believed this power to be
hers, and she gazed at him with something of the reverence and humble
love with which Catholics contemplate the effigies of the saints they
worship.</p>
<p>"But what was the business, the painful business, my poor friend, upon
which you wished to consult me, before that vision of light had drawn
all our attention upon herself? What was it, my dear Mrs. Mowbray, you
wished to say to me?"</p>
<p>"I am hardly justified, I fear, Mr. Cartwright, thus early in our
acquaintance, in taking up your valuable time in listening to my sorrows
and my wrongs; but in truth I have both to bear; and I have at this
moment no friend near me to whom I can apply for advice how to proceed
with business that puzzles almost as much as it distresses me. May I,
then, my dear sir, intrude on your kindness for half an hour, while I
state to you the singular predicament in which I am placed?"</p>
<p>"Were it not, as most assuredly it is—were it not, dearest Mrs.
Mowbray, a true and deep-felt pleasure to me to believe that I might
possibly be useful to you, it would be my especial and bounden duty to
strive to be so. For what are the ministers of the Most High placed
amidst the people? wherefore are their voices raised, so that all should
hear them? Is it not, my friend, because their lives, their souls, their
bodies, are devoted to the service of those committed by Providence to
their care? And, trust me, the minister who would shrink from this is
unworthy—utterly unworthy the post to which he has been called. Speak,
then, dearest Mrs. Mowbray, as to one bound alike by duty and the most
fervent good-will to aid and assist you to the utmost extent of his
power."</p>
<p>The great natural gift of Mr. Cartwright was the power of making his
voice, his eye, and the flexible muscles of his handsome mouth, echo,
and, as it were reverberate and reiterate every word he spoke, giving to
his language a power beyond its own. What he now said was uttered
rapidly, but with an apparent depth and intensity of feeling that
brought tears of mingled gratitude and admiration to the eyes of Mrs.
Mowbray. After a moment given to this not unpleasing emotion, she said,</p>
<p>"It was from you, Mr. Cartwright, if I remember rightly, that I first
heard the enactments of my husband's will. When I give you my word, as I
now most solemnly do, that I had never during his life the slightest
knowledge of what that will was to be, I think you will believe me."</p>
<p>"Believe you!" exclaimed Mr. Cartwright. "Is there on earth a being
sufficiently depraved to doubt an assertion so vouched by you?"</p>
<p>"Oh, Mr. Cartwright! if all men had your generous, and, I will say, just
confidence in me, I should not now be in the position I am! But Sir
Gilbert Harrington, the person most unhappily chosen by Mr. Mowbray as
joint executor with myself, is persuaded that this generous will was
made in my favour solely in consequence of my artful influence over him;
and so deeply does he resent this imputed crime, that instead of
standing forward, as he ought to do, as the protector and agent of his
friend's widow, he loads the memory of that friend with insult, and
oppresses me with scorn and revilings, the more bitter because conveyed
to me by my own child."</p>
<p>Mrs. Mowbray wept.—Mr. Cartwright hid his face with his hands, and for
some moments seemed fearful of betraying all he felt. At length he fixed
his eyes upon her—eyes moistened by a tear, and in a low, deep voice
that seemed to indicate an inward struggle, he uttered, "<i>Vengeance is
mine, saith the Lord</i>!"</p>
<p>He closed his eyes, and sat for a moment silent,—then added, "Perhaps
of all the trials to which we are exposed in this world of temptation,
the obeying this mandate is the most difficult! But, like all uttered by
its Divine Author, it is blessed alike by its authority and its use.
Without it!—my friend! without it, would not my hand be grappling the
throat of your malignant enemy?—Without it, should I not even now be
seeking to violate the laws of God and man, to bring the wretch who can
thus stab an angel woman's breast to the dust before her? But, thanks to
the faith that is in me, I <i>know</i> that his suspicious heart and cruel
soul shall meet a vengeance as much greater than any I could inflict, as
the hand that wields it is more powerful than mine! I humbly thank
Heaven for this, and remembering it, turn with chastened spirit from the
forbidden task of punishing him, to the far more Christian one of
offering aid to the gentle being he would crush.—Was it indeed from the
lips of your child, my poor friend, that these base aspersions reached
you?"</p>
<p>"It was indeed, Mr. Cartwright; and it was this which made them cut so
deeply. Poor Helen knew not what she was about when she secretly left
her mother's roof to visit this man, in the hope of restoring the
families to their former habits of intimacy!"</p>
<p>"Did Helen do this?" said Mr. Cartwright, with a sort of shiver.</p>
<p>"Yes, poor thing, she did; and perhaps for her pains may have won
caresses for herself. But, by her own statement—most reluctantly given,
certainly,—she seems to have listened to calumnies against her mother,
which I should have thought no child of mine would have borne to hear;"
and again Mrs. Mowbray shed tears.</p>
<p>"Gracious Heaven!" exclaimed Mr. Cartwright, fervently clasping his
hands, "Dear, tortured Mrs. Mowbray, turn your weeping eyes to Heaven!
those drops shall not fall in vain. It was your child—a child nurtured
in that gentle bosom, who repeated to you this blasphemy? Oh, fie! fie!
fie! But let us not think of this,—at least, not at this trying moment.
Hereafter means must be taken to stay this plague-spot from spreading
over the hearts of all whom nature has given to love and honour you.
Your pretty, gentle Fanny! she at least will not, I think, be led to
listen to any voice that shall speak ill of you:—sweet child! let her
be near your heart, and that will comfort you.—But, alas! my poor
friend, this maternal disappointment, grievous as it is, will not be all
you have to bear from this wretch, whom Heaven, for its good but
inscrutable purposes, permits to persecute you. There must be business,
my dear Mrs. Mowbray, business of great importance that this man must be
immediately called upon to execute with you,—the proving the will, for
instance; he must either do this, or refuse to act."</p>
<p>"Would to Heaven he might refuse!" said Mrs. Mowbray eagerly; "what a
relief would this be to me, Mr. Cartwright! Do you think there would be
any possibility of leading him to it?"</p>
<p>"Of leading him,—certainly not; for it is very clear, from his conduct,
that whatever you appeared to wish, <i>that</i> he would be averse to do.
Your only hope of obtaining what would most assuredly be an especial
blessing for you, his formal renunciation of the executorship, would, I
think, be from writing to him immediately, and imperatively demanding
his joining you forthwith in proving the will. In such a state of mind
as he must be in before he would bear to utter his vile suspicions to
your daughter, I think it very likely he may refuse."</p>
<p>"And what would happen then, Mr. Cartwright?"</p>
<p>"You must place yourself in the hands of a respectable lawyer, totally a
stranger and unconnected with him, and he would put you in a way to
prove it yourself; after which he could give you no further trouble of
any kind: unless, indeed, your misguided children should continue to
frequent his house, and so become the means of wounding your ears and
your heart by repeating his calumnies. But this, I trust, the source of
all wisdom and goodness will give you power to prevent."</p>
<p>"With your help and counsel, Mr. Cartwright, I may yet hope to weather
the storm that seems to have burst upon me; but indeed it could hardly
have burst upon any one less capable of struggling with it! In what
language should I write to this, cruel man, who has so undeservedly
become my enemy?"</p>
<p>"There is no difficulty there, my friend. The shortest and most strictly
ceremonious form must be the best."</p>
<p>Mrs. Mowbray drew towards her materials for writing,—opened the
portfolio, which between its leaves of blotting-paper contained sundry
sheets of wire-wove, black-edged post,—placed one of them before
her,—took a pen and curiously examined its tip—dipped it delicately in
the ink, and finally turned to Mr. Cartwright, saying,</p>
<p>"How very grateful I should be if you would have the great kindness to
write it for me!"</p>
<p>"But the handwriting, my dear lady, must be yours."</p>
<p>"Oh yes! I know. But it would be so much more satisfactory if you would
sketch the form!"</p>
<p>"Then I am sure I will do it most readily." He drew the paper to him and
wrote,</p>
<p>"Mrs. Mowbray presents her compliments to Sir Gilbert Harrington, and
requests to know on what day it will suit him to meet her and her lawyer
in London, for the purpose of proving her late husband's will at
Doctors' Commons. The amount of the real property may be ascertained by
the rent-roll; that of the personal, by means of papers left by the
deceased, and a valuation of the effects made by competent persons. Mrs.
Mowbray begs leave to intimate that she wishes as little delay as
possible to intervene before the completion of this transaction."</p>
<p>Mr. Cartwright turned what he had written towards her, saying, "This is
the sort of letter which I should think it advisable to send."</p>
<p>Mrs. Mowbray drew forth another sheet, and transcribed it so rapidly
that it might be doubted whether she allowed herself time to read it as
she did so.</p>
<p>"And this should be despatched instantly, should it not?" she said,
folding and directing it.</p>
<p>"Indeed, I think so."</p>
<p>"Then will you have the kindness to ring the bell, Mr. Cartwright?"</p>
<p>"Bring me a lighted taper, John," said Mrs. Mowbray to the servant who
entered; "and let Thomas get a horse ready to take this letter
immediately to Oakley."</p>
<p>The taper was brought, the letter sealed and delivered, with
instructions that the bearer was to wait for an answer.</p>
<p>This important business concluded, Mr. Cartwright rose to go, saying,
"You have filled my heart and my head so completely by the communication
of Sir Gilbert Harrington's conduct, that I protest to you I do not at
this moment recollect why it was I troubled you with a visit this
morning. I shall recollect it, I dare say, when I see you no longer; and
if I do, you must let me come back before very long to tell you."</p>
<p>"But whether you recollect it or not," replied Mrs. Mowbray in a
plaintive tone, "I trust you will not let it be long before I see you:
otherwise, Mr. Cartwright, I shall not know how to proceed when I
receive Sir Gilbert's answer."</p>
<p>This appeal was answered by an assurance, uttered in a tone of the most
soothing kindness, that he would never be far from her when she wished
him near; and then, with a pastoral and affectionate pressure of her
hand, he left her.</p>
<p>Fanny kept her word, and was walking up and down about a dozen yards
from that end of the shrubbery which terminated in the road leading to
the house. Mr. Cartwright looked in that direction as he stepped from
the library window, and walking quickly to the spot, conversed with her
for several minutes as she stood leaning over the gate. Fanny smiled,
blushed, and looked delighted: her hand, too, was pressed with
affectionate kindness; and Mr. Cartwright returned to his vicarage and
his early dinner.</p>
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