<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0045" id="link2HCH0045"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER 9. Appearance and Disappearance </h2>
<p>'Arthur, my dear boy,' said Mr Meagles, on the evening of the following
day, 'Mother and I have been talking this over, and we don't feel
comfortable in remaining as we are. That elegant connection of ours—that
dear lady who was here yesterday—'</p>
<p>'I understand,' said Arthur.</p>
<p>'Even that affable and condescending ornament of society,' pursued Mr
Meagles, 'may misrepresent us, we are afraid. We could bear a great deal,
Arthur, for her sake; but we think we would rather not bear that, if it
was all the same to her.'</p>
<p>'Good,' said Arthur. 'Go on.'</p>
<p>'You see,' proceeded Mr Meagles 'it might put us wrong with our
son-in-law, it might even put us wrong with our daughter, and it might
lead to a great deal of domestic trouble. You see, don't you?'</p>
<p>'Yes, indeed,' returned Arthur, 'there is much reason in what you say.' He
had glanced at Mrs Meagles, who was always on the good and sensible side;
and a petition had shone out of her honest face that he would support Mr
Meagles in his present inclinings.</p>
<p>'So we are very much disposed, are Mother and I,' said Mr Meagles, 'to
pack up bags and baggage and go among the Allongers and Marshongers once
more. I mean, we are very much disposed to be off, strike right through
France into Italy, and see our Pet.'</p>
<p>'And I don't think,' replied Arthur, touched by the motherly anticipation
in the bright face of Mrs Meagles (she must have been very like her
daughter, once), 'that you could do better. And if you ask me for my
advice, it is that you set off to-morrow.'</p>
<p>'Is it really, though?' said Mr Meagles. 'Mother, this is being backed in
an idea!'</p>
<p>Mother, with a look which thanked Clennam in a manner very agreeable to
him, answered that it was indeed.</p>
<p>'The fact is, besides, Arthur,' said Mr Meagles, the old cloud coming over
his face, 'that my son-in-law is already in debt again, and that I suppose
I must clear him again. It may be as well, even on this account, that I
should step over there, and look him up in a friendly way. Then again,
here's Mother foolishly anxious (and yet naturally too) about Pet's state
of health, and that she should not be left to feel lonesome at the present
time. It's undeniably a long way off, Arthur, and a strange place for the
poor love under all the circumstances. Let her be as well cared for as any
lady in that land, still it is a long way off. just as Home is Home though
it's never so Homely, why you see,' said Mr Meagles, adding a new version
to the proverb, 'Rome is Rome, though it's never so Romely.'</p>
<p>'All perfectly true,' observed Arthur, 'and all sufficient reasons for
going.'</p>
<p>'I am glad you think so; it decides me. Mother, my dear, you may get
ready. We have lost our pleasant interpreter (she spoke three foreign
languages beautifully, Arthur; you have heard her many a time), and you
must pull me through it, Mother, as well as you can.</p>
<p>I require a deal of pulling through, Arthur,' said Mr Meagles, shaking his
head, 'a deal of pulling through. I stick at everything beyond a
noun-substantive—and I stick at him, if he's at all a tight one.'</p>
<p>'Now I think of it,' returned Clennam, 'there's Cavalletto. He shall go
with you, if you like. I could not afford to lose him, but you will bring
him safe back.'</p>
<p>'Well! I am much obliged to you, my boy,' said Mr Meagles, turning it
over, 'but I think not. No, I think I'll be pulled through by Mother.
Cavallooro (I stick at his very name to start with, and it sounds like the
chorus to a comic song) is so necessary to you, that I don't like the
thought of taking him away. More than that, there's no saying when we may
come home again; and it would never do to take him away for an indefinite
time. The cottage is not what it was. It only holds two little people less
than it ever did, Pet, and her poor unfortunate maid Tattycoram; but it
seems empty now. Once out of it, there's no knowing when we may come back
to it. No, Arthur, I'll be pulled through by Mother.'</p>
<p>They would do best by themselves perhaps, after all, Clennam thought;
therefore did not press his proposal.</p>
<p>'If you would come down and stay here for a change, when it wouldn't
trouble you,' Mr Meagles resumed, 'I should be glad to think—and so
would Mother too, I know—that you were brightening up the old place
with a bit of life it was used to when it was full, and that the Babies on
the wall there had a kind eye upon them sometimes. You so belong to the
spot, and to them, Arthur, and we should every one of us have been so
happy if it had fallen out—but, let us see—how's the weather
for travelling now?' Mr Meagles broke off, cleared his throat, and got up
to look out of the window.</p>
<p>They agreed that the weather was of high promise; and Clennam kept the
talk in that safe direction until it had become easy again, when he gently
diverted it to Henry Gowan and his quick sense and agreeable qualities
when he was delicately dealt With; he likewise dwelt on the indisputable
affection he entertained for his wife. Clennam did not fail of his effect
upon good Mr Meagles, whom these commendations greatly cheered; and who
took Mother to witness that the single and cordial desire of his heart in
reference to their daughter's husband, was harmoniously to exchange
friendship for friendship, and confidence for confidence. Within a few
hours the cottage furniture began to be wrapped up for preservation in the
family absence—or, as Mr Meagles expressed it, the house began to
put its hair in papers—and within a few days Father and Mother were
gone, Mrs Tickit and Dr Buchan were posted, as of yore, behind the parlour
blind, and Arthur's solitary feet were rustling among the dry fallen
leaves in the garden walks.</p>
<p>As he had a liking for the spot, he seldom let a week pass without paying
a visit. Sometimes, he went down alone from Saturday to Monday; sometimes
his partner accompanied him; sometimes, he merely strolled for an hour or
two about the house and garden, saw that all was right, and returned to
London again. At all times, and under all circumstances, Mrs Tickit, with
her dark row of curls, and Dr Buchan, sat in the parlour window, looking
out for the family return.</p>
<p>On one of his visits Mrs Tickit received him with the words, 'I have
something to tell you, Mr Clennam, that will surprise you.' So surprising
was the something in question, that it actually brought Mrs Tickit out of
the parlour window and produced her in the garden walk, when Clennam went
in at the gate on its being opened for him.</p>
<p>'What is it, Mrs Tickit?' said he.</p>
<p>'Sir,' returned that faithful housekeeper, having taken him into the
parlour and closed the door; 'if ever I saw the led away and deluded child
in my life, I saw her identically in the dusk of yesterday evening.'</p>
<p>'You don't mean Tatty—'</p>
<p>'Coram yes I do!' quoth Mrs Tickit, clearing the disclosure at a leap.</p>
<p>'Where?'</p>
<p>'Mr Clennam,' returned Mrs Tickit, 'I was a little heavy in my eyes, being
that I was waiting longer than customary for my cup of tea which was then
preparing by Mary Jane. I was not sleeping, nor what a person would term
correctly, dozing. I was more what a person would strictly call watching
with my eyes closed.'</p>
<p>Without entering upon an inquiry into this curious abnormal condition,
Clennam said, 'Exactly. Well?'</p>
<p>'Well, sir,' proceeded Mrs Tickit, 'I was thinking of one thing and
thinking of another, just as you yourself might. Just as anybody might.'
'Precisely so,' said Clennam. 'Well?'</p>
<p>'And when I do think of one thing and do think of another,' pursued Mrs
Tickit, 'I hardly need to tell you, Mr Clennam, that I think of the
family. Because, dear me! a person's thoughts,' Mrs Tickit said this with
an argumentative and philosophic air, 'however they may stray, will go
more or less on what is uppermost in their minds. They will do it, sir,
and a person can't prevent them.'</p>
<p>Arthur subscribed to this discovery with a nod.</p>
<p>'You find it so yourself, sir, I'll be bold to say,' said Mrs Tickit, 'and
we all find it so. It an't our stations in life that changes us, Mr
Clennam; thoughts is free!—As I was saying, I was thinking of one
thing and thinking of another, and thinking very much of the family. Not
of the family in the present times only, but in the past times too. For
when a person does begin thinking of one thing and thinking of another in
that manner, as it's getting dark, what I say is, that all times seem to
be present, and a person must get out of that state and consider before
they can say which is which.'</p>
<p>He nodded again; afraid to utter a word, lest it should present any new
opening to Mrs Tickit's conversational powers.</p>
<p>'In consequence of which,' said Mrs Tickit, 'when I quivered my eyes and
saw her actual form and figure looking in at the gate, I let them close
again without so much as starting, for that actual form and figure came so
pat to the time when it belonged to the house as much as mine or your own,
that I never thought at the moment of its having gone away. But, sir, when
I quivered my eyes again, and saw that it wasn't there, then it all
flooded upon me with a fright, and I jumped up.'</p>
<p>'You ran out directly?' said Clennam.</p>
<p>'I ran out,' assented Mrs Tickit, 'as fast as ever my feet would carry me;
and if you'll credit it, Mr Clennam, there wasn't in the whole shining
Heavens, no not so much as a finger of that young woman.'</p>
<p>Passing over the absence from the firmament of this novel constellation,
Arthur inquired of Mrs Tickit if she herself went beyond the gate?</p>
<p>'Went to and fro, and high and low,' said Mrs Tickit, 'and saw no sign of
her!'</p>
<p>He then asked Mrs Tickit how long a space of time she supposed there might
have been between the two sets of ocular quiverings she had experienced?
Mrs Tickit, though minutely circumstantial in her reply, had no settled
opinion between five seconds and ten minutes.</p>
<p>She was so plainly at sea on this part of the case, and had so clearly
been startled out of slumber, that Clennam was much disposed to regard the
appearance as a dream. Without hurting Mrs Tickit's feelings with that
infidel solution of her mystery, he took it away from the cottage with
him; and probably would have retained it ever afterwards if a circumstance
had not soon happened to change his opinion. He was passing at nightfall
along the Strand, and the lamp-lighter was going on before him, under
whose hand the street-lamps, blurred by the foggy air, burst out one after
another, like so many blazing sunflowers coming into full-blow all at
once,—when a stoppage on the pavement, caused by a train of
coal-waggons toiling up from the wharves at the river-side, brought him to
a stand-still. He had been walking quickly, and going with some current of
thought, and the sudden check given to both operations caused him to look
freshly about him, as people under such circumstances usually do.</p>
<p>Immediately, he saw in advance—a few people intervening, but still
so near to him that he could have touched them by stretching out his arm—Tattycoram
and a strange man of a remarkable appearance: a swaggering man, with a
high nose, and a black moustache as false in its colour as his eyes were
false in their expression, who wore his heavy cloak with the air of a
foreigner. His dress and general appearance were those of a man on travel,
and he seemed to have very recently joined the girl. In bending down
(being much taller than she was), listening to whatever she said to him,
he looked over his shoulder with the suspicious glance of one who was not
unused to be mistrustful that his footsteps might be dogged. It was then
that Clennam saw his face; as his eyes lowered on the people behind him in
the aggregate, without particularly resting upon Clennam's face or any
other.</p>
<p>He had scarcely turned his head about again, and it was still bent down,
listening to the girl, when the stoppage ceased, and the obstructed stream
of people flowed on. Still bending his head and listening to the girl, he
went on at her side, and Clennam followed them, resolved to play this
unexpected play out, and see where they went.</p>
<p>He had hardly made the determination (though he was not long about it),
when he was again as suddenly brought up as he had been by the stoppage.
They turned short into the Adelphi,—the girl evidently leading,—and
went straight on, as if they were going to the Terrace which overhangs the
river.</p>
<p>There is always, to this day, a sudden pause in that place to the roar of
the great thoroughfare. The many sounds become so deadened that the change
is like putting cotton in the ears, or having the head thickly muffled. At
that time the contrast was far greater; there being no small steam-boats
on the river, no landing places but slippery wooden stairs and
foot-causeways, no railroad on the opposite bank, no hanging bridge or
fish-market near at hand, no traffic on the nearest bridge of stone,
nothing moving on the stream but watermen's wherries and coal-lighters.
Long and broad black tiers of the latter, moored fast in the mud as if
they were never to move again, made the shore funereal and silent after
dark; and kept what little water-movement there was, far out towards
mid-stream. At any hour later than sunset, and not least at that hour when
most of the people who have anything to eat at home are going home to eat
it, and when most of those who have nothing have hardly yet slunk out to
beg or steal, it was a deserted place and looked on a deserted scene.</p>
<p>Such was the hour when Clennam stopped at the corner, observing the girl
and the strange man as they went down the street. The man's footsteps were
so noisy on the echoing stones that he was unwilling to add the sound of
his own. But when they had passed the turning and were in the darkness of
the dark corner leading to the terrace, he made after them with such
indifferent appearance of being a casual passenger on his way, as he could
assume.</p>
<p>When he rounded the dark corner, they were walking along the terrace
towards a figure which was coming towards them. If he had seen it by
itself, under such conditions of gas-lamp, mist, and distance, he might
not have known it at first sight, but with the figure of the girl to
prompt him, he at once recognised Miss Wade.</p>
<p>He stopped at the corner, seeming to look back expectantly up the street
as if he had made an appointment with some one to meet him there; but he
kept a careful eye on the three. When they came together, the man took off
his hat, and made Miss Wade a bow. The girl appeared to say a few words as
though she presented him, or accounted for his being late, or early, or
what not; and then fell a pace or so behind, by herself. Miss Wade and the
man then began to walk up and down; the man having the appearance of being
extremely courteous and complimentary in manner; Miss Wade having the
appearance of being extremely haughty.</p>
<p>When they came down to the corner and turned, she was saying,</p>
<p>'If I pinch myself for it, sir, that is my business. Confine yourself to
yours, and ask me no question.'</p>
<p>'By Heaven, ma'am!' he replied, making her another bow. 'It was my
profound respect for the strength of your character, and my admiration of
your beauty.'</p>
<p>'I want neither the one nor the other from any one,' said she, 'and
certainly not from you of all creatures. Go on with your report.'</p>
<p>'Am I pardoned?' he asked, with an air of half abashed gallantry.</p>
<p>'You are paid,' she said, 'and that is all you want.'</p>
<p>Whether the girl hung behind because she was not to hear the business, or
as already knowing enough about it, Clennam could not determine. They
turned and she turned. She looked away at the river, as she walked with
her hands folded before her; and that was all he could make of her without
showing his face. There happened, by good fortune, to be a lounger really
waiting for some one; and he sometimes looked over the railing at the
water, and sometimes came to the dark corner and looked up the street,
rendering Arthur less conspicuous.</p>
<p>When Miss Wade and the man came back again, she was saying, 'You must wait
until to-morrow.'</p>
<p>'A thousand pardons?' he returned. 'My faith! Then it's not convenient
to-night?'</p>
<p>'No. I tell you I must get it before I can give it to you.'</p>
<p>She stopped in the roadway, as if to put an end to the conference. He of
course stopped too. And the girl stopped.</p>
<p>'It's a little inconvenient,' said the man. 'A little. But, Holy Blue!
that's nothing in such a service. I am without money to-night, by chance.
I have a good banker in this city, but I would not wish to draw upon the
house until the time when I shall draw for a round sum.'</p>
<p>'Harriet,' said Miss Wade, 'arrange with him—this gentleman here—for
sending him some money to-morrow.' She said it with a slur of the word
gentleman which was more contemptuous than any emphasis, and walked slowly
on. The man bent his head again, and the girl spoke to him as they both
followed her. Clennam ventured to look at the girl as they Moved away. He
could note that her rich black eyes were fastened upon the man with a
scrutinising expression, and that she kept at a little distance from him,
as they walked side by side to the further end of the terrace.</p>
<p>A loud and altered clank upon the pavement warned him, before he could
discern what was passing there, that the man was coming back alone.
Clennam lounged into the road, towards the railing; and the man passed at
a quick swing, with the end of his cloak thrown over his shoulder, singing
a scrap of a French song.</p>
<p>The whole vista had no one in it now but himself. The lounger had lounged
out of view, and Miss Wade and Tattycoram were gone. More than ever bent
on seeing what became of them, and on having some information to give his
good friend, Mr Meagles, he went out at the further end of the terrace,
looking cautiously about him. He rightly judged that, at first at all
events, they would go in a contrary direction from their late companion.
He soon saw them in a neighbouring bye-street, which was not a
thoroughfare, evidently allowing time for the man to get well out of their
way. They walked leisurely arm-in-arm down one side of the street, and
returned on the opposite side. When they came back to the street-corner,
they changed their pace for the pace of people with an object and a
distance before them, and walked steadily away. Clennam, no less steadily,
kept them in sight.</p>
<p>They crossed the Strand, and passed through Covent Garden (under the
windows of his old lodging where dear Little Dorrit had come that night),
and slanted away north-east, until they passed the great building whence
Tattycoram derived her name, and turned into the Gray's Inn Road. Clennam
was quite at home here, in right of Flora, not to mention the Patriarch
and Pancks, and kept them in view with ease. He was beginning to wonder
where they might be going next, when that wonder was lost in the greater
wonder with which he saw them turn into the Patriarchal street. That
wonder was in its turn swallowed up on the greater wonder with which he
saw them stop at the Patriarchal door. A low double knock at the bright
brass knocker, a gleam of light into the road from the opened door, a
brief pause for inquiry and answer and the door was shut, and they were
housed.</p>
<p>After looking at the surrounding objects for assurance that he was not in
an odd dream, and after pacing a little while before the house, Arthur
knocked at the door. It was opened by the usual maid-servant, and she
showed him up at once, with her usual alacrity, to Flora's sitting-room.</p>
<p>There was no one with Flora but Mr F.'s Aunt, which respectable
gentlewoman, basking in a balmy atmosphere of tea and toast, was ensconced
in an easy-chair by the fireside, with a little table at her elbow, and a
clean white handkerchief spread over her lap on which two pieces of toast
at that moment awaited consumption. Bending over a steaming vessel of tea,
and looking through the steam, and breathing forth the steam, like a
malignant Chinese enchantress engaged in the performance of unholy rites,
Mr F.'s Aunt put down her great teacup and exclaimed, 'Drat him, if he
an't come back again!'</p>
<p>It would seem from the foregoing exclamation that this uncompromising
relative of the lamented Mr F., measuring time by the acuteness of her
sensations and not by the clock, supposed Clennam to have lately gone
away; whereas at least a quarter of a year had elapsed since he had had
the temerity to present himself before her.</p>
<p>'My goodness Arthur!' cried Flora, rising to give him a cordial reception,
'Doyce and Clennam what a start and a surprise for though not far from the
machinery and foundry business and surely might be taken sometimes if at
no other time about mid-day when a glass of sherry and a humble sandwich
of whatever cold meat in the larder might not come amiss nor taste the
worse for being friendly for you know you buy it somewhere and wherever
bought a profit must be made or they would never keep the place it stands
to reason without a motive still never seen and learnt now not to be
expected, for as Mr F. himself said if seeing is believing not seeing is
believing too and when you don't see you may fully believe you're not
remembered not that I expect you Arthur Doyce and Clennam to remember me
why should I for the days are gone but bring another teacup here directly
and tell her fresh toast and pray sit near the fire.'</p>
<p>Arthur was in the greatest anxiety to explain the object of his visit; but
was put off for the moment, in spite of himself, by what he understood of
the reproachful purport of these words, and by the genuine pleasure she
testified in seeing him. 'And now pray tell me something all you know,'
said Flora, drawing her chair near to his, 'about the good dear quiet
little thing and all the changes of her fortunes carriage people now no
doubt and horses without number most romantic, a coat of arms of course
and wild beasts on their hind legs showing it as if it was a copy they had
done with mouths from ear to ear good gracious, and has she her health
which is the first consideration after all for what is wealth without it
Mr F. himself so often saying when his twinges came that sixpence a day
and find yourself and no gout so much preferable, not that he could have
lived on anything like it being the last man or that the previous little
thing though far too familiar an expression now had any tendency of that
sort much too slight and small but looked so fragile bless her?'</p>
<p>Mr F.'s Aunt, who had eaten a piece of toast down to the crust, here
solemnly handed the crust to Flora, who ate it for her as a matter of
business. Mr F.'s Aunt then moistened her ten fingers in slow succession
at her lips, and wiped them in exactly the same order on the white
handkerchief; then took the other piece of toast, and fell to work upon
it. While pursuing this routine, she looked at Clennam with an expression
of such intense severity that he felt obliged to look at her in return,
against his personal inclinations.</p>
<p>'She is in Italy, with all her family, Flora,' he said, when the dreaded
lady was occupied again.</p>
<p>'In Italy is she really?' said Flora, 'with the grapes growing everywhere
and lava necklaces and bracelets too that land of poetry with burning
mountains picturesque beyond belief though if the organ-boys come away
from the neighbourhood not to be scorched nobody can wonder being so young
and bringing their white mice with them most humane, and is she really in
that favoured land with nothing but blue about her and dying gladiators
and Belvederes though Mr F. himself did not believe for his objection when
in spirits was that the images could not be true there being no medium
between expensive quantities of linen badly got up and all in creases and
none whatever, which certainly does not seem probable though perhaps in
consequence of the extremes of rich and poor which may account for it.'</p>
<p>Arthur tried to edge a word in, but Flora hurried on again.</p>
<p>'Venice Preserved too,' said she, 'I think you have been there is it well
or ill preserved for people differ so and Maccaroni if they really eat it
like the conjurors why not cut it shorter, you are acquainted Arthur—dear
Doyce and Clennam at least not dear and most assuredly not Doyce for I
have not the pleasure but pray excuse me—acquainted I believe with
Mantua what has it got to do with Mantua-making for I never have been able
to conceive?'</p>
<p>'I believe there is no connection, Flora, between the two,' Arthur was
beginning, when she caught him up again.</p>
<p>'Upon your word no isn't there I never did but that's like me I run away
with an idea and having none to spare I keep it, alas there was a time
dear Arthur that is to say decidedly not dear nor Arthur neither but you
understand me when one bright idea gilded the what's-his-name horizon of
et cetera but it is darkly clouded now and all is over.'</p>
<p>Arthur's increasing wish to speak of something very different was by this
time so plainly written on his face, that Flora stopped in a tender look,
and asked him what it was?</p>
<p>'I have the greatest desire, Flora, to speak to some one who is now in
this house—with Mr Casby no doubt. Some one whom I saw come in, and
who, in a misguided and deplorable way, has deserted the house of a friend
of mine.'</p>
<p>'Papa sees so many and such odd people,' said Flora, rising, 'that I
shouldn't venture to go down for any one but you Arthur but for you I
would willingly go down in a diving-bell much more a dining-room and will
come back directly if you'll mind and at the same time not mind Mr F.'s
Aunt while I'm gone.'</p>
<p>With those words and a parting glance, Flora bustled out, leaving Clennam
under dreadful apprehension of this terrible charge.</p>
<p>The first variation which manifested itself in Mr F.'s Aunt's demeanour
when she had finished her piece of toast, was a loud and prolonged sniff.
Finding it impossible to avoid construing this demonstration into a
defiance of himself, its gloomy significance being unmistakable, Clennam
looked plaintively at the excellent though prejudiced lady from whom it
emanated, in the hope that she might be disarmed by a meek submission.</p>
<p>'None of your eyes at me,' said Mr F.'s Aunt, shivering with hostility.
'Take that.'</p>
<p>'That' was the crust of the piece of toast. Clennam accepted the boon with
a look of gratitude, and held it in his hand under the pressure of a
little embarrassment, which was not relieved when Mr F.'s Aunt, elevating
her voice into a cry of considerable power, exclaimed, 'He has a proud
stomach, this chap! He's too proud a chap to eat it!' and, coming out of
her chair, shook her venerable fist so very close to his nose as to tickle
the surface. But for the timely return of Flora, to find him in this
difficult situation, further consequences might have ensued. Flora,
without the least discomposure or surprise, but congratulating the old
lady in an approving manner on being 'very lively to-night', handed her
back to her chair.</p>
<p>'He has a proud stomach, this chap,' said Mr F.'s relation, on being
reseated. 'Give him a meal of chaff!'</p>
<p>'Oh! I don't think he would like that, aunt,' returned Flora.</p>
<p>'Give him a meal of chaff, I tell you,' said Mr F.'s Aunt, glaring round
Flora on her enemy. 'It's the only thing for a proud stomach. Let him eat
up every morsel. Drat him, give him a meal of chaff!'</p>
<p>Under a general pretence of helping him to this refreshment, Flora got him
out on the staircase; Mr F.'s Aunt even then constantly reiterating, with
inexpressible bitterness, that he was 'a chap,' and had a 'proud stomach,'
and over and over again insisting on that equine provision being made for
him which she had already so strongly prescribed.</p>
<p>'Such an inconvenient staircase and so many corner-stairs Arthur,'
whispered Flora, 'would you object to putting your arm round me under my
pelerine?'</p>
<p>With a sense of going down-stairs in a highly-ridiculous manner, Clennam
descended in the required attitude, and only released his fair burden at
the dining-room door; indeed, even there she was rather difficult to be
got rid of, remaining in his embrace to murmur, 'Arthur, for mercy's sake,
don't breathe it to papa!'</p>
<p>She accompanied Arthur into the room, where the Patriarch sat alone, with
his list shoes on the fender, twirling his thumbs as if he had never left
off. The youthful Patriarch, aged ten, looked out of his picture-frame
above him with no calmer air than he. Both smooth heads were alike
beaming, blundering, and bumpy.</p>
<p>'Mr Clennam, I am glad to see you. I hope you are well, sir, I hope you
are well. Please to sit down, please to sit down.'</p>
<p>'I had hoped, sir,' said Clennam, doing so, and looking round with a face
of blank disappointment, 'not to find you alone.'</p>
<p>'Ah, indeed?' said the Patriarch, sweetly. 'Ah, indeed?'</p>
<p>'I told you so you know papa,' cried Flora.</p>
<p>'Ah, to be sure!' returned the Patriarch. 'Yes, just so. Ah, to be sure!'</p>
<p>'Pray, sir,'demanded Clennam, anxiously, 'is Miss Wade gone?'</p>
<p>'Miss—? Oh, you call her Wade,' returned Mr Casby. 'Highly proper.'
Arthur quickly returned, 'What do you call her?'</p>
<p>'Wade,' said Mr Casby. 'Oh, always Wade.'</p>
<p>After looking at the philanthropic visage and the long silky white hair
for a few seconds, during which Mr Casby twirled his thumbs, and smiled at
the fire as if he were benevolently wishing it to burn him that he might
forgive it, Arthur began:</p>
<p>'I beg your pardon, Mr Casby—'</p>
<p>'Not so, not so,' said the Patriarch, 'not so.'</p>
<p>'—But, Miss Wade had an attendant with her—a young woman
brought up by friends of mine, over whom her influence is not considered
very salutary, and to whom I should be glad to have the opportunity of
giving the assurance that she has not yet forfeited the interest of those
protectors.'</p>
<p>'Really, really?' returned the Patriarch.</p>
<p>'Will you therefore be so good as to give me the address of Miss Wade?'</p>
<p>'Dear, dear, dear!' said the Patriarch, 'how very unfortunate! If you had
only sent in to me when they were here! I observed the young woman, Mr
Clennam. A fine full-coloured young woman, Mr Clennam, with very dark hair
and very dark eyes. If I mistake not, if I mistake not?'</p>
<p>Arthur assented, and said once more with new expression, 'If you would be
so good as to give me the address.'</p>
<p>'Dear, dear, dear!' exclaimed the Patriarch in sweet regret. 'Tut, tut,
tut! what a pity, what a pity! I have no address, sir. Miss Wade mostly
lives abroad, Mr Clennam. She has done so for some years, and she is (if I
may say so of a fellow-creature and a lady) fitful and uncertain to a
fault, Mr Clennam. I may not see her again for a long, long time. I may
never see her again. What a pity, what a pity!'</p>
<p>Clennam saw now, that he had as much hope of getting assistance out of the
Portrait as out of the Patriarch; but he said nevertheless:</p>
<p>'Mr Casby, could you, for the satisfaction of the friends I have
mentioned, and under any obligation of secrecy that you may consider it
your duty to impose, give me any information at all touching Miss Wade? I
have seen her abroad, and I have seen her at home, but I know nothing of
her. Could you give me any account of her whatever?'</p>
<p>'None,' returned the Patriarch, shaking his big head with his utmost
benevolence. 'None at all. Dear, dear, dear! What a real pity that she
stayed so short a time, and you delayed! As confidential agency business,
agency business, I have occasionally paid this lady money; but what
satisfaction is it to you, sir, to know that?'</p>
<p>'Truly, none at all,' said Clennam.</p>
<p>'Truly,' assented the Patriarch, with a shining face as he
philanthropically smiled at the fire, 'none at all, sir. You hit the wise
answer, Mr Clennam. Truly, none at all, sir.' His turning of his smooth
thumbs over one another as he sat there, was so typical to Clennam of the
way in which he would make the subject revolve if it were pursued, never
showing any new part of it nor allowing it to make the smallest advance,
that it did much to help to convince him of his labour having been in
vain. He might have taken any time to think about it, for Mr Casby, well
accustomed to get on anywhere by leaving everything to his bumps and his
white hair, knew his strength to lie in silence. So there Casby sat,
twirling and twirling, and making his polished head and forehead look
largely benevolent in every knob.</p>
<p>With this spectacle before him, Arthur had risen to go, when from the
inner Dock where the good ship Pancks was hove down when out in no
cruising ground, the noise was heard of that steamer labouring towards
him. It struck Arthur that the noise began demonstratively far off, as
though Mr Pancks sought to impress on any one who might happen to think
about it, that he was working on from out of hearing. Mr Pancks and he
shook hands, and the former brought his employer a letter or two to sign.
Mr Pancks in shaking hands merely scratched his eyebrow with his left
forefinger and snorted once, but Clennam, who understood him better now
than of old, comprehended that he had almost done for the evening and
wished to say a word to him outside. Therefore, when he had taken his
leave of Mr Casby, and (which was a more difficult process) of Flora, he
sauntered in the neighbourhood on Mr Pancks's line of road.</p>
<p>He had waited but a short time when Mr Pancks appeared. Mr Pancks shaking
hands again with another expressive snort, and taking off his hat to put
his hair up, Arthur thought he received his cue to speak to him as one who
knew pretty well what had just now passed. Therefore he said, without any
preface:</p>
<p>'I suppose they were really gone, Pancks?'</p>
<p>'Yes,' replied Pancks. 'They were really gone.'</p>
<p>'Does he know where to find that lady?'</p>
<p>'Can't say. I should think so.'</p>
<p>Mr Pancks did not? No, Mr Pancks did not. Did Mr Pancks know anything
about her? 'I expect,' rejoined that worthy, 'I know as much about her as
she knows about herself. She is somebody's child—anybody's,
nobody's.</p>
<p>Put her in a room in London here with any six people old enough to be her
parents, and her parents may be there for anything she knows. They may be
in any house she sees, they may be in any churchyard she passes, she may
run against 'em in any street, she may make chance acquaintance of 'em at
any time; and never know it.</p>
<p>She knows nothing about 'em. She knows nothing about any relative
whatever. Never did. Never will.' 'Mr Casby could enlighten her, perhaps?'</p>
<p>'May be,' said Pancks. 'I expect so, but don't know. He has long had money
(not overmuch as I make out) in trust to dole out to her when she can't do
without it. Sometimes she's proud and won't touch it for a length of time;
sometimes she's so poor that she must have it. She writhes under her life.
A woman more angry, passionate, reckless, and revengeful never lived. She
came for money to-night. Said she had peculiar occasion for it.'</p>
<p>'I think,' observed Clennam musing, 'I by chance know what occasion—I
mean into whose pocket the money is to go.'</p>
<p>'Indeed?' said Pancks. 'If it's a compact, I recommend that party to be
exact in it. I wouldn't trust myself to that woman, young and handsome as
she is, if I had wronged her; no, not for twice my proprietor's money!
Unless,' Pancks added as a saving clause, 'I had a lingering illness on
me, and wanted to get it over.'</p>
<p>Arthur, hurriedly reviewing his own observation of her, found it to tally
pretty nearly with Mr Pancks's view.</p>
<p>'The wonder is to me,' pursued Pancks, 'that she has never done for my
proprietor, as the only person connected with her story she can lay hold
of. Mentioning that, I may tell you, between ourselves, that I am
sometimes tempted to do for him myself.'</p>
<p>Arthur started and said, 'Dear me, Pancks, don't say that!'</p>
<p>'Understand me,' said Pancks, extending five cropped coaly finger-nails on
Arthur's arm; 'I don't mean, cut his throat. But by all that's precious,
if he goes too far, I'll cut his hair!'</p>
<p>Having exhibited himself in the new light of enunciating this tremendous
threat, Mr Pancks, with a countenance of grave import, snorted several
times and steamed away.</p>
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