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Works of Ellen Wood

Page 652

by Ellen Wood


  But nothing further could be heard of Mr. Dundyke; nothing further was heard, and it became useless to linger on in Geneva. That he was in Geneva’s lake, she never doubted, and the place became hateful to her.

  She travelled towards home in company with Mr. Prattleton and his daughter. At Paris they parted; they remaining in it for a few days, she proceeding to London direct, which she reached in safety. Poor Mrs. Dundyke! As she sat alone in the dark cab which was to take her to her now solitary home at Brixton, she perhaps felt the loss, the dreadful circumstances of it altogether, more keenly than she had felt them yet. She sat with dry eyes, but a throbbing brain, feeling that life for her had ended; that she was left in a world whose happiness had died out.

  It was a very pretty white villa, with a lawn before it, and encircled by carriage drive, with double gates. As the man drove in at one, and stopped before the entrance, and the door was thrown open to the light of the hall, Mrs. Dundyke became aware that some gentleman was standing there, behind the servant.

  “Who is that, John?” she whispered.

  “It’s a stranger, ma’am; a gentleman who has just called. He seemed so surprised when I said you had not returned yet; but you drove up at the moment. And master, ma’am?”

  Mrs. Dundyke did not answer. The servants knew that something was amiss; but she had not courage to explain then; in fact, she could scarcely suppress her emotion sufficiently to speak with composure. The stranger came forward to meet her, and she recognised the gentleman who had assisted them in Grenoble, and had given his name as Robert Carr.

  “You see I have availed myself of your invitation to call,” he said. “It is curious I should happen to come to-night when you are only returning. I fancied you did not intend to remain away so long. But where is Mr. Dundyke?”

  She turned with him into one of the sitting-rooms — an elegant room of good proportions. The chandelier was lighted; a handsome china tea-service, interspersed with articles of silver, stood on the table; cold meats and other good things were ready; and altogether it was a complete picture of home comfort, of easy competency. The thought that he, who had been the many years partner of her life, would never come back to this again, combined with the home question of the Rev. Mr. Carr, struck out of her what little composure she had retained, and Mrs. Dundyke sank down in an easy chair, and burst into a storm of sobs.

  To say that the young clergyman stood in consternation, would be saying little. He was not used to scenes, did not like them; and he felt inwardly uncomfortable, not knowing what he ought to say or do.

  “Pray, forgive me,” she murmured, when she had recovered sufficiently to speak. “You asked after my husband. He is lost — he is gone. He will never come home again.”

  “Lost!” repeated Robert Carr.

  Mrs. Dundyke told her tale, and the young man listened in utter astonishment. He had never heard of such a thing in all his life; had never imagined anything so strange. It seemed that he could not be tired of asking questions — of hazarding conjectures. He wished he had been there, he said; he was sure that the search he would have instituted would have found him, dead or alive. And it was a somewhat remarkable fact that everybody, forthwith destined to hear the story, said the same. So prone are we to under-rate the exertions of other people, and over-rate our own.

  But simple, courteous Mrs. Dundyke, could not forget the duties of hospitality amid her great sorrow. She went upstairs for a minute to take off her travelling things, and then quietly made tea for Robert Carr, asking him questions about himself as he drank it.

  He had come straight to London from Grenoble, on business connected with an assistant ministry he expected to get in November, and then went to Holland. He had been back in London now about a week, but should soon be returning to Holland, as his wife was not in good health.

  “His wife!” Mrs. Dundyke repeated in surprise. She thought he looked too young to have a wife.

  Robert Carr laughed. He had a wife and two children, he said; he had married young.

  Mrs. Dundyke told him that she thought they were connected — in fact, she knew they were, for old Mrs. Dundyke used to say so. “I do not quite remember how she made it out,” continued Mrs. Dundyke; “I think she was a cousin in the second degree to the Miss Hughes’s of Westerbury. They were — —”

  Mrs. Dundyke stopped short. None were more considerate than she of the feelings of others; and it suddenly struck her that the young clergyman before her, a gentleman himself, might not like to be reminded of these things.

  “They were dressmakers, if you speak of my mother’s sisters,” he quietly said; “I have heard her say so. She was a lady herself in mind and manners; but her family were quite inferior.”

  Mrs. Dundyke did not feel her way altogether clear. She remembered hearing of the elopement; she remembered certain unpleasant subsequent rumours — that Martha Ann Hughes remained with Mr. Carr in Holland, although the ceremony of marriage had not passed between them. Always charitably judging, she supposed now that they must have been married at some subsequent period; and this, their eldest son, called himself Robert Carr. But it was not a topic that she felt comfortable in pursuing.

  “You say that your mother is dead?” she resumed.

  “She has been dead about five years. We are three of us: I; my brother Thomas, who was born two years after me; and my sister, Mary Augusta, who is several years younger. There were two other girls between my brother and Mary, but they died.”

  “Mr. Carr is in business in Rotterdam?”

  “Yes; partner in a merchant’s house there. He has saved money, and is well off.”

  Mrs. Dundyke faintly smiled; she was glad for a moment to make a semblance of forgetting her own woes. “Those random young men often make the most sober ones when they settle down. Your father was wild in his young days.”

  “Was he? I’m sure I don’t know. You should see him now: a regular steady-going old Dutchman, fat and taciturn, who smokes his afternoons away in the summer-house. He has not been very well of late years; and I tell him he ought to spend his hours of recreation in taking exercise, not in sitting still and smoking.”

  “Does he keep up any intercourse with his relatives in Westerbury?” asked Mrs. Dundyke, for she had heard through Mildred Arkell that Westerbury never heard anything of its renegade son, Robert Carr, and did not know or care whether he was dead or alive — in fact, had forgotten all remembrance of him.

  “Not any — not the least. I fancy my father and mother must have had some disagreement with their home friends, for they never spoke of them. I remember, when I was a little boy, my mother getting news of the death of a sister; but how it came to her I’m sure I don’t know.”

  “She had two sisters, and she had a brother,” said Mrs. Dundyke. “I heard that Mary died. Are the other sister and the brother living?”

  “I really do not know. If we had possessed no relatives in the world, we could not have lived more completely isolated from them. I believe my grandfather is living, and in Westerbury — at least, I have not heard of his death.”

  “Have you lived entirely in Rotterdam?” she asked, her interest very much awakened, she scarcely knew why, for this young man. Perhaps it took its rise in the faint, sad thought, which would keep arising in spite of herself, that a terrible blow might be in future store for him, of whose possible existence he was evidently in utter ignorance.

  “Our home has been in Rotterdam, but I and my brother have been educated in England. We were with a clergyman for some years in London, and then went to Cambridge. It would not have done for me to preach with a foreign accent,” he added, with a smile.

  “But you speak with a perfect accent,” said Mrs. Dundyke; “as well as if you had never been out of England. Do you speak Dutch?”

  “As a native; in fact, I suppose it may be said that I am a native. Dutch, English, German, and French — we speak them all well.”

  Poor Mrs. Dundyke heaved a bitter sigh. The words brought
to her remembrance what her husband had said about their rubbing on with “we” and “no;” but she would not let it go on again to emotion. She observed the same delicate look on this young man that had struck her at Grenoble; and he coughed rather frequently, always putting his hand to his chest at the time, as if the cough gave him pain.

  “Will you let me ask you if you are very strong?” she said. “I do not think you look so.”

  “I was strong,” he replied, “no one more so, until I met with a hurt. In riding one day at Cambridge, the horse threw me, and kicked me here,” touching his chest. “Since then, I have had a cough, more or less, and am sometimes in slight pain. My father despatched me on that tour, when I met you, with a view of making me strong.”

  “Was the injury great at the time?”

  “No, I think not; the doctors said not. I believe some of the small arteries were ruptured. I spit blood for some time after it; and, do you know,” he added, looking suddenly up at her, “the last day or two I have been spitting it a little again.”

  “You must take care of yourself,” said Mrs. Dundyke, after a pause.

  “So I do. I am going to a doctor to-morrow morning, for I want to get into duty again, and should be vexed if anything stopped it.”

  “Have you ever done duty?”

  “Of course; for a twelvemonth. I had my title in the diocese of Ely. I am in full orders now, and hope to be at work in November.”

  A doubt came over Mrs. Dundyke as she looked at his slender hands and his hollow cheek, whether he would ever work again. Robert Carr rose to bid her good-bye.

  “Can I be of any service to you in any way?” he said, in a low, earnest tone, as he held her hand in his. “You cannot tell what a strange impression this tale has made upon me; and I feel as if I should like to go to Geneva, and prosecute the search still.”

  “You are very kind,” she said; “but indeed there is nothing else that can be done. The environs of Geneva were scoured, especially on the side where, as I have told you, two gentlemen were seen who bore the resemblance to my husband and Mr. Hardcastle.”

  “I don’t like that Mr. Hardcastle,” cried the young man; “no, I don’t. He ought not to have gone away, and left you in the midst of your distress. It was an unfeeling thing to do.”

  “He could not help it. He said he had urgent business at Genoa.”

  “The business should have waited, had it been mine. Well, if I can do anything for you, Mrs. Dundyke, now or later, do let me. If what you say is correct — that we are related — I have a right to help you.”

  “Thank you very much. And remember,” she added, in a voice almost as low as a whisper, “that should you ever be in — in — trouble, or distress, or need a friend in any way, you have only to come to me.”

  What was in Mrs. Dundyke’s mind as she spoke? What made her say it? She was thinking of that shock which might be looming for him in the future, it was hard to say how near or how distant. And she felt that she could love this young man almost like a son.

  “I will see you again, Mrs. Dundyke, before I leave town,” were his last words.

  But he did not. When he reached his lodgings that night, he found a telegraphic despatch awaiting him from Rotterdam, saying that his father was taken dangerously ill.

  And the Reverend Robert Carr hastened to Dover by the first train, en route for Holland.

  CHAPTER VI.

  NEWS FOR WESTERBURY.

  It cannot be denied that the present time, this first day after coming home, was one of peculiar pain to Mrs. Dundyke. She would have to go over the sad and strange story again and again, and there was no help for it. The chief partners in Fenchurch-street naturally required the particulars; the few friends she had, the household servants, wished to hear them, and there was only herself to tell the tale.

  By ten o’clock, on the morning after her arrival, the second partner of the house, who wore rings and a moustache, and had altogether been an object of envy to the unfortunate common-councilman, was sitting with Mrs. Dundyke. She had not put on widow’s weeds; she would not yet; she had said to Mary Prattleton, with a burst of grief, that a widow’s cap would take the last remnant of lingering hope out of her. She wore a rich black silk gown, trimmed with much crape, but the cap and bonnet of the widow she assumed not.

  Mr. Knowles, a kind-hearted man, who did not want for good sense, dandy though he was in dress, sat twirling his sandy moustache, the very gravest concern pervading his countenance. Mrs. Dundyke, who had never seen this gentleman more than once or twice, sat in humility, struggling with her grief. His social position was of a different standing from what poor Mr. Dundyke’s had ever been.

  “You see, Mrs. Dundyke, one hardly knows how to act, or what to be at,” he remarked, after they had talked for some time, and she had related to him the details (always excepting any suspicion she might once have entertained of Mr. Hardcastle) as closely as she could. “Apart from the grief, the concern for your husband personally, it is altogether so awkward an affair, in a business point of view: we don’t know whether we are to consider him as dead or alive.”

  She shook her head.

  “There is little hope that he is alive, sir.”

  “Well, it would really seem like it. But what can have become of him?”

  “There was the lake, you know.”

  “Yes.”

  A pause. Presently Mr. Knowles went on.

  “When the letter came from that clergyman — Prattleton, wasn’t his name? — saying that Mr. Dundyke was missing, and asking for the particulars of the money we had forwarded to him, we could not understand it. ‘Missing!’ cried old Mr. Knowles, who happened to have come to Fenchurch-street that day, ‘one talks of a child being missing, but not of a man.’ And when Mr. Prattleton’s second letter came to us, giving some of the facts, I assure you we could with difficulty give credence to them.”

  “There is one little point I did not know of, sir; the sending to you for a fifty-pound note. My husband told me he was sending for the thirty pounds, but he did not say anything of the other. I cannot think why he sent for it.”

  Mr. Knowles took out his pocket-book.

  “I happen to have Mr. Dundyke’s letter, which was preserved quite accidentally, not being a strictly business one. You see, he only asks for the fifty pounds in a postscript, as if it were an afterthought. In fact, he says as much:” and Mrs. Dundyke’s eyes filled as she looked on the well-known characters.

  “P.S. Upon second thoughts, I doubt whether the 30l. will be enough for me. Be so good as to send me a 50l. note in addition to it; in halves as the other.”

  “Which accordingly we did,” resumed Mr. Knowles, as Mrs. Dundyke returned him the letter. “And that note, you say, has not been traced?”

  “No, sir, it has not.”

  “Well, it is altogether most strange. Of course whoever found the pocket-book (if the supposition that it was picked up on the bank of the lake be correct) may be keeping the fifty-pound note by him, but the probability is that he would have got rid of it at once, as he did the others.”

  “The most singular point to my mind throughout, sir, is the finding of the pencil-case in Mr. Hardcastle’s room,” said Mrs. Dundyke. “I can’t get over that.”

  “Can’t you? It appears to me easily explainable. The supposition that Mr. Dundyke took it out with him that morning must be a mistake. Mr. Hardcastle probably borrowed it from him at breakfast.”

  “I am quite sure, sir, he did not. I saw my husband put the pencil in its place in the pocket-book, and return the pocket-book to his pocket.”

  “Then he must have taken it out again when outside the room, and perhaps dropped it. Mr. Hardcastle may have picked it up, and carried it up to the chamber and forgotten it. There are many ways of accounting for that; but it is a pity the pencil was not found before Mr. Hardcastle’s departure.”

  Mrs. Dundyke opened her lips to ask how then could her husband have written the pencilled note afterwards —
that he never carried but that one; but she was weary with reiterating the same thing over and over again; and, after all, what Mr. Knowles said was possible. He might have dropped the pencil afterwards; Mr. Hardcastle might have picked it up and carried it to his room; and it certainly might have happened, it was not impossible, that her husband, contrary to custom, had a second pencil in his pocket.

  “Shall we send the twenty-pound order to Hardcastle’s house and get it cashed for you?” Mr. Knowles asked, when he was leaving. “I fancy that young Hardcastle is not very steady. He is a great deal on the continent, and I have heard he gambles.”

  Mrs. Dundyke thanked him and handed him the order. “Perhaps you would let the clerk inquire for Mr. Hardcastle’s address at the same time, sir?” she said; “and whether he is still at Genoa. I should like to write and ask how he did find the pencil.”

  But when the order on Hardcastle and Co. was presented — as it was that same day — the house in Leadenhall-street declined to pay it, disclaiming all knowledge of the drawer. Upon the clerk’s saying that it had been given by the nephew of Mr. Hardcastle, senior, to Mrs. Dundyke, in liquidation of money borrowed at Geneva, the firm shrugged their shoulders, and recommended the clerk to apply personally to that gentleman, at his residence at Kensington. This information was conveyed to Mrs. Dundyke, and she at once said she should like to go herself.

  She went up to Mr. Hardcastle’s the next day, and the old gentleman received her very courteously. He was a venerable man with white hair, and was walking up and down the room, which opened to a conservatory. Mrs. Dundyke did not state any particulars at first; she merely said that she had an order on the house in Leadenhall-street for twenty pounds, money borrowed by his nephew; that the house had declined to pay it, and had referred it to him.

  “Borrowed money?” he repeated, in a sharp tone, as if the words visibly annoyed him.

  “Yes, sir,” he borrowed it of my husband; “his remittances did not arrive from England.”

 

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