In the second week a new visitor arrived, a grey-headed man who called Helen by her Christian name, and whom Theo addressed as "Uncle Conrad." He proved to be not a relative, but an old and close friend of Helen's family, and a former fellow-prisoner of her husband. After spending several years in a Russian fortress on a general charge of seditious opinions, he had settled in Paris, where he was now a well-known and successful musical critic. He examined Theo severely in harmony, and found so many faults in his violin playing that the child, when finally released, dashed into the garden, where Jack found him in tears.
"It's all a sham!" he wailed. "Those English music masters are duffers — they don't know anything about it. They said I was getting on nicely, and Uncle Conrad has done nothing but grumble! I hold my bow too tight, and I slur the phrasing, and I can't play a bit!"
"Perhaps it's he that's a duffer," Jack suggested, racking his brains for consolation to give. Theo sat bolt upright, scandalised at such a heresy.
"Jack! Uncle Conrad is always right about music. And it's true, I know it is; I played hatefully to-day. I shall be just an amateur; I shall never play like Joachim — never, never!"
His distress was so passionate that Jack finally ran up the verandah steps to call Helen, as his own attempts at consolation had no effect. The glass door leading into the sitting-room was open, and as he came up to it he saw Helen and Conrad in the room, talking earnestly together in their native language. He could not understand the worls they said, but drew back instinctively, seeing the look on her face.
"Helen," the old man was saying, "it is a vocation, like the other. Who shall say it is less holy? I would not speak till I was quite sure; last year I only told you the child had talent. I tell you now that he has genius."
"If it is his vocation," she answered slowly, "he must follow it, and there is nothing more to say. I had hoped..." She raised her eyes suddenly to a picture hanging on the wall. Jack had often looked at it and wondered what it meant. It was a large photograph of a group of statuary, representing a colossal seated figure of a woman, with torn garments and chained hands, and with dead and dying men about her feet.
"God help me!" Helen said, and covered her face.
Jack slipped out silently. He had understood nothing beyond the bare fact that she was unhappy; but over this he pondered gravely, never having realised before that any one else in the world except himself could have a secret grief.
Before returning to Paris Conrad put Theo through a minute examination, testing his ear in various ways. On the last afternoon of his visit, when they were all sitting on the garden lawn, he called the child's attention to the peculiar intervals in the songs of certain birds.
"Remember, Theo, you don't stop learning music when you put down your instrument and go for a walk; every bird has got something to teach you. The best teacher I ever had was my pet sky-lark."
"Why, Conrad," said Helen; "you didn't keep a sky-lark in a cage, surely!"
He laughed.
"We were both in the same cage. It was in the prison in Moscow; I picked the bird up in the court-yard with a broken wing, and they let me keep it in my cell. It got nearly tame by the time the wing was cured."
"And did it stay with you afterwards?" Theo asked.
"No, it flew away, — lucky little mortal!"
Jack, apparently, was not listening; he was cutting his name, after the manner of boys, on the trunk of the laburnum tree. He left it half cut and swung himself off the bench in his lumpy, coltish fashion.
"I'm going to look at the rabbits."
He slouched away across the lawn with his hands in his pockets, whistling shrilly between his teeth: "Said the young Obadiah to the old Obadiah..." He had been distressingly addicted to comic songs of late, though he never could get the tunes right, having no ear.
"Jack!" Theo cried, trotting after him; "you're out of tune; it's F sharp!"
"Rather a loutish sort of lad for Theo to be so fond of, isn't he?" said Conrad, when the boys were out of hearing.
"I suppose so," Helen answered absently.
Theo came running back.
"Mummy, Jack's as cross as two sticks."
"Is he?"
"Yes; I wanted to look at the rabbits with him, and he told me to go and be damned."
"Don't tell tales," said Conrad.
Helen had risen with an anxious face.
"Where has he gone?"
"Into the house. You'd better let him alone a bit, mummy; he gets sulky fits at school now and then. He'll be all right soon."
"Take Uncle Conrad to see the rabbits," was all Helen said.
She went into the house and up to the door of Jack's room. There she paused a moment, listening. From within came a stifled sound which she had sometimes heard at night. She opened the door softly and went in.
Jack was lying face downwards on his bed, with both hands clenched into the pillow, sobbing under his breath in a horrible, suppressed, unchildlike way. She came up to him and laid a hand on his.
"Jack, what is it?"
He neither started nor cried out; only shrank a little away and held his breath, trembling. Presently he lifted himself up, and she saw that his eyes were quite tearless and dry.
"Oh, it's nothing."
She sat down on the bed and put her arms round him.
"Won't you tell me? I know you often lie awake half the night; I can hear every sound from my room, you know."
Jack bit his lip.
"It's nothing partic'lar, thanks! I've been a bit upset; and Theo's such a blasted little donkey, he can't let a fellow alone."
"Is there nothing I can do? It's horrible to have a secret trouble at your age. If you can't trust me, is there no one you can trust?"
"There's nothing to tell. It's only something that happened... before I went to school."
"Last year? And don't your people know of it?"
Jack began to laugh.
"All Porthcarrick knows; that's why they let me go to school."
She drew him closer into her arms. "Won't you tell me?"
He looked away from her, breathing quickly. "Ask old Jenkins," he said at last, huskily; "he'll tell you all about it."
"Who is Jenkins?"
"The new doctor, down to Porthcarrick. He and Dr. Williams both came when I smashed my arm, and he tried to come the soft dodge over me, just like you. I told him he'd better get me away from there instead of talking all that tommy-rot about being sorry for me; he wasn't sorry enough to help me."
Helen thought for a moment, silently.
"Would you let me write to Dr. Jenkins and ask him to tell me about it? You see, I can't help caring, when you've been so good to my Theo."
Jack pulled himself away with a jerk and walked over to the window. He turned round after a minute, his eyebrows dragged down in the ugliest scowl she had ever seen him wear. He was rather white about the lips.
"All right," he said. "You can write to him: Dr. Jenkins, Cliff Cottage, Porthcarrick. Tell him I said he can tell you what he knows about me. P'raps you won't be in such a hurry to have me good to Theo then. I don't care."
He stuck his hands into his pockets again and stumped down the stairs, whistling, out of tune as usual: "Said the young Obadiah..."
Neither he nor Helen referred to the subject any more. She wrote to Dr. Jenkins, explaining how matters stood, and begging him to tell her what he could. On the last day of the holidays a fat letter came from Porthcarrick in reply. She slipped it into her pocket, that Jack might not see the postmark, and after breakfast carried it to her room. Dr. Jenkins wrote, in detail, all that he knew of Jack's history; as much, that is, as his own eyes had shown him, together with what he had heard from the Vicar, the schoolmaster, and Mrs. Raymond.
The letter ended with a grave warning as to the dangers to which an intimacy with Jack was presumably exposing Theo. "In my capacity as the boy's medical attendant," the doctor added, "I made every effort to win his confidence; but entirel
y without success. His disposition appeared to me peculiarly sullen, stubborn, vindictive, and secret; indeed, before this unhappy business came to light, he had already, though barely fourteen, gained an exceedingly bad name in the whole country round. Far from regarding this fact, however, as in any way excusing Mr. Raymond's conduct, I believe the mischief to have been from the beginning largely caused by his systematic brutality; and am inclined to lay the guilt of the boy's moral ruin at his door. I may be doing him wrong, but I have always doubted whether he was really innocent about the broken arm."
Helen read the letter over and over again; she had sent the boys out for a long ramble in the fields, and was free to think undisturbed. Late in the afternoon, when tea was finished and Theo was practising violin exercises in the breakfast room, she went to look for Jack, but he was not in the house. She returned to the tiny parlour, and stepped out on to the verandah. A sound of hammering came from the garden; and, looking down, she saw Jack mending the roof of the summer house. She watched him for a little while, noticing his absorption in the work and the masterly handling of his tools. Certainly he had a natural turn for carpentering.
"Jack!" she called at last.
He looked round.
"What?"
"Will you come in here a minute?"
"S'pose I must," he muttered crossly, jumping to the ground with a splendid spring. His manners might be defective, but his muscular development was admirable.
He ran up the verandah steps and into the room, an uncouth barbarian cub, slamming the glass door noisily, stamping marks of muddy boot-heels into the carpet.
"What's up?"
"Sit down a minute; I want to speak to you."
"Oh!" said Jack, sitting down ungraciously on the edge of a chair. " I thought you wanted something done."
Helen looked into the fire for a moment before she spoke; and Jack, hunched up sulkily, with an ugly scowl on his face, drummed with his boot-heels the eternal refrain of: "Said the young Obadiah to the old Obadiah..."
"You remember," she began with her eyes on the red coals, "telling me I might write to Dr. Jenkins?"
Jack stiffened all over and sat up straight. The drumming of his heels had stopped.
"Well, I wrote; and I had an answer this morning."
He drew in his breath so sharply that the sound was like a cry. She kept her head turned away.
"He has told me all he knows."
A little pause followed, punctuated by the sound of quick breathing.
"Where's the letter?"
"It's here; but I would rather you didn't read it."
He rose and came up to her.
"Give me the letter."
She looked round. His eyes were black and gleaming, as his uncle had seen them in the wood-shed.
"Give me the letter."
"My child, I will give it to you if you insist; but I would very much rather not. And besides, there is no need; you know everything in it already."
"Give me the letter."
She handed it to him silently. He took it away to the window, sat down and read it through. Helen watched his face; it was pinched and grey, and lines came about the mouth which made her think of the changelings in the fairy tales, old haggard children who can never be made young again.
He brought the letter back at last and laid it on the table.
"Well," he said, "what's the next move?"
She made no answer. He came a step nearer, quivering.
"Have you got all you wanted? I don't go poking about asking people your private affairs. Jenkins is a dirty little sneak to tell you."
His eyes were like hot coals.
"I told you you wouldn't want me hanging round your precious little molly-coddle, spoiling his innocence... You know all about it now; you know I was caught gambling, and lying, and trading in all sorts of beastliness, and teaching the little chaps everything that's filthy, and was pretty near killed for it; and a good job if I'd died altogether! Anything else you want to know?"
She rose and put her hand on his shoulder.
"Only one thing more, my child: Has any one ever treated you as a human creature, and believed your word — ever in all your life?"
He wrenched himself away from the hand, and faced her, white and panting.
"D'you mean... you'd believe it..?"
"I have not even asked you for your word."
Jack had still not understood. He put up a hand, and the fingers shook against his throat.
"S'pose I told you... it was all a lie... from beginning to end? S'pose I told you I... didn't confess... because there... was nothing to confess... because..."
She caught him suddenly in her arms.
"My dear, there is no need to tell me that; of course I knew!"
Jack was sobbing now, in the slow, tearless, frightful way that was like the weeping of a grown man.
When they sat down together, she in a low chair by the fire, he on the hearth rug at her feet, staring into the red coals, she learned the story of the mavis, or as much of it as Jack could put into words, which, indeed, was not much. He told it quietly, without tears, but with pauses and intervals of silence here and there, much as she had heard other stories told long ago in Siberia.
But for that same Siberia, she too, like Dr. Jenkins, would probably have failed to understand. But she had lived outside the pale of men's mercy, and her unsheltered eyes had seen the naked sores of the world. Month after month of daily contact with criminals, idiots, and lunatics on the journey out, years spent among a monstrous population of degenerates in a land which has been for centuries a sink without a drain, had taught her many things. To her the Vicar's disease was no new horror; she had seen his like in every shape and stage, from ghastly children sniggering and leering while they burned a squirrel alive, to homicidal maniacs plunging into frenzied orgies, their hands wet from the gash in a victim's throat.
The story was finished, and both sat silent for a little while. It was growing dark in the room. Helen was softly stroking the head on her knee.
"Tell me one thing more, my son. What was it you were going to do when you got out of the window? To run away and go to sea?"
"Not to sea; only to the cliff. I'd had enough."
His voice was quite lifeless and dreary; utterly unchildlike.
"Old Jenkins is wrong, though," he added. "Uncle didn't know my arm was smashed; I took precious good care he shouldn't."
Her fingers tightened on his. "Because..?"
"You see, I couldn't manage to kill him; I did try once, and it was no use. So I thought I'd see whether I could make him kill me; then he'd have been hanged."
Helen stooped and kissed him. The twilight faded slowly into darkness; a faint glow shone in the blackening coals.
"That's why it's such beastly rot," Jack began suddenly, and stopped. Helen's arm was still round his neck.
"What is, dear?"
"Why, you coddling me up and making all this fuss, just as if I was Theo. Oh, of course I'll look after the little beggar, and try to lick him into shape, and not let the other chaps bully him, — he's such a shrimp; but his wanting to chum up with me, and all that, is just bubble and squeak."
"Theo is a little boy, and... has not gone down into hell, yet. His turn will come, when he is a man. But I think I understand."
Jack burst out laughing. His voice sounded old and thin out of the darkness.
"You?" he said. "Rats!"
He jerked away from her hand and stirred the dying embers with the poker.
"You think, because you've seen prisons and things... What do you know? you're clean. Your people may have been shot and hanged, and all that, but they've not been tied up and ------"
She put a hand over his mouth to stop him.
"Hush! It was to set God's creature free, and Theo's father died to set God's people free. Whose child should you be but mine?"
***
Early next morning, when he came into Helen's room, awkwar
d and sullen, to say good-bye, she greeted him in a cheerful, matter-of-fact way, as if their new relationship were years old.
"Then you'll spend all your holidays here, if your people don't object. I'll run down to Cornwall and see them, and try to arrange matters; perhaps they'll let me adopt you altogether. And about pocket-money, of course you'll share whatever Theo has, and I'll make the amount a little larger. It's rather a tiny income for three, so we shall all have to be careful till my two sons are grown, and can support themselves."
Jack muttered something sulkily about its being "beastly slow" not to be twenty-one. He was near to breaking down again, and his speech was proportionately curt and slangy. There were tears in Helen's eyes as she kissed him.
"And you'll take care of Theo. Since I was left alone I have been anxious about him, having no one near that I could trust. He will be a musician when he grows up, and musicians are not always the happiest people. But I shall feel quite safe now that I have you, who are so good to singing-birds. God keep you, my other son!"
It was the last time that the story of the mavis was referred to.
CHAPTER IX
The year in which Jack came of age was to him one of trial. He grew up, and entered into life; a difficult matter commonly, and in his case a grievous one.
He was studying medicine in London, and the more observant among the professors had begun to watch his development with interest. When he could get sufficiently far out of himself to throw off the laboured accuracy, the painful over-conscientiousness which usually marred his work, he would show a certain breadth of conception and sureness of intellectual grasp quite unusual at his age. More than once a professor, demonstrating in the dissecting room, had looked up in surprise at his questions, and asked him quickly: "How did you guess that?" But these flashes of sudden insight never came to help him out at examinations. At such times he always relapsed into the dull and docile pupil whom
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