CHAPTER XV
Up in London
Some kind and attentive reader may perhaps
remember that Miss Grace Crawley, in a letter written by her to her
friend Miss Lily Dale, said a word or two of a certain John. “If it
can only be as John wishes it!” And the same reader, if there be
one so kind and attentive, may also remember that Miss Lily Dale
had declared, in reply, that “about that other subject she would
rather say nothing,”—,and then she added, “When one thinks of going
beyond friendship—even if one tries to do so—there are so many
barriers!” From which words the kind and attentive reader, if such
reader be in such matters intelligent as well as kind and
attentive, may have learned a great deal in reference to Miss Lily
Dale.
We will now pay a visit to the John in
question—a certain Mr. John Eames, living in London, a bachelor, as
the intelligent reader will certainly have discovered, and cousin
to Miss Grace Crawley. Mr. John Eames at the time of our story was
a young man, some seven or eight and twenty years of age, living in
London, where he was supposed by his friends in the country to have
made his mark, and to be something a little out of the common way.
But I do not know that he was very much out of the common way,
except in the fact that he had some few thousand pounds left him by
an old nobleman, who had been in no way related to him, but who had
regarded him with great affection, and who had died some two years
since. Before this, John Eames had not been a very poor man, as he
filled the comfortable official position of private secretary to
the Chief Commissioner of the Income-tax Board, and drew a salary
of three hundred and fifty pounds a year from the resources of his
country; but when, in addition to this source of official wealth,
he became known as the undoubted possessor of a hundred and
twenty-eight shares in one of the most prosperous joint-stock banks
in the metropolis, which property had been left to him free of
legacy duty by the lamented nobleman above named, then Mr. John
Eames rose very high indeed as a young man in the estimation of
those who knew him, and was supposed to be something a good deal
out of the common way. His mother, who lived in the country, was
obedient to his slightest word, never venturing to impose upon him
any sign of parental authority; and to his sister, Mary Eames, who
lived with her mother, he was almost a god upon earth. To sisters
who have nothing of their own—not even some special god for their
own individual worship—generous, affectionate, unmarried brothers,
with sufficient incomes, are gods upon earth.
And even up in London Mr. John Eames was
somebody. He was so especially at his office; although, indeed, it
was remembered by many a man how raw a lad he had been when he
first came there, not so very many years ago; and how they had
laughed at him and played him tricks; and how he had customarily
been known to be without a shilling for the last week before
pay-day, during which period he would borrow sixpence here and a
shilling there with energy, from men who now felt themselves to be
honoured when he smiled upon them. Little stories of his former
days would often be told of him behind his back; but they were not
told with ill-nature, because he was very constant in referring to
the same matters himself. And it was acknowledged by everyone at
the office, that neither the friendship of the nobleman, nor that
fact of the private secretaryship, nor the acquisition of his
wealth, had made him proud to his old companions or forgetful of
old friendships. To the young men, lads who had lately been
appointed, he was perhaps a little cold; but then it was only
reasonable to conceive that such a one as Mr. John Eames was now
could not be expected to make an intimate acquaintance with every
new clerk that might be brought into the office. Since competitive
examinations had come into vogue, there was no knowing who might be
introduced; and it was understood generally through the
establishment—and I may almost say by the civil service at large,
so wide was his fame—that Mr. Eames was very averse to the whole
theory of competition. The “Devil take the hindmost” scheme he
called it; and would then go on to explain that hindmost candidates
were often the best gentlemen, and that, in this way, the Devil got
the pick of the flock. And he was respected the more for this
because it was known that on this subject he had fought some hard
battles with the chief commissioner. The chief commissioner was a
great believer in competition, wrote papers about it, which he read
aloud to various bodies of the civil service—not at all to their
delight—which he got to be printed here and there, and which he
sent by post all over the kingdom. More than once this chief
commissioner had told his private secretary that they must part
company, unless the private secretary could see fit to alter his
view, or could, at least, keep his views to himself. But the
private secretary would do neither; and, nevertheless, there he
was, still private secretary. “It’s because Johnny has got money,”
said one of the young clerks, who was discussing this singular
state of things with his brethren at the office. “When a chap has
got money, he may do what he likes. Johnny has got lots of money,
you know.” The young clerk in question was by no means on intimate
terms with Mr. Eames, but there had grown up in the office a way of
calling him Johnny behind his back, which had probably come down
from the early days of his scrapes and his poverty.
Now the entire life of Mr. John Eames was
pervaded by a great secret; and although he never, in those days,
alluded to the subject in conversation with any man belonging to
the office, yet the secret was known to them all. It had been
historical for the last four or five years, and was now regarded as
a thing of course. Mr. John Eames was in love, and his love was not
happy. He was in love, and had long been in love, and the lady of
his love was not kind to him. The little history had grown to be
very touching and pathetic, having received, no doubt, some
embellishments from the imaginations of the gentlemen of the
Income-tax Office. It was said of him that he had been in love from
his early boyhood, that at sixteen he had been engaged, under the
sanction of the nobleman now deceased and of the young lady’s
parents, that contracts of betrothal had been drawn up, and things
done very unusual in private families in these days, and that then
there had come a stranger into the neighbourhood just as the young
lady was beginning to reflect whether she had a heart of her own or
not, and that she had thrown her parents, and the noble lord, and
the contract, and poor Johnny Eames to the winds, and had— Here the
story took different directions, as told by different men. Some
said the lady had gone off with the stranger and that there had
been a clandestine marriage, which afterwards turned out to be no
marriage at all; others, that the stranger suddenly took himself
off, and was no more seen by the young lady; others that he owned
at last to having another wife—and so on. The stranger was very
well known to be one Mr. Crosbie, belonging to another public
office; and there were circumstances in his life, only half known,
which gave rise to these various rumours. But there was one thing
certain, one point as to which no clerk in the Income-tax Office
had a doubt, one fact which had conduced much to the high position
which Mr. John Eames now held in the estimation of his brother
clerks—he had given this Mr. Crosbie such a thrashing that no man
had ever received such treatment before and lived through it.
Wonderful stories were told about that thrashing, so that it was
believed, even by the least enthusiastic in such matters, that the
poor victim had only dragged on a crippled existence since the
encounter. “For nine weeks he never said a word or ate a mouthful,”
said one young clerk to a younger clerk who was just entering the
office; “and even now he can’t speak above a whisper, and has to
take all his food in pap.” It will be seen, therefore, that Mr.
John Eames had about him much of the heroic.
That he was still in love, and in love with
the same lady, was known to everyone in the office. When it was
declared of him that in the way of amatory expressions he had never
in his life opened his mouth to another woman, there were those in
the office who knew this was an exaggeration. Mr. Cradell, for
instance, who in his early years had been very intimate with John
Eames, and who still kept up the old friendship—although, being a
domestic man, with a wife and six young children, and living on a
small income, he did not go out much among his friends—could have
told a very different story; for Mrs. Cradell herself had, in days
before Cradell had made good his claim upon her, been not unadmired
by Cradell’s fellow-clerk. But the constancy of Mr. Eames’s present
love was doubted by none who knew him. It was not that he went
about with his stockings ungartered, or any of the old acknowledged
signs of unrequited affection. In his manner he was rather jovial
than otherwise, and seemed to live a happy, somewhat luxurious
life, well contented with himself and the world around him. But
still he had this passion within his bosom, and I am inclined to
think that he was a little proud of his own constancy.
It might be presumed that when Miss Dale
wrote to her friend Grace Crawley about going beyond friendship,
pleading that there were so many “barriers”, she had probably seen
her way over most of them. But this was not so; nor did John Eames
himself at all believe that the barriers were in a way to be
overcome. I will not say that he had given the whole thing up as a
bad job, because it was the law of his life that the thing never
should be abandoned as long as hope was possible. Unless Miss Dale
should become the wife of somebody else, he would always regard
himself as affianced to her. He had so declared to Miss Dale
herself and to Miss Dale’s mother, and to all the Dale people who
had ever been interested in the matter. And there was an old lady
living in Miss Dale’s neighbourhood, the sister of the lord who had
left Johnny Eames the bank shares, who always fought his battles
for him, and kept a close lookout, fully resolved that John Eames
should be rewarded at last. This old lady was connected with the
Dales by family ties, and therefore had means of close observation.
She was in constant correspondence with John Eames, and never
failed to acquaint him when any of the barriers were, in her
judgment, giving way. The nature of some of the barriers may
possibly be made intelligible to my readers by the following letter
from Lady Julia De Guest to her young friend.
Guestwick Cottage, December, 186—
MY DEAR JOHN, I am much obliged to you for
going to Jones’s. I send stamps for two shillings and fourpence,
which is what I owe to you. It used only to be two shillings and
twopence, but they say everything has got to be dearer now, and I
suppose pills as well as other things. Only think of Pritchard
coming to me, and saying she wanted her wages raised, after living
with me for twenty years! I was very
angry, and scolded her roundly; but as she acknowledged she had
been wrong, and cried and begged my pardon, I did give her two
guineas a year more.
I saw dear Lily just for a moment on Sunday,
and upon my word I think she grows prettier every year. She had a
young friend with her—a Miss Crawley—who, I believe, is the cousin
I have heard you speak of. What is this sad story about her father,
the clergyman? Mind you tell me all about it.
It is quite true what I told you about the De
Courcys. Old Lady De Courcy is in London, and Mr. Crosbie is going
to law with her about his wife’s money. He has been at it in one
way or the other ever since poor Lady Alexandrina died. I wish she
had lived, with all my heart. For though I feel sure that our Lily
will never willingly see him again, yet the tidings of her death
disturbed her, and set her thinking of things that were fading from
her mind. I rated her soundly, not mentioning your name, however;
but she only kissed me, and told me in her quiet drolling way that
I didn’t mean a word of what I said.
You can come here whenever you please after
the tenth of January. But if you come early in January you must go
to your mother first, and come to me for the last week of your
holiday. Go to Blackie’s in Regent Street, and bring me down all
the colours in wool that I ordered. I said you would call. And tell
them at Dolland’s the last spectacles don’t suit at all, and I
won’t keep them; they had better send me down, by you, one or two
more pairs to try. And you had better see Smithers and Smith, in
Lincoln’s Inn Fields, No 57—but you have been there before—and beg
them to let me know how my poor dear brother’s matters are to be
settled at last. As far as I can see I shall be dead before I shall
know what income I have got to spend. As to my cousins at the
manor, I never see them; and as to talking to them about business,
I should not dream of it. She hasn’t come to me since she first
called, and she may be quite sure I
shan’t go to her till she does. Indeed I think we shall like each
other apart quite as much as we should together. So let me know
when you’re coming, and pray don’t
forget to call at Blackie’s; nor yet at Dolland’s, which is much
more important than the wool, because of my eyes getting so weak.
But what I want you specially to remember is about Smithers and
Smith. How is a woman to live if she doesn’t know how much she has
got to spend?
Believe me to be, my dear John, Your most
sincere friend, Julia De Guest.
Lady Julia always directed her letters for
her young friend to his office, and there he received the one now
given to the reader. When he had read it he made a memorandum as to
the commissions, and then threw himself back in his arm-chair to
think over the tidings communicated to him. All the facts stated he
had known before; that Lady De Courcy was in London, and that her
son-in-law, Mr. Crosbie, whose wife—Lady Alexandrina—had died some
twelve months since at Baden Baden, was at variance with her
respecting money which he supposed to be due to him. But there was
that in Lady Julia’s letter that was wormwood to him. Lily Dale was
again thinking of this man, whom she had loved in the old days, and
who had treated her with monstrous perfidy! It was all very well
for Lady Julia to be sure that Lily Dale would never desire to see
Mr. Crosbie again; but John Eames was by no means equally certain
that it would be so. “The tidings of her death disturbed her!” said
Johnny, repeating to himself certain words out of the old lady’s
letter. “I know they disturbed me. I wish she could have lived for
ever. If he ever ventures to show himself within ten miles of
Allington, I’ll see if I cannot do better than I did the last time
I met him!” Then there came a knock at the door, and the private
secretary, finding himself to be somewhat annoyed by the
disturbance at such a moment, bade the intruder enter in an angry
voice. “Oh, it’s you, Cradell, is it? What can I do for you?” Mr.
Cradell, who now entered, and who, as before said, was an old ally
of John Eames, was a clerk of longer standing in the department
than his friend. In age he looked to be much older, and he had left
with him none of that appearance of the gloss of youth which will
stick for many years to men who are fortunate in their worldly
affairs. Indeed it may be said that Mr. Cradell was almost shabby
in his outward appearance, and his brow seemed to be laden with
care, and his eyes were dull and heavy.
“I thought I’d just come in and ask you how
you are,” said Cradell.
“I’m pretty well, thank you; and how are
you?”
“Oh, I’m pretty well—in health, that is. You
see one has so many things to think of when one has a large family.
Upon my word, Johnny, I think you’ve been lucky to keep out of
it.”
“I have kept out of it, at any rate; haven’t
I?”
“Of course; living with you as much as I used
to do, I know the whole story of what kept you single.”
“Don’t mind about that, Cradell; what is it
you want?”
“I mustn’t let you suppose, Johnny, that I’m
grumbling about my lot. Nobody knows better than you what a trump I
got in my wife.”
“Of course you did—an excellent woman.”
“And if I cut you out a little there, I’m
sure you never felt malice against me for that.”
“Never for a moment, old fellow.”
“We all have our luck, you know.”
“Your luck has been a wife and family. My
luck has been to be a bachelor.”
“You may say a family,” said Cradell. “I’m
sure that Amelia does the best she can; but we are desperately
pushed sometimes—desperately pushed. I never was so bad, Johnny, as
I am now.”
“So you said last time.”
“Did I? I don’t remember it. I didn’t think I
was so bad then. But, Johnny, if you can let me have one more fiver
now I have made arrangements with Amelia how I’m to pay you off by
thirty shillings a month—as I get my salary. Indeed I have. Ask her
else.”
“I’ll be shot if I do.”
“Don’t say that, Johnny.”
“It’s no good your Johnnying me, for I won’t
be Johnnyed out of another shilling. It comes too often, and
there’s no reason why I should do it. And what’s more, I can’t
afford it. I’ve people of my own to help.”
“But oh, Johnny, we all know how comfortable
you are. And I’m sure no one rejoiced as I did when the money was
left to you. If it had been myself I could hardly have thought more
of it. Upon my solemn word and honour if you’ll let me have it this
time, it shall be the last.”
“Upon my word and honour then, I won’t. There
must be an end to everything.”
Although Mr. Cradell would probably, if
pressed, have admitted the truth of this last assertion, he did not
seem to think that the end had as yet come to his friend’s
benevolence. It certainly had not come to his own importunity.
“Don’t say that, Johnny; pray don’t.”
“But I do say it.”
“When I told Amelia yesterday evening that I
didn’t like to go to you again, because of course a man has
feelings, she told me to mention her name. ‘I’m sure he’d do it for
my sake,’ she said.”
“I don’t believe she said anything of the
kind.”
“Upon my word she did. You ask her.”
“And if she did, she oughtn’t to have said
it.”
“Oh, Johnny, don’t speak in that way of her.
She’s my wife, and you know what your own feelings were once. But
look here—we are in that state at home at this moment, that I must
get money somewhere before I go home. I must, indeed. If you’ll let
me have three pounds this once, I’ll never ask you again. I’ll give
you a written promise if you like, and I’ll pledge myself to pay it
back by thirty shillings a time out of the next two months’ salary.
I will, indeed.” And then Mr. Cradell began to cry. But when Johnny
at last took out his cheque-book and wrote a cheque for three
pounds, Mr. Cradell’s eyes glistened with joy. “Upon my word I am
so much obliged to you! You are the best fellow that ever lived.
And Amelia will say the same when she hears of it.”
“I don’t believe she’ll say anything of the
kind, Cradell. If I remember anything of her, she has a stouter
heart than that.” Cradell admitted that his wife had a stouter
heart than himself, and then made his way back to his own part of
the office.
This little interruption to the current of
Mr. Eames’s thoughts was, I think, for the good for the service, as
immediately on his friend’s departure he went to his work; whereas,
had not he been called away from his reflections about Miss Dale,
he would have sat thinking about her affairs probably for the rest
of the morning. As it was, he really did write a dozen notes in
answer to as many private letters addressed to his chief, Sir
Raffle Buffle, in all of which he made excellently-worded false
excuses for the non-performance of various requests made to Sir
Raffle by the writers. “He’s about the best hand at it that I
know,” said Sir Raffle, one day, to the secretary; “otherwise you
may be sure I shouldn’t keep him there.” “I will allow that he is
clever,” said the secretary. “It isn’t cleverness, so much as tact.
It’s what I call tact. I hadn’t been long in the service before I
mastered it myself; and now that I’ve been at the trouble to teach
him I don’t want to have the trouble to teach another. But upon my
word he must mind his p‘s and
q‘s; upon my word, he must; and you had
better tell him so.” “The fact is, Mr. Kissing,” said the private
secretary the next day to the secretary—Mr. Kissing was at that
time secretary to the board of commissioners for the receipt of
income tax—”The fact is, Mr. Kissing, Sir Raffle should never
attempt to write a letter himself. He doesn’t know how to do it. He
always says twice too much, and yet not half enough. I wish you’d
tell him so. He won’t believe me.” From which it will be seen Mr.
Eames was proud of his special accomplishment, but did not feel any
gratitude to the master who assumed to himself the glory of having
taught him. On the present occasion John Eames wrote all his
letters before he thought again of Lily Dale, and was able to write
them without interruption, as the chairman was absent for the day
at the Treasury—or perhaps at his club. Then, when he had finished,
he rang his bell, and ordered some sherry and soda-water, and
stretched himself before the fire—as though his exertions in the
public service had been very great—and seated himself comfortably
in his arm-chair, and lit a cigar, and again took out Lady Julia’s
letter.
As regarded the cigar, it may be said that
both Sir Raffle and Mr. Kissing had given orders that on no account
should cigars be lit within the precincts of the Income-tax Office.
Mr. Eames had taken upon himself to understand that such orders did
not apply to a private secretary, and was well aware that Sir
Raffle knew his habit. To Mr. Kissing, I regret to say, he put
himself in opposition whenever and wherever opposition was
possible; so that men in the office said that one of the two must
go at last. “But Johnny can do anything, you know, because he has
got money.” That was too frequently the opinion finally expressed
among the men.
So John Eames sat down, and drank his
soda-water, and smoked his cigar, and read his letter; or, rather,
simply that paragraph of the letter which referred to Miss Dale.
“The tidings of her death have disturbed her, and set her thinking
again of things that were fading from her mind.” He understood it
all. And yet how could it possibly be so? How could it be that she
should not despise a man—despise him if she did not hate him—who
had behaved as this man had behaved to her? It was now four years
since this Crosbie had been engaged to Miss Dale, and had jilted
her so heartlessly as to incur the disgust of every man in London
who had heard the story. He had married an earl’s daughter, who had
left him within a few months of their marriage, and now Mr.
Crosbie’s noble wife was dead. The wife was dead, and simply
because the man was free again, he, John Eames, was to be told that
Miss Dale’s mind was “disturbed”, and that her thoughts were going
back to things which had faded from her memory, and which should
have been long since banished altogether from such holy
ground.
If Lily Dale were now to marry Mr. Crosbie,
anything so perversely cruel as the fate of John Eames would never
yet have been told in romance. That was his own idea on the matter
as he sat smoking his cigar. I have said that he was proud of his
constancy, and yet, in some sort, he was also ashamed of it. He
acknowledged the fact of his love, and believed himself to have
out-Jacobed Jacob; but he felt that it was hard for a man who had
risen in the world as he had done to be made a plaything of by a
foolish passion. It was now four years ago—that affair of
Crosbie—and Miss Dale should have accepted him long since.
Half-a-dozen times he had made up his mind to be very stern to her;
and he had written somewhat sternly—but the first moment that he
saw her he was conquered again. “And now that brute will reappear,
and everything will be wrong again,” he said to himself. If the
brute did reappear, something should happen of which the world
should hear the tidings. So he lit another cigar, and began to
think what that something should be.
As he did so he heard a loud noise, as of
harsh, rattling winds in the next room, and he knew that Sir Raffle
had come back from the Treasury. There was a creaking of boots, and
a knocking of chairs, and a ringing of bells, and then a loud angry
voice—a voice that was very harsh, and on this occasion very angry.
Why had not his twelve o’clock letters been sent up to him to the
West End? Why not? Mr. Eames knew all about it. Why did Mr. Eames
know all about it? Why had not Mr. Eames sent them up? Where was
Mr. Eames? Let Mr. Eames be sent to him. All which Mr. Eames heard
standing with the cigar in his mouth and his back to the fire.
“Somebody has been bullying old Buffle, I suppose. After all he has
been up at the Treasure to-day,” said Eames to himself. But he did
not stir till the messenger had been to him, nor even then at once.
“All right, Rafferty,” he said; “I’ll go in just now.” Then he took
half-a-dozen more whiffs from the cigar, threw the remainder into
the fire, and opened the door which communicated between his room
and Sir Raffle’s.
The great man was standing with two unopened
epistles in his hand. “Eames,” said he, “here are letters—” Then he
stopped himself, and began upon another subject. “Did I not give
express orders that I would have no smoking in the office?”
“I think Mr. Kissing said something about it,
sir.”
“Mr. Kissing! It was not Mr. Kissing at all.
It was I. I gave the order myself.”
“You’ll find it began with Mr.
Kissing.”
“It did not begin with Mr. Kissing; it began
and ended with me. What are you going to do, sir?” John Eames
stepped towards the bell, and his hand was already on the
bell-pull.
“I was going to ring for the papers,
sir.”
“And who told you to ring for the papers? I
don’t want the papers. The papers won’t show anything. I suppose my
word may be taken without the papers. Since you’re so fond of Mr.
Kissing—”
“I’m not fond of Mr. Kissing at all.”
“You’ll have to go back to him, and let
somebody come here who will not be too independent to obey my
orders. Here are two most important letters have been lying here
all day, instead of being sent up to me at the Treasury.”
“Of course they have been lying there. I
thought you were at the club.”
“I told you I should go to the Treasury. I
have been there all morning with the chancellor,”—when Sir Raffle
spoke officially of the chancellor he was not supposed to mean the
Lord Chancellor—”and here I find letters which I particularly
wanted lying upon my desk now. I must put an end to this kind of
thing. I must, indeed. If you like the outer office better say so
at once, and you can go.”
“I’ll think about it, Sir Raffle.”
“Think about it! What do you mean by thinking
about it? But I can’t talk about that now. I’m very busy, and shall
be here till past seven. I suppose you can stay?”
“All night, if you wish it, sir.”
“Very well. That will do for the present.—I
wouldn’t have had these letters delayed for twenty pounds.”
“I don’t suppose it would have mattered one
straw if both of them remained unopened till next week.” This last
little speech, however, was not made aloud to Sir Raffle, but by
Johnny to himself in the solitude of his own room.
Very soon after that he went away, Sir Raffle
having discovered that one of the letters in question required his
immediate return to the West End. “I’ve changed my mind about
staying. I shan’t stay now. I should have done if these letters had
reached me as they ought.”
“Then I suppose I can go?”
“You can do as you like about that,” said Sir
Raffle.
Eames did do as he liked, and went home, or
to his club; and as he went he resolved that he would put an end,
and at once, to the present trouble of his life. Lily Dale should
accept him or reject him; and, taking either the one or the other
alternative, she should hear a bit of his mind plainly
spoken.