CHAPTER LXX
Mrs. Arabin is Caught
One morning about the middle of April Mr.
Toogood received a telegram from Venice which caused him instantly
to leave his business in Bedford Row and take the first train for
Silverbridge. “It seems to me that this job will be a deal of time
and very little money,” said his partner to him, when Toogood on
the spur of the moment was making arrangements for his sudden
departure and uncertain period of absence. “That’s about it,” said
Toogood. “A deal of time, some expense, and no returns. It is not
the kind of business a man can live upon, is it?” The partner
growled, and Toogood went. But we must go with Mr. Toogood down to
Silverbridge, and as we cannot make the journey in this chapter, we
will just indicate his departure and then go back to John Eames,
who, as will be remembered, was just starting for Florence when we
last saw him.
Our dear old friend Johnny had been rather
proud of himself as he started from London. He had gotten an
absolute victory over Sir Raffle Buffle, and that alone was
gratifying to his feelings. He liked the excitement of a journey,
and especially of a journey to Italy; and the importance of the
cause of his journey was satisfactory to him. But above all things
he was delighted at having found that Lily Dale was pleased at his
going. He had seen clearly that she was much pleased, and that she
made something of a hero of him because of his alacrity in the
cause of his cousin. He had partially understood—had understood in
a dim sort of way—that his want of favour in Lily’s eyes had come
from some deficiency of his own in this respect. She had not found
him to be a hero. She had known him first as a boy, with boyish
belongings around him, and she had seen him from time to time as he
became a man, almost with too much intimacy for the creation of
that love with which he wished to fill her heart. His rival had
come before her eyes for the first time with all the glories of
Pall Mall heroism about him, and Lily in her weakness had been
conquered by them. Since that she had learned how weak she had
been—how silly, how childish, she would say to herself when she
allowed her memory to go back to the details of her own story; but
not the less on that account did she feel the want of something
heroic in a man before she could teach herself to look upon him as
more worthy of her regard than other men. She had still
unconsciously hoped in regard to Crosbie, but now that hope had
been dispelled as unconsciously, simply by his appearance. There
had been moments in which John Eames had almost risen to the
necessary point—had almost made good his footing on the top of some
moderate, but still sufficient mountain. But there had still been a
succession of little tumbles—unfortunate slips for which he himself
should not always have been held responsible; and he had never
quite stood upright on his pinnacle, visible to Lily’s eyes as
being really excelsior. Of all this John Eames himself had an
inkling which had often made him very uncomfortable. What the
mischief was it she wanted of him; and what was he to do? The days
for plucking glory from the nettle danger were clean gone by. He
was well dressed. He knew a good many of the right sort of people.
He was not in debt. He had saved an old nobleman’s life once upon a
time, and had been a good deal talked about on that score. He had
even thrashed the man who had ill-treated her. His constancy had
been as the constancy of a Jacob! What was it that she wanted of
him? But in a certain way he did know what was wanted; and now, as
he started for Florence, intending to stop nowhere till he reached
that city, he hoped that by this chivalrous journey he might even
yet achieve the thing necessary.
But on reaching Paris he heard tidings of
Mrs. Arabin which induced him to change his plans and make for
Venice instead of for Florence. A banker at Paris, to who whom he
brought a letter, told him that Mrs. Arabin would now be found at
Venice. This did not perplex him at all. It would have been
delightful to have seen Florence—but was more delightful still to
see Venice. His journey was the same as far as Turin; but from
Turin he proceeded through Milan to Venice, instead of going by
Bologna to Florence. He had fortunately come armed with an Austrian
passport—as was necessary in those bygone days of Venetia’s
thraldom. He was almost proud of himself, as though he had done
something great, when he tumbled in to his inn at Venice, without
having been in a bed since he left London.
But he was barely allowed to swim in a
gondola, for on reaching Venice he found that Mrs. Arabin had gone
back to Florence. He had been directed to the hotel which Mrs.
Arabin had used, and was there told that she had started the day
before. She had received some letter, from her husband as the
landlord thought, and had done so. That was all the landlord knew.
Johnny was vexed, but became a little prouder than before as he
felt it to be his duty to go on to Florence before he went to bed.
There would be another night in a railway carriage, but he would
live through it. There was just time to have a tub and a breakfast,
to swim in a gondola, to look at the outside of the Doge’s palace,
and to walk up and down the piazza before he started again. It was
hard work, but I think he would have been pleased had he heard that
Mrs. Arabin had retreated from Florence to Rome. Had such been the
case, he would have folded his cloak around him, and have gone
on—regardless of brigands—thinking of Lily, and wondering whether
anybody else had ever done so much before without going to bed. As
it was, he found that Mrs. Arabin was at the hotel in
Florence—still in bed, as he had arrived early in the morning. So
he had another tub, another breakfast, and sent up his card. “Mr.
John Eames”—and across the top of it he wrote, “has come from
England about Mr. Crawley.” Then he threw himself on a sofa in the
hotel reading-room, and went fast to sleep.
John had found an opportunity of talking to a
young lady in the breakfast-room, and had told her of his deeds. “I
only left London on Tuesday night, and I have come here taking
Venice on the road.”
“Then you have travelled fast,” said the
young lady.
“I haven’t seen a bed, of course,” said
John.
The young lady immediately afterwards told
her father. “I suppose he must be one of those Foreign Office
messengers,” said the young lady.
“Anything but that,” said the gentleman.
“People never talk about their own trades. He’s probably a clerk
with a fortnight’s leave of absence, seeing how many towns he can
do in the time. It’s the usual way of travelling nowadays. When I
was young and there were no railways, I remember going from Paris
to Vienna without sleeping.” Luckily for his present happiness,
John did not hear this.
He was still fast asleep when a servant came
to him from Mrs. Arabin to say that she would see him at once.
“Yes, yes; I’m quite ready to go on,” said Johnny, jumping up, and
thinking of the journey to Rome. But there was no journey to Rome
before him. Mrs. Arabin was almost in the next room, and there he
found her.
The reader will understand that they had
never met before, and hitherto knew nothing of each other. Mrs.
Arabin had never heard the name of John Eames till John’s card was
put into her hands, and would not have known his business with her
had he not written those few words upon it. “You have come about
Mr. Crawley?” she said to him eagerly. “I have heard from my father
that somebody was coming.”
“Yes, Mrs. Arabin; as hard as I could travel.
I had expected to find you at Venice.”
“Have you been at Venice?”
“I have just arrived from Venice. They told
me at Paris I should find you there. However, that does not matter,
as I have found you here. I wonder whether you can help us?”
“Do you know Mr. Crawley? Are you a friend of
his?”
“I never saw him in my life; but he married
my cousin.”
“I gave him the cheque, you know,” said Mrs.
Arabin.
“What!” exclaimed Eames, literally almost
knocked backwards by the easiness of the words which contained a
solution for so terrible a difficulty. The Crawley case had assumed
such magnitude, and the troubles of the Crawley family had been so
terrible, that it seemed to him to be almost sacrilegious that
words so simply uttered should suffice to cure everything. He had
hardly hoped—had at least barely hoped—that Mrs. Arabin might be
able to suggest something which would put them all on a track
towards discovery of the truth. But he found that she had the clue
in her hand, and that the clue was one which required no further
delicacy of investigation. There would be nothing more to unravel;
no journey to Jerusalem would be necessary!
“Yes,” said Mrs. Arabin, “I gave it to him.
They have been writing to my husband about it, and never wrote to
me; and till I received a letter about it from my father, and
another from my sister, at Venice the day before yesterday, I knew
nothing of the particulars of Mr. Crawley’s trouble.”
“Had you not heard that he had been taken
before the magistrates?”
“No; not so much even as that. I had seen in
Galignani something about a clergyman,
but I did not know what clergyman; and I heard that there was
something wrong about Mr. Crawley’s money, but there has always
been something wrong about money with poor Mr. Crawley; and as I
knew that my husband had been written to also, I did not interfere,
further than to ask the particulars. My letters have followed me
about, and I only learned at Venice, just before I came here, what
was the nature of the case.”
“And did you do anything?”
“I telegraphed at once to Mr. Toogood, who I
understand is acting as Mr. Crawley’s solicitor. My sister sent me
his address.”
“He is my uncle.”
“I telegraphed to him, telling him that I had
given Mr. Crawley the cheque, and then I wrote to Archdeacon
Grantly giving him the whole history. I was obliged to come here
before I could return home, but I intended to start this
evening.”
“And what is the whole history?” asked John
Eames.
The history of the gift of the cheque was
very simple. It has been told how Mr. Crawley in his dire distress
had called upon his old friend at the deanery asking for pecuniary
assistance. This he had done with so much reluctance that his
spirit had given way while he was waiting in the dean’s library,
and he had wished to depart without accepting what the dean was
quite willing to bestow upon him. From this cause it had come to
pass there had been no time for explanatory words, even between the
dean and his wife—from whose private funds had in truth come the
money which had been given to Mr. Crawley. For the private wealth
of the family belonged to Mrs. Arabin, and not to the dean; and was
left entirely in Mrs. Arabin’s hands, to be disposed of as she
might please. Previously to Mr. Crawley’s arrival at the deanery
this matter had been discussed between the dean and his wife, and
it had been agreed between them that a sum of fifty pounds should
be given. It should be given by Mrs. Arabin, but it was thought
that the gift would come with more comfort to the recipient from
the hands of his old friend than from those of his wife. There had
been much discussion between them as to the mode in which this
might be done with least offence to the man’s feelings—for they
knew Mr. Crawley and his peculiarities well. At last it was agreed
that the notes should be put into an envelope, which envelope the
dean should have ready with him. But when the moment came the dean
did not have the envelope ready, and was obliged to leave the room
to seek his wife. And Mrs. Arabin explained to John Eames that even
she had not had it ready, and had been forced to go to her own desk
to fetch it. Then, at the last moment, with the desire of
increasing the good to be done to people who were so terribly in
want, she put the cheque for twenty pounds, which was in her
possession as money of her own, along with the notes, and in this
way the cheque had been given by the dean to Mr. Crawley. “I shall
never forgive myself for not telling the dean,” she said. “Had I
done that all this trouble would have been saved.”
“But where did you get the cheque?” Eames
asked with natural curiosity.
“Exactly,” said Mrs. Arabin. “I have got to
show now that I did not steal it—have I not? Mr. Soames will indict
me now. And, indeed, I have had some trouble to refresh my memory
as to all the particulars, for you see it is more than a year
past.” But Mrs. Arabin’s mind was clearer on such matters than Mr.
Crawley’s, and she was able to explain that she had taken the
cheque as part of the rent due to her from the landlord of “The
Dragon of Wantly”, which inn was her property, having been the
property of her first husband. For some years past there had been a
difficulty about the rent, things not having gone at “The Dragon of
Wantly” as smoothly as they had used to go. At once time the money
had been paid half-yearly by the landlord’s cheque on the bank of
Barchester. For the last year-and-a-half this had not been done,
and the money had come into Mrs. Arabin’s hands at irregular
periods and in irregular sums. There was at this moment rent due
for twelve months, and Mrs. Arabin expressed her doubt whether she
would get it on her return to Barchester. On the occasion to which
she was now alluding, the money had been paid into her own hands,
in the deanery breakfast-parlour, by a man she knew very well—not
the landlord himself, but one bearing the landlord’s name, whom she
believed to the landlord’s brother, or at least his cousin. The man
in question was named Daniel Stringer, and he had been employed in
“The Dragon of Wantly”, as a sort of clerk or managing man, as long
as she had known it. The rent had been paid to her by Daniel
Stringer quite as often as by Daniel’s brother or cousin, John
Stringer, who was, in truth, the landlord of the hotel. When
questioned by John respecting the persons employed at the inn, she
said that she did believe that there had been rumours of something
wrong. The house had been in the hands of the Stringers for many
years—before the property had been purchased by her husband’s
father—and therefore there had been an unwillingness to remove
them; but gradually, so she said, there had come upon her and her
husband a feeling that the house must be put into other hands. “But
did you say nothing about the check?” John asked. “Yes, I said a
good deal about it. I asked why a cheque of Mr. Soames’s was
brought to me, instead of being taken to the bank for money; and
Stringer explained to me that they were not very fond of going to
the bank, as they owed money there, but that I could pay it into my
account. Only I kept my account at the other bank.”
“You might have paid it in there?” said
Johnny.
“I suppose I might, but I didn’t. I gave it
to poor Mr. Crawley instead—like a fool, as I know now that I was.
And so I have brought all this trouble on him and on her; and now I
must rush home, without waiting for the dean, as fast as the trains
will carry me.”
Eames offered to accompany her, and this
offer was accepted. “It is hard upon you, though,” she said; “you
will see nothing of Florence. Three hours in Venice, and six in
Florence, and no hours at all anywhere else, will be a hard fate to
you on your first trip to Italy.” But Johnny said “Excelsior” to
himself once more, and thought of Lily Dale, who was still in
London, hoping that she might hear of his exertions; and he felt,
perhaps, also that it would be pleasant to return with a dean’s
wife, and never hesitated. Nor would it do, he thought, for him to
be absent in the excitement caused by the news of Mr. Crawley’s
innocence and injuries. “I don’t care a bit about that,” he said.
“Of course, I should like to see Florence, and, of course, I should
like to go to bed; but I will live in hopes that I may do both some
day.” And so there grew to be a friendship between him and Mrs.
Arabin even before they had started.
He had driven through Florence; he saw the
Venus de’ Medici, and he saw the Seggiolia; he looked up from the
side of the Duomo to the top of the Campanile, and he walked round
the back of the cathedral itself; he tried to inspect the doors of
the Baptistry, and declared that the “David” was very fine. Then he
went back to the hotel, dined with Mrs. Arabin, and started for
England.
The dean was to have joined his wife at
Venice, and then they were to have returned together, coming round
by Florence. Mrs. Arabin had not, therefore, taken her things away
from Florence when she left it, and had been obliged to return to
pick them up on her journey homewards. He—the dean—had been delayed
in his Eastern travels. Neither Syria or Constantinople had got
themselves done as quickly as he had expected, and he had,
consequently, twice written to his wife, begging her to pardon the
transgression of his absence for even yet a few days longer.
“Everything, therefore,” as Mrs. Arabin said, “has conspired to
perpetuate this mystery, which a word from me would have solved. I
owe more to Mr. Crawley than I can ever pay him.”
“He will be very well paid, I think,” said
John, “when he hears the truth. If you could see the inside his
mind at this moment, I’m sure you’d find that he thinks he stole
the cheque.”
“He cannot think that, Mr. Eames. Besides, at
this moment I hope he has heard the truth.”
“That may be, but he did think so. I do
believe that he had not the slightest notion where he got it; and,
which is more, not a single person in the whole county had a
notion. People thought that he had picked it up, and used it in his
despair. And the bishop has been so hard upon him.”
“Oh, Mr. Eames, that is the worst of
all.”
“So I am told. The bishop has a wife, I
believe.”
“Yes, he has a wife, certainly,” said Mrs.
Arabin.
“And people say that she is not very
good-natured.”
“There are some of us at Barchester who do
not love her very dearly. I cannot say that she is one of my own
especial friends.”
“I believe she has been hard to Mr. Crawley,”
said John Eames.
“I should not be in the least surprised,”
said Mrs. Arabin.
Then they reached Turin, and there, taking up
Galignani’s Messenger in the
reading-room of Trompetta’s Hotel, John Eames saw that Mrs. Proudie
was dead. “Look at that,” said he, taking the paragraph to Mrs.
Arabin; “Mrs. Proudie is dead!” “Mrs. Proudie dead!” she exclaimed.
“Poor woman! Then there will be peace at Barchester!” “I never knew
her very intimately,” she afterwards said to her companion, “and I
do not know that I have a right to say that she ever did me an
injury. But I remember well her first coming into Barchester. My
sister’s father-in-law, the late bishop, was just dead. He was a
mild, kind, dear old man, whom my father loved beyond all the
world, except his own children. You may suppose we were all a
little sad. I was not specially connected with the cathedral then,
except through my father,”—and Mrs. Arabin, as she told all this,
remembered that in the days of which she was speaking she was a
young mourning widow—”but I think I can never forget the sort of
harsh-toned pæan of low-church trumpets with which that poor woman
made her entry into the city. She might have been more lenient, as
we had never sinned by being very high. She might, at any rate,
have been more gentle with us at first. I think we had never
attempted much beyond decency, good-will and comfort. Our comfort
she utterly destroyed. Good-will was not to her taste. And as for
decency, when I remember some things, I must say that when the
comfort and good-will went, the decency went along with them. And
now she is dead! I wonder how the bishop will get on without
her.”
“Like a house on fire, I should think,” said
Johnny.
“Fie, Mr. Eames; you shouldn’t speak in such
a way on such a subject.”
Mrs. Arabin and Johnny became fast friends as
they journeyed home. There was a sweetness in his character which
endeared him readily to women; though, as we have seen, there was a
want of something to make one woman cling to him. He could be soft
and pleasant-mannered. He was fond of making himself useful, and
was a perfect master of all those little caressing modes of
behaviour in which the caress is quite impalpable, and of which
most women know the value and appreciate the comfort. By the time
that they had reached Paris John had told the whole story of Lily
Dale and Crosbie, and Mrs. Arabin had promised to assist him, if
any assistance might be in her power.
“Of course I have heard of Miss Dale,” she
said, “because we know the De Courcys.” Then she turned away her
face, almost blushing, as she remembered the first time that she
had seen that Lady Alexandrina De Courcy whom Mr. Crosbie had
married. It had been at Mr. Thorne’s house at Ullathorne, and on
that day she had done a thing which she had never since remembered
without blushing. But it was an old story now, and a story of which
her companion knew nothing—of which he never could know anything.
That day at Ullathorne Mrs. Arabin, the wife of the Dean of
Barchester, than whom there was no more discreet clerical matron in
the diocese, had—boxed a clergyman’s ears!
“Yes,” said John, speaking of Crosbie, “he
was a wise fellow; he knew what he was about; he married an earl’s
daughter.”
“And now I remember hearing that somebody
gave him a terrible beating. Perhaps it was you?”
“It wasn’t terrible at all,” said
Johnny.
“Then it was you?”
“Oh, yes; it was I.”
“Then it was you who saved poor old Lord De
Guest from the bull?”
“Go on, Mrs. Arabin. There is no end to the
grand things I’ve done.”
“You’re quite a hero of romance.”
He bit his lip as he told himself that he was
not enough of a hero. “I don’t know about that,” said Johnny. “I
think what a man ought to do in these days is to seem not to care
what he eats and drinks, and to have his linen very well got up.
Then he’ll be a hero.” But that was hard upon Lily.
“Is that what Miss Dale requires?” said Mrs.
Arabin.
“I was not thinking about her particularly,”
said Johnny, lying.
They slept a night in Paris, as they had done
also at Turin—Mrs. Arabin not finding herself able to accomplish
such marvels in the way of travelling as her companion had
achieved—and then arrived in London in the evening. She was taken
to a certain quiet clerical hotel at the top of Suffolk Street,
much patronised by bishops and deans of the better sort, expecting
to find a message there from her husband. And there was a
message—just arrived. The dean had reached Florence three days
after her departure; and as he would do the journey home in
twenty-four hours less than she had taken, he would be there, at
the hotel, on the day after to-morrow. “I suppose I may wait for
him, Mr. Eames?” said Mrs. Arabin.
“I will see Mr. Toogood to-night, and I will
call here to-morrow, whether I see him or not. At what hour will
you be in?”
“Don’t trouble yourself to do that. You must
take care of Sir Raffle Buffle, you know.”
“I shan’t go near Sir Raffle Buffle
to-morrow, nor yet the next day. You mustn’t suppose that I am
afraid of Sir Raffle Buffle.”
“You are only afraid of Lily Dale.” From all
which it may be seen that Mrs. Arabin and John Eames had become
very intimate on their way home.
It was then arranged that he should call on
Mr. Toogood that same night or early next morning, and that he
should come to the hotel at twelve o’clock on the next day. Going
along one of the passages he passed two gentlemen in shovel hats,
with very black new coats, and knee-breeches; and Johnny could not
but hear a few words which one clerical gentleman said to the
other. “She was a woman of great energy, of wonderful spirit, but a
firebrand, my lord—a complete firebrand!” Then Johnny knew that the
Dean of A. was talking to the Bishop of B. about the late Mrs.
Proudie.