Dr Thorne by Anthony Trollope - CHAPTER XI

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Dr Thorne

CHAPTER XI

THE DOC­TOR DRINKS HIS TEA

The doc­tor got on his cob and went his way, re­turn­ing du­ly to Gre­shams­bury. But, in truth, as he went he hard­ly knew whith­er he was go­ing, or what he was do­ing. Sir Roger had hint­ed that the cob would be com­pelled to make up for lost time by ex­tra ex­er­tion on the road; but the cob had nev­er been per­mit­ted to have his own way as to pace more sat­is­fac­to­ri­ly than on the present oc­ca­sion. The doc­tor, in­deed, hard­ly knew that he was on horse­back, so com­plete­ly was he en­veloped in the cloud of his own thoughts.

In the first place, that al­ter­na­tive which it had be­come him to put be­fore the baronet as one un­like­ly to oc­cur–that of the speedy death of both fa­ther and son–was one which he felt in his heart of hearts might very prob­ably come to pass.

‘The chances are ten to one that such a clause will nev­er be brought to bear.’ This he had said part­ly to him­self, so as to ease the thoughts which came crowd­ing on his brain; part­ly, al­so, in pity for the pa­tient and the fa­ther. But now that he thought the mat­ter over, he felt that there were no such odds. Were not the odds the oth­er way? Was it not al­most prob­able that both these men might be gath­ered to their long ac­count with­in the next four years? One, the el­der, was a strong man, in­deed; one who might yet live for years to come if he could but give him­self fair play. But then, he him­self protest­ed, and protest­ed with a truth too sure­ly ground­ed, that fair play to him­self was be­yond his own pow­er to give. The oth­er, the younger, had ev­ery­thing against him. Not on­ly was he a poor, puny crea­ture, with­out phys­ical strength, one of whose life a friend could nev­er feel sure un­der any cir­cum­stances, but he al­so was al­ready ad­dict­ed to his fa­ther’s vices; he al­so was al­ready killing him­self with al­co­hol.

And then, if these two men did die with­in the pre­scribed pe­ri­od, if this clause of Sir Roger’s will were brought to bear, it should be­come his, Dr Thorne’s, du­ty to see that clause car­ried out, how would he be bound to act? That wom­an’s el­dest child was his own niece, his adopt­ed bairn, his dar­ling, the pride of his heart, the cyno­sure of his eye, his child al­so, his own Mary. Of all his du­ties on this earth, next to that one great du­ty to his God and con­science, was his du­ty to her. What, un­der these cir­cum­stances, did his du­ty to her re­quire of him?

But then, that one great du­ty, that du­ty which she would be the first to ex­pect from him; what did that de­mand of him? Had Scatcherd made his will with­out say­ing what its claus­es were, it seemed to Thorne that Mary must have been the heiress, should that clause be­come nec­es­sar­ily op­er­ative. Whether she were so or not would at any rate be for lawyers to de­cide. But now the case was very dif­fer­ent. This rich man had con­fid­ed in him, and would it not be a breach of con­fi­dence, an act of ab­so­lute dis­hon­esty–an act of dis­hon­esty both to Scatcherd and to that far-​dis­tant Amer­ican fam­ily, to that fa­ther, who, in for­mer days, had be­haved so nobly, and to that el­dest child of his, would it not be gross dis­hon­esty to them all if he al­lowed this man to leave a will by which his prop­er­ty might go to a per­son nev­er in­tend­ed to be his heir?

Long be­fore he had ar­rived at Gre­shams­bury his mind on this point had been made up. In­deed, it had been made up while sit­ting there by Scatcherd’s bed­side. It had not been dif­fi­cult to make up his mind to so much; but then, his way out of this dis­hon­esty was not so easy for him to find. How should he set this mat­ter right to as to in­flict no in­jury on his niece, and no sor­row to him­self–if that in­deed could be avoid­ed?

And then oth­er thoughts crowd­ed on his brain. He had al­ways pro­fessed–pro­fessed at any rate to him­self and to her–that of all the vile ob­jects of a man’s am­bi­tion, wealth, wealth mere­ly for its own sake, was the vilest. They, in their joint school of in­her­ent phi­los­ophy, had pro­gressed to ideas which they might find it not easy to car­ry out, should they be called on by events to do so. And if this would have been dif­fi­cult to ei­ther when act­ing on be­half of self alone, how much more dif­fi­cult when one might have to act for the oth­er! This dif­fi­cul­ty had now come to the un­cle. Should he, in this emer­gen­cy, take up­on him­self to fling away the gold­en chance which might ac­crue to his niece if Scatcherd should be en­cour­aged to make her part­ly his heir?

‘He’d want her to go and live there–to live with him and his wife. All the mon­ey in the Bank of Eng­land would not pay her for such mis­ery,’ said the doc­tor to him­self, as he slow­ly rode in­to is own yard.

On one point, and one on­ly, had he def­inite­ly made up his mind. On the fol­low­ing day he would go over again to Box­all Hill, and would tell Scatcherd the whole truth. Come what might, the truth must be best. And so, with some gleam of com­fort, he went in­to the house, and found his niece in the draw­ing-​room with Pa­tience Oriel.

‘Mary and I have been quar­relling,’ said Pa­tience. ‘She says the doc­tor is the great­est man in a vil­lage; and I say the par­son is of course.’

‘I on­ly say that the doc­tor is the most looked af­ter,’ said Mary. ‘There’s an­oth­er hor­rid mes­sage for you to go to Sil­ver­bridge, un­cle. Why can’t that Dr Cen­tu­ry man­age his own peo­ple?’

‘She says,’ con­tin­ued Miss Oriel, ‘that if a par­son was away for a month, no one would miss him; but that a doc­tor is so pre­cious that his very min­utes are count­ed.’

‘I am sure un­cle’s are. They be­grudge him his meals. Mr Oriel nev­er gets called away to Sil­ver­bridge.’

‘No; we in the Church man­age our parish ar­range­ments bet­ter than you do. We don’t let strange prac­ti­tion­ers in among our flocks be­cause the sheep may chance to fan­cy them. Our sheep have to put up with our spir­itu­al dos­es whether they like them or not. In that re­spect we are much the best off. I ad­vise you, Mary, to mar­ry a cler­gy­man, by all means.’

‘I will when you mar­ry a doc­tor,’ said she.

‘I am sure noth­ing on earth would give me greater plea­sure,’ said Miss Oriel, get­ting up and curt­sey­ing very low to Dr Thorne; ‘but I am not quite pre­pared for the ag­ita­tion of an of­fer this morn­ing, so I’ll run away.’

And so she went; and the doc­tor, get­ting to his oth­er horse, start­ed again for Sil­ver­bridge, weari­ly enough. ‘She’s hap­py now where she is,’ said he to him­self, as he rode along. ‘They all treat her there as an equal at Gre­shams­bury. What though she be no cousin to the Thornes of Ul­lathorne. She has found her place there among them all, and keeps it on equal terms with the best of them. There is Miss Oriel; her fam­ily is high; she is rich, fash­ion­able, a beau­ty, court­ed by ev­ery one; but yet she does not look down on Mary. They are equal friends to­geth­er. But how would it be if she were tak­en to Box­all Hill, even as a rec­og­nized niece of the rich man there? Would Pa­tience Oriel and Beat­rice Gre­sham go there af­ter her? Could she be hap­py there as she is in my house here, poor though it be? It would kill her to pass a month with La­dy Scatcherd and put up with that man’s hu­mours, to see his mode of life, to be de­pen­dent on him, to be­long to him.’ And then the doc­tor, hur­ry­ing on to Sil­ver­bridge, again met Dr Cen­tu­ry at the old la­dy’s bed­side, and hav­ing made his en­deav­ours to stave off the in­ex­orable com­ing of the grim vis­itor, again re­turned to his own niece and his own draw­ing-​room.

‘You must be dead, un­cle,’ said Mary, as she poured out his tea for him, and pre­pared the com­forts of that most com­fort­able meal-​tea, din­ner, and sup­per, all in one. ‘I wish Sil­ver­bridge was fifty miles off.’

‘That would on­ly make the jour­ney worse; but I am not dead yet, and, what is more to the pur­pose, nei­ther is my pa­tient.’ And as he spoke he con­trived to swal­low a jo­rum of scald­ing tea, con­tain­ing in mea­sure some­what near a pint. Mary, not a whit amazed at this feat, mere­ly re­filled the jo­rum with­out any ob­ser­va­tion; and the doc­tor went on stir­ring the mix­ture with his spoon, ev­ident­ly obliv­ious that any cer­emo­ny had been per­formed by ei­ther of them since the first sup­ply had been ad­min­is­tered to him.

When the clat­ter of knives and forks was over, the doc­tor turned him­self to the hearthrug, and putting one leg over the oth­er, he be­gan to nurse it as he looked with com­pla­cen­cy at his third cup of tea, which stood un­tast­ed be­side him. The frag­ments of the sol­id ban­quet had been re­moved, but no sac­ri­le­gious hand had been laid on the teapot and the cream-​jug.

‘Mary,’ said he, ’sup­pose you were to find out to-​mor­row morn­ing that, by some ac­ci­dent, you had be­come a great heiress, would you be able to sup­press your ex­ul­ta­tion?’

‘The first thing I’d do, would be to pro­nounce a pos­itive edict that you should nev­er go to Sil­ver­bridge again; at least with­out a day’s no­tice.’

‘Well, and what next? what would you do next?’

‘The next thing–the next thing would be to send to Paris for a French bon­net ex­act­ly like the one Pa­tience Oriel had on. Did you see it?’

‘Well I can’t say I did; bon­nets are in­vis­ible now; be­sides I nev­er re­mark any­body’s clothes, ex­cept yours.’

‘Oh! do look at Miss Oriel’s bon­net the next time you see her. I can­not un­der­stand why it should be so, but I am sure of this–no En­glish fin­gers put to­geth­er such a bon­net as that; and I am near­ly sure that no French fin­gers could do it in Eng­land.’

‘But you don’t care so much about bon­nets, Mary!’ This the doc­tor said as an as­ser­tion; but there was, nev­er­the­less, some­what of a ques­tion in­volved in it.

‘Don’t I though?’ said she. ‘I do care very much about bon­nets; es­pe­cial­ly since I saw Pa­tience this morn­ing. I asked how much it cost–guess.’

‘Oh! I don’t know–a pound?’

‘A pound, un­cle!’

‘What! a great deal more? Ten pounds?’

‘Oh, un­cle.’

‘What! more than ten pounds? Then I don’t think even Pa­tience Oriel ought to give it.’

‘No, of course she would not; but, un­cle, it re­al­ly cost a hun­dred francs!’

‘Oh! a hun­dred francs; that’s four pounds, isn’t it? Well, and how much did your last new bon­net cost?’

‘Mine! oh, noth­ing–five and ninepence, per­haps; I trimmed it my­self. If I were left a great for­tune, I’d send to Paris to-​mor­row; no, I’d go my­self to Paris to buy a bon­net, and I’d take you with me to choose it.’

The doc­tor sat silent for a while med­itat­ing about this, dur­ing which he un­con­scious­ly ab­sorbed the tea be­side him; and Mary again re­plen­ished his cup.

‘Come, Mary,’ he said at last, ‘I’m in a gen­er­ous mood; and as I am rather more rich than usu­al, we’ll send to Paris for a French bon­net. The go­ing for it must wait a while longer I am afraid.’

‘You’re jok­ing.’

‘No, in­deed. If you know the way to send–that I must con­fess would puz­zle me; but if you’ll man­age the send­ing, I’ll man­age the pay­ing; and you shall have a French bon­net.’

‘Un­cle!’ said she, look­ing up at him.

‘Oh, I’m not jok­ing; I owe you a present, and I’ll give you that.’

‘And if you do, I’ll tell you what I’ll do with it. I’ll cut it in­to frag­ments, and burn them be­fore your face. Why, un­cle, what do you take me for? You’re not a bit nice to-​night to make such an of­fer as that to me; not a bit, not a bit.’ And then she came over from her seat at the tea-​tray and sat down on a foot-​stool close at his knee. ‘Be­cause I’d have a French bon­net if I had a large for­tune, is that a rea­son why I should like one now? if you were to pay four pounds for a bon­net for me, it would scorch my head ev­ery time I put it on.’

‘I don’t see that: four pounds would not ru­in me. How­ev­er, I don’t think you’d look a bit bet­ter if you had it; and, cer­tain­ly, I should not like to scorch these locks,’ and putting his hand up­on her shoul­ders, he played with her hair.

‘Pa­tience has a pony-​phaeton, and I’d have one if I were rich; and I’d have all my books bound as she does; and, per­haps, I’d give fifty guineas for a dress­ing-​case.’

‘Fifty guineas!’

‘Pa­tience did not tell me; but so Beat­rice says. Pa­tience showed it to me once, and it is a dar­ling. I think I’d have the dress­ing-​case be­fore the bon­net. But, un­cle–’

‘Well?’

‘You don’t sup­pose I want such things?’

‘Not im­prop­er­ly. I am sure you do not.’

‘Not prop­er­ly, or im­prop­er­ly; not much, or lit­tle. I cov­et many things; but noth­ing of that sort. You know, or should know, that I do not. Why do you talk of buy­ing a French bon­net for me?’

Dr Thorne did not an­swer this ques­tion, but went on nurs­ing his leg.

‘Af­ter all,’ said he, ‘mon­ey is a fine thing.’

‘Very fine, when it is well come by,’ she an­swered; ‘that is, with­out detri­ment to the heart and soul.’

‘I should be a hap­pi­er man if you were pro­vid­ed for as Miss Oriel. Sup­pose, now, I could give you up to a rich man who would be able to in­sure you against all wants?’

‘In­sure me against all wants! Oh, that would be a man. That would be sell­ing me, wouldn’t it, un­cle? Yes, sell­ing me; and the price you would re­ceive would be free­dom from fu­ture ap­pre­hen­sions as re­gards me. It would be a cow­ard­ly sale for you to make; and then, as to me–me the vic­tim. No, un­cle; you must bear the mis­ery of hav­ing to pro­vide for me–bon­nets and all. We are in the same boat, and you shan’t turn me over­board.’

‘But if I were to die, what would you do then?’

‘And if I were to die, what would you do? Peo­ple must be bound to­geth­er. They must de­pend on each oth­er. Of course, mis­for­tunes may come; but it is cow­ard­ly to be afraid of them be­fore­hand. You and I are bound to­geth­er, un­cle; and though you say these things to tease me, I know you do not wish to get rid of me.’

‘Well, well; we shall win through, doubt­less; if not in one way, then in an­oth­er.’

‘Win through! Of course we shall; who doubts our win­ning? but, un­cle–’

‘But, Mary.’

‘Well?’

‘You haven’t got an­oth­er cup of tea, have you?’

‘Oh, un­cle! you have had five.’

‘No, my dear! not five; on­ly four–on­ly four. I as­sure you; I have been very par­tic­ular to count. I had one while I was–’

‘Five un­cle; in­deed and in­deed.’

‘Well, then, as I hate the prej­udice which at­tach­es luck to an odd num­ber, I’ll have the sixth to show that I am not su­per­sti­tious.’

While Mary was prepar­ing the sixth jo­rum, there came a knock at the door. Those late sum­mons­es were hate­ful to Mary’s ear, for they were usu­al­ly fore­run­ners of a mid­night ride through the dark lanes to some farmer’s house. The doc­tor had been in the sad­dle all day, and, as Janet brought the note in­to the room, Mary stood up as though to de­fend her un­cle from any fur­ther in­va­sion on his rest.

‘A note from the house, miss,’ said Janet: now ‘the house’, in Gre­shams­bury par­lance, al­ways meant the squire’s man­sion.

‘No one ill at the house, I hope,’ said the doc­tor, tak­ing the note from Mary’s hand. ‘Oh–ah–yes; it’s from the squire–there’s no­body ill: wait a minute, Janet, and I’ll write a line. Mary, lend me your desk.’

The squire, anx­ious as usu­al for mon­ey, had writ­ten to ask what suc­cess the doc­tor had had in ne­go­ti­at­ing the new loan with Sir Roger. That fact, how­ev­er, was, that in his vis­it to Box­all Hill, the doc­tor had been al­to­geth­er un­able to bring on the car­pet the mat­ter of this loan. Sub­jects had crowd­ed them­selves in too quick­ly dur­ing that in­ter­view–those two in­ter­views at Sir Roger’s bed­side; and he had been obliged to leave with­out even al­lud­ing to the ques­tion.

‘I must at any rate go back now,’ he said to him­self. So he wrote to the squire, say­ing that he was to be at Box­all Hill again on the fol­low­ing day, and that he would call at the house on his re­turn.

‘That’s all set­tled, at any rate,’ said he.

‘What’s set­tled?’ said Mary.

‘Why, I must go to Box­all Hill again to-​mor­row. I must go ear­ly, too, so we’d bet­ter both be off to bed. Tell Janet I must break­fast at half-​past sev­en.’

‘You couldn’t take me, could you? I should so like to see that Sir Roger.’

‘To see Sir Roger! Why, he’s ill in bed.’

‘That’s an ob­jec­tion, cer­tain­ly; but some day, when he’s well, could you not take me over? I have the great­est de­sire to see a man like that; a man who be­gan with noth­ing and now has more than enough to buy the whole parish of Gre­shams­bury.’

‘I don’t think you’d like him at all.’

‘Why not? I am sure I should; I am sure I should like him, and La­dy Scatcherd too. I’ve heard you say that she is an ex­cel­lent wom­an.’

‘Yes, in her way; and he, too, is good in his way; but they are nei­ther of them in your way: they are ex­treme­ly vul­gar–’

‘Oh! I don’t mind that; that would make them more amus­ing; one doesn’t go to those sort of peo­ple for pol­ished man­ners.’

‘I don’t think you’d find the Scatcherds pleas­ant ac­quain­tances at all,’ said the doc­tor, tak­ing his bed-​can­dle, and kiss­ing his niece’s fore­head as he left the room.