Dr Thorne by Anthony Trollope - CHAPTER XXXIV

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Dr Thorne

CHAPTER XXXIV

A BAROUCHE AND FOUR AR­RIVES AT GRE­SHAMS­BURY

Dur­ing the last twelve months Sir Louis Scatcherd had been very ef­fi­ca­cious in bring­ing trou­ble, tur­moil, and vex­ation up­on Gre­shams­bury. Now that it was too late to take steps to save him­self, Dr Thorne found that the will left by Sir Roger was so made as to en­tail up­on him du­ties that he would find it al­most im­pos­si­ble to per­form. Sir Louis, though his fa­ther had wished to make him still a child in the eye of the law, was no child. He knew his own rights and was de­ter­mined to ex­act them; and be­fore Sir Roger had been dead three months, the doc­tor found him­self in con­tin­ual lit­iga­tion with a low Barch­ester at­tor­ney, who was act­ing on be­half of his, the doc­tor’s, own ward.

And if the doc­tor suf­fered so did the squire, and so did those who had hith­er­to had the man­age­ment of the squire’s af­fairs. Dr Thorne soon per­ceived that he was to be driv­en in­to lit­iga­tion, not on­ly with Mr Finnie, the Barch­ester at­tor­ney, but with the squire him­self. While Finnie ha­rassed him, he was com­pelled to ha­rass Mr Gre­sham. He was no lawyer him­self; and though he had been able to man­age very well be­tween the squire and Sir Roger, and had per­haps giv­en him­self some cred­it for his lawyer-​like abil­ity in so do­ing, he was ut­ter­ly un­able to man­age be­tween Sir Louis and Mr Gre­sham.

He had, there­fore, to em­ploy a lawyer on his own ac­count, and it seemed prob­able that the whole amount of Sir Roger’s lega­cy to him­self would by de­grees be ex­pend­ed in this man­ner. And then the squire’s lawyers had to take up the mat­ter; and they did so great­ly to the detri­ment of poor Mr Yates Um­ble­by, who was found to have made a mess of the af­fairs en­trust­ed to him. Mr Um­ble­by’s ac­counts were in­cor­rect; his mind was any­thing but clear, and he con­fessed, when put to it by the very sharp gen­tle­man that came down from Lon­don, that he was ‘both­ered’; and so, af­ter a while, he was sus­pend­ed from his du­ties, and Mr Gaze­bee, the sharp gen­tle­man from Lon­don, reigned over the di­min­ished rent-​roll of the Gre­shams­bury es­tate.

Thus ev­ery­thing was go­ing wrong at Gre­shams­bury–with the one ex­cep­tion of Mr Oriel and his love-​suit. Miss Gush­ing at­tribut­ed the de­po­si­tion of Mr Um­ble­by to the nar­row­ness of the vic­to­ry which Beat­rice had won in car­ry­ing off Mr Oriel. For Miss Gush­ing was a re­la­tion of the Um­ble­bys, and had been for many years one of their fam­ily. ‘If she had on­ly cho­sen to ex­ert her­self as Miss Gre­sham had done, she could have had Mr Oriel, eas­ily; oh, too eas­ily! but she had de­spised such work,’ so she said. ‘But though she had de­spised it, the Gre­shams had not been less ir­ri­tat­ed, and, there­fore, Mr Um­ble­by had been driv­en out of his house.’ We can hard­ly be­lieve this, as vic­to­ry gen­er­al­ly makes men gen­er­ous. Miss Gush­ing, how­ev­er, stat­ed it as a fact so of­ten that it is prob­able she was in­duced to be­lieve it her­self.

Thus ev­ery­thing was go­ing wrong at Gre­shams­bury, and the squire him­self was es­pe­cial­ly a suf­fer­er. Um­ble­by had at any rate been his own man, and he could do what he liked with him. He could see him when he liked, and where he liked, and now he liked; could scold him if in an ill-​hu­mour, and laugh at him when in a good hu­mour. All this Mr Um­ble­by knew, and bore. But Mr Gaze­bee was a very dif­fer­ent sort of gen­tle­man; he was the ju­nior part­ner in the firm of Gump­tion, Gaze­bee & Gaze­bee of Mount Street, a house that nev­er de­filed it­self with any oth­er busi­ness than the agen­cy busi­ness, and that in the very high­est line. They drew out leas­es, and man­aged prop­er­ty both for the Duke of Om­ni­um and Lord De Cour­cy; and ev­er since her mar­riage, it had been one of the ob­jects dear­est to La­dy Ara­bel­la’s heart that the Gre­shams­bury acres should be su­per­in­tend­ed by the po­lite skill and pol­ished le­gal abil­ity of that all but el­egant firm in Mount Street.

The squire had long stood firm, and had de­light­ed in hav­ing ev­ery­thing done un­der his own eye by poor Mr Yates Um­ble­by. But now, alas! he could stand it no longer. He had put off the evil day as long as he could; he had de­ferred the odi­ous work of in­ves­ti­ga­tion till things had seemed re­solved on in­ves­ti­gat­ing them­selves; and then, when it was ab­so­lute­ly nec­es­sary that Mr Um­ble­by should go, there was noth­ing for him left but to fall in­to the ready hands of Messrs Gump­tion, Gaze­bee and Gaze­bee.

It must not be sup­posed that Messrs Gump­tion, Gaze­bee and Gaze­bee were in the least like the or­di­nary run of at­tor­neys. They wrote no let­ters for six-​and-​eight­pence each: they col­lect­ed no debts, filed no bills, made no charge per fo­lio for ‘where­as­es’ and ‘as afore­saids’; they did no dirty work, and prob­ably were as ig­no­rant of the in­te­ri­or of a court of law as any young la­dy liv­ing in their May­fair vicin­ity. No; their busi­ness was to man­age the prop­er­ty of great peo­ple, draw up leas­es, make le­gal as­sign­ments, get the fam­ily mar­riage set­tle­ments made, and look af­ter wills. Oc­ca­sion­al­ly, al­so, they had to raise mon­ey; but it was gen­er­al­ly un­der­stood that this was done by proxy.

The firm had been go­ing on for a hun­dred and fifty years, and the des­ig­na­tion had of­ten been al­tered; but it al­ways con­sist­ed of Gump­tions and Gaze­bees dif­fer­ent­ly ar­ranged, and no less hal­lowed names had ev­er been per­mit­ted to ap­pear. It had been Gaze­bee, Gaze­bee and Gump­tion; then Gaze­bee and Gump­tion; then Gaze­bee, Gump­tion and Gump­tion; then Gump­tion, Gump­tion and Gaze­bee; and now it was Gump­tion, Gaze­bee and Gaze­bee.

Mr Gaze­bee, the ju­nior mem­ber of this firm, was a very el­egant young man. While look­ing at him rid­ing in Rot­ten Row, you would hard­ly have tak­en him for an at­tor­ney; and had he heard that you had so tak­en him, he would have been very much sur­prised in­deed. He was rather bald; not be­ing, as peo­ple say, quite so young as he was once. His ex­act age was thir­ty-​eight. But he had a re­al­ly re­mark­able pair of jet-​black whiskers, which ful­ly made up for his de­fi­cien­cy as to his head; he had al­so dark eyes, and a beaked nose, what may be called a dis­tin­guished mouth, and was al­ways dressed in fash­ion­able at­tire. The fact was, that Mr Mor­timer Gaze­bee, ju­nior part­ner in the firm Gump­tion, Gaze­bee, and Gaze­bee, by no means con­sid­ered him­self to be made of that very dis­agree­able ma­te­ri­al which mor­tals call small beer.

When this great firm was ap­plied to get Mr Gre­sham through his dif­fi­cul­ties, and when the state of his af­fairs was made known to them, they at first ex­pressed rather a dis­in­cli­na­tion for the work. But at last, moved doubt­less by their re­spect for the De Cour­cy in­ter­est, they as­sent­ed; and Mr Gaze­bee, ju­nior, went down to Gre­shams­bury. The poor squire passed many a sad day af­ter that be­fore he again felt him­self to be mas­ter even of his own do­main.

Nev­er­the­less, when Mr Mor­timer Gaze­bee vis­it­ed Gre­shams­bury, which he did on more than one or two oc­ca­sions, he was al­ways re­ceived en grand seigneur. To La­dy Ara­bel­la he was by no means an un­wel­come guest, for she found her­self able, for the first time in her life, to speak con­fi­den­tial­ly on her hus­band’s pe­cu­niary af­fairs with the man who had the man­age­ment of her hus­band’s prop­er­ty. Mr Gaze­bee al­so was a pet with La­dy De Cour­cy; and be­ing known to be a fash­ion­able man in Lon­don, and quite a dif­fer­ent sort of per­son from poor Mr Um­ble­by, he was al­ways re­ceived with smiles. He had a hun­dred lit­tle ways of mak­ing him­self agree­able, and Au­gus­ta de­clared to her cousin, the La­dy Amelia, af­ter hav­ing been ac­quaint­ed with him for a few months, that he would be a per­fect gen­tle­man, on­ly, that his fam­ily had nev­er been any­thing but at­tor­neys. The La­dy Amelia smiled in her own pe­cu­liar­ly aris­to­crat­ic way, shrugged her shoul­ders slight­ly, and said, ‘that Mr Mor­timer Gaze­bee was a very good sort of per­son, very.’ Poor Au­gus­ta felt her­self snubbed, think­ing per­haps of the tai­lor’s son; but as there was nev­er any ap­peal against the La­dy Amelia, she said noth­ing more at that mo­ment in favour of Mr Mor­timer Gaze­bee.

All these evils–Mr Mor­timer Gaze­bee be­ing the worst of them–had Sir Louis Scatcherd brought down on the poor squire’s head. There may be those who will say that the squire had brought them on him­self, by run­ning in­to debt; and so, doubt­less, he had; but it was not the less true that the baronet’s in­ter­fer­ence was un­nec­es­sary, vex­atious, and one might al­most say, ma­li­cious. His in­ter­est would have been quite safe in the doc­tor’s hands, and he had, in fact, no le­gal right to med­dle; but nei­ther the doc­tor nor the squire could pre­vent him. Mr Finnie knew very well what he was about, if Sir Louis did not; and so the three went on, each with his own lawyer, and each of them dis­trust­ful, un­hap­py, and ill at ease. This was hard up­on the doc­tor, for he was not in debt, and had bor­rowed no mon­ey.

There was not much rea­son to sup­pose that the vis­it of Sir Louis to Gre­shams­bury would much im­prove mat­ters. It must be pre­sumed that he was not com­ing with any am­ica­ble views, but with the ob­ject rather of look­ing af­ter his own; a phrase which was now con­stant­ly in his mouth. He might prob­ably find it nec­es­sary while look­ing af­ter his own at Gre­shams­bury, to say some very dis­agree­able things to the squire; and the doc­tor, there­fore, hard­ly ex­pect­ed that the vis­it would go off pleas­ant­ly.

When last he saw Sir Louis, now near­ly twelve months since, he was in­tent on mak­ing a pro­pos­al of mar­riage to Miss Thorne. This in­ten­tion he car­ried out about two days af­ter Frank Gre­sham had done the same thing. He had de­layed do­ing so till he had suc­ceed­ed in pur­chas­ing his friend Jenk­ins’s Arab pony, imag­in­ing that such a present could not but go far in wean­ing Mary’s heart from her oth­er lover. Poor Mary was put to the trou­ble of re­fus­ing both the baronet and the pony, and a very bad time she had of it while do­ing so. Sir Louis was a man eas­ily an­gered, and not very eas­ily paci­fied, and Mary had to en­dure a good deal of an­noy­ance; from any oth­er per­son, in­deed, she would have called it im­per­ti­nence. Sir Louis, how­ev­er, had to bear his re­jec­tion as best he could, and, af­ter a per­se­ver­ance of three days, re­turned to Lon­don in dis­gust; and Mary had not seen him since.

Mr Greyson’s first let­ter was fol­lowed by a sec­ond; and the sec­ond was fol­lowed by the baronet in per­son. He al­so re­quired to be re­ceived en grand seigneur, per­haps more im­per­ative­ly than Mr Mor­timer Gaze­bee him­self. He came with four posters from the Barch­ester Sta­tion, and had him­self rat­tled up to the doc­tor’s door in a way that took the breath away from all Gre­shams­bury. Why! the squire him­self for a many long year had been con­tent­ed to come home with a pair of hors­es; and four were nev­er seen in the place, ex­cept when the De Cour­cys came to Gre­shams­bury, or La­dy Ara­bel­la, with all her daugh­ters re­turned from her hard-​fought metropoli­tan cam­paigns.

Sir Louis, how­ev­er, came with four, and very ar­ro­gant looked, lean­ing back in the barouche be­long­ing to the George and Drag­on, and wrapped up in fur, al­though it was now mid­sum­mer. And up in the dicky be­hind was a ser­vant, more ar­ro­gant, if pos­si­ble, than his mas­ter–the baronet’s own man, who was the ob­ject of Dr Thorne’s spe­cial de­tes­ta­tion and dis­gust. He was a lit­tle fel­low, cho­sen orig­inal­ly on ac­count of his light weight on horse­back; but if that may be con­sid­ered a mer­it, it was the on­ly one he had. His out-​door show dress was a lit­tle tight frock-​coat, round which a pol­ished strap was al­ways buck­led tight­ly, a stiff white chok­er, leather breech­es, top-​boots, and a hat, with a cock­ade, stuck on one side of his head. His name was Jon­ah, which his mas­ter and his mas­ter’s friends short­ened to Joe; none, how­ev­er, but those who were very in­ti­mate with his mas­ter were al­lowed to do so with im­puni­ty.

This Joe was Dr Thorne’s spe­cial aver­sion. In his anx­iety to take ev­ery pos­si­ble step to keep Sir Louis from poi­son­ing him­self, he had at first at­tempt­ed to en­list the baronet’s ‘own man’ in the cause. Joe had promised fair­ly, but had be­trayed the doc­tor at once, and had be­come the worst in­stru­ment of his mas­ter’s dis­si­pa­tion. When, there­fore, his hat and the cock­ade were seen, as the car­riage dashed up to the door, the doc­tor’s con­tent­ment was by no means in­creased.

Sir Louis was now twen­ty-​three years old, and was a great deal too know­ing to al­low him­self to be kept un­der the doc­tor’s thumb. It had, in­deed, be­come his plan to rebel against his guardian in al­most ev­ery­thing. He had at first been de­cent­ly sub­mis­sive, with the view of ob­tain­ing in­creased sup­plies of ready mon­ey; but he had been sharp enough to per­ceive that, let his con­duct be what it would, the doc­tor would keep him out of debt; but that the do­ing so took so large a sum that he could not hope for any fur­ther ad­vances. In this re­spect Sir Louis was per­haps more keen-​wit­ted than Dr Thorne.

Mary, when she saw the car­riage, at once ran up to her own bed­room. The doc­tor, who had been with her in the draw­ing-​room, went down to meet his ward, but as soon as he saw the cock­ade he dart­ed al­most in­vol­un­tar­ily in­to his shop and shut the door. This pro­tec­tion, how­ev­er, last­ed on­ly for a mo­ment; he felt that de­cen­cy re­quired him to meet his guest, and so he went forth and faced the en­emy.

‘I say,’ said Joe, speak­ing to Janet, who stood curt­sy­ing at the gate, with Brid­get, the oth­er maid, be­hind her, ‘I say, are there any chaps about the place to take the things–eh? come, look sharp here.’

It so hap­pened that the doc­tor’s groom was not on the spot, and ‘oth­er chaps’ the doc­tor had none.

‘Take those things, Brid­get,’ he said, com­ing for­ward and of­fer­ing his hand to the baronet. Sir Louis, when he saw his host, roused him­self slow­ly from the back of his car­riage. ‘How do, doc­tor?’ said he. ‘What ter­ri­ble bad roads you have here! and, up­on my word, it’s as cold as win­ter:’ and, so say­ing, he slow­ly pro­ceed­ed to de­scend.

Sir Louis was a year old­er than when we last saw him, and, in his gen­er­ation, a year wis­er. He had then been some­what hum­ble be­fore the doc­tor; but now he was de­ter­mined to let his guardian see that he knew how to act the baronet; that he had ac­quired the man­ners of a great man; and that he was not to be put up­on. He had learnt some lessons from Jenk­ins in Lon­don, and oth­er friends of the same sort, and he was about to prof­it by them.

The doc­tor showed him to his room, and then pro­ceed­ed to ask af­ter his health. ‘Oh, I’m right enough,’ said Sir Louis. ‘You mustn’t be­lieve all that fel­low Greyson tells you: he wants me to take salts and sen­na, opodel­doc, and all that sort of stuff; looks af­ter his bill, you know–eh? like all the rest of you. But I won’t have it;–not at any price; and then he writes to you.’

‘I’m glad to see you are able to trav­el,’ said Dr Thorne, who could not force him­self to tell his guest that he was glad to see him at Gre­shams­bury.

‘Oh, trav­el; yes, I can trav­el well enough. But I wish you had some bet­ter sort of trap down in these coun­try parts. I’m shak­en to bits. And, doc­tor, would you tell your peo­ple to send that fel­low of mine up here with hot wa­ter.

So dis­missed, the doc­tor went his way, and met Joe swag­ger­ing in one of the pas­sages, while Janet and her col­league dragged along be­tween them a heavy ar­ti­cle of bag­gage.

‘Janet,’ said he, ‘go down­stairs and get Sir Louis some hot wa­ter, and Joe, do you take hold of your mas­ter’s port­man­teau.’

Joe sulk­ily did as he was bid. ‘Seems to me,’ said he, turn­ing to the girl, and speak­ing be­fore the doc­tor was out of hear­ing, ’seems to me, my dear, you be rather short-​hand­ed here; lots of work and noth­ing to get; that’s about the tick­et, ain’t it?’ Brid­get was too de­mure­ly mod­est to make any an­swer up­on so short an ac­quain­tance; so, putting her end of the bur­den down at the strange gen­tle­man’s door, she re­treat­ed in­to the kitchen.

Sir Louis in an­swer to the doc­tor’s in­quiries, had de­clared him­self to be all right; but his ap­pear­ance was any­thing but all right. Twelve months since, a life of dis­si­pa­tion, or rather, per­haps, a life of drink­ing, had not had up­on him so strong an ef­fect but that some of the salt of youth was still left; some of the fresh­ness of young years might still be seen in his face. But this was now all gone; his eyes were sunken and wa­tery, his cheeks were hol­low and wan, his mouth was drawn and his lips dry; his back was even bent, and his legs were un­steady un­der him, so that he had been forced to step down from his car­riage as an old man would do. Alas, alas! he had no fur­ther chance now of ev­er be­ing all right again.

Mary had se­clud­ed her­self in her bed­room as soon as the car­riage had driv­en up to the door, and there she re­mained till din­ner-​time. But she could not shut her­self up al­to­geth­er. It would be nec­es­sary that she should ap­pear at din­ner; and, there­fore, a few min­utes be­fore the hour, she crept out in­to the draw­ing-​room. As she opened the door, she looked in timid­ly, ex­pect­ing Sir Louis to be there; but when she saw that her un­cle was the on­ly oc­cu­pant of the room, her brow cleared, and she en­tered with a quick step.

‘He’ll come down to din­ner; won’t he, un­cle?’

‘Oh, I sup­pose so.’

‘What’s he do­ing now?’

‘Dress­ing, I sup­pose; he’s been at this hour.’

‘But, un­cle–’

‘Well?’

‘Will he come up af­ter din­ner, do you think?’

Mary spoke of him as though he were some wild beast, whom her un­cle in­sist­ed on hav­ing in his house.

‘Good­ness knows what he will do! Come up? Yes. He will not stay in the din­ing-​room all night.’

‘But, dear un­cle, do be se­ri­ous.’

‘Se­ri­ous!’

‘Yes; se­ri­ous. Don’t you think that I might go to bed, in­stead of wait­ing?’

The doc­tor was saved the trou­ble of an­swer­ing by the en­trance of the baronet. He was dressed in what he con­sid­ered the most fash­ion­able style of the day. He had on a new dress-​coat lined with satin, new dress-​trousers, a silk waist­coat cov­ered with chains, a white cra­vat, pol­ished pumps, and silk stock­ings, and he car­ried a scent­ed hand­ker­chief in his hand; he had rings on his fin­gers, and car­bun­cle studs in his shirt, and he smelt as sweet as patchouli could make him. But he could hard­ly do more than shuf­fle in­to the room, and seemed al­most to drag one of his legs be­hind him.

Mary, in spite of her aver­sion, was shocked and dis­tressed when she saw him. He, how­ev­er, seemed to think him­self per­fect, and was no whit abashed by the un­favourable re­cep­tion which twelve months since had been paid to his suit. Mary came up and shook hands with him, and he re­ceived her with a com­pli­ment which no doubt he thought must be ac­cept­able. ‘Up­on my word, Miss Thorne, ev­ery place seems to agree with you; one bet­ter than an­oth­er. You were look­ing charm­ing at Box­all Hill; but, up­on my word, charm­ing isn’t half strong enough now.’

Mary sat down qui­et­ly, and the doc­tor as­sumed a face of un­ut­ter­able dis­gust. This was the crea­ture for whom all his sym­pa­thies had been de­mand­ed, all his best en­er­gies put in req­ui­si­tion; on whose be­half he was to quar­rel with his old­est friends, lose his peace and quiet­ness of life, and ex­er­cise all the func­tions of a lov­ing friend! This was his self-​in­vit­ed guest, whom he was bound to fos­ter, and whom he could not turn from his door.

The din­ner came, and Mary had to put her hand up­on his arm. She cer­tain­ly did not lean up­on him, and once or twice felt in­clined to give him some sup­port. They reached the din­ing-​room, how­ev­er, the doc­tor fol­low­ing them, and then sat down, Janet wait­ing in the room, as was usu­al.

‘I say, doc­tor,’ said the baronet, ‘hadn’t my man bet­ter come in and help? He’s got noth­ing to do, you know. We should be more cosy, shouldn’t we?’

‘Janet will man­age pret­ty well,’ said the doc­tor.

‘Oh, you’d bet­ter have Joe; there’s noth­ing like a good ser­vant at ta­ble. I say, Janet, just send that fel­low in, will you?’

‘We shall do very well with­out him,’ said the doc­tor, be­com­ing rather red about the cheek-​bones, and with a slight gleam of de­ter­mi­na­tion about the eye. Janet, who saw how mat­ters stood, made no at­tempt to obey the baronet’s or­der.

‘Oh, non­sense, doc­tor; you think he’s an up­pish sort of fel­low, I know, and you don’t like to trou­ble him; but when I’m near him, he’s all right; just send him in, will you?’

‘Sir Louis,’ said the doc­tor, ‘I’m ac­cus­tomed to none but my own old wom­an here in my own house, and if you will al­low me, I’ll keep my old ways. I shall be sor­ry if you are not com­fort­able.’ The baronet said noth­ing more, and the din­ner passed off slow­ly and weari­ly enough.

When Mary had eat­en her fruit and es­caped, the doc­tor got in­to one arm-​chair and the baronet in­to an­oth­er, and the lat­ter be­gan the on­ly work of ex­is­tence of which he knew any­thing.

‘That’s good port,’ said he; ‘very fair port.’

The doc­tor loved his port wine, and thawed a lit­tle in his man­ner. He loved it not as a top­er, but as a col­lec­tor loves his pet pic­tures. He liked to talk about it, and think about it; to praise it, and hear it praised; to look at it turned to­wards the light, and to count over the years it had lain in his cel­lar.

‘Yes,’ said he, ‘it’s pret­ty fair wine. It was, at least, when I got it, twen­ty years ago, and I don’t sup­pose time has hurt it;’ and he held the glass up to the win­dow, and looked at the evening light through the rosy tint of the liq­uid. ‘Ah, dear, there’s not much of it left; more’s the pity.’

‘A good thing won’t last for ev­er. I’ll tell you what now; I wish I had brought down a dozen or two of claret. I’ve some prime stuff in Lon­don; got it from Muz­zle and Drug, at nine­ty-​six shillings; it was a great favour, though. I’ll tell you what now, I’ll send up for a cou­ple of dozen to-​mor­row. I mustn’t drink you out of the house, high and dry; must I, doc­tor?’

The doc­tor froze im­me­di­ate­ly.

‘I don’t think I need trou­ble you,’ said he; ‘I nev­er drink claret, at least not here; and there’s enough of the old bin left to last some lit­tle time longer yet.’

Sir Louis drank two or three glass­es of wine very quick­ly af­ter each oth­er, and they im­me­di­ate­ly be­gan to tell up­on his weak stom­ach. But be­fore he was tip­sy, he be­came more im­pu­dent and more dis­agree­able.

‘Doc­tor,’ said he, ‘when are we go­ing to see any of this Gre­shams­bury mon­ey? That’s what I want to know.’

‘Your mon­ey is quite safe, Sir Louis; and the in­ter­est is paid to the day.’

‘In­ter­est yes; but how do I know how long it will be paid? I should like to see the prin­ci­pal. A hun­dred thou­sand pounds, or some­thing like it, is a pre­cious large stake to have in one man’s hands, and he is pre­cious­ly hard up him­self. I’ll tell you what, doc­tor–I shall look the squire up my­self.’

‘Look him up?’

‘Yes; look him up; fer­ret him out; tell him a bit of my mind. I’ll thank you to pass the bot­tle. D— me doc­tor; I mean to know how things are go­ing on.’

‘Your mon­ey is quite safe,’ re­peat­ed the doc­tor, ‘and, to my mind, could not be bet­ter in­vest­ed.’

‘That’s all very well; d— well I dare say, for you and Squire Gre­sham–’

‘What do you mean, Sir Louis?’

‘Mean! why I mean that I’ll sell the squire up; that’s what I mean–hal­lo–beg par­don. I’m blessed if I haven’t bro­ken the wa­ter-​jug. That comes of hav­ing wa­ter on the ta­ble. Oh, d—- me, it’s all over me.’ And then, get­ting up, to avoid the flood he him­self had caused, he near­ly fell in­to the doc­tor’s arms.

‘You’re tired with your jour­ney, Sir Louis; per­haps you’d bet­ter go to bed.’

‘Well, I am a bit seedy or so. Those cursed roads of yours shake a fel­low so.’

The doc­tor rang the bell, and, on this oc­ca­sion, did re­quest that Joe might be sent for. Joe came in, and, though he was much stead­ier than his mas­ter, looked as though he al­so had found some bin of which he had ap­proved.

‘Sir Louis wish­es to go to bed,’ said the doc­tor; ‘you had bet­ter give him your arm.’

‘Oh, yes; in course I will,’ said Joe, stand­ing im­move­able about half-​way be­tween the door and the ta­ble.

‘I’ll just take one more glass of the old port–eh, doc­tor?’ said Sir Louis, putting out his hand and clutch­ing the de­canter.

It is very hard for any man to de­ny his guest in his own house, and the doc­tor, at the mo­ment, did not know how to do it; so Sir Louis got his wine, af­ter pour­ing half of it over the ta­ble.

‘Come in, sir, and give Sir Louis your arm,’ said the doc­tor, an­gri­ly.

‘So I will in course, if my mas­ter tells me; but, if you please, Dr Thorne–’ and Joe put his hand up to his hair in a man­ner that a great deal more im­pu­dence than rev­er­ence in it–’I just want to ax one ques­tion; where be I to sleep?’

Now this was a ques­tion which the doc­tor was not pre­pared to an­swer on the spur of the mo­ment, how­ev­er well Janet or Mary might have been able to do so.

‘Sleep,’ said he, ‘I don’t know where you are to sleep, and don’t care; ask Janet.’

‘That’s all very well, mas­ter–’

‘Hold your tongue, sir­rah!’ said Sir Louis. ‘What the dev­il do you want of sleep?–come here,’ and then, with his ser­vant’s help, he made his way up to his bed­room, and was no more heard of that night.

‘Did he get tip­sy,’ asked Mary, al­most in a whis­per, when her un­cle joined her in the draw­ing-​room.

‘Don’t talk of it,’ said he. ‘Poor wretch! poor wretch! Let’s have some tea now, Mol­ly, and pray don’t talk any more about him to-​night.’ Then Mary did make the tea, and did not talk any more about Sir Louis that night.

What on earth were they to do with him? He had come there self-​in­vit­ed; but his con­nex­ion with the doc­tor was such, that it was im­pos­si­ble he should be told to go away, ei­ther he him­self, or that ser­vant of his. There was no rea­son to dis­be­lieve him when he de­clared that he had come down to fer­ret out the squire. Such was, doubt­less, his in­ten­tion. He would fer­ret out the squire. Per­haps he might fer­ret out La­dy Ara­bel­la al­so. Frank would be home in a few days; and he, too, might be fer­ret­ed out.

But the mat­ter took a very sin­gu­lar turn, and one quite un­ex­pect­ed on the doc­tor’s part. On the morn­ing fol­low­ing the lit­tle din­ner of which we have spo­ken, one of the Gre­shams­bury grooms rode up to the doc­tor’s door with two notes. One was ad­dressed to the doc­tor in the squire’s well-​known large hand­writ­ing, and the oth­er was for Sir Louis. Each con­tained an in­vi­ta­tion do din­ner for the fol­low­ing day; and that to the doc­tor was in this wise:-

‘DEAR DOC­TOR,

Do come and dine here to-​mor­row, and bring Sir Louis Scatcherd with you. If you’re the man I take you to be, you won’t refuse me. La­dy Ara­bel­la sends a note for Sir Louis. There will be no­body here but Oriel, and Mr Gaze­bee, who’s stay­ing in the house.

‘Yours ev­er, F.N.GRE­SHAM’

‘PS–I make a pos­itive re­quest that you’ll come, and I think you will hard­ly refuse me.’

The doc­tor read it twice be­fore he could be­lieve it, and then or­dered Janet to take the oth­er note up to Sir Louis. As these in­vi­ta­tions were rather in op­po­si­tion to the then ex­ist­ing Gre­shams­bury tac­tics, the cause of La­dy Ara­bel­la’s spe­cial ci­vil­ity must be ex­plained.

Mr Mor­timer Gaze­bee was now at the house, and there­fore, it must be pre­sumed, that things were not al­lowed to go on af­ter their old fash­ion. Mr Gaze­bee was an acute as well as fash­ion­able man; one who knew what he was about, and who, more­over, had de­ter­mined to give his very best ef­forts on be­half of the Gre­shams­bury prop­er­ty. His en­er­gy, in this re­spect, will ex­plain it­self here­after. It was not prob­able that the ar­rival in the vil­lage of such a per­son as Sir Louis Scatcherd should es­cape at­ten­tion. He had heard of it be­fore din­ner, and, be­fore the evening was over, had dis­cussed it with La­dy Ara­bel­la.

Her la­dy­ship was not at first in­clined to make much of Sir Louis, and ex­pressed her­self as but lit­tle in­clined to agree with Mr Gaze­bee when that gen­tle­man sug­gest­ed that he should be treat­ed with ci­vil­ity at Gre­shams­bury. But she was at last talked over. She found it pleas­ant enough to have more to do with the se­cret man­age­ment of the es­tate than Mr Gre­sham him­self; and when Mr Gaze­bee proved to her, by sundry nods and winks, and sub­tle al­lu­sions to her own in­fi­nite good sense, that it was nec­es­sary to catch this ob­scene bird which had come to prey up­on the es­tate, by throw­ing a lit­tle salt up­on his tail, she al­so nod­ded and winked, and di­rect­ed Au­gus­ta to pre­pare the salt ac­cord­ing to or­der.

‘But won’t it be odd, Mr Gaze­bee, ask­ing him out of Dr Thorne’s house?’

‘Oh, we must have the doc­tor, too, La­dy Ara­bel­la; by all means ask the doc­tor al­so.’

La­dy Ara­bel­la’s brow grew dark. ‘Mr Gaze­bee,’ she said, ‘you can hard­ly be­lieve how that man has be­haved to me.’

‘He is al­to­geth­er be­neath your anger,’ said Mr Gaze­bee, with a bow.

‘I don’t know: in one way he may be, but not in an­oth­er. I re­al­ly do not think I can sit down to ta­ble with Doc­tor Thorne.’

But, nev­er­the­less, Mr Gaze­bee gained his point. It was now about a week since Sir Omi­cron Pie had been at Gre­shams­bury, and the squire had, al­most dai­ly, spo­ken to his wife as to that learned man’s ad­vice. La­dy Ara­bel­la al­ways an­swered in the same tone: ‘You can hard­ly know, Mr Gre­sham, how that man has in­sult­ed me.’ But, nev­er­the­less, the physi­cian’s ad­vice had not been dis­be­lieved: it tal­lied too well with her own in­ward con­vic­tions. She was anx­ious enough to have Doc­tor Thorne back at her bed­side, if she could on­ly get him there with­out dam­age to her pride. Her hus­band, she thought, might prob­ably send the doc­tor there with­out ab­so­lute per­mis­sion from her­self; in which case she would have been able to scold, and show that she was of­fend­ed; and, at the same time, prof­it by what had been done. But Mr Gre­sham nev­er thought of tak­ing so vi­olent a step as this, and, there­fore, Dr Fill­grave still came, and her la­dy­ship’s fi­nesse was wast­ed in vain.

But Mr Gaze­bee’s propo­si­tion opened a door by which her point might be gained. ‘Well,’ said she, at last, with in­fi­nite self-​de­nial, ‘if you think it is for Mr Gre­sham’s ad­van­tage, and if he choos­es to ask Dr Thorne, I will not refuse to re­ceive him.’

Mr Gaze­bee’s next task was to dis­cuss the mat­ter with the squire. Nor was this easy, for Mr Gaze­bee was no favourite with Mr Gre­sham. But the task was at last per­formed suc­cess­ful­ly. Mr Gre­sham was so glad at heart to find him­self able, once more, to ask his old friend to his own house; and, though it would have pleased him bet­ter that this sign of re­lent­ing on his wife’s part should have reached him by oth­er means, he did not refuse to take ad­van­tage of it; and so he wrote the above let­ter to Dr Thorne.

The doc­tor, as we have said, read it twice; and he at once re­solved stout­ly that he would not go.

‘Oh, do, do, do go!’ said Mary. She well knew how wretched this feud had made her un­cle. ‘Pray, pray go!’

‘In­deed, I will not,’ said he. ‘There are some things a man should bear, and some he should not.’

‘You must go,’ said Mary, who had tak­en the note from her un­cle’s hand, and read it. ‘You can­not refuse him when he asks you like that.’

‘It will great­ly grieve me; but I must refuse him.’

‘I al­so am an­gry, un­cle; very an­gry with La­dy Ara­bel­la; but for him, for the squire, I would go to him on my knees if he asked me in that way.’

‘Yes; and had he asked you, I al­so would have gone.’

‘Oh! now I shall be so wretched. It is his in­vi­ta­tion, not hers: Mr Gre­sham could not ask me. As for her, do not think of her; but do, do go when he asks you like that. You will make me so mis­er­able if you do not. And then Sir Louis can­not go with­out you,’–and Mary point­ed up­stairs–’and you may be sure that he will go.’

‘Yes; and make a beast of him­self.’

This col­lo­quy was cut short by a mes­sage pray­ing the doc­tor to go up to Sir Louis’s room. The young man was sit­ting in his dress­ing-​gown, drink­ing a cup of cof­fee at his toi­let-​ta­ble, while Joe was prepar­ing his ra­zor and hot wa­ter. The doc­tor’s nose im­me­di­ate­ly told him that there was more in the cof­fee-​cup than had come out of his own kitchen, and he would not let the of­fence pass un­no­ticed.

‘Are you tak­ing brandy this morn­ing, Sir Louis?’

‘Just a lit­tle chas­se-​cafe,’ said he, not ex­act­ly un­der­stand­ing the word he used. ‘It’s all the go now; and a cap­ital thing for the stom­ach.’

‘It’s not a cap­ital thing for your stom­ach;–about the least cap­ital thing you can take; that is, if you wish to live.’

‘Nev­er mind about that now, doc­tor, but look here. This is what we call the civ­il thing–eh?’ and he showed the Gre­shams­bury note. ‘Not but that they have an ob­ject, of course. I un­der­stand all that. Lots of girls there–eh?’

The doc­tor took the note and read it. ‘It is civ­il,’ said he; ‘very civ­il.’

‘Well; I shall go, of course. I don’t bear mal­ice be­cause he can’t pay me the mon­ey he owes me. I’ll eat his din­ner, and look at the girls. Have you an in­vite too, doc­tor?’

‘Yes; I have.’

‘And you’ll go?’

‘I think not; but that need not de­ter you. But, Sir Louis–’

‘Well! eh! what is it?’

‘Step down­stairs a mo­ment,’ said the doc­tor, turn­ing to the ser­vant, ‘and wait till you are called for. I wish to speak to your mas­ter.’ Joe, for a mo­ment, looked up at the baronet’s face, as though he want­ed but the slight­est en­cour­age­ment to dis­obey the doc­tor’s or­ders; but not see­ing it, he slow­ly re­tired, and placed him­self, of course, at the key­hole.

And then, the doc­tor be­gan a long and very use­less lec­ture. The first ob­ject of it was to in­duce his ward not to get drunk at Gre­shams­bury; but hav­ing got so far, he went on, and did suc­ceed in fright­en­ing his un­hap­py guest. Sir Louis did not pos­sess the iron nerves of his fa­ther–nerves which even brandy had not been able to sub­due. The doc­tor spoke, strong­ly, very strong­ly; spoke of quick, al­most im­me­di­ate death in case of fur­ther ex­cess­es; spoke to him of the cer­tain­ty there would be that he could not live to dis­pose of his own prop­er­ty if he could not re­frain. And thus he did fright­en Sir Louis. The fa­ther he had nev­er been able to fright­en. But there are men who, though they fear death huge­ly, fear present suf­fer­ing more; who, in­deed, will not bear a mo­ment of pain if there by any mode of es­cape. Sir Louis was such: he had no strength of nerve, no courage, no abil­ity to make a res­olu­tion and keep it. He promised the doc­tor that he would re­frain; and, as he did so, he swal­lowed down his cup of cof­fee and brandy, in which the two ar­ti­cles bore about equal pro­por­tions.

The doc­tor did, at last, make up his mind to go. Whichev­er way he de­ter­mined, he found that he was not con­tent­ed with him­self. He did not like to trust Sir Louis by him­self, and he did not like to show that he was an­gry. Still less did he like the idea of break­ing bread in La­dy Ara­bel­la’s house till some amends had been made to Mary. But his heart would not al­low him to refuse the pe­ti­tion con­tained in the squire’s postscript, and the mat­ter end­ed in his ac­cept­ing the in­vi­ta­tion.

This vis­it of his ward’s was, in ev­ery way, per­ni­cious to the doc­tor. He could not go about his busi­ness, fear­ing to leave such a man alone with Mary. On the af­ter­noon of the sec­ond day, she es­caped to the par­son­age for an hour or so, and then, walked away among the lanes, call­ing on some of her old friends among the farm­ers’ wives. But even then, the doc­tor was afraid to leave Sir Louis. What could such a man do, left alone in a vil­lage like Gre­shams­bury? So he stayed at home, and the two to­geth­er went over their ac­counts. The baronet was par­tic­ular about his ac­counts, and said a good deal as to hav­ing Finnie over to Gre­shams­bury. To this, how­ev­er, Dr Thorne pos­itive­ly re­fused his con­sent.

The evening passed off bet­ter than the pre­ced­ing one; at least the ear­ly part of it. Sir Louis did not get tip­sy; he came up to tea, and Mary, who did not feel so keen­ly on the sub­ject as her un­cle, al­most wished that he had done so. At ten o’clock he went to bed.

But af­ter that new trou­bles came on. The doc­tor had gone down­stairs in­to his study to make up some of the time which he had lost, and had just seat­ed him­self at his desk, when Janet, with­out an­nounc­ing her­self, burst in­to the room; and Brid­get, dis­solved in hys­ter­ical tears, with her apron to her eyes, ap­peared be­hind the se­nior do­mes­tic.

‘Please, sir,’ said Janet, driv­en by ex­cite­ment much be­yond her usu­al place of speak­ing, and be­com­ing un­in­ten­tion­al­ly a lit­tle less re­spect­ful than usu­al, ‘please sir, that ‘ere young man must go out of this here house; or else no re­spectable young ‘ooman can’t stop here; no, in­deed, sir; and we be sor­ry to trou­ble you, Dr Thorne; so we be.’

‘What young man? Sir Louis?’ asked the doc­tor.

‘Man!’ sobbed Brid­get from be­hind. ‘He an’t no man, no noth­ing like a man. If Tum­mas had been here, he wouldn’t have dared; so he wouldn’t.’ Thomas was the groom, and, if all Gre­shams­bury re­ports were true, it was prob­able, that on some hap­py, fu­ture day, Thomas and Brid­get would be­come one flesh and one bone.

‘Please sir,’ con­tin­ued Janet, ‘there’ll be bad work here if there ‘ere young man doesn’t quit this here house this very night, and I’m sor­ry to trou­ble you, doc­tor; and so I am. But Tom, he be giv­en to fight a’most for noth­in’. He’s out now; but if that there young man be’s here when Tom comes home, Tom will be punch­ing his head; I know he will.’

‘He wouldn’t stand by and see a poor girl put up­on; no more he wouldn’t,’ said Brid­get, through her tears.

Af­ter many fu­tile in­quiries, the doc­tor as­cer­tained that Mr Jon­ah had ex­pressed some ad­mi­ra­tion for Brid­get’s youth­ful charms, and had, in the ab­sence of Janet, thrown him­self at the la­dy’s feet in a man­ner which had not been al­to­geth­er pleas­ing to her. She had de­fend­ed her­self stout­ly and loud­ly, and in the mid­dle of the row Janet had come down.

‘And where is he now?’ said the doc­tor.

‘Why, sir,’ said Janet, ‘the poor girl was so put about that she did give him one touch across the face with the rolling-​pin, and he be all bloody now, in the back kitchen.’ At hear­ing this achieve­ment of hers thus spo­ken of, Brid­get sobbed more hys­ter­ical­ly than ev­er; but the doc­tor, look­ing at her arm as she held her apron to her face, thought in his heart that Joe must have had so much the worst of it, that there could be no pos­si­ble need for the in­ter­fer­ence of Thomas the groom.

And such turned out to be the case. The bridge of Joe’s nose was bro­ken; and the doc­tor had to set it for him in a lit­tle bed­room at the vil­lage pub­lic-​house, Brid­get hav­ing pos­itive­ly re­fused to go to bed in the same house with so dread­ful a char­ac­ter.

‘Qui­et now, or I’ll be serv­ing thee the same way; thee see I’ve found the trick of it.’ The doc­tor could not but hear so much as he made in­to his own house by the back door, af­ter fin­ish­ing his sur­gi­cal op­er­ation. Brid­get was re­count­ing to her cham­pi­on the fra­cas that had oc­curred; and he, as was so nat­ural, was ex­press­ing his ad­mi­ra­tion for her val­our.