<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
<h3>Meshach and Hannah</h3>
<p>The little old bachelor and spinster were resting after dinner
in the back-parlour of their house near the top of Church Street.
In that abode they had watched generations pass and manners change,
as one list hearthrug succeeded another in the back-parlour.
Meshach had been born in the front bedroom, and he meant to die
there; Hannah had also been born in the front bedroom, but it was
through the window of the back bedroom that the housewife's soul
would rejoin the infinite. The house, which Meshach's grandfather,
first of his line to emerge from the grey mass of the proletariat,
had ruined himself to build, was a six-roomed dwelling of honest
workmanship in red brick and tile, with a beautiful pillared
doorway and fanlight in the antique taste. It had cost two hundred
pounds, and was the monument of a life's ambition. Mortgaged by its
hard-pressed creator, and then sold by order of the mortgagee, it
had ultimately been bought <SPAN name='Page35' id="Page35"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">35</span>again in triumph by
Meshach's father, who made thirty thousand pounds out of pots
without getting too big for it, and left it unspoilt to Meshach and
Hannah. Only one alteration had ever been made in it, and that,
completed on Meshach's fiftieth birthday, admirably exemplified his
temperament. Because he liked to observe the traffic in Church
Street, and liked equally to sit in the back-parlour near the hob,
he had, with an oriental grandeur of self-indulgence, removed the
dividing wall between the front and the back parlours and
substituted a glass partition: so that he could simultaneously warm
the fire and keep an eye on the street. The town said that no one
but Meshach could have hit on such a scheme, or would have carried
it out with such an object: it crowned his reputation.</p>
<p>John Stanway's maternal uncle was one of those individuals whose
character, at once strong, egotistic, and peculiar, so forcibly
impresses the community that by contrast ordinary persons seem to
be without character; such men are therefore called, distinctively,
'characters'; and it is a matter of common experience that, whether
through the unconscious prescience of parents or through that
felicitous sense of propriety which often guides the hazards of
destiny, they usually bear names to match their qualities. <SPAN name=
'Page36' id="Page36"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">36</span>Meshach
Myatt! Meshach Myatt! What piquant curious syllables to roll glibly
off the tongue, and to repeat for the pleasure of repetition! And
what a vision of Meshach their utterance conjured up! At
sixty-four, stereotyped by age, fixed and confirmed in singularity,
Meshach's figure answered better than ever to his name. He was
slight of bone and spare in flesh, with a hardly perceptible stoop.
He had a red, seamed face. Under the small, pale blue eyes, genial
and yet frigid, there showed a thick, raw, red selvedge of skin,
and below that the skin was loose and baggy; the wrinkled eyelids,
instead of being shaped to the pupil, came down flat and
perpendicular. His nose and chin were witch-like, the nostrils
large and elastic; the lips, drawn tight together, curved
downwards, indifferently captious; a short white beard grew
sparsely on the chin; the skin of the narrow neck was fantastically
drawn and creased. His limbs were thin, the knees and elbows
sharpened to a fine point; the hands very long, with blue, corded
veins. As a rule his clothes were a distressing combination of
black and dark blue; either the coat, the waistcoat, or the
trousers would be black, the rest blue; the trousers had the
old-fashioned flap-pockets, like a sailor's, with a complex
apparatus of buttons. He wore loose white cuffs that were
continually <SPAN name='Page37' id="Page37"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">37</span>slipping down the wrist, a starched dickey, a
collar of too lenient flexure, and a black necktie with a 'made'
bow that was fastened by means of a button and button-hole under
the chin to the right; twenty times a day Meshach had to secure
this precarious cravat. Lastly, the top and bottom buttons of his
waistcoat were invariably loose.</p>
<p>He was of that small and lonely minority of men who never know
ambition, ardour, zeal, yearning, tears; whose convenient desires
are capable of immediate satisfaction; of whom it may be said that
they purchase a second-rate happiness cheap at the price of an
incapacity for deep feeling. In his seventh decade, Meshach Myatt
could look back with calm satisfaction at a career of uninterrupted
nonchalance and idleness. The favourite of a stern father and of
fate, he had never done a hard day's work in his life. When he and
Hannah came into their inheritance, he realised everything except
the house and invested the proceeds in Consols. With a roof, four
hundred a year from the British Empire, a tame capable sister, and
notoriously good health, he took final leave of care at the age of
thirty-two. He wanted no more than he had. Leisure was his chief
luxury; he watched life between meals, and had time to think about
what he saw. Being gifted with a vigorous and original mind
<SPAN name='Page38' id="Page38"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">38</span>that by instinct held formulas in defiance, he
soon developed a philosophy of his own; and his reputation as a
'character' sprang from the first diffident, wayward expressions of
this philosophy. Perceiving that the town not unadmiringly deemed
him odd, he cultivated oddity. Perceiving also that it was
sometimes astonished at the extent of his information about hidden
affairs, he cultivated mystery, the knowledge of other people's
business, and the trick of unexpected appearances. At forty his
fame was assured; at fifty he was an institution; at sixty an
oracle.</p>
<p>'Meshach's a mixture,' ran the local phrase; but in this mixture
there was a less tedious posturing and a more massive intellect
than usually go to the achievement of a provincial renown such as
Meshach's. The man's externals were deceptive, for he looked like a
local curiosity who might never have been out of Bursley. Meshach,
however, travelled sometimes in the British Isles, and thereby kept
his ideas from congealing. And those who had met him in trains and
hotels knew that porters, waiters, and drivers did not mistake his
shrewdness for that of a simpleton determined not to be robbed;
that he wanted the right things and had the art to get them; in
short, that he was an expert in travel. Like many old provincial
bachelors, while frugal <SPAN name='Page39' id="Page39"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">39</span>at home he could be
profuse abroad, exercising the luxurious freedom of the bachelor.
In the course of years it grew slowly upon his fellow pew-holders
at the big Sytch Chapel that he was worldly-minded and possibly
contemptuous of their codes; some, who made a specialty of smelling
rats, accused him of gaiety.</p>
<p>'You'd happen better get something extra for tea, sister,' said
Meshach, rousing himself.</p>
<p>'Why, brother?' demanded Hannah.</p>
<p>'Some sausage, happen,' Meshach proceeded.</p>
<p>'Is any one coming?' she asked.</p>
<p>'Or a bit of fish,' said Meshach, gazing meditatively at the
fire.</p>
<p>Hannah rose and interrogated his face. 'You ought to have told
me before, brother. It's past three now, and Saturday afternoon
too!' So saying, she hurried anxiously into the kitchen and told
the servant to put her hat on.</p>
<p>'Who is it that's coming, brother?' she inquired later, with
timid, ravenous curiosity.</p>
<p>'I see you'll have it out of me,' said Meshach, who gave up
mysteries as a miser parts with gold. 'It's Arthur Twemlow from New
York; and let that stop your mouth.'</p>
<p>Thus, with the utterance of this name in the prim, archaic,
stuffy little back-parlour, Meshach raised the curtain on the last
act of a <SPAN name='Page40' id="Page40"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">40</span>drama which had slumbered for fifteen years,
since the death of William Twemlow, and which the principal actors
in it had long thought to be concluded or suppressed.</p>
<p>The whole matter could be traced back, through a series of
situations which had developed one out of another, to the character
of old Twemlow; but the final romantic solution was only rendered
possible by the peculiarities of Meshach Myatt. William Twemlow had
been one of those men in whom an unbridled appetite for virtue
becomes a vice. He loved God with such virulence that he killed his
wife, drove his daughter into a fatuous marriage, and quarrelled
irrevocably with his son. The too sensitive wife died for lack of
joy; Alice escaped to Australia with a parson who never
accomplished anything but a large family; and Arthur, at the age of
seventeen, precociously cursed his father and sought in America a
land where there were fewer commandments. Then old Twemlow told his
junior partner, John Stanway, that the ways of Providence were past
finding out. Stanway sympathised with him, partly from motives of
diplomacy, and partly from a genuine misunderstanding of the case;
for Twemlow, mild, earnest, and a generous supporter of charities,
was much respected in the town, and his lonely predicament <SPAN name=
'Page41' id="Page41"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">41</span>excited
compassion; most people looked upon young Arthur as a godless and
heartless vagabond.</p>
<p>Alice's husband was a fool, impulsive and vain; and, despite
introductions, no congregation in Australia could be persuaded to
listen to his version of the gospel; Alice gave birth to more
children than bad sermons could keep alive, and soon the old man at
Bursley was regularly sending remittances to her. Twemlow desired
fervently to do his duty, and moreover the estrangement from his
son increased his satisfaction in dealing handsomely with his
daughter; the son would doubtless learn from the daughter how much
he had lost by his impiety. Seven years elapsed so, and then the
parson gave up his holy calling and became a tea-blender in
Brisbane. Twemlow was shocked at this defection, which seemed to
him sacrilegious, and a chance phrase in a letter of Alice's
requesting capital for the new venture—a too assured demand,
an insufficient gratitude for past benefits, Alice never quite knew
what—brought about a second breach in the Twemlow family. The
paternal purse was closed, and perhaps not too early, for the
improvidence of the tea-blender and Alice's fecundity were a gulf
whose depth no munificence could have plumbed. Again John Stanway
sympathised with the now enfeebled old man. John advised him to
retire, <SPAN name='Page42' id="Page42"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">42</span>and Twemlow decided to do so, receiving
one-third of the net profits of the partnership business during
life. In two years he was bedridden and the miserable victim of a
housekeeper; but, though both Alice and Arthur attempted
reconciliation, some fine point of conscience obliged him to ignore
their overtures. John Stanway, his last remaining friend, called
often and chatted about business, which he lamented was far from
being what it ought to be. Twemlow's death was hastened by a fire
at the works; it happened that he could see the flames from his
bedroom window; he survived the spectacle five days. Before
entering into his reward, the great pietist wrote letters of
forgiveness to Alice and Arthur, and made a will, of which John
Stanway was sole executor, in favour of Alice. The town expressed
surprise when it learnt that the estate was sworn at less than a
thousand pounds, for the dead man's share in the profits of Twemlow
& Stanway was no secret, and Stanway had been living in
splendour at Hillport for several years. John, when questioned by
gossips, referred sadly to Alice's husband and to the depredations
of housekeepers. In this manner the name and memory of the Twemlows
were apparently extinguished in Bursley.</p>
<p>But Meshach Myatt had witnessed the fire <SPAN name='Page43' id="Page43"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">43</span>at the works; he had
even remained by the canal side all through that illuminated night;
and an adventure had occurred to him such as occurs only to the
Meshach Myatts of this world. The fire was threatening the office,
and Meshach saw his nephew John running to a place of refuge with a
drawer snatched out of an American desk; the drawer was loaded with
papers and books, and as John ran a small book fell unheeded to the
ground. Meshach cried out to John that he had dropped something,
but in the excitement and confusion of the fire his rather
high-pitched voice was not heard. He left the book lying where it
fell; half-an-hour afterwards he saw it again, picked it up, and
put it in his pocket. It contained some interesting informal
private memoranda of the annual profits of the firm. Now Meshach
did not return the book to its owner. He argued that John deserved
to suffer for his carelessness in losing it, that John ought to
have heard his call, and that anyhow John would surely inquire for
it and might then be allowed to receive it with a few remarks upon
the need of a calm demeanour at fires; but John never did inquire
for it.</p>
<p>When William Twemlow's will was proved a few weeks later,
Meshach Myatt made no comment whatever. From time to time he heard
<SPAN name='Page44' id="Page44"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">44</span>news of Arthur Twemlow: that he had set up in
New York as an earthenware and glassware factor, that he was doing
well, that he was doing extremely well, that his buyer had come
over to visit the more aristocratic manufactories at Knype and
Cauldon, that some one from Bursley had met Arthur at the Leipzig
Easter Fair and reported him stout, taciturn, and Americanised.
Then, one morning in Lord Street, Liverpool, fifteen years after
the death of old Twemlow and the misappropriation of the little
book, Meshach encountered Arthur Twemlow himself; Meshach was
returning from his autumn holiday in the Isle of Man, and Arthur
had just landed from the 'Servia.' The two men were mutually
impressed by each other's skill in nicely conducting an interview
which ninety-nine people out of a hundred would have botched; for
they had last met as boy of seventeen and man of forty. They
lunched richly at the Adelphi, and gave news for news. Arthur's
buyer, it seemed, was dead, and after a day or two in London Arthur
was coming to the Five Towns to buy a little in person. Meshach
inquired about Alice in Australia, and was told that things were in
a specially bad way with the tea-blender. He said that you couldn't
cure a fool, and remarked casually upon the smallness of the amount
left by <SPAN name='Page45' id="Page45"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">45</span>old Twemlow. Arthur, unaware that Meshach Myatt
was raising up an idea which for fifteen years had been buried but
never forgotten in his mind, answered with nonchalance that the
amount certainly was rather small. Arthur added that in his dying
letter of forgiveness to Alice the old man had stated that his
income from the works during the last years of his life had been
less than two hundred per annum. Meshach worked his shut thin lips
up and down and then began to discuss other matters. But as they
parted at Lime Street Station the observer of life said to Arthur
with presaging calm: 'You'll be i' th' Five Towns at the end of the
week. Come and have a cup o' tea with me and Hannah on Saturday
afternoon. The old spot, you know it, top of Church Street. I've
something to show you as 'll interest you.' There was a pause and
an interchange of glances. 'Right!' said Arthur Twemlow. 'Thank
you! I'll be there at a quarter after four or thereabouts.' 'It's
like as if what must be!' Meshach murmured to himself with almost
sad resignation, in the enigmatic idiom of the Five Towns. But he
was highly pleased that he, the first of all the townsfolk, should
have seen Arthur Twemlow after twenty-five years' absence.</p>
<p>When Hannah, in silk, met the most interest<SPAN name='Page46' id="Page46"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">46</span>ing and disconcerting
American stranger in the lobby, the sound and the smell of Bursley
sausage frizzling in the kitchen added a warm finish to her
confused welcome. She remembered him perfectly, 'Eh! Mr. Arthur,'
she said, 'I remember you that <i>well</i>....' And that was all
she could say, except: 'Now take off your overcoat and do make
yourself at home, Mr. Arthur.'</p>
<p>'I guess I know <i>you</i>,' said Twemlow, touched by the
girlish shyness, the primeval innocence, and the passionate
hospitality of the little grey-haired thing.</p>
<p>As he took off his glossy blue overcoat and hung it up he seemed
to fill the narrow lobby with his large frame and his quiet but
penetrating attractive American accent. He probably weighed
fourteen stone, but the elegance of his suit and his boots, the
clean-shaven chin, the fineness of the lines of the nose, and the
alert eyes set back under the temples, redeemed him from grossness.
He looked under rather than over forty; his brown hair was
beginning to recede from the forehead, but the heavy moustache,
which entirely hid his mouth and was austerely trimmed at the
sides, might have aroused the envy of a colonel of hussars.</p>
<p>'Come in, wut,'<SPAN name='FNanchor_1_1' id="FNanchor_1_1"></SPAN><SPAN href='#Footnote_1_1'><sup>[1]</sup></SPAN> cried
Meshach impatiently <SPAN name='Page47' id="Page47"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">47</span>from the hob, 'come in and let's be pecking a
bit,' and as Arthur and Hannah entered the parlour, he added:
'She's gotten sausages for you. She would get 'em, though I told
her you'd take us as you found us. I told her that. But
women—well, you know what they are!'</p>
<p class='footnote'><SPAN name='Footnote_1_1' id="Footnote_1_1"></SPAN>
<SPAN href='#FNanchor_1_1'>[1]</SPAN> <i>Wut</i> = wilt.</p>
<p>'Eh, Meshach, Meshach!' the old damsel protested sadly, and
escaped into the kitchen.</p>
<p>And when Meshach insisted that the guest should serve out the
sausages, and Hannah, passing his tea, said it was a shame to
trouble him, Twemlow slipped suddenly back into the old life and
ways and ideas. This existence, which he thought he had utterly
forgotten, returned again and triumphed for a time over all the
experiences of his manhood; it alone seemed real, honest,
defensible. Sensations of his long and restless career in New York
flashed through his mind as he impaled Hannah's sausages in the
curious parlour—the hysteric industry of his girl-typist, the
continuous hot-water service in the bedroom of his glittering
apartment at the Concord House, youthful nights at Coster and
Bial's music-hall, an insanely extravagant dinner at Sherry's on
his thirtieth birthday, a difficulty once with an emissary of
Pinkerton, the incredible plague of flies in summer. And during all
<SPAN name='Page48' id="Page48"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">48</span>those racing years of clangour and success in
New York, the life of Bursley, self-sufficient and self-contained,
had preserved its monotonous and slow stolidity. Bursley had become
a museum to him; he entered it as he might have entered the Middle
Ages, and was astonished to find that beautiful which once he had
deemed sordid and commonplace. Some of the streets seemed like a
monument of the past, a picturesque survival; the crate-floats,
drawn by swift shaggy ponies and driven by men who balanced
themselves erect on two thin boards while flying round corners,
struck him as the quaintest thing in the world.</p>
<p>'And what's going on nowadays in old Bosley, Miss Myatt?' he
asked expansively, trying to drop his American accent and use the
dialect.</p>
<p>'Eh, bless us!' exclaimed Hannah, startled. 'Nothing ever
happens here, Mr. Arthur.'</p>
<p>He felt that nothing did happen there.</p>
<p>'Same here as elsewhere,' said Meshach. 'People living, and
getting childer to worry 'em, and dying. Nothing'll cure 'em of it
seemingly. Is there anything different to that in New York? Or can
they do without cemeteries?'</p>
<p>Twemlow laughed, and again he had the illusion of having come
back to reality after a <SPAN name='Page49' id="Page49"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">49</span>long, hurried dream.
'Nothing seems to have changed here,' he remarked idly.</p>
<p>'Nothing changed!' said Meshach. 'Nay, nay! We're up in the
world. We've got the steam-car. And we've got public baths. We wash
oursen nowadays. And there's talk of a park, and a pond with a duck
on it. We're moving with the times, my lad, and so's the
rates.'</p>
<p>It gave him pleasure to be called 'my lad' by old Meshach. It
was piquant to him that the first earthenware factor in New York,
the Jupiter of a Fourteenth Street office, should be addressed as a
stripling. 'And where is the park to be?' he suavely inquired.</p>
<p>'Up by the railway station, opposite your father's old works as
was—it's a row of villas now.'</p>
<p>'Well,' said Twemlow. 'That sounds pretty nice. I believe I'll
get you to come around with me and show off the sights. Say!' he
added suddenly, 'do you remember being on that works one day when
my poor father was on to me like half a hundred of bricks, and you
said, "The boy's all right, Mr. Twemlow"? I've never forgotten
that. I've thought of it scores of times.'</p>
<p>'Nay!' Meshach answered carelessly, 'I remember nothing o'
that.'</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page50' id="Page50"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">50</span>Twemlow was dashed by this oblivion. It was his
memory of the minute incident which more than anything else had
encouraged him to respond so cordially to Meshach's advances in
Liverpool; for he was by no means facile in social intercourse. And
Meshach had rudely forgotten the affecting scene! He felt
diminished, and saw in the old bachelor a personification of the
blunt independent spirit of the Five Towns.</p>
<hr class='short' />
<p>'Milly's late to-day,' said Hannah to her brother, timorously
breaking the silence which ensued.</p>
<p>'Milly?' questioned Twemlow.</p>
<p>'Millicent her proper name is,' Hannah said quickly, 'but we
call her Milly. My nephew's youngest.'</p>
<p>'Yes, of course,' Twemlow commented, when the Myatt family-tree
had been sketched for him by the united effort of brother and
sister, 'I recollect now you told me in Liverpool that Mr. Stanway
was married. Who did he marry?'</p>
<p>Meshach Myatt pushed back his chair and stood up. 'John catched
on to Knight's daughter, the doctor at Turnhill,' he said, reaching
to a cigar-cabinet on the sideboard. 'Best thing he ever did in his
life. John's among the <SPAN name='Page51' id="Page51"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">51</span>better end of folk now.
People said it were a come-down for her, but Leonora isn't the sort
that comes down. She's got blood in her. <i>That</i>!' He snapped
his fingers. 'She's a good bred 'un. Old Knight's father came from
up York way. Ah! She's a cut above Twemlow & Stanway, is
Leonora.'</p>
<p>Twemlow smiled at this persistence of respect for caste.</p>
<p>'Have a weed,' said Meshach, offering him a cigar. 'You'll find
it all right; it's a J.S. Murias. Yes,' he resumed, 'maybe you
don't remember old Knight's sister as had that far house up at
Hillport? When she died she left it to Leonora, and they've lived
there this dozen year and more.'</p>
<p>'Well, I guess she's got a handsome name to her,' Twemlow
remarked perfunctorily, rising and leaving Hannah alone at the
table.</p>
<p>'And she's the handsomest woman in the Five Towns: that I do
know,' said Meshach as, in the grand manner of a connoisseur, he
lighted his cigar. 'And her was forty, day afore yesterday,' he
added with caustic emphasis.</p>
<p>'Meshach!' cried Hannah, 'for shame of yourself!' Then she
turned to Twemlow smiling and blushing a little. 'Oughtn't he? Eh,
but Mrs. John's a great favourite of my brother's. <SPAN name='Page52' id="Page52"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">52</span>And I'm sure her
girls are very good and attentive. Not a day but one or another of
them calls to see me, not a day. Eh, if they missed a day I should
think the world was coming to an end. And I'm expecting Milly
to-day. What's made the dear child so late——'</p>
<p>'I will say this for John,' asserted Meshach, as though the
little housewife had not been speaking, 'I will say this for John,'
he repeated, settling himself by the hob. 'He knew how to pick up a
d——d fine woman.'</p>
<p>'Meshach!' Hannah expostulated again.</p>
<p>Something in the excellence of Meshach's cigars, in his way of
calling a woman fine, in the dry, aloof masculinity of his attitude
towards Hannah, gave Twemlow to reflect that in the fundamental
deeps of experience New York was perhaps not so far ahead of the
old Five Towns after all.</p>
<p>There was a fluttering in the lobby, and Millicent ran into the
parlour, hurriedly, negligently.</p>
<p>'I can't stay a minute, auntie,' the vivacious girl burst out in
the unmistakable accents of condescending pertness, and then she
caught sight of the well-dressed, good-looking man in the corner,
and her bearing changed as though by a conjuring trick. She flushed
sensitively, <SPAN name='Page53' id="Page53"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">53</span>stroked her blue serge frock, composed her
immature features to the mask of the finished lady paying a call,
and summoned every faculty to aid her in looking her best. 'So this
chit is the daughter of our admired Leonora,' thought Twemlow.</p>
<p>'I suppose you don't remember old Mr. Twemlow, my dear?' said
Hannah after she had proudly introduced her niece.</p>
<p>'Oh, auntie! how silly you are! Of course I remember him quite
well. I really can't stay, auntie.'</p>
<p>'You'll stay and drink this cup of tea with me,' Hannah insisted
firmly, and Milly was obliged to submit. It was not often that the
old lady exercised authority; but on that afternoon the famous New
York visitor was just as much an audience for Hannah as for
Hannah's greatniece.</p>
<p>Twemlow could think of nothing to say to this pretty pouting
creature who had rushed in from a later world and dissipated the
atmosphere of mediævalism, and so he addressed himself to Meshach
upon the eternal subject of the staple trade. The women at the
table talked quietly but self-consciously, and Twemlow saw Milly
forced to taste parkin after three refusals. Even while still
masticating the viscid unripe parkin, <SPAN name='Page54' id="Page54"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">54</span>Milly rose to depart.
She bent down and dutifully grazed with her lips the cheek of the
parkin-maker. 'Good-bye, auntie; good-bye, uncle.' And in an
elegant, mincing tone, 'Good afternoon, Mr. Twemlow.'</p>
<p>'I suppose you've just got to be on time at the next place?' he
said quizzically, smiling at her vivid youth in spite of himself.
'Something very important?'</p>
<p>'Oh, very important!' she laughed archly, reddening, and then
was gone; and Aunt Hannah followed her to the door.</p>
<p>'What th' old folks lose,' murmured Meshach, apparently to the
fire, as he put his half-consumed cigar into a meerschaum holder,
'goes to the profit of young Burgess, as is waiting outside the
Bank at top o' th' Square.'</p>
<p>'I see,' said Twemlow, and thought primly that in his day such
laxities were not permitted.</p>
<p>Hannah and the servant cleared the tea-table, and the two men
were left alone, each silently reducing an J.S. Murias to ashes.
Meshach seemed to grow smaller in his padded chair by the hob, to
become torpid, and to lose that keen sense of his own astuteness
which alone gave zest to his life. Arthur stared out of the window
at the confined backyard. The autumn dusk thickened.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page55' id="Page55"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">55</span>Suddenly Meshach sprang up and lighted the gas,
and as he adjusted the height of the flame, he remarked casually:
'So your sister Alice is as poorly off as ever?'</p>
<p>Twemlow assented with a nod. 'By the way,' he said, 'you told me
on Wednesday you had something interesting to show me.'</p>
<p>Meshach made no answer, but picked up the poker and struck
several times a large pewter platter on the mantelpiece.</p>
<p>'Do you want anything, brother?' said Hannah, hastening into the
room.</p>
<p>'Go up into my bedroom, sister, and in the left-hand pigeon-hole
in the bureau you'll see a little flat tissue-paper parcel. Bring
it me. It's marked J.S.'</p>
<p>'Yes, brother,' and she departed.</p>
<p>'You said as your father had told your sister as he never got no
more than two hundred a year from th' partnership after he
retired.'</p>
<p>'Yes,' Twemlow replied. 'That's what she wrote me. In fact she
sent me the old chap's letter to read. So I reckoned it cost him
most all he got to live.'</p>
<p>'Well,' the old man said, and Hannah returned with the parcel,
which he carefully unwrapped. 'That'll do, sister.' Hannah
disappeared. 'Sithee!' He mysteriously drew <SPAN name='Page56' id="Page56"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">56</span>Arthur's attention to a
little green book whose cover still showed traces of mud and
water.</p>
<p>'And what's this?' Twemlow asked with assumed lightness.</p>
<p>Meshach gave him the history of his adventure at the fire, and
then laboriously displayed and expounded the contents of the book,
peering into the yellow pages through the steel-rimmed spectacles
which he had put on for the purpose.</p>
<p>'And you've kept it all this time?' said Twemlow.</p>
<p>'I've kept it,' answered the old man grimly, and Twemlow felt
that that was precisely what Meshach Myatt might have been expected
to do.</p>
<p>'See,' said Meshach, and their heads were close together,'
that's the year before your father's death—eight hundred and
ninety-two pounds. And year afore that—one thousand two
hundred and seven pounds. And year afore that—bless us! Have
I turned o'er two pages at once?' And so he continued.</p>
<p>Twemlow's heart began to beat heavily as Meshach's eyes met his.
He seemed to see his father as a pathetic cheated simpleton, and to
hear the innumerable children of his sister crying for food; he
remembered that in the old Bursley days he had always distrusted
John Stanway, that <SPAN name='Page57' id="Page57"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">57</span>conceited fussy imposing young man of twenty-two
whom his father had taken into partnership and utterly believed in.
He forgot that he had hated his father, and his mind was obsessed
by a sentimental and pure passion for justice.</p>
<p>'Say! Mr. Myatt,' he exclaimed with sudden gruffness, 'do you
suggest that John Stanway didn't do my father right?'</p>
<p>'My lad, I'm doing no suggesting.... You can keep the book if
you've a mind to. I've said nothing to no one, and if I had not met
you in Liverpool, and you hadn't told me that your sister was
poorly off again, happen I should ha' been mum to my grave. But
that's how things turn out.'</p>
<p>'He's your own nephew, you know,' said Twemlow.</p>
<p>'Ay!' said the old man, 'I know that. What by that? Fair's
fair.'</p>
<p>Meshach's tone, frigidly jocular, almost frightened the
American.</p>
<p>'According to you,' said he, determined to put the thing into
words, 'your nephew robbed my father each year of sums varying from
one to three hundred pounds—that's what it comes to.'</p>
<p>'Nay, not according to me—according to that book, and what
your father told your sister Alice,' Meshach corrected.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page58' id="Page58"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">58</span>'But why should he do it? That's what I want to
know.'</p>
<p>'Look here,' said Meshach quietly, resuming his chair. 'John's
as good a man of business as you'd meet in a day's march. But never
sin' he handled money could he keep off stocks and shares. He
speculates, always has, always will. And now you know it—and
'tisn't everybody as does, either.'</p>
<p>'Then you think——'</p>
<p>'Nay, my lad, I don't,' said Meshach curtly.</p>
<p>'But what ought I to do?'</p>
<p>Meshach cackled in laughter. 'Ask your sister Alice,' he
replied, 'it's her as is interested, not you. You aren't in the
will.'</p>
<p>'But I don't want to ruin John Stanway,' Twemlow protested.</p>
<p>'Ruin John!' Meshach exclaimed, cackling again. 'Not you! We mun
have no scandals in th' family. But you can go and see him,
quiet-like, I reckon. Dost think as John'll be stuck fast for six
or seven hundred, or eight hundred? Not John! And happen a bit of
money'll come in handy to th' old parson tea-blender, by all
accounts.'</p>
<p>'Suppose my father—made some mistake—forgot?'</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page59' id="Page59"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">59</span>'Ay!' said Meshach calmly. 'Suppose he did. And
suppose he didna'.'</p>
<p>'I believe I'll go and talk to Stanway,' said Twemlow, putting
the book in his pocket. 'Let me see. The works is down at
Shawport?'</p>
<p>'On th' cut,'<SPAN name='FNanchor_2_2' id="FNanchor_2_2"></SPAN><SPAN href='#Footnote_2_2'><sup>[2]</sup></SPAN> said
Meshach.</p>
<p class='footnote'><SPAN name='Footnote_2_2' id="Footnote_2_2"></SPAN><SPAN href='#FNanchor_2_2'>[2]</SPAN> Cut = canal.</p>
<p>'I can say Alice had asked me to look at the accounts. Oh!
Perhaps I can straighten it out neat——' He spoke
cheerfully, then stopped. 'But it's fifteen years ago!'</p>
<p>'Fifteen!' said Meshach with gravity.</p>
<p>'I'm d——d if I can make you out!' thought Twemlow as
he walked along King Street towards the steam-tram for Knype, where
he was staying at the Five Towns Hotel. Hannah had sped him, with
blushings, and rustlings of silk, from Meshach's door. 'I'm
d——d if I can make you out, Meshach.' He said it aloud.
And yet, so complex and self-contradictory is the mind's action
under certain circumstances, he could make out Meshach perfectly
well; he could discern clearly that Meshach had been actuated
partly by the love of chicane, partly by a quasi-infantile
curiosity to see what he should see, and partly by an almost
biblical sense of justice, a sense blind, callous, cruel.</p>
<hr class='long' />
<SPAN name='Page60' id="Page60"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">60</span>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_III' id="CHAPTER_III"></SPAN>
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