taken to the station; and I saw that time alone could<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
comfort her, yet ventured to say a few earnest words, about her
position and high character. And presently she was quite brisk
again.</p>
<p>“Why bless my heart,” she said, looking about for a box of
matches on the onion shelf; “I ought to have stuck up my
candle in the window, pretty well half an hour agone. Not that
no customer comes after dark, nor many by daylight for that
matter. Ah, Master Kit, I am a poor lone widow; but you
are the nicest young man in Sunbury; and I wish you well,
with all my heart I do. And mind one thing, whatever you
do; if you ever carries out what I was saying, here’s the one
as will help you to it, in a humble way, and without much
money. A nice front drawing-room over the shop, bedroom,
and chamber-suit to match. Only twelve shillings a week for it
all, and the use of the kitchen fire for nothing. And the window
on the landing looks on the river Thames, and the boats,
and the barges, and the fishermen. Oh, Mr. Kit, with Mrs.
Kitty now and then, it would be like the Garden of Eden.”</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2>CHAPTER XIII.<br/> <small>MY UNCLE BEGINS.</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">That</span> last suggestion was most delicious, but it came too late to
relieve the pang of the horrible idea first presented. I could
not help wondering at my own slow wit, which ought to have
told me that such a treasure as my heart was set upon, must
have been coveted long ere now, by many with higher claims
to it. Was it likely that I, a mere stupid fellow, half a rustic,
and of no position, birth or property, should be preferred to the
wealthy, accomplished, and brilliant men, who were sure to be
gathering round such a prize? Black depression overcame me;
even as the smoke of London, when the air is muggy, falls upon
some country village, wrapping in funereal gloom the church,
the trees, the cattle by the pond, and the man at the window
with his newspaper. I could not see my way to eat much
supper, and my Uncle was crusty with me.</p>
<p>“Can’t stand this much more,” he said, as he finished the
beer that was meant for me; “a plague on all girls, and the
muffs as well that go spooning after them! Why, the Lord<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
might just as well never have made a Williams pear, or a cat’s-head
codlin. S’pose you don’t even want to hear my story;
you don’t deserve it anyhow. Better put it off, till you look
brighter, for there isn’t much to laugh at in it, unless it is the
dunder-headed folly of a very clever man.”</p>
<p>However, I begged him to begin at once; for he had hinted
that his tale would throw some light on the subject most important
in the world to me; so I filled him five pipes that he
might not hunt about, and made his glass of rum and water
rather strong, and put the black stool for his legs to rest on, and
drew the red curtains behind his head, for the evening was
chilly, and the fire cheerful.</p>
<p>“Like to do things for myself,” he muttered, while accepting
these little duties. “Nobody else ever does them right, though
meaning it naturally for the best. Well, you want to hear about
those people; and you shall hear all I know, my lad; though
I don’t pretend to know half of all; but what I know I do know,
and don’t talk at random, like the old women here. We’ll take
them in branches—male and female—until they unite, or pretend
to do it; but a very poor splice; the same as you see, if
you send for Camelias to Portugal, a great clumsy stick-out at
the heel of the graft, and the bark grinning open all along.
Bah! There’s no gardeners like Englishmen, though we run
’em down for fear of boasting. Did you ever hear why Professor
Fairthorn would ever so much rather be called ‘Captain,’
though ‘Professor’ sounds ever so much better?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps he has a legal right to be called ‘Captain,’ but
not to the other title. I have heard that hundreds of people
call themselves Professors, without any right to do it. And I
am sure he would never like to be one of them.”</p>
<p>“That has got nothing to do with it. He has held some
appointment that gave him the right to the title, if he liked it.
The reason is that his wife always calls him ‘Professor’; and
so it reminds him of her. Ah, don’t you be in this outrageous
hurry for a wife of your own, Master Kit, I say. For all I
know, the Captain may have been as wild for her, some time,
as you are for your Kitty. What can you say to that, my lad?”</p>
<p>“Why, simply that you don’t know at all what you are
talking about, Uncle Corny. My Miss Fairthorn is not that
lady’s daughter, and is not to be blamed for the whole of her
sex, any more than you are for the whole of yours.”</p>
<p>“There is something in that, when one comes to see it,”
my Uncle replied; for his mind was generally fair, when it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span>
cost him nothing. “But you must not keep on breaking in
like this, or you won’t have heard half of it, this side of Christmas.
Well, I was going to take them according to their sexes,
the same as the Lord made them. And first comes the lady,
as she hath a right to do, being at the bottom of the mischief.</p>
<p>“When I was a young man, thirty year or more agone, there
used to be a lot of talk about the two handsome Miss Coldpeppers,
of the Manor Hall down here. There used to be a lot
also of coaches running, not so much through Sunbury, which
lay to one side of the road, though some used to pass here on
their way to Chertsey; and there was tootle-tootle along father’s
walls, three or four times a day. But the most of them went
further back, along the Staines and Windsor road, where the
noise was something wonderful; and it’s my opinion that these
Railway things will never be able to compare with it. They
may make as much noise for the time, but it seems to be over,
before the boys can holloa.</p>
<p>“Lots of young sparks, and bucks, and dandies, and Corinthians,
and I forget what else, but all much finer than you can
see now, used to come down by the coaches then, some of them
driving, some blowing the horn, some upon the roof like merry-Andrews,
making fools of themselves as we should call it now,
and not be far wrong either. They were much bigger men
than I see now, in their size, and their way of going on, and
their spirits, and their strength of life, and likewise in their
language. And the manners of the time were as different as
can be, more frolicsome like, and more free and jovial; and
they talked about the ladies, and to them also, ten times as
much as they do now; and things were altogether merrier for
them that had the money, and no worse for them that hadn’t
got it, so far as I can see. Ah, there was something to be done
in growing then—pineapples ordered at a guinea a pound, and
grapes at fifteen shillings, though of course you didn’t always
get your money. I’m blest if I won’t have another glass of rum
and water.</p>
<p>“Well, old Squire Nicholas, as they call him now, was as
proud as Punch of his two fine daughters, and expected them
to marry at least an earl apiece, by their faces and fine figures.
And they went about with great folk in Town, and to Court,
and all that sort of thing, looking fit to marry the King almost,
in their velvets, and their satin furbelows. The eldest daughter
was Arabella, our Miss Coldpepper to this day, and the other<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span>
was Miss Monica; as fine a pair of women as the Lord ever
made. But for all that, see what they come to!</p>
<p>“There was no love lost between them even then, jealous
of one another no doubt, like two cats over a fish-bone. Some
said that one was the handsomer of them, and some said the
other. There was a good bit of difference between them too,
though any fool could tell they were sisters. Such eyes and
noses as you won’t see now, and hair that would fall to their
knees, I’ve been told, and complexions as clear as a white-heart
cherry, and a cock of the chin, and a lordly walk—they
deserved the name they went by in London, ‘the two Bright
Suns of Sunbury.’ But after all, what good came of it? One
is an old maid, and the other—well, not very likely to go to
heaven, though she hasn’t had much of that yet on earth. Kit,
I have seen a deal of women, as much as is good for any mortal
man; and I tell you the first thing, and the second, and the
third, and the whole to the end of the chapter of them depends
upon their tempers. Ah, those two beauties were beauties at
that; but Miss Monica ever so much the worse.</p>
<p>“It seems that they both might have married very well, if
it had not been for that stumbling-block. Many young women
go on so soft, and eye you so pleasant, and blush so sweet, that
you’d fancy almost there was no such thing as a cross word, or
a spitfire look, or a puckered forehead in their constitution;
and angels is the name for them, until it is too late to fly away.
But these two Misses had never learned how to keep their
tempers under for a week together; and it seems that they never
cared enough for any one to try to do it. Till there came a
man with a temper ten times as bad as both of theirs put
together; and then they fell in love with him hot and hearty.
This was a younger son of Lord Roarmore, a nobleman living
in North Wales, or Ireland—I won’t be certain which—and he
was known as the Honourable Tom Bulwrag. He used to
drive the Windsor coach from London down to Hounslow; for
the passengers could stand him, while the stones and air were
noisy; but there he was forced to get down from the box; for
nothing that lived, neither man, nor horse, nor cow in the
ditch, could endure this gentleman’s language, when there was
too much silence to hear it in.</p>
<p>“I suppose he was quiet among the ladies, as many men are,
who can speak no good. And perhaps our two ladies fell in
love with him, because he was a bigger sample of themselves.
Not that they ever used swearing words, only thought them,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span>
as it were, and let other people know it. Any way, both of
them took a fancy to him, though their father would not hear
of it; for the gentleman was not wealthy enough to have any
right to such wickedness. Perhaps that made them like him all
the more, for they always flew in the face of Providence. And
for doing of that, they both paid out, as generally happens here,
that we may see it.</p>
<p>“So far as I can tell, and I had better chances of knowing
than any one else outside the house, everything was settled for
the Honourable Tom to run away to Bath with Miss Arabella,
with special licence, and everything square. But whether she
was touched in heart about her father (whose favourite she had
always been), or whether her lover came out too strong in his
usual style, or whether her sister Monica had egged her on to
it, sure enough she blazed out into such a fury, just when they
were starting, and carried on so reckless, that the Honourable
Tom, who had never quite made up his mind, was frightened
of what she would be by-and-by, and locked her in a tool-house
at the bottom of the grounds, and set off with Miss Monica that
same hour, changing the name in the licence, and married her.</p>
<p>“Without being too particular, you might fairly suppose that
a job of this kind was not likely to end well. Miss Monica
had taken with her one—what shall I say? Certainly not
servant, nor attendant, nor inferior in any way—”</p>
<p>My uncle here seemed to feel a certain want of power to
express himself; and I knew that he was beating about the
bush of the one and only one romance of his dry and steady
life. He turned away, so that I could not see his eyes, and
I did not wish to look at them.</p>
<p>“Well, that is neither here nor there,” he continued, after
pushing more tobacco into a pipe too full already; “but she
took away a young lady of this neighbourhood, to whom she
appeared to be much attached, and who alone had any power to
control her furious outbreaks, just because she always smiled at
them, as soon as they were over. The sweet-tempered girl
could never quite believe that the Fury was in earnest, because
it was so far beyond her own possibilities; and the woman of
fury did a far worse thing than the wrecking of her own stormy
life, she also wrecked a sweet, and gentle, loving, and reasonable
heart. Never mind that; it often happens, and what
does the selfish Fury care? Miss Monica became, as I have said,
the Honourable Mrs. Bulwrag, and then she reaped the harvest
she had sown.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“For in the first place Viscount Roarmore, being a hot-headed
man likewise, stopped every farthing of his son’s allowance,
and said—‘Go to your new father. Your pretty cousin
Rose, with five thousand pounds a year, was ready to marry you,
in spite of all your sins, and you had promised to marry her.
You have taken one of those two girls, who were called the
“Bright Suns of Sunbury,” till people found out what they
were, and called them the two “Raging Suns.” Now rage her
down, if you can, and you ought to be more than a match for a
woman. In any case, expect no more from me.’</p>
<p>“Then the young man came to Squire Nicholas, and screwed
himself down to eat humble pie. But the Squire said, ‘Sir,
you have married my daughter without asking my leave, and
against it. I still have a dutiful daughter left. She is my
only one henceforth.’ Then the young man broke into the
strongest language ever yet heard at Coldpepper Hall, although
it had never been weak in that line. He was very soon shown
the outside of the door, and got drunk for the night at the
‘Bell and Dragon.’</p>
<p>“Then began the rough-and-tumble work between those
two—the hugging and the hating, the billing and the bullying,
the kissing and the kicking, all and every up and down of laughing,
sobbing, scratching, screeching, that might be in a wild
hyena’s den. How they contrived to hold together so long as
they did, Heaven only knows, or perhaps the opposite place to
Heaven. There must have been some fierce love between
them, some strange suitability; as if each perceived the worst
part of himself or herself in the other, and flew to it, as well as
flew at it. What kept them together was a mystery; but what
kept them alive was a darker one. Without friends, or money,
or credit, or visible robbery, they fought on together, for five
or even six years, now here and now there. Three children
they had, and fought over them of course, and perhaps began to
teach them to fight each other, at least so far as example goes.</p>
<p>“But suddenly this queer union was broken up for ever.
Mr. Bulwrag did something which risked his neck; he believed
that Squire Nicholas was bound to contribute to the support of
his grandchildren, and he made him do his duty, without
knowing it. Then, having arranged for a three-days’ start, he
was well upon his voyage before pursuit began. It is not very
easy to catch a man now, when he has a good start, and knows
the world; but five and twenty years ago, it was generally
given up as a bad job; unless the reward was astounding. No<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span>
reward was offered, and the Honourable Tom was next heard
of from South America, where there seemed to be a lot of little
States, which never allow their civil wars to abate their wars
with one another. This condition of things was exactly to his
taste; his courage and strong language made their way; he
commanded the forces of one great Republic, with the title of
‘Marshal Torobelle,’ and he promised to send some money
home in the last letter ever received from him.</p>
<p>“His deserted wife said after that, that she truly would
believe in everything, if she ever saw a ten-pound note from
her beloved husband. But she never was put to the trial, for
the next news was that he was dead. He had found it much
to his advantage to learn to swear in Spanish; and being proud
of this, because he had little other gift of lingo, he tried it upon
a young Spanish officer, who did not take it cordially. After
parade, they had a private fight, and Marshal Torobelle could
swear no more, even in his native language. His friends, for
he seems to have been liked out there, wrote a very kind letter
in bad French, telling how grand he had been, and how faithful,
but grieving that he had left no affairs, to place them in a
state to remember him. Then the Marshal’s widow bought
expensive mourning, for he had left with her a thousand pounds
of the proceeds of his forgery, and wrote to his father, Lord
Roarmore.</p>
<p>“Kit, I have found that one can generally tell what a man
will do, in certain cases, from a rough outline of his character.
What a woman will do, no man can tell, though he fancies he
knows her thoroughly. My Lord Roarmore was a violent man,
and hot more than hard in his resolution. And he took it very
kindly that his son, when driven hard, had forged the name of
the father-in-law, and not of the father, as he might have done.
He was beginning to relent already, and finding it too late,
naturally relented altogether. He talked of his noble and
gallant son, and although himself in difficulties, bravely settled
five hundred pounds a year upon the widow and the little ones.</p>
<p>“I dare say you are surprised, my lad, that I should have
come to know so much of this unhappy story; more I believe
than is even known by the lady’s own sister—our Miss Coldpepper.
Women are slower to forgive than men, and slower in
beginning to be forgiven. Arabella has never forgiven her
sister for running away with her lover; and Monica has never
forgiven her sister for making such a fuss about it. They may
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