<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXVI.<br/> <small>A DOWNY COVE.</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">It</span> could hardly be expected that my Uncle Corny should grow
very miserable about this matter. He knew that young people
of the ordinary cast tumble into love and tumble out again,
with perhaps a little running of the eyes and nose, and a hat
crushed on the head, or a ribbon saturated; but nothing that
penetrates the skin, far less puts a “tub of clothes,” as Mrs.
Wilcox said, into the lungs. And it would not have been
reasonable to demand of him, that he should believe in any
grand distinction between the case of Kitty and myself, and
that of any other couple he might come across, in a life whose
main nucleus was Covent Garden. That which chiefly moved
him, as he told me in the end, and as I might have known
without his telling, was the iron sense of justice, gilded haply
at the corners, and crowned with a little touch of chivalry. To
his sturdy sense of right it seemed a monstrous thing, that an
innocent girl, and such a lovely girl, should be locked away
from all who were longing to help her, and left at the mercy of
two bad men.</p>
<p>Therefore he donned his Sunday clothes, though he grumbled
a good deal at having to do it, and without a word to me, put old
<i>Spanker</i> in the shafts, and drove away alone in the green spring-cart,
with a face which made all the village say to one another,
that he must have a County-court job on his hands. Dr. Sippets,
who came to see me every day, had by this time supplied such
a row of medicine-bottles, that we glazed a new wall with them
forty yards long, for he would not allow a farthing on their
return, though he put them in the bill at twopence halfpenny
apiece; and that glazing brought him even more than that much
again, from the number of boys’ fingers which he had to dress.
For he was a skilful, as well as zealous man, and did his utmost
for his patients and his family.</p>
<p>He had now begun to “exhibit” mustard oil externally, as
well as zinc, and especially sulphur inside; till the sulphur
began to ooze through my pores, as if I had been a tea rose
suffering from mildew. Then Tabby had to rub me with the
mustard oil; and the more I groaned, the surer she became of
its effect. With this vigorous treatment I began to rally, and
even heard Uncle Corny depart, and contrived to steal a peep<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span>
at him behind the window curtain. But they told me some
fib about his errand.</p>
<p>When he put up his horse, somewhere near Holland Park,
he had not far to walk to find Mrs. Wilcox, who received him
with great cordiality. And she sent her little Ted, who proved
to be the very boy that had guided me among the brickfields,
with a note which he managed to convey to Miss Fairthorn.
“Rumpus going on,” he said when he came back; “they makes
more rumpus in that house, than a score of navvies over one
red herring. But cooky’s not a bad sort; she’ll give it to her.”</p>
<p>It was nearly an hour before Miss Fairthorn came, and then
she was so nervous, and down-hearted, that they scarcely knew
what to do with her. At first she had quite forgotten Uncle
Corny, having never seen him in his best clothes at home, and
being distracted with sorrow and ill usage. For as yet Mrs.
Wilcox had been unable to get a word with her about the visit
of the day before. Gradually, however, she began to understand
what had happened, and why she had not heard from me.</p>
<p>“Then he has not forgotten me, after all!” she said, in a
tone that made her old nurse sob, and my uncle look out of
the window. “Something told me all along, that he could
not forget me, any more than I could do such a thing to him.
But you say that he is ill, that he has long been ill; and perhaps
he will never be well any more. Tell me the truth, I
would rather know it. Is he dead, is he dead, Mr. Orchardson?”</p>
<p>“No, my dear, thank the Lord, he is all alive, and getting
ever so much better every day. He went off his head, just a
little for a time; and he did not know me from the man in the
moon; and what do you think was the word that was on his
tongue, all day, and all night too for that matter? Guess, and
I’ll tell you if you are right.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I know what it was! It began with a K, and it was
not a very long word, was it? It was ‘Kitty.’ Don’t tell me
that it was anything but ‘Kitty.’”</p>
<p>“No, my dear, I won’t, because I never tell fibs. Sure
enough that was it, like a cherry-clapper; only in a hundred
different tones. I used to say that if you were there, you’d get
heartily tired of your own name.”</p>
<p>“Never, so long as it came from his lips. But I think I
should have broken my heart, all the same. It has been the
kindest thing you could do, to keep all knowledge of this long
suspense from me. How soon will he be better? How soon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</SPAN></span>
will he be well again? Well enough, I mean, to come down
and let me see him?”</p>
<p>“At present, Miss Fairthorn, wherever he is not mustard,
he is brimstone. You cannot expect him to present himself
in that condition. But we have got the mischief out of his
joints by this time. Dr. Sippets considers it a very happy thing
that the ailment flew there; for his heart will be all right,
and that’s a great part of the system, in love. His head is of
no importance in that condition; and Mrs. Wilcox proved to
me last night, that it is quite a superfluity in the present days.
Madam, you know you did, and you did it thoroughly.”</p>
<p>My uncle gave a wink at Mrs. Wilcox, not with any overture
to familiarity—for he was very shy of widows—but to
intimate to her that she should talk a little nonsense, after his
example, as a rescue from hysterics. For poor Kitty had been
passing through much outrage all the morning; and now to be
met with this shock of strange news (bad to her head, but
perhaps good for her heart) after such a long time of dejection
was enough to throw the finest daughter of Divine Science
into some confusion as to all her organisms. But she fetched
herself back from the precipice of sobs, with a deep draught of
air, and spoke as she did not feel.</p>
<p>“If he is being treated like—like beef, I think I ought to
have a voice in the matter. Will you let me come down, and
do it for him—or see that it is done properly? My father has
taught me so many things—”</p>
<p>“My dear,” said my uncle, being truly thankful to her, for
not even pulling out her handkerchief, “you are the sweetest
young lady I have ever met. No, you shall not come down and
nurse our Kit; not only because it is not the place for you,
but also that it might be very bad for him. His mind must
not come back with a jerk, however pleasant the jerk may be.
He must come round slowly, and he has begun to do it, under
Tabby Tapscott’s scrubbing-brush. But you shall come and
see him, in a week, my dear, if you think you can hold out so
long here. And now tell me, what is going on, to urge your
gentle nature so.”</p>
<p>The young lady looked at Mrs. Wilcox, as if she could
hardly tell what to do. She was very unwilling to refuse my
uncle anything he might ask her; and yet she could not bring
herself to speak of such matters to him.</p>
<p>“I will tell you all about it, when she is gone,” said the
lady of the shop, as if hurried for time; “but I know by her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</SPAN></span>
look that she is getting in a fright. What will they do, if they
catch you out, dearie?”</p>
<p>“I defy them. I defy them. They may do what they like.
Now I know that Kit stands fast to me, after all he has suffered
for my sake, am I likely to show the white feather? Uncle
Corny, I will come away with you, and let them do their worst,
if you will take me.”</p>
<p>She pulled her hat down on her forehead, and drew her
crinoline into small compass, as if she were ready to mount our
spring-cart; and her manner had such an effect on my uncle—for
very pretty girls do even more by attitude, than by words
or looks—that he saw himself driving her away, and looking
back with a whistle of defiance at the world. Moreover she
had called him “Uncle Corny,” which put him on his mettle to
deserve it; and though there have been few men born as yet,
with more gift of decision in their nature, he looked at her
lovingly, and hesitated.</p>
<p>“It will not do,” Mrs. Wilcox interrupted, as if she were
once more in office as nurse. “Of law I know nothing, sir, and
you do; as you was pleased to tell me yesterday. If her father
was at home, and sanctioned it, no doubt it might be in your
jurisdiction”—the good lady was proud of her law, and
repeated—“it might be in your jurisdiction, sir. But without
any sign of that, where should we be? Pulled up for conspiracy
against the realm, and nothing for me, but to put my
shutters up.”</p>
<p>“I fear that you are right, ma’am,” replied my uncle,
“though I don’t care twopence for the law sometimes, when I
feel better law inside me. But it is the young lady we must
think of first. We must let her do nothing to injure herself.
Have patience, my dear. They may torment you in the house,
but they cannot take you out of it, and marry you to anybody,
against your own will and pleasure. Your will and pleasure is
to have our Kit; and with the will of the Lord, you shall do
so.”</p>
<p>“I suppose I must go back. There seems nothing else to
do;” Miss Fairthorn spoke very sadly, looking from one to the
other, and trying to be cheerful. “But if the worst comes to
the worst, will you find a place for me, Uncle Corny? I have
got a little money my dear father gave me; and they shall
take away my life, before they get it.”</p>
<p>“Bravo, well said indeed, my dear!” This alone was
needed to confirm my uncle in his high opinion of her. “What<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</SPAN></span>
a wife you will make for a steady young man! Yes, my dear
child, I will find you a place, and you shan’t pay sixpence for it.
And none but your father shall take you away, unless the Lord
Chancellor comes himself to fetch you.”</p>
<p>“Thank you. Then I shall know what to do. I am not so
much afraid of them, now I know that Kit is true. I shall
say to myself—‘What is this to put up with, after all that he
has borne for me?’ Give him my best love, and tell him to
get well, and sit by the window, and look out for me. Good-bye,
Uncle Corny; I will not attempt to thank you. Good-bye,
nurse. I don’t deserve such friends. They may do what
they like now, and I shall only laugh.”</p>
<p>“She deserves the best friends, and she shall have them
too,” Mr. Orchardson said, as soon as she was gone, with little
Ted to see the way clear for her; “that’s what I call a downright
good girl, without a bit of humbug in her. A fig for their
science! Will it ever produce such a fine bit of nature as that
is? Now tell me, as far as you can, Mrs. Wilcox, what is it
they want to do with her, why they torment her so, and what
we can do to stop it?”</p>
<p>My uncle laid his watch on the table, because he wished
to be home before dark, and the days, though drawing out
nicely, were not very long. He knew that the lady with
whom he had to deal, instead of putting things into small
compass, would fetch a large compass about them, whose radius
would only be lengthened by any disturbance or hurry on his
part. So he merely placed his watch as a silent, or at least a
comparatively quiet witness, and reproof; but the scheme
failed, as it deserved to do. All he obtained by it was a lesson,
which he often repeated afterwards—never set a watch to go
against a woman’s tongue; it puts her on her mettle to outgo
it; and one wants winding, but the other never does.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wilcox had not so very much to tell, but she found a
vast quantity to say, and never said it twice to the same effect.
Stripped of her embellishments, reflections, divergencies, and
other little sallies, it was something as follows.</p>
<p>Captain Fairthorn had been called away to see to the fitting
of some ship near Glasgow, with engines of a special kind, and
large coal-storage, so that she might keep at sea for months
together—seven years the lady said, but that looked like a
lady’s tale. And there were to be wonderful appliances, such
as had never been heard of, on board her, as well as every
kind of scientific instrument, all under the Professor’s own<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</SPAN></span>
direction. If ever a man was in his own element, this was the
man, and the time and place were there. No wonder that he
forgot all other things below the moon; and it was much to
his credit that before he started, he insisted on a promise from
his wife and two step-daughters, that his dear child Kitty
should be treated kindly, and harassed by none of them while
he was away. Upon that condition only, would he send them
every month a handsome sum out of the liberal payment he was
to receive for his services. And he thought himself very firm,
and most sagacious—even suspicious it might be—in providing
that before he drew each cheque, he should have by post a line
from his own daughter, to this effect—“I am very happy, and
every one is most kind to me.”</p>
<p>Unluckily his suspicions were not very shrewd; for he
forgot that there were pens and ink and fingers at Bulwrag
Park, quite apart from Kitty’s, well able to afford him that
assurance in her name, for the gift of forgery was in the family;
and his daughter was not to distract him with letters, so long
as he knew that she was comfortable.</p>
<p>No sooner was he off the scene, than that old rake, Sir
Cumberleigh Hotchpot, reappeared, having purposely kept away
till then, for he dreaded the simple and calm man of science.
He annoyed poor Miss Fairthorn with his odious advances, and
coarse familiarity, and slangy talk, and he took a mean
advantage of her gentle diffidence by perpetually assuming that
she was pledged to him. This, and the contempt and spiteful
hatred of her stepmother, seemed more than enough for the
poor girl to have to bear; but soon a far greater distress was
added. Donovan Bulwrag, the only son of the Honourable
Mrs. Bulwrag Fairthorn—as she absurdly called herself—came
home from the Continent, where he had been engaged on the
staff of some embassy, after running from his debts; and the
house, and the people, and the chattels therein were not good
enough for him to tread upon. This would have mattered
little to Miss Fairthorn (who was rarely favoured with the
Bulwrag society, except for the purpose of insults if this divine
Downy, as his mother called him), had not taken into his great
yellow head the idea that he was in love with Kitty.</p>
<p>This dearly loved son of his mother was a strong young man
of three or four and twenty, able to take his own part anywhere,
either with violence or with fraud, but preferring the latter,
when it would do the trick. Mrs. Wilcox said that he had
three crowns to his head, which went beyond all her experience,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></span>
although she had been in a hospital. She had known malefactors
with two sometimes, and you never could tell where
their mischief began, because it started double; but she had
combed the hair of this boy once, and nothing would tempt her
to do it again. She was not superstitious, but afraid more
often of being too much the other way; and she left it
entirely to the future to prove her a fool, if she deserved it.
Only let any one look at his head.</p>
<p>For it was not only that he was bad inside, but that he gave
the same idea at first sight, to any one having any sense of
human looks. It was not Mrs. Wilcox alone who said this,
but my uncle as well, when he happened to see the young
man, while going to look for his horse. He had notice that he
might have the luck to meet him, and sure enough he had, if
there was any luck in it. And my Uncle Corny, though a man
of strong opinions, did not go so entirely by outward show.</p>
<p>Mr. Downy Bulwrag, as the grandson of a Lord, and likely
enough to be a Lord himself, if people in his way died out of it,
had a sense of being somebody, and liked the world to know
that he was rather an important part of it. Not that he
swaggered, or stuck out his arms, or jerked himself into big
attitudes—as some bits of the human chip do—all that he left
for fellows who had yet to prove their value, and knew much
less of life than he did. His manner and air were of solid and
silent conviction, that without him this earth would be a place
unfit for a civilized race to inhabit. He prided himself, if he
had any pride, upon his knowledge of human nature; and like
most who do that, he attributed every word and every action to
selfishness, spite, and cupidity. And like the great bulk of such
people again, he was truly consistent in his own freedom from
any loftier motives.</p>
<p>His mother’s pet name for him had been confirmed by all who
had the honour of knowing him. He was downy in manner,
as well as appearance, and (according to the slang of the day) a
“downy cove” in all his actions. No one could look at his
bulky form (which greatly resembled his father’s), enormous
head furnished with bright yellow hair, soft saffron moustache,
and orange-coloured eyelashes, without thinking of a fat, downy
apricot, and fearing that he had none of its excellence. His
face, too, was flattened in its own broad substance, as that
yellow fruit often is against the wall, and bulged at the jowl
with the great socket of square jaws. But the forehead was
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