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<h2> CHAPTER XI </h2>
<p>Imagination, one gathers, is a quality dispensed with of necessity in the
practice of most professions, being that of which nature is, for some
reason, most niggardly. There is no such thing as passing in imagination
for any department of public usefulness, even the government of Oriental
races; the list of the known qualified would be exhausted, perhaps, in
getting the papers set. Yet neither poet nor philosopher enjoys it in
monopoly; the chemist may have it, and the inventor must; it has been
proved the mainspring of the mathematician, and I have hinted it the
property of at least two of the Murchisons. Lorne was indebted to it
certainly for his constructive view of his client’s situation, the view
which came to him and stayed with him like a chapter in a novel, from the
hour in which Ormiston had reluctantly accounted for himself upon the
night of the burglary. It was a brilliant view, that perceived the young
clerk the victim of the conspiracy he was charged with furthering; its
justification lay back, dimly, among the intuitions about human nature
which are part of the attribute I have quoted. I may shortly say that it
was justified; another day’s attendance at the Elgin Courthouse shall not
be compulsory here, whatever it may have been there. Young Ormiston’s
commercial probity is really no special concern of ours; the thing which
does matter, and considerably, is the special quality which Lorne
Murchison brought to the task of its vindication, the quality that made
new and striking appeal, through every channel of the great occasion, to
those who heard him. It was that which reinforced and comforted every
friend Ormiston had in the courtroom, before Lorne proceeded either to
deal with the evidence of the other side, or to produce any jot or tittle
of his own; and it was that which affected his distinguished opponent to
the special interest which afterward showed itself so pleasantly superior
to the sting of defeat. The fact that the defence was quite as
extraordinarily indebted to circumstantial evidence as the prosecution in
no way detracted from the character of Lorne’s personal triumph; rather,
indeed, in the popular view and Rawlins’s, enhanced it. There was in it
the primitive joy of seeing a ruffian knocked down with his own
illegitimate weapons, from the moment the dropped formula was proved to be
an old superseded one, and unexpected indication was produced that
Ormiston’s room, as well as the bank vault, had been entered the night of
the robbery, to the more glorious excitement of establishing Miss Belton’s
connection—not to be quoted—with a cracksman at that moment
being diligently inquired for by the New York police with reference to a
dramatically bigger matter. You saw the plot at once as he constructed it;
the pipe ash became explicable in the seduction of Miss Belton’s charms.
The cunning net unwove itself, delicately and deliberately, to tangle
round the lady. There was in it that superiority in the art of
legerdemain, of mere calm, astonishing manipulation, so applauded in
regions where romance has not yet been quite trampled down by reason.
Lorne scored; he scored in face of probability, expectation, fact; it was
the very climax and coruscation of score. He scored not only by the cards
he held but by the beautiful way he played them, if one may say so. His
nature came into this, his gravity and gentleness, his sympathy, his young
angry irony. To mention just one thing, there was the way he held Miss
Belton up, after the exposure of her arts, as the lady for whom his client
had so chivalric a regard that he had for some time refused to state his
whereabouts at the hour the bank was entered in the fear of compromising
her. For this, no doubt, his client could have strangled him, but it
operated, of course, to raise the poor fellow in the estimation of every
body, with the possible exception of his employers. When, after the
unmistakable summing-up, the foreman returned in a quarter of an hour with
the verdict of “Not guilty,” people noticed that the young man walked out
of court behind his father with as drooping a head as if he had gone under
sentence; so much so that by common consent he was allowed to slip quietly
away. Miss Belton departed, followed by the detective, whose services were
promptly transferred to the prosecution, and by a proportion of those who
scented further entertainment in her perfumed, perjured wake. But the
majority hung back, leaving their places slowly; it was Lorne the crowd
wanted to shake hands with to say just a word of congratulation to,
Lorne’s triumph that they desired to enhance by a hearty sentence, or at
least an admiring glance. Walter Winter was among the most genial.</p>
<p>“Young man,” he said, “what did I tell you? Didn’t I tell you you ought to
take this case?” Mr Winter, with his chest thrust out, plumed and strutted
in justifiable pride of prophecy. “Now, I’ll tell you another thing:
today’s event will do more for you than it has for Ormiston. Mark my
words!”</p>
<p>They were all of that opinion, all the fine foretellers of the profit
Lorne should draw from his spirited and conspicuous success; they stood
about in knots discussing it; to some extent it eclipsed the main interest
and issue of the day, at that moment driving out, free and disconsolate,
between the snake fences of the South Riding to Moneida Reservation. The
quick and friendly sense of opportunity was abroad on Lorne Murchison’s
behalf; friends and neighbours and Dr Drummond, and people who hardly knew
the fellow, exchanged wise words about what his chance would do for him.
What it would immediately do was present to nobody so clearly, however, as
to Mr Henry Cruickshank, who decided that he would, after all, accept Dr
Drummond’s invitation to spend the night with him, and find out the little
he didn’t know already about this young man.</p>
<p>That evening the Murchisons’ doorbell rang twice. The first time it was to
admit the Rev. Hugh Finlay, who had come to return Sordello, which he had
borrowed from Advena, and to find out whether she thought with him about
the interpretation of certain passages, and if not—there was always
the possibility—wherein their divergence lay. The second time the
door opened to Dr Drummond and Mr Cruickshank; and the electric light had
to be turned on in the drawing-room, since the library was already
occupied by Mr Finlay and Advena, Mr and Mrs Murchison never having got
over their early habit of sitting in the dining-room after tea. Even then
Mrs Murchison had to put away her workbasket, and John Murchison to knock
the ashes out of his pipe, looking at one another with surprised inquiry
when Eliza informed them of their visitors. Luckily, Mr Lorne was also in,
and Eliza was sent to tell him, and Mr Lorne came down the stairs two at a
time to join the party in the drawing-room, which was presently supplied
by Eliza with a dignified service of cake and wine. The hall divided that
room from the library, and both doors were shut. We cannot hesitate about
which to open; we have only, indeed, to follow the recognized tradition of
Elgin, which would never have entered the library. No vivid conclusion
should be drawn, no serious situation may even be indicated. It would
simply have been considered, in Elgin, stupid to go into the library.</p>
<p>“It isn’t a case for the High Commissioner for Canada,” Mr Cruickshank was
saying. “It’s a case for direct representation of the interests concerned,
and their view of the effect upon trade. That’s the only voice to speak
with if you want to get anything done. Conviction carries conviction. The
High Commissioner is a very useful fellow to live in London and look after
the ornamental, the sentimental, and immigration—nobody could do it
better than Selkirk. And in England, of course, they like that kind of
agency. It’s the good old dignified way; but it won’t do for everything.
You don’t find our friend Morgan operating through the American equivalent
of a High Commissioner.”</p>
<p>“No, you don’t,” said John Murchison.</p>
<p>“He goes over there as a principal, and the British Government, if he
wants to deal with it, is only another principal. That’s the way our
deputation will go. We’re practically all shippers, though of course the
matter of tenders will come later. There is big business for them here,
national business, and we propose to show it. The subsidy we want will
come back to the country four times over in two years. Freights from
Boston alone—”</p>
<p>“It’s the patriotic, imperial argument you’ll have to press, I doubt,”
said John Murchison. “They’re not business people over there—the men
in office are not. How should they be? The system draws them from the
wrong class. They’re gentlemen—noblemen, maybe—first, and
they’ve no practical education. There’s only one way of getting it, and
that’s to make your own living. How many of them have ever made tuppence?
There’s where the Americans beat them so badly—they’ve got the sixth
sense, the business sense. No; you’ll not find them responding greatly to
what there is in it for trade—they’d like to well enough, but they
just won’t see it; and, by George! what a fine suspicion they’ll have of
ye! As to freights from Boston,” he continued, as they all laughed, “I’m
of opinion you’d better not mention them. What! steal the trade of a
friendly power! Tut, tut!”</p>
<p>It was a long speech for John Murchison, but they were all excited to a
pitch beyond the usual. Henry Cruickshank had brought with him an event of
extraordinary importance. It seemed to sit there with him, significant and
propitious, in the middle of the sofa; they all looked at it in the
pauses. Dr Drummond, lost in an armchair, alternately contemplated it and
remembered to assert himself part of it. As head of a deputation from the
United Chambers of Commerce of Canada shortly to wait on the British
Government to press for the encouragement of improved communications
within the Empire, Cruickshank had been asked to select a secretary. The
appointment, in view of the desirability, for political reasons, of giving
the widest publicity to the hopes and motives of the deputation, was an
important one. The action of the Canadian Government, in extending
conditional promises of support, had to be justified to the Canadian
taxpayer; and that shy and weary person whose shoulders uphold the
greatness of Britain, had also to receive such conciliation and
reassurance as it was possible to administer to him, by way of nerving the
administrative arm over there to an act of enterprise. Mr Cruickshank had
had two or three young fellows, mostly newspaper men, in his mind’s eye;
but when Lorne came into his literal range of vision, the others had
promptly been retired in our friend’s favour. Young Mr Murchison, he had
concluded, was the man they wanted; and if his office could spare him, it
would probably do young Mr Murchison no harm in any sort of way to
accompany the deputation to London and throw himself into the matter the
deputation had at heart.</p>
<p>“But it’s the Empire!” said Lorne, with a sort of shy fire, when Mr
Cruickshank enunciated this.</p>
<p>We need not, perhaps, dwell upon the significance of his agreement. It was
then not long since the maple leaf had been stained brighter than ever,
not without honour, to maintain the word that fell from him. The three
older men looked at him kindly; John Murchison, rubbing his chin as he
considered the situation, slightly shook his head. One took it that in his
view the Empire was not so readily envisaged.</p>
<p>“That has a strong bearing,” Mr Cruickshank assented.</p>
<p>“It’s the whole case—it seems to me,” repeated young Murchison.</p>
<p>“It should help to knit us up,” said Dr Drummond. “I’ll put my name down
on the first passenger list, if Knox Church will let me off. See that you
have special rates,” he added, with a twinkle, “for ministers and
missionaries.”</p>
<p>“And only ten days to get him ready in,” said Mrs Murchison. “It will take
some seeing to, I assure you; and I don’t know how it’s to be done in the
time. For once, Lorne, I’ll have to order you ready-made shirts, and
you’ll just have to put up with it. Nothing else could possibly get back
from the wash.”</p>
<p>“I’ll put up with it, Mother.”</p>
<p>They went into other details of Lorne’s equipment while Mrs Murchison’s
eye still wandered over the necessities of his wardrobe. They arranged the
date on which he was to meet the members of the deputation in Montreal,
and Mr Cruickshank promised to send him all available documents and such
presentation of the project as had been made in the newspapers.</p>
<p>“You shall be put in immediate possession of the bones of the thing,” he
said, “but what really matters,” he added pleasantly, “I think you’ve got
already.”</p>
<p>It took, of course, some discussion, and it was quite ten o’clock before
everything was gone into, and the prospect was clear to them all. As they
emerged into the hall together, the door of the room opposite also opened,
and the Rev. Hugh Finlay found himself added to their group. They all made
the best of the unexpected encounter. It was rather an elaborate best,
very polite and entirely grave, except in the instance of Dr Drummond, who
met his subaltern with a smile in which cordiality struggled in vain to
overcome the delighted humour.</p>
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