<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
<h3>MR MOSK IS INDISCREET</h3>
<p>While the bishop was conversing with Miss Whichello about the engagement
of George and Mab, the young people themselves were discussing the
self-same subject with much ardour. Captain Pendle had placed two chairs
near a quick-set hedge, beyond the hearing of other guests, and on these
he and Mab were seated as closely as was possible without attracting the
eyes of onlookers. Their attitude and actions were guarded and
indifferent for the misleading of the company, but their conversation,
not being likely to be overheard, was confidential and lover-like
enough. No spectator from casual observation could have guessed their
secret.</p>
<p>'You must tell your father about our engagement at once,' said Mab, with
decision. 'He should have known of it before I consented to wear this
ring.'</p>
<p>'I'll tell him to-morrow, dearest, although I am sorry that Lucy and the
mater are not here to support me.'</p>
<p>'But you don't think that he will object to me, George?'</p>
<p>'I—should—think—not!' replied Captain Pendle, smiling at the very
idea; 'object to have the prettiest daughter-in-law in the county. You
don't know what an eye for beauty the bishop has.'</p>
<p>'If you are so sure of his consent I wonder you did not tell him
before,' pouted Mab. 'Aunty has been very angry at my keeping our
engagement secret.'</p>
<p>'Darling, you know it isn't a secret. We told Cargrim, and when he is
aware of it the whole town is. I didn't want to tell my father until I
was sure you would marry me.'</p>
<p>'You have been sure of that for a long time.'</p>
<p>'In a sort of way,' asserted Captain Pendle; 'but I was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</SPAN></span> not absolutely
certain until I placed a ring on that pretty hand. Now I'll tell my
father, get his episcopalian benediction, and wire the news to Lucy and
the mater. We shall be married in spring. Miss Whichello will be the
bridesmaid, and all will be hay and sunshine.'</p>
<p>'What nonsense you talk, George!'</p>
<p>'I'd do more than talk nonsense if the eyes of Europe were not on us.
Mother Jael is telling fortunes in that tent, my fairy queen, so let us
go in and question her about the future. Besides,' added George, with an
insinuating smile, 'I don't suppose she would mind if I gave you one
kiss.'</p>
<p>Mab laughed and shook her head. 'You will have to dispense with both
kiss and fortune for the present,' said she, 'for your father has this
moment gone into the tent.'</p>
<p>'What! is Saul also among the prophets?' cried George, with uplifted
eyebrows. 'Won't there be a shine in the tents of Shem when it is
published abroad that Bishop Pendle has patronised the Witch of Endor. I
wonder what he wants to know. Surely the scroll of his fortune is made
up.'</p>
<p>'George,' said Mab, gravely, 'your father has been much worried lately.'</p>
<p>'About what? By whom?'</p>
<p>'I don't know, but he looks worried.'</p>
<p>'Oh, he is fidgeting because my mother is away; he always fusses about
her health like a hen with one chick.'</p>
<p>'Be more respectful, my dear,' corrected Mab, demurely.</p>
<p>'I'll be anything you like, sweet prude, if you'll only fly with me far
from this madding crowd. Hang it! here is someone coming to disturb us.'</p>
<p>'It is your brother.'</p>
<p>'So it is. Hullo, Gabriel, why that solemn brow?'</p>
<p>'I have just heard bad news,' said Gabriel, pausing before them. 'Old Mr
Leigh is dying.'</p>
<p>'What! the rector of Heathcroft? I don't call that bad news, old boy,
seeing that his death gives you your step.'</p>
<p>'George!' cried Mab and Gabriel in a breath, 'how can you?'</p>
<p>'Well, Leigh is old and ripe enough to die, isn't he?' said the
incorrigible George. 'Remember what the old Scotch sexton said to the
weeping mourners, "What are ye<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</SPAN></span> greeting aboot? If ye dinna bring them
at eighty, when wull ye bring them?" My Scotch accent is bad,' added
Captain Pendle, 'but the story itself is a thing of beauty.'</p>
<p>'I want to tell my father the news,' said Gabriel, indignantly turning
away from George's wink. 'Where is he?'</p>
<p>'With Moth—Oh, there he is,' cried Mab, as the bishop issued from the
sibyl's tent. 'Oh, George, how ill he looks!'</p>
<p>'By Jove, yes! He is as pale as a ghost. Come and see what is wrong,
Gabriel. Excuse me a moment, Mab.'</p>
<p>The two brothers walked forward, but before they could reach their
father he was already taking his leave and shaking hands with Mrs
Pansey. His face was white, his eyes were anxious, and it was only by
sheer force of will that he could excuse himself to his hostess in his
ordinary voice.</p>
<p>'I am afraid the sun has been too much for me, Mrs Pansey,' he said in
his usual sauve tones, 'and the close atmosphere of that tent is rather
trying. I regret being obliged to leave so charming a scene, but I feel
sure you will excuse me.'</p>
<p>'Certainly, bishop,' said Mrs Pansey, graciously enough, 'but won't you
have a glass of sherry or—'</p>
<p>'Nothing, thank you; nothing. Good-bye, Mrs Pansey; your <i>fête</i> has been
most successful. Ah, Gabriel,' catching sight of his youngest son, 'will
you be so good as to come with me?'</p>
<p>'Are you ill, sir?' asked George, with solicitude.</p>
<p>'No, no! a little out of sorts, perhaps. The sun, merely the sun;' and
waving his hand in a hurried manner, Dr Pendle withdrew as quickly as
his dignity permitted, leaning on Gabriel's arm. The curate's face was
as colourless as that of his father, and he seemed equally as nervous in
manner. Captain Pendle returned to Mab in a state of bewilderment, for
which there was surely sufficient cause.</p>
<p>'I never saw the bishop so put out before,' said he with a puzzled look.
'Old Mother Jael must have prophesied blue ruin and murder.'</p>
<p>Murder! The ominous word struck on the ears of Cargrim, who was passing
at the moment, and he smiled cruelly as he heard the half-joking tone in
which it was spoken. Captain George Pendle little thought that the
chaplain took his jesting speech in earnest, and was more convinced
than<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</SPAN></span> ever that the bishop had killed Jentham, and had just been warned
by Mother Jael that she knew the truth. This then, as Cargrim
considered, was her reason for haunting the bishop in his incomings and
outgoings.</p>
<p>Of course it was impossible that the bishop's agitation could have
escaped the attention of the assembled guests, and many remarks were
made as to its probable cause. His sudden illness at his own reception
was recalled, and, taken in conjunction with this seizure, it was
observed that Dr Pendle was working too hard, that his constitution was
breaking up and that he sadly needed a rest. The opinion on this last
point was unanimous.</p>
<p>'For I will say,' remarked Mrs Pansey, who was an adept at damning with
faint praise, 'that the bishop works as hard as his capacity of brain
will let him.'</p>
<p>'And that is a great deal,' said Dr Graham, tartly. 'Bishop Pendle is
one of the cleverest men in England.'</p>
<p>'That is right, doctor,' replied the undaunted Mrs Pansey. 'Always speak
well of your patients.'</p>
<p>Altogether, so high stood the bishop's reputation as a transparently
honest man that no one suspected anything was wrong save Graham and Mr
Cargrim. The former remembered Dr Pendle's unacknowledged secret, and
wondered if the gipsy was in possession of it, while the latter was
satisfied that the bishop had been driven away by the fears roused by
Mother Jael's communication, whatever that might be. But the general
opinion was that too much work and too much sun had occasioned the
bishop's illness, and it was spoken of very lightly as a mere temporary
ailment soon to be set right by complete change and complete rest. Thus
Dr Pendle's reputation of the past stood him in good stead, and saved
his character thoroughly in the present.</p>
<p>'Now,' said Cargrim to himself, 'I know for certain that Mother Jael is
aware of the truth, also that the truth implicates the bishop in
Jentham's death. I shall just go in and question her at once. She can't
escape from that tent so easily as she vanished the other day.'</p>
<p>But Cargrim quite underrated Mother Jael's power of making herself
scarce, for when he entered the tent he found it tenanted only by Daisy
Norsham, who was looking<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</SPAN></span> in some bewilderment at an empty chair. The
cunning old gipsy had once more melted into thin air.</p>
<p>'Where is she?' demanded Cargrim, regretting that his clerical garb
prevented him from using appropriate language.</p>
<p>'Oh, really, dear Mr Cargrim, I don't know. After the dear bishop came
out so upset with the heat, we all ran to look after him, so I suppose
Mother Jael felt the heat also, and left while our backs were turned. It
is really very vexing,' sighed Daisy, 'for lots of girls are simply
dying to have their fortunes told. And, oh!' making a sudden discovery,
'how very, very dreadful!'</p>
<p>'What is it?' asked the chaplain, staring at her tragic face.</p>
<p>'That wicked old woman has taken all the money. Oh, poor Mrs Pansey's
home!'</p>
<p>'She has no doubt run off with the money,' said Cargrim, in what was for
him a savage tone. 'I must question the servants about her departure.
Miss Norsham, I am afraid that your beautiful nature has been imposed
upon by this deceitful vagrant.'</p>
<p>Whether this was so or not, one thing was clear that Mother Jael had
gone off with a considerable amount of loose silver in her pocket. The
servants knew nothing of her departure, so there was no doubt that the
old crone, used to dodging and hiding, had slipped out of the garden by
some back way, while the guests had been commiserating the bishop's
slight illness. As Cargrim wanted to see the gipsy at once, and hoped to
force her into confessing the truth by threatening to have her arrested
with the stolen money in her pocket, he followed on her trail while it
was yet fresh. Certainly Mother Jael had left no particular track by
which she could be traced, but Cargrim, knowing something of her habits,
judged that she would either strike across Southberry Heath to the tents
of her tribe or take refuge for the time being at The Derby Winner. It
was more probable that she would go to the hotel than run the risk of
being arrested in the gipsy camp, so Cargrim, adopting this argument,
took his way down to Eastgate. He hoped to run Mother Jael to earth in
the tap-room of the hotel.</p>
<p>On arriving at The Derby Winner, he walked straight into the bar, and
found it presided over by a grinning pot-boy.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</SPAN></span> A noise of singing and
shouting came from the little parlour at the back, and when the chaplain
asked for Mr Mosk, he was informed by the smiling Ganymede that 'th'
guv'nor was injiyin' of hisself, and goin' on like one o'clock.'</p>
<p>'Dear! dear!' said the scandalised chaplain, 'am I to understand that
your master has taken more than is good for him?'</p>
<p>'Yuss; he's jist drunk up to jollyness, sir.'</p>
<p>'And Miss Mosk?'</p>
<p>'She's a-tryin' to git 'im t' bed, is young missus, an' old missus is
cryin' upstairs.'</p>
<p>'I shall certainly speak about this to the authorities,' said Cargrim,
in an angry tone. 'You are sober enough to answer my questions, I hope?'</p>
<p>'Yuss, sir; I'm strite,' growled the pot-boy, pulling his forelock.</p>
<p>'Then tell me if that gipsy woman, Mother Jael, is here?'</p>
<p>'No, sir, sh' ain't. I ain't set eyes on 'er for I do'no how long.'</p>
<p>The man spoke earnestly enough, and was evidently telling the truth.
Much disappointed to find that the old crone was not in the
neighbourhood, the chaplain was about to depart when he heard Mosk begin
to sing in a husky voice, and also became aware that Bell, as he judged
from the raised tones of her voice, was scolding her father thoroughly.
His sense of duty got the better of his anxiety to find Mother Jael, and
feeling that his presence was required, he passed swiftly to the back of
the house, and threw open the door of the parlour with fine clerical
indignation.</p>
<p>'What is all this noise, Mosk?' he cried sharply. 'Do you wish to lose
your license?'</p>
<p>Mosk, who was seated in an arm-chair, smiling and singing, with a very
red face, was struck dumb by the chaplain's sudden entrance and sharp
rebuke. Bell, flushed and angered, was also astonished to see Mr
Cargrim, but hailed his arrival with joy as likely to have some moral
influence on her riotous father. Personally she detested Cargrim, but
she respected his cloth, and was glad to see him wield the thunders of
his clerical position.</p>
<p>'That is right, Mr Cargrim!' she cried with flashing eyes.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</SPAN></span> 'Tell him he
ought to be ashamed of drinking and singing with mother so ill
upstairs.'</p>
<p>'I don't mean t'do any 'arm,' said Mosk, rising sheepishly, for the
shock of Cargrim's appearance sobered him a good deal. 'I wos jus'
havin' a glass to celebrate a joyful day.'</p>
<p>'Cannot you take your glass without becoming intoxicated?' said Cargrim,
in disgust. 'I tell you what, Mosk, if you go on in this way, I shall
make it my business to warn Sir Harry Brace against you.'</p>
<p>'I told you how t'would be, father,' put in Bell, reproachfully.</p>
<p>'You onnatural child, goin' agin your parent,' growled Mr Mosk. 'Wasn't
I drinking to your health, 'cause the old 'un at Heathcroft wos passin'
to his long 'ome? Tell me that!'</p>
<p>'What do you mean, Mosk?' asked the chaplain, starting.</p>
<p>'Nothing, sir,' interposed Bell, hurriedly. 'Father don't know what he
is sayin'.'</p>
<p>'Yes, I do,' contradicted her father, sulkily. 'Old Mr Leigh, th' pass'n
of Heathcroft, is dying, and when he dies you'll live at Heathcroft
with—'</p>
<p>'Father! father! hold your tongue!'</p>
<p>'With my son-in-law Gabriel!'</p>
<p>'Your—son-in-law,' gasped Cargrim, recoiling. 'Is—is your daughter the
wife of young Mr Pendle?'</p>
<p>'No, I am not, Mr Cargrim,' cried Bell, nervously. 'It's father's
nonsense.'</p>
<p>'It's Bible truth, savin' your presence,' said Mosk, striking the table.
'Young Mr Pendle is engaged to marry you, ain't he? and he's goin' to
hev the livin' of Heathcroft, ain't he? and old Leigh's a-dyin' fast,
ain't he?'</p>
<p>'Go on, father, you've done it now,' said Bell, resignedly, and sat
down.</p>
<p>Cargrim was almost too surprised to speak. The rector of
Heathcroft—dying; Gabriel engaged to marry this common woman. He looked
from one to the other in amazement; at the triumphant Mosk, and the
blushing girl.</p>
<p>'Is this true, Miss Mosk?' he asked doubtfully.</p>
<p>'Yes! I am engaged to marry Gabriel Pendle,' cried<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</SPAN></span> Bell, with a toss of
her head. 'You can tell the whole town so if you like. Neither he nor I
will contradict you.'</p>
<p>'It's as true as true!' growled Mosk. 'My daughter's going to be a
lady.'</p>
<p>'I congratulate you both,' said Cargrim, gravely. 'This will be a
surprise to the bishop,' and feeling himself unequal to the situation,
he made his escape.</p>
<p>'Well, father,' said Bell, 'this is a pretty kettle of fish, this is!'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />