<h2><SPAN name="XVI" name="XVI"></SPAN>XVI</h2>
<p>In this manner the full and happy years began to glide past them. Their prosperity
was now firmly established; the business grew; and money came in so nicely that Mrs.
Dale's mortgage had been paid off and her two thousand pounds invested in gilt-edged
securities, while Dale hoped very shortly to discharge the remainder of his
obligation to Mr. Bates. They were, however, as economical as ever in their own way
of life, although they permitted themselves some license in the generosity they had
begun to practise with regard to their less fortunate neighbors. But they found, as
so many have found before them, that in personal charity a little money goes a long
way, and that the claims of the very poor, although sometimes noisy, are rarely
excessive. Naturally they had to be careful for the sake of their children, the
security of whose future must be the first consideration. Dale had promised the baby
boy in his cradle "the advantages of a lib'ral education," and he intended to act up
to this promise largely.</p>
<p>"It is my wish," he said, "that the two of them shall enjoy all that I was myself
deprived of."</p>
<p>New scraps were continually being pasted into the album, and it seemed to Mavis
that she ought to have bought a bigger one, if indeed any albums were made of a size
sufficiently big to contain all the evidences of her husband's gratified ambition.
Scarce a <i>Courier</i><SPAN name="Page_214" name="Page_214"></SPAN> was published without "a
bit" in it that referred to Mr. Dale of Vine-Pits Farm. He was really becoming quite
a public character. He had been called to the District Council, on its foundation, as
a personage who could not be left out. When the Otterford branch of the Fire Brigade
was instituted all agreed in inviting Mr. Dale to be its captain; and four of the
once sluggish yard-servants had immediately decided that they must follow their
master wherever he led, and had enrolled themselves forthwith under his captaincy. He
was a prominent figure at the Old Manninglea corn market, known by sight in its
streets, and had recently been chosen as a member of its very select tradesmen's
club. This was an affair truly different from that vulgar boozing circle at the
Gauntlet Inn which he had denounced so contemptuously in old days. The Manninglea
Club was solid and respectable, a pleasant meeting-place where he could take his
midday meal after market business in company with men of substance and repute. He was
on friendly terms with most of the farmers between the down country and Rodhaven
Harbor; and last, but not least, the gentry all passed the time of day when they met
him, and many would stop him on the high-roads for a chat in the most polite and
jolly fashion.</p>
<p>He confessed to Mavis that the sweetest thing in his success was the feeling of
being no longer disliked.</p>
<p>"Oh, Will, you never were disliked."</p>
<p>"But that's just what I was. And I begin to get a glimmer of the reason why. I was
reading an article in <i>Answers</i> last week, and it seemed as if it had been
written specially to enlighten me. It was about sympathy. The author, who didn't sign
his name, but <SPAN name="Page_215" name="Page_215"></SPAN>was ev'dently a man of powerful
int'lect, said that without understanding you can't sympathize; and he went on to
show that without sympathy the whole world would come to a standstill."</p>
<p>"Ah," said Mavis, "that's the sort of difficult reading that you like. It's too
deep for me."</p>
<p>"It's plain as the nose on one's face, come to think of it. Sympathy is the
key-note. It enables you to look at things from both sides—to put yourself in
another man's place, and ask yourself the question, What should I be thinking and
doing, if I was him?—I should say if I was he. In the old days I was very
deficient in that. A fool just made me angry. Now I try to put myself in his place."
He paused, and smiled. "Perhaps you'll say I'm there already—a fool
myself."</p>
<p>"Oh, I wouldn't go so far as to say that;" and Mavis smiled too. "Not <i>quite</i>
a fool, Will."</p>
<p>He went on analyzing his characteristics, talking with great interest in the
subject, and after a didactic style, but not with the heavy egoistic method that he
had often employed years ago.</p>
<p>"No, I never remarked that."</p>
<p>"You know," he said presently, "in spite of all my bounce, I was a <i>shy</i>
man.</p>
<p>"It's the fact, Mav. And my shyness came between me and others. I couldn't take
them sufficiently free. I wanted all the overtures to come from them, and I was too
ready to draw in my horns if they didn't seem to accept me straight at what I judged
my own value. For a long while now it has been my endeavor to sink what was once
described to me as my pers'nal equation. I don't think of myself <SPAN name="Page_216"
name="Page_216"></SPAN>at all, if I can help it; and the consequence is the shyness gets
pushed into the background, my manner becomes more free and open, and people begin to
treat me in a more friendly spirit."</p>
<p>And he wound up his discourse by returning to the original cause of
satisfaction.</p>
<p>"Yes, I do think there are some now that like me for myself—not many, but
just one or two, besides dear old Mr. Bates."</p>
<p>"Everybody does. Why, look at that child, Norah. Only been here a month, and
worships the ground you tread on."</p>
<p>"Poor little mite. That's her notion of being grateful for what I did for her
father. Does she eat just the same?"</p>
<p>"Ravenous."</p>
<p>"Don't stint her," said Dale, impressively. "Feed her <i>ad lib</i>. Give her all
she'll swallow. It's the leeway she's got to make up;" and he turned his eyes toward
the kitchen door. "Is she out there?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"I spoke loud. You don't think she heard what I said?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no. She's busy with Mrs. Goudie."</p>
<p>"I wouldn't like for her to hear us discussing her victuals as though she was an
animal."</p>
<p>"You might have thought she was verily an animal," said Mavis, "if you'd seen her
at the first meals we set before her. And even now it brings a lump into my throat to
watch her."</p>
<p>"Just so."</p>
<p>"When I told her to undress that night to wash herself, she was a sight to break
one's heart. Her <SPAN name="Page_217" name="Page_217"></SPAN>poor little ribs were almost
sticking through the skin; and, Will, I thought of one of ours ever being treated
so."</p>
<p>Dale got up from the table, his face glowing redly, his brows frowning; and he
stretched his arms to their full length.</p>
<p>"By Jupiter!" he said thickly, "if only Mrs. Neath had been a man, I'd 'a' given
him—well, at the least, I'd 'a' given him a piece of my mind. I'd have told him
what I thought of him."</p>
<p>"I promise you," said Mavis, "that I told Mrs. Neath what I thought of
<i>her</i>."</p>
<p>"An' I'm right glad you did."</p>
<p>This new inmate under their roof was Norah Veale, a twelve-year-old daughter of
the Hadleigh Wood hurdle-maker. Mavis, taking a present of tea and sugar to one of
the Cross Roads cottages, had found her digging in the garden, and, struck by her
pitiful aspect, had questioned her and elicited her history. It was a common enough
one in those parts. Not being wanted at home, she had been "lent" to Mrs. Neath, the
cottage woman, in exchange for her keep, and was mercilessly used by the borrower.
She rose at dawn, worked as the regular household drudge till within an hour of
school-time, then walked into Rodchurch for the day's schooling with a piece of dry
bread in her pocket as dinner; and on her return from school worked again till late
at night. She admitted that she felt always hungry, always tired, always miserable;
that she suffered from cold at night in her wretched little bed; and that Mrs. Neath
often beat her. She was a bright, intelligent child, black-haired,
olive-complexioned, with lively blue eyes which expressed <SPAN name="Page_218"
name="Page_218"></SPAN>at once the natural trustfulness of youth, a certain boldness and
wildness derived from gipsy ancestors, and a questioning wonder that this
pleasant-looking world should be systematically ill-treating her.</p>
<p>The horrid, lying, carneying old woman of the cottage received home truths instead
of tea and sugar from Mavis Dale, who, with all her maternal feelings aroused, rushed
off straightway to hunt for the neglectful father. She found him at the Barradine
Arms, and demanded his permission to take away the child. Veale, although sadly
bemused, at once said that he could refuse nothing to the wife of his preserver.</p>
<p>"Oh, lor-a-mussy, yes, mum, you may 'aave my little Norrer an' do what you like
wi' her. Bless her heart, I look on Norrer and her brothers to be the comfort o' my
old age, but I wunt stan' in their light to interfere wi' what's best for any of
'em."</p>
<p>Mavis then took Norah straight home with her to Vine-Pits, bathed her, fed her,
clothed her, and made much of her. And Norah proved grateful, docile, amenable, doing
all that Mrs. Dale told her to do; and from the first exhibiting an almost
superstitious worship of Mr. Dale. For truly, as he himself had surmised, her little
starved breast was overflowing with gratitude to the man who had saved her father. It
mattered nothing to the children of the mud hovel that their father was not an
exemplary character; they did not want him to be drowned; and Norah, hearing in
extreme youth of the hero who had interposed between him and such a cruel death, had
mentally built a pedestal for the hero and kept him on top of it ever since.</p>
<p>It happened that about the time when Dale was preparing <SPAN name="Page_219"
name="Page_219"></SPAN>to pay off the last instalment of his debt, Mr. Bates
unexpectedly applied for the money. He had never before shown the least anxiety for
repayment; it had always been "Take your time, William. I know I'm in safe hands,"
and so forth; but now he said, "If you can make it convenient to you, William, it
would be convenient to me."</p>
<p>"Oh, certainly, Mr. Bates. You shall have it before the end of the week—and
I hope you're going to act on the advice I ventured to offer last time; that is, put
it in one of these Canadian Government guaranteed stocks."</p>
<p>"I'm sure it was good advice, William—even if I didn't act on it."</p>
<p>"Of course my orig'nal advice was what you ought to have acted on, Mr. Bates. That
is to say, bought an annuity with your entire capital."</p>
<p>"Ah, William, I really couldn't do that;" and Mr. Bates turned away his eyes, as
if unable to support Dale's friendly regard. "Apart from these annuities for old folk
being rather a dog-in-the-manger trick, I—well, one has one's private
difficulties, William. One is not always a free agent."</p>
<p>The demand for repayment, and with something of evasiveness or reticence in the
old fellow's manner, greatly troubled Dale. Not at all from selfish motives; but
because it confirmed a suspicion that he had long entertained. Although invisible
locally, disgraced and hiding somewhere at a distance, that blackguardly son was
probably still draining the good old man's resources.</p>
<p>So many things pointed to the correctness of this supposition. On the interest of
the money that Mavis <SPAN name="Page_220" name="Page_220"></SPAN>and Dale had together paid
him for the business, he should have been able to live very comfortably; whereas, in
fact, his way of life was mean and sorry. His cottage was quite a decent dwelling,
separated from the road by a nice long strip of garden, and with a miniature apple
orchard behind it; but it showed all those signs of neglect that had been evident at
Vine-Pits when the Dales first came there. He had no proper servant, but just pigged
it anyhow with the occasional assistance of a woman and her husband. His clothes,
though neatly brushed, were too shabby and overworn for a person of his position. And
he was not a miser; he was a proud self-respecting man, who naturally would desire to
maintain conventionally adequate state, were he able to do so.</p>
<p>These thoughts worried Dale. He really loved Mr. Bates, thoroughly appreciated the
great dignity and sweetness of his nature, and felt it to be a monstrous and
intolerable thing that the dear old chap at the age of seventy-three, instead of
being allowed to end his days in a happy, seemly style, should be as if were bled to
death by a conscienceless reprobate. But what could one do? It was like the cruelties
of the woods that one regrets, but can not prevent—the rabbits chased by the
weasels, the pheasants killed by the foxes, the thrushes destroyed by the hawks.</p>
<p>Any doubt that remained in the mind of Dale was soon dissipated. He told Mavis how
he had seen Bates junior—a seedy, wicked-looking wretch now—lurking at
dusk in the cottage porch, and how next morning he had ridden over to talk to Mr.
Bates about this ill-omened visitor. Mr. Bates said it was true that his son had been
there for two or three days, but <SPAN name="Page_221" name="Page_221"></SPAN>he was now
gone; and he declined to discuss the matter any further. "I can't speak of it,
William. I thank you for meaning kindness, but it's a thing I can't speak of."</p>
<p>Dale also told Mrs. Goudie that Richard Bates had shown himself in the
neighborhood, and asked her if the fact was generally known. He was aware that Mrs.
Goudie had almost as much regard for the old man as he had himself.</p>
<p>"No, sir," said Mrs. Goudie, "I hadn't 'a' heard of it."</p>
<p>"Then that proves how close he kept. No doubt he came and went as surreptitiously
as he could. Let it be between ourselves, Mrs. Goudie. Don't spread the tale an inch
beyond us three."</p>
<p>"I will not, sir. But, oh, well-a-day, it's a bad bit o' news, sir. I did hope Mr.
Bates was cured o' that runnin' sore."</p>
<p>She had been summoned from the kitchen just before leaving for the night; and with
her shawl over her head, her wrinkled face working, and her bony hands clasped she
stood near the table and waited for Mr. Dale to give the signal for her to
withdraw.</p>
<p>"If you should see him, at any time, let me know, Mrs. Goudie."</p>
<p>"I will, sir."</p>
<p>"I might perhaps do good, if I could get hold of him on the quiet and address a
few words to him."</p>
<p>"I wish you'd break his neck for him, yes, I do, indeed I do. I could tell you
things as 'd make any one say hanging was too good for him."</p>
<p>And, encouraged to talk freely, Mrs. Goudie told Mavis and Dale, what indeed she
had often told them <SPAN name="Page_222" name="Page_222"></SPAN>before, of the shocking
badness of Richard Bates and the ugly scenes that had taken place in this very house;
of how he bullied his father to give him money, storming and raving like a lunatic
when resisted; and of how the old fellow alone by himself had groaned and wept and
prayed. Mrs. Goudie had heard him, after a most dreadful quarrel, praying out loud in
his room up-stairs.</p>
<p>"An' believe me, sir, he was a praying for his son all the time—imploring of
the Lord to soften his heart like, and save him from the hell-fire that his conduct
asked for. You know, sir, he's a very God-fearing man, Mr. Bates."<SPAN name="Page_223"
name="Page_223"></SPAN></p>
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