"Of course I didn"t mean you, stupid! How literal you English are!"
It is highly probable that in all the sixty years of his well-ordered existence the Bishop of Blanford had never been called "stupid" by anybody. He gasped, and the episcopal cross, and even the heavy gold chain by which it depended from his neck, were unduly agitated. Then he decided that he liked it, and determined to continue the conversation.
"When I thought of all that," said Mrs. Mackintosh, "I said to your son: "Cecil," said I, "your father"s like that old board fence in my back yard; he needs a coat of whitewash to freshen him up, and I"m going over to put it on.""
"Cromwell," remarked the Bishop, "applied enough whitewash to Blanford to last it for several centuries. Indeed, we"ve not succeeded in restoring all the frescoes yet."
"Nonsense, man," said Mrs. Mackintosh, "you don"t see the point at all.
Now what do you take when your liver"s out of order?"
"Really, madam," faltered the Bishop, thoroughly aghast at this new turn in the conversation, "I--er--generally consult my medical adviser."
"Well, you shouldn"t!" said Mrs. Mackintosh with determination. "You should take what we call in my country a pick-me-up. Now I said to your son: "I"m going to be a mental and moral pick-me-up for your father.
What he needs is a new point of view. If you don"t take care, he"ll fossilise, and you"ll have to put him in the British Museum.""
The Bishop"s reflections during this conversation were many and varied.
What he was pleased to term his inner moral consciousness told him he ought to be shocked at its flippancy; the rest of his mental make-up was distinctly refreshed. Besides, a certain tension in the social atmosphere suggested that Miss Matilda was about to go forth to battle, so he smiled graciously, saying:
"It"s certainly very considerate of you to undertake all this on my account, but I should not like to be in any one"s debt, and I hardly see how I can repay my obligations."
"I"m just coming to that," said Mrs. Mackintosh. "I don"t say that I shouldn"t be doing a Christian act by taking you in hand, but I"m free to admit that I"ve a personal interest in the matter, for you"re the one man in England I most wanted to meet."
"But what can there possibly be about me--" began the Bishop.
"It isn"t about you," replied his guest. "It"s about Jonah."
"Josephus," broke in the harsh voice of his sister, "the bell of the mission chapel has been ringing for some time."
The Bishop drew a long breath and formed a mighty resolve. At last he had met a person who took an intelligent interest in Jonah, a Biblical character to whose history he had devoted exhaustive research. It was a golden opportunity not to be let slip. So, turning to his sister and looking her squarely in the eyes, he replied boldly that he was quite aware of the fact.
"If you do not go at once you"ll be late," remarked that lady.
"I"ve not the slightest intention of going at all," said the Bishop.
"I"m talking to Mrs. Mackintosh, who is, it seems, much interested in Jonah."
There came a sound as of spluttering from the upraised tea-cup of Professor Tybalt Smith, and Miss Matilda gave a distinctly aggressive sniff.
"If you"re not going, Josephus," she retorted, "I must send word to one of the chaplains, though after what you had said I naturally--" But there she paused, arrested by the incredible fact that for the first time in her experience her brother was not listening to what she was saying. Her silence commanded his attention.
"Oh," he replied, looking up vacantly, "do what you think proper," and turned again to Mrs. Mackintosh, who proceeded placidly with her theme.
"Of course," she said, "you hear a lot about seeing with the eye of faith, but I like to see with the eye of understanding, too, and I never yet sat under a preacher who was what I should call "up to Jonah." I read your book when it came out. It was one of the prizes they offered for selling on commission fifty packets of Tinker"s Tannin Tea, and I"ve been wild to meet you ever since. I have been a-whaling, so to speak, for years, but I expect you to carry me safely into port."
"Madam," said the Bishop, "you overwhelm me." He was immensely flattered by her appreciative, if outspoken, commendation. "I"m now," he continued, "at work on a set of supplementary sermons on this very subject; and if it wouldn"t be imposing too much on your good nature to let me read them to you, or parts of them--they embrace some six hundred pages."
Mrs. Mackintosh looked at him regretfully.
"Isn"t there any more than that?" she said. "I wanted three volumes at least."
The Bishop beamed with gratification.
"I trust," he replied, "that they"ll be worthy of your attention. But my treatment of the subject is--er--slightly doctrinal, and perhaps you"re not a member of the Church of England."
"Well, no," said Mrs. Mackintosh. "I can"t say as I am. I was baptised a Methodist, brought up in a Roman Catholic convent, finished at a Presbyterian boarding-school, and married before a Justice of the Peace to a Unitarian, and since I"ve been a widow I"ve attended a Baptist church regularly; but I don"t believe I"d mind a few weeks of an Episcopalian, specially seeing he"s a Bishop, which I haven"t experienced before."
"I shall endeavour to do my best, madam," said his Lordship. "Perhaps I may even lead you--in time--"
"Well, I shouldn"t be surprised but what you might," replied Mrs.
Mackintosh, "but I mustn"t take up all your time. I want you to know my little friend Miss Arminster. She"s one of the nicest girls that ever was."
"I shall be delighted," said his Lordship. "Arminster," he continued reflectively. "Does she come from the Arminsters of Shropshire?"
Mrs. Mackintosh laughed.
"I"m sure I don"t know," she replied, "but from the way her friends speak of her, you"d think she came from Noah"s Ark."
"Dear me!" said the Bishop. "That"s very curious."
"They call her the Leopard," she went on, "and I must say for my part that I"m "most as fond of the Leopard as I am of Jonah"s whale." And she rose and joined the group about the tea-table, for she did not wish to try Miss Matilda"s patience too far.
"I don"t know what you"ll think of our quiet life. I fear it"ll seem very strange to you," said his Lordship, addressing himself to Miss Arminster.
"I think it"ll be jolly," she replied promptly, looking up at him playfully to see whether he would bear chaffing, "and," she added, after due deliberation, "I think you"re a dear, and your uniform is just sweet. I always did love a uniform. I used to be awfully gone, as a child, on a policeman at the corner of our block, but you"re much more nicely dressed than he was."
His Lordship started to say something crushing in regard to the sanct.i.ty of ecclesiastical trappings, but another glance at the bewitching little figure that confronted him caused him to remark instead that he was glad she approved of him, and that he would try to take better care of her than even a guardian of the law.
"Oh, I"m afraid I"ve said something shocking!" she exclaimed in a delightfully nave manner, "and I did mean to be so good and decorous.
I"m sure I"ll need a lot of teaching."
"I shall be delighted to undertake the task," he replied gallantly.
"Suppose we begin by going to evensong. Would you like to do so?"
"Rather," she returned; "but I"m afraid," looking at her travelling-costume, "that I"m hardly dressed for the part--I mean the occasion."
"Dear me!" said the Bishop, scrutinizing her keenly, "it seems to be a very pretty gown."
"Oh, that"s all right," she said. "Then we"ll go at once."
"So we shall," he replied, "and you shall sit in the stalls."
"How jolly!" she exclaimed. "I almost always have to sit in the balcony."
"Really?" said his Lordship. "You don"t say so. But from what Mr. Spotts says, I should judge that the architecture of American churches was novel." And they walked across the lawn to the cathedral.
A few moments later, Miss Matilda, having dismissed her guests to their rooms, found herself alone with her nephew.
"Well," she said, turning on him sharply, "perhaps at last you"ll condescend to tell me who these _friends_ of yours are?"