"Goodness knows. Upon things that he pledges, and the vegetables in the garden. I was in there last night, and I can tell you it was a picture, Mr. Johnny Ludlow."
"A picture of what?"
"Misery: distress: hopelessness. It is several weeks now since Lee earned anything, and they have been all that time upon short commons.
Some days on no commons at all, I expect."
"But what took you there?"
"I heard such an account of the girl--Mamie--yesterday afternoon, of her cough and her weakness, that I thought I"d see if any of my drugs would do her good. But it"s food they all want."
"Is Mamie very ill?"
"Very ill indeed. I"m not sure but she"s dying."
"It is a dreadful thing."
"One can"t ask too many professional questions--people are down upon you for that before you have pa.s.sed," resumed Ben, alluding to his not being qualified. "But I sent her in a cordial or two, and I spoke to Darbyshire; so perhaps he will look in upon her to-day."
Ben Rymer might have been a black sheep once upon a time, but he had not a bad heart. I began wondering whether Mrs. Todhetley could help them.
"Is Mamie Lee still able to do any sewing?"
"About as much as I could do it. Not she. I shall hear what Darbyshire"s report is. They would certainly be better off in the workhouse."
"I wish they could be helped!"
"Not much chance of that," said Ben. "She is a sinner, and he is a sinner: that"s what Timberdale says, you know. People in these enlightened days are so very self-righteous!"
"How is Lee a sinner?"
"How! Why, has he not burnt up the people"s letters? Mr. Tanerton leads the van in banning him, and Timberdale follows."
I went home, questioning whether our folk would do anything to help the Lees. No one went on against ill-doings worse than the Squire; and no one was more ready than he to lend a helping hand when the ill-doers were fainting for want of it.
It chanced that just about the time I was talking to Ben Rymer, Mr.
Darbyshire, the doctor at Timberdale, called at Lee"s. He was a little, dark man, with an irritable temper and a turned-up nose, but good as gold at heart. Mamie Lee lay back in a chair, her head on a pillow, weak and wan and weary, the tears slowly rolling down her cheeks. Darbyshire was feeling her pulse, and old Mrs. Lee pottered about, bringing sticks from the garden to feed the handful of fire. The two children sat on the brick floor.
"If it were not for leaving my poor little one, I should be glad to die, sir," she was saying. "I shall be glad to go; hope it is not wrong to say it. She and I have been a dreadful charge upon them here."
Darbyshire looked round the kitchen. It was almost bare; the things had gone to the p.a.w.nbroker"s. Then he looked at her.
"There"s no need for you to die yet. Don"t get that fallacy in your head. You"ll come round fast enough with a little care."
"No, sir, I"m afraid not; I think I am past it. It has all come of the trouble, sir; and perhaps, when I"m gone, the neighbours will judge me more charitably. I believed with all my heart it was a true marriage--and I hope you"ll believe me when I say it, sir; it never came into my mind to imagine otherwise. And I"d have thought the whole world would have deceived me sooner than James."
"Ah," says Darbyshire, "most girls think that. Well, I"ll send you in some physic to soothe the pain in the chest. But what you most want, you see, is kitchen physic."
"Mr. Rymer has been very good in sending me cordials and cough-mixture, sir. Mother"s cough is bad, and he sent some to her as well."
"Ah, yes. Mrs. Lee, I am telling your daughter that what she most wants is kitchen physic. Good kitchen physic, you understand. You"d be none the worse yourself for some of it."
Dame Lee, coming in just then in her pattens, tried to put her poor bent back as upright as she could, and shook her head before answering.
"Kitchen physic don"t come in our way now, Dr. Darbyshire. We just manage not to starve quite, and that"s all. Perhaps, sir, things may take a turn. The Lord is over all, and He sees our need."
"He dave me some pep"mint d"ops," said the little one, who had been waiting to put in a word. "Andy, too."
"Who did?" asked the doctor.
"Mr. "Ymer."
Darbyshire patted the little straw-coloured head, and went out. An additional offence in the eyes of Timberdale was that the child"s fair curls were just the pattern of those on the head of James the deceiver.
"Well, have you seen Mamie Lee?" asked Ben Rymer, who chanced to be standing at his shop-door after his dinner, when Darbyshire was pa.s.sing by from paying his round of visits.
"Yes, I have seen her. There"s no radical disease."
"Don"t you think her uncommonly ill?"
Darbyshire nodded. "But she"s not too far gone to be cured. She"d get well fast enough under favourable circ.u.mstances."
"Meaning good food?"
"Meaning food and other things. Peace of mind, for instance. She is just fretting herself to death. Shame, remorse, and all that, have taken hold of her; besides grieving her heart out after the fellow."
"Her voice is so hollow! Did you notice it?"
"Hollow from weakness only. As to her being too far gone, she is not so at present; at least, that"s my opinion; but how soon she may become so I can"t say. With good kitchen physic, as I"ve just told them, and ease of mind to help me, I"ll answer for it that I"d have her well in a month; but the girl has neither the one nor the other. She seems to look upon coming death in the light of a relief, rather than otherwise; a relief to her own mental trouble, and a relief to the household, in the shape of saving it what she eats and drinks. In such a condition as this, you must be aware that the mind does not help the body by striving for existence; it makes no effort to struggle back to health; and there"s where Mamie Lee will fail. Circ.u.mstances are killing her, not disease."
"Did you try her lungs?"
"Partially. I"m sure I am right. The girl will probably die, but she need not die of necessity; though I suppose there will be no help for it. Good-day."
Mr. Darbyshire walked away in the direction of his house, where his dinner was waiting: and Ben Rymer disappeared within doors, and began to pound some rhubarb (or what looked like it) in a mortar. He was pounding away like mad, with all the strength of his strong hands, when who should come in but Lee. Lee had never been much better than a shadow of late years, but you should have seen him now, with his grey hair straggling about his meek, wan face. You should have seen his clothes, too, and the old shoes, out at the toes and sides. Burning people"s letters was of course an unpardonable offence, not to be condoned.
"Mamie said, sir, that you were good enough to tell her I was to call in for some of the cough lozenges that did her so much good. But----"
"Ay," interrupted Ben, getting down a box of the lozenges. "Don"t let her spare them. They won"t interfere with anything Mr. Darbyshire may send. I hear he has been."
But that those were not the days when beef-tea was sold in tins and gallipots, Ben Rymer might have added some to the lozenges. As he was handing the box to Lee, something in the man"s wan and worn and gentle face put him in mind of his late father"s, whose heart Mr. Ben had helped to break. A great pity took the chemist.
"You would like to be reinstated in your place, Lee?" he said suddenly.
Lee could not answer at once, for the pain at his throat and the moisture in his eyes that the notion called up. His voice, when he did speak, was as hollow and mild as Mamie"s.
"There"s no hope of that, sir. For a week after it was taken from me, I thought of nothing else, night or day, but that Mr. Tanerton might perhaps forgive me and get Salmon to put me on again. But the time for hoping that went by: as you know, Mr. Rymer, they put young Jelf in my place. I shall never forget the blow it was to me when I heard it. The other morning I saw Jelf crossing that bit of waste ground yonder with my old bag slung on his shoulder, and for a moment I thought the pain would have killed me."
"It is hard lines," confessed Ben.