"There," said Dolly, pointing with her finger; "there! He is arm-in-arm with two others; in the middle of them. How very strange! It was only yesterday I had a letter from him from Bradford, saying he should be detained there for some time to come. How I wish he had looked up at this window!"
Mrs. Turk"s sight had failed to single him out amongst the moving crowd.
And as Mr. Mapping did not make his appearance at home that evening, or for many evenings to come, she concluded that the young wife must have been mistaken.
When Mr. Mapping did appear, he said the same, telling Dolly she must have "seen double," for that he had not been in London. Dolly did not insist, but she felt staggered and uncomfortable; she felt _certain_ it was her husband she saw.
How long the climax would have been postponed, or in what way it might have disclosed itself, but for something that occurred, cannot be conjectured. This wretched kind of life went on until the next spring.
Dolly was reduced to perplexity. She had parted with all the pretty trinkets her mother left her; she would live for days together upon bread-and-b.u.t.ter and tears: and a most unhappy suspicion had instilled itself into her mind--that the nest-egg no longer existed. But even yet she found excuses for her husband; she thought that all doubt might still be explained away. Mrs. Turk was very good, and did not worry; Dolly did some plain sewing for her, and made her a gown or two.
On one of these spring days, when the sun was shining brightly on the pavement outside, Dolly went out on an errand. She had not gone many steps from the door when a lady, very plainly dressed, came up and accosted her quietly.
"Young woman, I wish to ask why you have stolen away my husband?"
"Good gracious!" exclaimed the startled Dolly. "What do you mean?"
"You call yourself Mrs. Mapping."
"I am Mrs. Mapping."
The stranger shook her head. "We cannot converse here," she said. "Allow me to go up to your room"--pointing to it. "I know you lodge there."
"But what is it that you want with me?" objected Dolly, who did not like all this.
"You think yourself the wife of Alick Mapping. You think you were married to him."
Dolly wondered whether the speaker had escaped from that neighbouring stronghold, Bedlam. "I don"t know what it is you wish to insinuate," she said. "I was married to Mr. Mapping at St. Martin"s Church in Worcester, more than eighteen months ago."
"Ay! But I, his wife, was married to him in London seven years ago.
Yours was no marriage; he deceived you."
Dolly"s face was turning all manner of colours. She felt frightened almost to death.
"Take me to your room and I will tell you all that you need to know. Do not fear I shall reproach you; I am only sorry for you; it has been no fault of yours. He is a finished deceiver, as I have learnt to my cost."
Dolly led the way. Seated together, face to face, her eyes strained on the stranger"s, she listened to the woeful tale, which was gently told.
That it was true she could not doubt. Alick Mapping had married her at St. Martin"s Church in Worcester, but he had married this young woman some years before it.
"You are thinking that I look older than my husband," said she, misinterpreting Dolly"s gaze. "That is true. I am five years older, and am now approaching my fortieth year. He pretended to fall in love with me; I thought he did; but what he really fell in love with was my money."
"How did you come to know about me?--how did you find it out?" gasped Dolly.
"It was through Mrs. Turk, your landlady," answered the true wife. "She has been suspecting that something or other was wrong, and she talked of it to a friend of hers who chances to know my family. This friend was struck with the similarity of name--the Alick Mapping whose wife was here in the Blackfriars Road, and the Alick Mapping whose wife lived at Hackney."
"How long is it since he left you?" asked poor Dolly.
"He has not left me. He has absented himself inexplicably at times for a year or two past, but he is still with me. He is at home now, at this present moment. I have a good home, you must understand, and a good income, which he cannot touch; he would think twice before giving up that. Had you money?" continued the lady abruptly.
"I had three hundred pounds. He told me he had placed it in the Bank of England; I think he did do that; and that he should never draw upon it, but leave it there for a nest-egg."
Mrs. Mapping smiled in pity. "You may rely upon it that there"s not a shilling left of it. Money in his hands, when he can get hold of any, runs out of them like water."
"Is it true that he travels for a wine house?"
"Yes--and no. It is his occupation, but he is continually throwing up his situations: pleasure has more attraction for him than work; and he will be a gentleman at large for months together. Yet not a more clever man of business exists than he is known to be, and he can get a place at any time."
"Have you any children?" whispered Dolly.
"No. Shall you prosecute him?" continued the first wife, after a pause.
"Shall I--what?" cried Dolly, aghast.
"Prosecute him for the fraud he has committed on you?"
"Oh dear! the exposure would kill me," shivered the unhappy girl. "I shall only hope to run away and hide myself forever."
"Every syllable I have told you is truth," said the stranger, producing a slip of paper as she rose to depart. "Here are two or three references by which you can verify it, if you doubt me. Mrs. Turk will do it for you if you do not care to stir in it yourself. Will you shake hands with me?"
Dolly a.s.sented, and burst into a whirlwind of tears.
Nothing seemed to be left for her, as she said, but to run away and hide herself. All the money was gone, and she was left penniless and helpless. By the aid of Mrs. Turk, who proved a good friend to her, she obtained a situation in a small preparatory school near Croydon, as needle-woman and companion to the mistress. She called herself Mrs.
Mapping still, and continued to wear her wedding-ring; she did not know what else to do. She _had_ been married; truly, as she had believed; and what had come of it was surely no fault of hers.
A little good fortune fell to her in time; a little bit. For years and years she remained in that school at Croydon, until, as it seemed to herself, she was middle-aged, and then the mistress of it died. Having no relatives, she left her savings and her furniture to Dolly. With the money Dolly set up the house in Gibraltar Terrace, put the furniture into it, and began to let lodgings. A young woman, who had been teacher in the school, and whom Dolly regarded as her sister, and often called her so, removed to it with her and stayed with her until she married.
Those particulars--which we listened to one evening from her own lips--were gloomy enough. The Squire went into an explosion over Alick Mapping.
"The despicable villain! What has become of him?"
"I never saw him after his wife came to me," she answered, "but Mrs.
Turk would get news of him now and then. Since Mrs. Turk"s death, I have heard nothing. Sometimes I think he may be dead."
"I hope he was hung!" flashed the Squire.
Well--to hasten on. That was Dorothy Grape"s history since she left Worcester; and a cruel one it was!
We saw her once or twice again before quitting London. And the Squire left a substantial present with her, for old remembrance sake.
"She looks as though she needed it, Johnny," said he. "Poor thing!
poor thing! And such a pretty, happy little maiden as she used to be, standing in her pinafore amongst the yellow roses in the porch at Islip!
Johnny, lad, I _hope_ that vagabond came to be hanged!"
II.
It was ever so long afterwards, and the time had gone on by years, when we again fell into the thread of Dorothy Grape"s life. The Squire was in London for a few days upon some law business, and had brought me with him.
"I should like to see how that poor woman"s getting on, Johnny," he said to me one morning. "Suppose we go down to Gibraltar Terrace?"
It was a dull, damp, misty day at the close of autumn; and when the Squire turned in at No. 60, after dismissing the cab, he stood still and stared, instead of knocking. A plate was on the door, "James Noak, carpenter and joiner."