It was extraordinary how much effort it cost Mrs Gamp to p.r.o.nounce the name she was commonly so ready with. She made some three or four gasps before she could get it out; and, when she had uttered it, pressed her hand upon her side, and turned up her eyes, as if she were going to faint away. But, knowing her to labour under a complication of internal disorders, which rendered a few drops of spirits indispensable at certain times to her existence, and which came on very strong when that remedy was not at hand, Jonas merely supposed her to be the victim of one of these attacks.
"Well!" he said, hastily, for he felt how incapable he was of confining his wandering attention to the subject. "You and she have arranged to take care of him, have you?"
Mrs Gamp replied in the affirmative, and softly discharged herself of her familiar phrase, "Turn and turn about; one off, one on." But she spoke so tremulously that she felt called upon to add, "which fiddle-strings is weakness to expredge my nerves this night!"
Jonas stopped to listen. Then said, hurriedly:
"We shall not quarrel about terms. Let them be the same as they were before. Keep him close, and keep him quiet. He must be restrained.
He has got it in his head to-night that my wife"s dead, and has been attacking me as if I had killed her. It"s--it"s common with mad people to take the worst fancies of those they like best. Isn"t it?"
Mrs Gamp a.s.sented with a short groan.
"Keep him close, then, or in one of his fits he"ll be doing me a mischief. And don"t trust him at any time; for when he seems most rational, he"s wildest in his talk. But that you know already. Let me see the other."
"The t"other person, sir?" said Mrs Gamp.
"Aye! Go you to him and send the other. Quick! I"m busy."
Mrs Gamp took two or three backward steps towards the door, and stopped there.
"It is your wishes, Mr Chuzzlewit," she said, in a sort of quavering croak, "to see the t"other person. Is it?"
But the ghastly change in Jonas told her that the other person was already seen. Before she could look round towards the door, she was put aside by old Martin"s hand; and Chuffey and John Westlock entered with him.
"Let no one leave the house," said Martin. "This man is my brother"s son. Ill-met, ill-trained, ill-begotten. If he moves from the spot on which he stands, or speaks a word above his breath to any person here, open the window, and call for help!"
"What right have you to give such directions in this house?" asked Jonas faintly.
"The right of your wrong-doing. Come in there!"
An irrepressible exclamation burst from the lips of Jonas, as Lewsome entered at the door. It was not a groan, or a shriek, or a word, but was wholly unlike any sound that had ever fallen on the ears of those who heard it, while at the same time it was the most sharp and terrible expression of what was working in his guilty breast, that nature could have invented.
He had done murder for this! He had girdled himself about with perils, agonies of mind, innumerable fears, for this! He had hidden his secret in the wood; pressed and stamped it down into the b.l.o.o.d.y ground; and here it started up when least expected, miles upon miles away; known to many; proclaiming itself from the lips of an old man who had renewed his strength and vigour as by a miracle, to give it voice against him!
He leaned his hand on the back of a chair, and looked at them. It was in vain to try to do so scornfully, or with his usual insolence. He required the chair for his support. But he made a struggle for it.
"I know that fellow," he said, fetching his breath at every word, and pointing his trembling finger towards Lewsome. "He"s the greatest liar alive. What"s his last tale? Ha, ha! You"re rare fellows, too! Why, that uncle of mine is childish; he"s even a greater child than his brother, my father, was, in his old age; or than Chuffey is. What the devil do you mean," he added, looking fiercely at John Westlock and Mark Tapley (the latter had entered with Lewsome), "by coming here, and bringing two idiots and a knave with you to take my house by storm? Hallo, there!
Open the door! Turn these strangers out!"
"I tell you what," cried Mr Tapley, coming forward, "if it wasn"t for your name, I"d drag you through the streets of my own accord, and single-handed I would! Ah, I would! Don"t try and look bold at me.
You can"t do it! Now go on, sir," this was to old Martin. "Bring the murderin" wagabond upon his knees! If he wants noise, he shall have enough of it; for as sure as he"s a shiverin" from head to foot I"ll raise a uproar at this winder that shall bring half London in. Go on, sir! Let him try me once, and see whether I"m a man of my word or not."
With that, Mark folded his arms, and took his seat upon the window-ledge, with an air of general preparation for anything, which seemed to imply that he was equally ready to jump out himself, or to throw Jonas out, upon receiving the slightest hint that it would be agreeable to the company.
Old Martin turned to Lewsome:
"This is the man," he said, extending his hand towards Jonas. "Is it?"
"You need do no more than look at him to be sure of that, or of the truth of what I have said," was the reply. "He is my witness."
"Oh, brother!" cried old Martin, clasping his hands and lifting up his eyes. "Oh, brother, brother! Were we strangers half our lives that you might breed a wretch like this, and I make life a desert by withering every flower that grew about me! Is it the natural end of your precepts and mine, that this should be the creature of your rearing, training, teaching, h.o.a.rding, striving for; and I the means of bringing him to punishment, when nothing can repair the wasted past!"
He sat down upon a chair as he spoke, and turning away his face, was silent for a few moments. Then with recovered energy he proceeded:
"But the accursed harvest of our mistaken lives shall be trodden down.
It is not too late for that. You are confronted with this man, you monster there; not to be spared, but to be dealt with justly. Hear what he says! Reply, be silent, contradict, repeat, defy, do what you please.
My course will be the same. Go on! And you," he said to Chuffey, "for the love of your old friend, speak out, good fellow!"
"I have been silent for his love!" cried the old man. "He urged me to it. He made me promise it upon his dying bed. I never would have spoken, but for your finding out so much. I have thought about it ever since; I couldn"t help that; and sometimes I have had it all before me in a dream; but in the day-time, not in sleep. Is there such a kind of dream?" said Chuffey, looking anxiously in old Martin"s face.
As Martin made him an encouraging reply, he listened attentively to his voice, and smiled.
"Ah, aye!" he cried. "He often spoke to me like that. We were at school together, he and I. I couldn"t turn against his son, you know--his only son, Mr Chuzzlewit!"
"I would to Heaven you had been his son!" said Martin.
"You speak so like my dear old master," cried the old man with a childish delight, "that I almost think I hear him. I can hear you quite as well as I used to hear him. It makes me young again. He never spoke unkindly to me, and I always understood him. I could always see him too, though my sight was dim. Well, well! He"s dead, he"s dead. He was very good to me, my dear old master!"
He shook his head mournfully over the brother"s hand. At this moment Mark, who had been glancing out of the window, left the room.
"I couldn"t turn against his only son, you know," said Chuffey. "He has nearly driven me to do it sometimes; he very nearly did tonight. Ah!"
cried the old man, with a sudden recollection of the cause. "Where is she? She"s not come home!"
"Do you mean his wife?" said Mr Chuzzlewit.
"Yes."
"I have removed her. She is in my care, and will be spared the present knowledge of what is pa.s.sing here. She has known misery enough, without that addition."
Jonas heard this with a sinking heart. He knew that they were on his heels, and felt that they were resolute to run him to destruction. Inch by inch the ground beneath him was sliding from his feet; faster and faster the encircling ruin contracted and contracted towards himself, its wicked centre, until it should close in and crush him.
And now he heard the voice of his accomplice stating to his face, with every circ.u.mstance of time and place and incident; and openly proclaiming, with no reserve, suppression, pa.s.sion, or concealment; all the truth. The truth, which nothing would keep down; which blood would not smother, and earth would not hide; the truth, whose terrible inspiration seemed to change dotards into strong men; and on whose avenging wings, one whom he had supposed to be at the extremest corner of the earth came swooping down upon him.
He tried to deny it, but his tongue would not move. He conceived some desperate thought of rushing away, and tearing through the streets; but his limbs would as little answer to his will as his stark, stiff staring face. All this time the voice went slowly on, denouncing him. It was as if every drop of blood in the wood had found a voice to jeer him with.
When it ceased, another voice took up the tale, but strangely; for the old clerk, who had watched, and listened to the whole, and had wrung his hands from time to time, as if he knew its truth and could confirm it, broke in with these words:
"No, no, no! you"re wrong; you"re wrong--all wrong together! Have patience, for the truth is only known to me!"
"How can that be," said his old master"s brother, "after what you have heard? Besides, you said just now, above-stairs, when I told you of the accusation against him, that you knew he was his father"s murderer."
"Aye, yes! and so he was!" cried Chuffey, wildly. "But not as you suppose--not as you suppose. Stay! Give me a moment"s time. I have it all here--all here! It was foul, foul, cruel, bad; but not as you suppose. Stay, stay!"
He put his hands up to his head, as if it throbbed or pained him. After looking about him in a wandering and vacant manner for some moments, his eyes rested upon Jonas, when they kindled up with sudden recollection and intelligence.
"Yes!" cried old Chuffey, "yes! That"s how it was. It"s all upon me now.
He--he got up from his bed before he died, to be sure, to say that he forgave him; and he came down with me into this room; and when he saw him--his only son, the son he loved--his speech forsook him; he had no speech for what he knew--and no one understood him except me. But I did--I did!"
Old Martin regarded him in amazement; so did his companions. Mrs Gamp, who had said nothing yet; but had kept two-thirds of herself behind the door, ready for escape, and one-third in the room, ready for siding with the strongest party; came a little further in and remarked, with a sob, that Mr Chuffey was "the sweetest old creetur goin"."