"Nonsense, my dear Brother George," said the Reverend Father. "He won"t know anything about it officially, and in any case ours is a private oratory, where refusals to licence and episcopal inhibitions have no effect."
"That"s not my point," argued Brother George. "My point is that any communication with a notorious ecclesiastical outlaw like this fellow Hett is liable to react unfavourably upon us. Why can"t we get down somebody else? There must be a number of unemployed elderly priests who would be glad of the holiday."
"I"m afraid that I"ve offered Hett the job now, so let us make up our minds to be content."
Mark, who was doing secretarial work for the Reverend Father, happened to be present during this conversation, which distressed him, because it showed him that the Prior was still at variance with the Abbot, a state of affairs that was ultimately bound to be disastrous for the Community.
He withdrew almost immediately on some excuse to the Superior"s inner room, whence he intended to go downstairs to the Porter"s Lodge until the Prior was gone. Unfortunately, the door of the inner room was locked, and before he could explain what had happened, a conversation had begun which he could not help overhearing, but which he dreaded to interrupt.
"I"m afraid, dear Brother George," the Reverend Father was saying, "I"m very much afraid that you are beginning to think I have outlived my usefulness as Superior of the Order."
"I"ve never suggested that," Brother George replied angrily.
"You may not have meant to give that impression, but certainly that is what you have succeeded in making me feel personally," said the Superior.
"I have been a.s.sociated with you long enough to be ent.i.tled to express my opinion in private."
"In private, yes. But are you always careful only to do so in private?
I"m not complaining. My only desire is the prosperity and health of the Order. Next Christmas I am ready to resign, and let the brethren elect another Superior-general."
"That"s talking nonsense," said the Prior. "You know as well as I do that n.o.body else except you could possibly be Superior. But recently I happen to have had a better opportunity than you to criticize our Mother House, and frankly I"m not satisfied with the men we have. Few of them will be any use to us. Birinus, Anselm, Giles, Chad, Athanasius if properly suppressed, Mark, these in varying degrees, have something in them, but look at the others! Dominic, ambitious and sly, Jerome, a pompous prig, Dunstan, a nincomp.o.o.p, Raymond, a milliner, Nicholas, a--well, you know what I think Nicholas is, Augustine, another nincomp.o.o.p, Lawrence, still at Sunday School, and poor Simon, a clown.
I"ve had a dozen probationers through my hands, and not one of them was as good as what we"ve got. I"m afraid I"m less hopeful of the future than I was in Canada."
"I notice, dear Brother George," said the Father Superior, "that you are prejudiced in favour of the brethren who follow your lead with a certain amount of enthusiasm. That is very natural. But I"m not so pessimistic about the others as you are. Perhaps you feel that I am forgetting how much the Order owes to your generosity in the past. Believe me, I have forgotten nothing. At the same time, you gave your money with your eyes open. You took your vows without being pressed. Don"t you think you owe it to yourself, if not to the Order or to me personally, to go through with what you undertook? Your three vows were Chast.i.ty, Poverty, and Obedience."
There was no answer from the Prior; a moment later he shut the door behind him, and went downstairs alone. Mark came into the room at once.
"Reverend Father," he said. "I"m sorry to have to tell you that I overheard what you and the Reverend Brother were saying." He went on to explain how this had happened, and why he had not liked to make his presence known.
"You thought the Reverend Brother would not bear the mortification with as much fort.i.tude as myself?" the Father Superior suggested with a faint smile.
It struck Mark how true this was, and he looked in astonishment at Father Burrowes, who had offered him the key to his action.
"Well, we must forget what we heard, my son," said the Father Superior.
"Sit down, and let"s finish off these letters."
An hour"s work was done, at the end of which the Reverend Father asked Mark if his had been the blank paper when the votes were counted in Chapter, and when Mark admitted that it had been, he pressed him for the reason of his neutrality.
"I"m not sure that it oughtn"t to be called indecision," said Mark. "I was personally interested in the keeping on of Aldershot, because I had worked there."
"Then why not have voted for doing so?" the Superior asked, in accents that were devoid of the least grudge against Mark for disagreeing with himself.
"I tried to get rid of my personal opinion," Mark explained. "I tried to look at the question strictly from the standpoint of the member of a community. As such I felt that the Reverend Brother was wrong to run counter to his Superior. At the same time, if you"ll forgive me for saying so, I felt that you were wrong to give up Aldershot. I simply could not arrive at a decision between the two opinions."
"I do not blame you, my son, for your scrupulous cast of mind. Only beware of letting it chill your enthusiasm. Satan may avail himself of it one day, and attack your faith. Solomon was just. Our Blessed Lord, by our cowardly standards, was unjust. Remembering the Gadarene swine, the barren fig-tree, the parable of the wedding-guest without a garment, Martha and Mary. . . ."
"Martha and Mary!" interrupted Mark. "Why, that was really the point at issue. And the ointment that might have been sold for the benefit of the poor. Yes, Judas would have voted with the Reverend Brother."
"And Pontius Pilate would have remained neutral," added Father Burrowes, his blue eyes glittering with delight at the effect upon Mark of his words.
But when Mark was walking back to the Abbey down the winding drive among the hazels, he wished that he and not the Reverend Father had used that ill.u.s.tration. However, useless regrets for his indecision in the matter of the priory at Aldershot were soon obliterated by a new cause of division, which was the arrival of the Reverend Andrew Hett on the Vigil of the Annunciation, just in time to sing first Vespers.
It fell to Mark"s lot to entertain the new chaplain that evening, because Brother Jerome who had become guest-master when Brother Anselm took his place as cellarer was in the infirmary. Mark was scarcely prepared for the kind of personality that Hett"s proved to be. He had grown accustomed during his time at the Abbey to look down upon the protagonists of ecclesiastical battles, so little else did any of the guests who visited them want to discuss, so much awe was lavished upon them by Brother Raymond and Brother Augustine. It did not strike Mark that the fight at St. Agnes" might appear to the large majority of people as much a foolish squabble over trifles, a cherishing of the letter rather than the spirit of Christian worship, as the dispute between Mr. So-and-so and the Bishop of Somewhere-or-other in regard to his use of the Litany of the Saints in solemn procession on high days and holy days.
Andrew Hett revived in Mark his admiration of the bigot, which would have been a dangerous thing to lose in one"s early twenties. The chaplain was a young man of perhaps thirty-five, tall, raw-boned, sandy-haired, with a complexion of extreme pallor. His light-blue eyes were very red round the rims, and what eyebrows he possessed slanted up at a diabolic angle. His voice was harsh, high, and rasping as a guinea fowl"s. When Mark brought him his supper, Hett asked him several questions about the Abbey time-table, and then said abruptly:
"The ugliness of this place must be soul-destroying."
Mark looked at the Guest-chamber with new eyes. There was such a force of a.s.sertion in Hett"s tone that he could not contradict him, and indeed it certainly was ugly.
"n.o.body can live with matchboarded walls and ceilings and not suffer for it," Hett went on. "Why didn"t you buy an old t.i.the barn and live in that? It"s an insult to Almighty G.o.d to worship Him in such surroundings."
"This is only a beginning," Mark pointed out.
"A very bad beginning," Hett growled. "Such brutalizing ugliness would be inexcusable if you were leading an active life. But I gather that you claim to be contemplative here. I"ve been reading your ridiculous monthly paper _The Dragon_. Full of sentimental bosh about bringing back the glories of monasticism to England. Tintern was not built of tin. How can you contemplate Almighty G.o.d here? It"s not possible. What Divine purpose is served by collecting men under hundreds of square feet of corrugated iron? I"m astonished at Charles Horner. I thought he knew better than to encourage this kind of abomination."
There was only one answer to make to Hett, which was that the religious life of the Community did not depend upon any externals, least of all upon its lodging; but when Mark tried to frame this answer, his lips would not utter the words. In that moment he knew that it was time for him to leave Malford and prepare himself to be a priest elsewhere, and otherwise than by what the Rector had stigmatized as the pseudo-monastic life.
Mark wondered when he had left the chaplain to his ferocious meditations what would have been the effect of that diatribe upon some of his brethren. He smiled to himself, as he sat over his solitary supper in the Refectory, to picture the various expressions he could imagine upon their faces when they came hotfoot from the Guest-chamber with the news of what manner of priest was in their midst. And while he was sipping his bowl of pea-soup, he looked up at the image of St.
George and perceived that the dragon"s expression bore a distinct resemblance to that of the Reverend Andrew Hett. That night it seemed to Mark, in one of those waking trances that occur like dreams between one disturbed sleep and another, that the presence of the chaplain was shaking the flimsy foundations of the Abbey with such ruthlessness that the whole structure must soon collapse.
"It"s only the wind," he murmured, with that half of his mind which was awake. "March is going out like a dragon."
After Ma.s.s next day, when Mark was giving the chaplain his breakfast, the latter asked who kept the key of the tabernacle.
"Brother Birinus, I expect. He is the sacristan."
"It ought to have been given to me before Ma.s.s. Please go and ask for it," requested the chaplain.
Mark found Brother Birinus in the Sacristy, putting away the white vestments in the press. When Mark gave him the chaplain"s message, Brother Birinus told him that the Reverend Brother had the key.
"What does he want the key for?" asked Brother George when Mark had repeated to him the chaplain"s request.
"He probably wishes to change the Host," Mark suggested.
"There is no need to do that. And I don"t believe that is the reason. I believe he wants to have Benediction. He"s not going to have Benediction here."
Mark felt that it was not his place to argue with the Reverend Brother, and he merely asked him what reply he was to give to the chaplain.
"Tell him that the key of the Tabernacle is kept by me while the Reverend Father is away, and that I regret I cannot give it to him."
The priest"s eyes blazed with anger when Mark returned without the key.
"Who is the Reverend Brother?" he rasped.
"Brother George."
"Yes, but what is he? Apothecary, tailor, ploughboy, what?"