"Brother George is the Prior."
"Well, please tell the Prior that I should like to speak to him instantly."
When Mark found Brother George he had already doffed his habit, and was dressed in his farmer"s clothes to go working on the land.
"I"ll speak to Mr. Hett before s.e.xt. Meanwhile, you can a.s.sure him that the key of the Tabernacle is perfectly safe. I wear it round my neck."
Brother George pulled open his shirt, and showed Mark the golden key hanging from a cord.
On receiving the Prior"s message, the chaplain asked for a railway time-table.
"I see there is a fast train at 10.30. Please order the trap."
"You"re not going to leave us?" Mark exclaimed.
"Do you suppose, Brother Mark, that no bishop in the Establishment will receive me in his diocese because I am accustomed to give way? I should not have asked for the key of the Tabernacle unless I thought that it was my duty to ask for it. I cannot take it from the Reverend Brother"s neck. I will not stay here without its being given up to me. Please order the trap in time to catch the 10.30 train."
"Surely you will see the Reverend Brother first," Mark urged. "I should have made it clear to you that he is out in the fields, and that all the work of the farm falls upon his shoulders. It cannot make any difference whether you have the key now or before s.e.xt. And I"m sure the Reverend Brother will see your point of view when you put it to him."
"I am not going to argue about the custody of G.o.d," said the chaplain.
"I should consider such an argument blasphemy, and I consider the Prior"s action in refusing to give up the key sacrilege. Please order the trap."
"But if you sent a telegram to the Reverend Father . . . Brother Dominic will know where he is . . . I"m sure that the Reverend Father will put it right with Brother George, and that he will at once give you the key."
"I was summoned here as a priest," said the chaplain. "If the amateur monk left in charge of this monastery does not understand the prerogatives of my priesthood, I am not concerned to teach him except directly."
"Well, will you wait until I"ve found the Reverend Brother and told him that you intend to leave us unless he gives you the key?" Mark begged, in despair at the prospect of what the chaplain"s departure would mean to a Community already too much divided against itself.
"It is not one of my prerogatives to threaten the prior of a monastery, even if he is an amateur," said the chaplain. "From the moment that Brother George refuses to recognize my position, I cease to hold that position. Please order the trap."
"You won"t have to leave till half-past nine," said Mark, who had made up his mind to wrestle with Brother George on his own initiative, and if possible to persuade him to surrender the key to the chaplain of his own accord. With this object he hurried out, to find Brother George ploughing that stony ground by the fir-trees. He was looking ruefully at a broken share when Mark approached him.
"Two since I started," he commented.
But he was breaking more precious things than shares, thought Mark, if he could but understand.
"Let the fellow go," said Brother George coldly, when Mark had related his interview with the chaplain.
"But, Reverend Brother, if he goes we shall have no priest for Easter."
"We shall be better off with no priest than with a fellow like that."
"Reverend Brother," said Mark miserably, "I have no right to remonstrate with you, I know. But I must say something. You are making a mistake.
You will break up the Community. I am not speaking on my own account now, because I have already made up my mind to leave, and get ordained.
But the others! They"re not all strong like you. They really are not. If they feel that they have been deprived of their Easter Communion by you . . . and have you the right to deprive them? After all, Father Hett has reason on his side. He is ent.i.tled to keep the key of the Tabernacle. If he wishes to hold Benediction, you can forbid him, or at least you can forbid the brethren to attend. But the key of the Tabernacle belongs to him, if he says Ma.s.s there. Please forgive me for speaking like this, but I love you and respect you, and I cannot bear to see you put yourself in the wrong."
The Prior patted Mark on the shoulder.
"Cheer up, Brother," he said. "You mustn"t mind if I think that I know better than you what is good for the Community. I have had a longer time to learn, you must remember. And so you"re going to leave us?"
"Yes, but I don"t want to talk about that now," Mark said.
"Nor do I," said Brother George. "I want to get on with my ploughing."
Mark saw that it was as useless to argue with him as attempt to persuade the chaplain to stay. He turned sadly away, and walked back with heavy steps towards the Abbey. Overhead, the larks, rising and falling upon their fountains of song, seemed to mock the way men worshipped Almighty G.o.d.
CHAPTER XXIX
SUBTRACTION
Mark had not spent a more unhappy Easter since the days of Haverton House. He was oppressed by the sense of excommunication that brooded over the Abbey, and on the Sat.u.r.day of Pa.s.sion Week the versicles and responses of the proper Compline had a dreadful irony.
_V. O King most Blessed, govern Thy servants in the right way._ _R. Among Thy Saints, O King most Blessed._ _V. By holy fasts to amend our sinful lives._ _R. O King most Blessed, govern Thy Saints in the right way._ _V. To duly keep Thy Paschal Feast._ _R. Among Thy Saints, O King most Blessed._
"Brother Mark," said Brother Augustine, on the morning of Palm Sunday, "_did_ you notice that ghastly split infinitive in the last versicle at Compline? _To duly keep._ I can"t think why we don"t say the Office in Latin."
Mark felt inclined to tell Brother Augustine that if nothing more vital than an infinitive was split during this holy season, the Community might have cause to congratulate itself. Here now was Brother Birinus throwing away as useless the bundle of palms that lacked the blessing of a priest, throwing them away like dead flowers.
Sir Charles Horner, who had been in town, arrived at the Abbey on the Tuesday, and announced that he was going to spend Holy Week with the Community.
"We have no chaplain," Mark told him.
"No chaplain!" Sir Charles exclaimed. "But I understood that Andrew Hett had undertaken the job while Father Burrowes was away."
Mark did not think that it was his duty to enlighten Sir Charles upon the dispute between Brother George and the chaplain. However, it was not long before he found out what had occurred from the Prior"s own lips and came fuming back to the Guest-chamber.
"I consider the whole state of affairs most unsatisfactory," he said. "I really thought that when Brother George took charge here the Abbey would be better managed."
"Please, Sir Charles," Mark begged, "you make it very uncomfortable for me when you talk like that about the Reverend Brother before me."
"Yes, but I must give my opinion. I have a right to criticize when I am the person who is responsible for the Abbey"s existence here. It"s all very fine for Brother George to ask me to notify Bazely at Wivelrod that the brethren wish to go to their Easter duties in his church. Bazely is a very timid man. I"ve already driven him into doing more than he really likes, and my presence in his church doesn"t alarm the parishioners. In fact, they rather like it. But they won"t like to see the church full of monks on Easter morning. They"ll be more suspicious than ever of what they call poor Bazely"s innovations. It"s not fair to administer such a shock to a remote country parish like Wivelrod, especially when they"re just beginning to get used to the vestments I gave them. It seems to me that you"ve deliberately driven Andrew Hett away from the Abbey, and I don"t see why poor Bazely should be made to suffer. How many monks are you now? Fifteen? Why, fifteen bulls in Wivelrod church would create less dismay!"
Sir Charles"s protest on behalf of the Vicar of Wivelrod was effective, for the Prior announced that after all he had decided that it was the duty of the Community to observe Easter within the Abbey gates. The Reverend Father would return on Easter Tuesday, and their Easter duties would be accomplished within the Octave. Withal, it was a gloomy Easter for the brethren, and when they began the first Vespers with the quadruple Alleluia, it seemed as if they were still chanting the sorrowful antiphons of Good Friday.
_My spirit is vexed within Me: and My heart within Me is desolate._
_Is it nothing to you, all ye that pa.s.s by: behold and see if there be any sorrow like unto My sorrow, which is done unto Me._
_What are these wounds in Thy Hands: Those with which I was wounded in the house of My friends._
Nor was there rejoicing in the Community when at Lauds of Easter Day they chanted:
_V. In Thy Resurrection, O Christ._ _R. Let Heaven and earth rejoice, Alleluia._
Nor when at Prime and Terce and s.e.xt and None they chanted: