"That"s as it happens. I"m lucky in seeing you early. He don"t mean to hurt her; he won"t be beaten. All she asks is ten minutes with him. If he would!--he won"t. She didn"t mean to do him offence t" other night in that place--you"ve heard. Kit Ines told me he was on duty there--going.
She couldn"t help speaking when she had eyes on her husband. She kisses the ground of his footsoles, you may say, let him be ever so unkind. She and I were crossing to the corner of Roper Street a rainy night, on way to Mile End, away down to one of your father"s families, Mother Davis and her sick daughter and the little ones, and close under the public-house Goat and Beard we were seized on and hustled into a covered carriage that was there, and they drove sharp. She "s not one to scream.
We weren"t frightened. We both made the same guess. They drove us to the house she "s locked in, and me, too, up till three o"clock this morning."
"You"ve seen n.o.body, Madge?"
"He "s fixed she "s to leave London, Mr. Woodseer. I"ve seen Kit Ines.
And she "s to have one of the big houses to her use. I guessed Kit Ines was his broom. He defends it because he has his money to make--and be a dirty broom for a fortune! But any woman"s sure of decent handling with Kit Ines--not to speak of lady. He and a mate guard the house. An old woman cooks."
"He guards the house, and he gave you a pa.s.s?"
"Not he. His pride"s his obedience to his "paytron"--he calls his master, and won"t hear that name abused. We are on the first floor; all the lower doors are locked day and night. New Street, not much neighbours; she wouldn"t cry out of the window. She "s to be let free if she"ll leave London."
"You jumped it!"
"If I"d broke a leg, Mr. Kit Ines would have had to go to his drams. It wasn"t very high; and a flower-bed underneath. My mistress wanted to be the one. She has to be careful. She taught me how to jump down not to hurt. She makes you feel you can do anything. I had a bother to get her to let me and be quiet herself. She"s not one to put it upon others, you"ll learn. When I was down I felt like a stick in the ground and sat till I had my feet, she at the window waiting; and I started for you.
She kissed her hand. I was to come to you, and then your father, you nowhere seen. I wasn"t spoken to. I know empty London."
"Kit Ines was left sleeping in the house?"
"Snoring, I dare say: He don"t drink on duty."
"He must be kept on duty."
"Drink or that kind of duty, it"s a poor choice."
"You"ll take him in charge, Madge."
"I"ve got a mistress to look after."
"You"ve warmed to her."
"That"s not new; Mr. Woodseer. I do trust you, and you his friend. But you are the minister"s son, and any man not a great n.o.bleman must have some heart for her. You"ll learn. He kills her so because she"s fond of him--loves him, however he strikes. No, not like a dog, as men say of us. She"d die for him this night, need were. Live with her, you won"t find many men match her for brave; and she"s good. My Sally calls her a Bible saint. I could tell you stories of her goodness, short the time though she"s been down our way. And better there for her than at that inn he left her at to pine and watch the Royal Sovereign come swing come smirk in sailor blue and star to meet the rain--would make anybody disrespect Royalty or else go mad! He"s a great n.o.bleman, he can"t buy what she"s ready to give; and if he thinks he breaks her will now, it"s because she thinks she"s obeying a higher than him, or no lord alive and Kit Ines to back him "d hold her. Women want a priest to speak to men certain times. I wish I dared; we have to bite our tongues. He"s master now, but, as I believe G.o.d"s above, if he plays her false, he"s the one to be brought to shame. I talk."
"Talk on, Madge," said Gower, to whom the girl"s short-syllabled run of the lips was a mountain rill compared with London park waters.
"You won"t let him hurry her off where she"ll eat her heart for never seeing him again? She prays to be near him, if she"s not to see him."
"She speaks in that way?"
"I get it by bits. I"m with her so, it"s as good as if I was inside her.
She can"t obey when it goes the wrong way of her heart to him."
"Love and wisdom won"t pull together, and they part company for good at the church door," said Gower. "This matrimony"s a bad business."
Madge hummed a moan of a.s.sent. "And my poor Sally "ll have to marry. I can"t leave my mistress while she wants me, and Sally can"t be alone.
It seems we take a step and harm"s done, though it"s the right step we take."
"It seems to me you"ve engaged yourself to follow Sally"s lead, Madge."
"Girls" minds turn corners, Mr. Woodseer."
He pa.s.sed the remark. What it was that girls" minds occasionally or habitually did, or whether they had minds to turn, or whether they took their whims for minds, were untroubled questions with a young man studying abstract and adoring surface nature too exclusively to be aware of the manifestation of her spirit in the flesh, as it is not revealed so much by men. However, she had a voice and a face that led him to be thoughtful over her devotedness to her mistress, after nearly losing her character for the prize-fighter, and he had to thank her for invigorating him. His disposition was to muse and fall slack, helpless to a friend. Here walked a creature exactly the contrary. He listened to the steps of the dissimilar pair on the detonating pavement, and eyed a church clock shining to the sun.
She was sure of the direction: "Out Camden way, where the murder was."
They walked at a brisk pace, conversing or not.
"Tired? You must be," he said.
"Not when I"m hot to do a thing."
"There"s the word of the thoroughbred!"
"You don"t tire, sir," said she. "Sally and I see you stalking out for the open country in the still of the morning. She thinks you look pale for want of food, and ought to have some one put a biscuit into your pocket overnight."
"Who"d have guessed I was under motherly observation!"
"You shouldn"t go so long empty, if you listen to trainers."
"Capital doctors, no doubt. But I get a fine appet.i.te."
"You may grind the edge too sharp."
He was about to be astonished, and reflected that she had grounds for her sagacity. His next thought plunged him into contempt for Kit Ines, on account of the fellow"s lapses to sottishness. But there would be no contempt of Kit Ines in a tussle with him. Nor could one funk the tussle and play cur, if Kit"s engaged young woman were looking on. We get to our courage or the show of it by queer screws.
Contemplative over these matters, the philosopher transformed to man of action heard Madge say she read directions in London by churches, and presently exclaiming disdainfully, and yet relieved, "Spooner Villas,"
she turned down a row of small detached houses facing a brickfield, that had just contributed to the erection of them, and threatened the big city with further defacements.
Madge pointed to the marks of her jump, deep in flower-bed earth under an open window.
Gower measured the height with sensational shanks.
She smote at the door. Carinthia nodded from her window. Close upon that, Kit Ines came bounding to the parlour window; he spied and stared.
Gower was known to him as the earl"s paymaster; so he went to the pa.s.sage and flung the door open, blocking the way.
"Any commands, your honour?"
"You bring the countess to my lord immediately," said Gower.
Kit swallowed his mouthful of surprise in a second look at Madge and the ploughed garden-bed beneath the chamber window.
"Are the orders written, sir?"
"To me?--for me to deliver to you?--for you to do my lord"s bidding?
Where"s your head?"
Kit"s finger-nails travelled up to it. Madge pushed past him. She and her mistress, and Kit"s mate, and the old woman receiving the word for a cup of tea, were soon in the pa.s.sage. Kit"s mate had a ready obedience for his pay, nothing else,--no counsel at all, not a suggestion to a head knocked to a pudding by Madge"s jump and my lord"s paymaster here upon the scene.