<h2><SPAN name="chap04"></SPAN> CHAPTER IV</h2>
<p>Search for the missing boys had been made everywhere over Raynham, and Sir
Austin was in grievous discontent. None had seen them save Austin Wentworth and
Mr. Morton. The baronet sat construing their account of the flight of the lads
when they were hailed, and resolved it into an act of rebellion on the part of
his son. At dinner he drank the young heir’s health in ominous silence.
Adrian Harley stood up in his place to propose the health. His speech was a
fine piece of rhetoric. He warmed in it till, after the Ciceronic model,
inanimate objects were personified, and Richard’s table-napkin and vacant
chair were invoked to follow the steps of a peerless father, and uphold with
his dignity the honour of the Feverels. Austin Wentworth, whom a
soldier’s death compelled to take his father’s place in support of
the toast, was tame after such magniloquence. But the reply, the thanks which
young Richard should have delivered in person were not forthcoming.
Adrian’s oratory had given but a momentary life to napkin and chair. The
company of honoured friends, and aunts and uncles, remotest cousins, were glad
to disperse and seek amusement in music and tea. Sir Austin did his utmost to
be hospitably cheerful, and requested them to dance. If he had desired them to
laugh he would have been obeyed, and in as hearty a manner.</p>
<p>“How triste!” said Mrs. Doria Forey to Lobourne’s curate, as
that most enamoured automaton went through his paces beside her with
professional stiffness.</p>
<p>“One who does not suffer can hardly assent,” the curate answered,
basking in her beams.</p>
<p>“Ah, you are good!” exclaimed the lady. “Look at my Clare.
She will not dance on her cousin’s birthday with anyone but him. What are
we to do to enliven these people?”</p>
<p>“Alas, madam! you cannot do for all what you do for one,” the
curate sighed, and wherever she wandered in discourse, drew her back with
silken strings to gaze on his enamoured soul.</p>
<p>He was the only gratified stranger present. The others had designs on the young
heir. Lady Attenbury of Longford House had brought her highly-polished specimen
of market-ware, the Lady Juliana Jaye, for a first introduction to him,
thinking he had arrived at an age to estimate and pine for her black eyes and
pretty pert mouth. The Lady Juliana had to pair off with a dapper Papworth, and
her mama was subjected to the gallantries of Sir Miles, who talked land and
steam-engines to her till she was sick, and had to be impertinent in
self-defence. Lady Blandish, the delightful widow, sat apart with Adrian, and
enjoyed his sarcasms on the company. By ten at night the poor show ended, and
the rooms were dark, dark as the prognostics multitudinously hinted by the
disappointed and chilled guests concerning the probable future of the hope of
Raynham. Little Clare kissed her mama, curtsied to the lingering curate, and
went to bed like a very good girl. Immediately the maid had departed, little
Clare deliberately exchanged night attire for that of day. She was noted as an
obedient child. Her light was allowed to burn in her room for half-an-hour, to
counteract her fears of the dark. She took the light, and stole on tiptoe to
Richard’s room. No Richard was there. She peeped in further and further.
A trifling agitation of the curtains shot her back through the door and along
the passage to her own bedchamber with extreme expedition. She was not much
alarmed, but feeling guilty she was on her guard. In a short time she was
prowling about the passages again. Richard had slighted and offended the little
lady, and was to be asked whether he did not repent such conduct toward his
cousin; not to be asked whether he had forgotten to receive his birthday kiss
from her; for, if he did not choose to remember that, Miss Clare would never
remind him of it, and to-night should be his last chance of a reconciliation.
Thus she meditated, sitting on a stair, and presently heard Richard’s
voice below in the hall, shouting for supper.</p>
<p>“Master Richard has returned,” old Benson the butler tolled out
intelligence to Sir Austin.</p>
<p>“Well?” said the baronet.</p>
<p>“He complains of being hungry,” the butler hesitated, with a look
of solemn disgust.</p>
<p>“Let him eat.”</p>
<p>Heavy Benson hesitated still more as he announced that the boy had called for
wine. It was an unprecedented thing. Sir Austin’s brows were portending
an arch, but Adrian suggested that he wanted possibly to drink his birthday,
and claret was conceded.</p>
<p>The boys were in the vortex of a partridge-pie when Adrian strolled in to them.
They had now changed characters. Richard was uproarious. He drank a health with
every glass; his cheeks were flushed and his eyes brilliant. Ripton looked very
much like a rogue on the tremble of detection, but his honest hunger and the
partridge-pie shielded him awhile from Adrian’s scrutinizing glance.
Adrian saw there was matter for study, if it were only on Master Ripton’s
betraying nose, and sat down to hear and mark.</p>
<p>“Good sport, gentlemen, I trust to hear?” he began his quiet
banter, and provoked a loud peal of laughter from Richard.</p>
<p>“Ha, ha! I say, Rip: ‘Havin’ good sport, gentlemen, are
ye?’ You remember the farmer! Your health, parson! We haven’t had
our sport yet. We’re going to have some first-rate sport. Oh, well! we
haven’t much show of birds. We shot for pleasure, and returned them to
the proprietors. You’re fond of game, parson! Ripton is a dead shot in
what Cousin Austin calls the Kingdom of ‘would-have-done’ and
‘might-have-been.’ Up went the birds, and cries Rip,
‘I’ve forgotten to load!’ Oh, ho!—Rip! some more
claret.—Do just leave that nose of yours alone.—Your health, Ripton
Thompson! The birds hadn’t the decency to wait for him, and so, parson,
it’s their fault, and not Rip’s, you haven’t a dozen brace at
your feet. What have you been doing at home, Cousin Rady?”</p>
<p>“Playing Hamlet, in the absence of the Prince of Denmark. The day without
you, my dear boy, must be dull, you know.”</p>
<p class="poem">
“‘He speaks: can I trust what he says is sincere?<br/>
There’s an edge to his smile that cuts much like a sneer.’</p>
<p>“Sandoe’s poems! You know the couplet, Mr. Rady. Why
shouldn’t I quote Sandoe? You know you like him, Rady. But, if
you’ve missed me, I’m sorry. Rip and I have had a beautiful day.
We’ve made new acquaintances. We’ve seen the world. I’m the
monkey that has seen the world, and I’m going to tell you all about it.
First, there’s a gentleman who takes a rifle for a fowling-piece. Next,
there’s a farmer who warns everybody, gentleman and beggar, off his
premises. Next, there’s a tinker and a ploughman, who think that God is
always fighting with the devil which shall command the kingdoms of the earth.
The tinker’s for God, and the ploughman”—</p>
<p>“I’ll drink your health, Ricky,” said Adrian, interrupting.</p>
<p>“Oh, I forgot, parson;—I mean no harm, Adrian. I’m only
telling what I’ve heard.”</p>
<p>“No harm, my dear boy,” returned Adrian. “I’m perfectly
aware that Zoroaster is not dead. You have been listening to a common creed.
Drink the Fire-worshippers, if you will.”</p>
<p>“Here’s to Zoroaster, then!” cried Richard. “I say,
Rippy! we’ll drink the Fire-worshippers to-night won’t we?”</p>
<p>A fearful conspiratorial frown, that would not have disgraced Guido Fawkes, was
darted back from the plastic features of Master Ripton.</p>
<p>Richard gave his lungs loud play.</p>
<p>“Why, what did you say about Blaizes, Rippy? Didn’t you say it was
fun?”</p>
<p>Another hideous and silencing frown was Ripton’s answer. Adrian matched
the innocent youths, and knew that there was talking under the table.
“See,” thought he, “this boy has tasted his first scraggy
morsel of life today, and already he talks like an old stager, and has, if I
mistake not, been acting too. My respected chief,” he apostrophized Sir
Austin, “combustibles are only the more dangerous for compression. This
boy will be ravenous for Earth when he is let loose, and very soon make his
share of it look as foolish as yonder game-pie!”—a prophecy Adrian
kept to himself.</p>
<p>Uncle Algernon shambled in to see his nephew before the supper was finished,
and his more genial presence brought out a little of the plot.</p>
<p>“Look here, uncle!” said Richard. “Would you let a churlish
old brute of a farmer strike you without making him suffer for it?”</p>
<p>“I fancy I should return the compliment, my lad,” replied his
uncle.</p>
<p>“Of course you would! So would I. And he shall suffer for it.” The
boy looked savage, and his uncle patted him down.</p>
<p>“I’ve boxed his son; I’ll box him,” said Richard,
shouting for more wine.</p>
<p>“What, boy! Is it old Blaize has been putting you up!”</p>
<p>“Never mind, uncle!” The boy nodded mysteriously.</p>
<p>‘Look there!’ Adrian read on Ripton’s face, he says
‘never mind,’ and lets it out!</p>
<p>“Did we beat to-day, uncle?”</p>
<p>“Yes, boy; and we’d beat them any day they bowl fair. I’d
beat them on one leg. There’s only Watkins and Featherdene among them
worth a farthing.”</p>
<p>“We beat!” cries Richard. “Then we’ll have some more
wine, and drink their healths.”</p>
<p>The bell was rung; wine ordered. Presently comes in heavy Benson, to say
supplies are cut off. One bottle, and no more. The Captain whistled: Adrian
shrugged.</p>
<p>The bottle, however, was procured by Adrian subsequently. He liked studying
intoxicated urchins.</p>
<p>One subject was at Richard’s heart, about which he was reserved in the
midst of his riot. Too proud to inquire how his father had taken his absence,
he burned to hear whether he was in disgrace. He led to it repeatedly, and it
was constantly evaded by Algernon and Adrian. At last, when the boy declared a
desire to wish his father good-night, Adrian had to tell him that he was to go
straight to bed from the supper-table. Young Richard’s face fell at that,
and his gaiety forsook him. He marched to his room without another word.</p>
<p>Adrian gave Sir Austin an able version of his son’s behaviour and
adventures; dwelling upon this sudden taciturnity when he heard of his
father’s resolution not to see him. The wise youth saw that his chief was
mollified behind his moveless mask, and went to bed, and Horace, leaving Sir
Austin in his study. Long hours the baronet sat alone. The house had not its
usual influx of Feverels that day. Austin Wentworth was staying at Poer Hall,
and had only come over for an hour. At midnight the house breathed sleep. Sir
Austin put on his cloak and cap, and took the lamp to make his rounds. He
apprehended nothing special, but with a mind never at rest he constituted
himself the sentinel of Raynham. He passed the chamber where the Great-Aunt
Grantley lay, who was to swell Richard’s fortune, and so perform her
chief business on earth. By her door he murmured, “Good creature! you
sleep with a sense of duty done,” and paced on, reflecting, “She
has not made money a demon of discord,” and blessed her. He had his
thoughts at Hippias’s somnolent door, and to them the world might have
subscribed.</p>
<p>A monomaniac at large, watching over sane people in slumber! thinks Adrian
Harley, as he hears Sir Austin’s footfall, and truly that was a strange
object to see.—Where is the fortress that has not one weak gate? where
the man who is sound at each particular angle? Ay, meditates the recumbent
cynic, more or less mad is not every mother’s son? Favourable
circumstances—good air, good company, two or three good rules rigidly
adhered to—keep the world out of Bedlam. But, let the world fly into a
passion, and is not Bedlam the safest abode for it?</p>
<p>Sir Austin ascended the stairs, and bent his steps leisurely toward the chamber
where his son was lying in the left wing of the Abbey. At the end of the
gallery which led to it he discovered a dim light. Doubting it an illusion, Sir
Austin accelerated his pace. This wing had aforetime a bad character.
Notwithstanding what years had done to polish it into fair repute, the Raynham
kitchen stuck to tradition, and preserved certain stories of ghosts seen there,
that effectually blackened it in the susceptible minds of new house-maids and
under-crooks, whose fears would not allow the sinner to wash his sins. Sir
Austin had heard of the tales circulated by his domestics underground. He
cherished his own belief, but discouraged theirs, and it was treason at Raynham
to be caught traducing the left wing. As the baronet advanced, the fact of a
light burning was clear to him. A slight descent brought him into the passage,
and he beheld a poor human candle standing outside his son’s chamber. At
the same moment a door closed hastily. He entered Richard’s room. The boy
was absent. The bed was unpressed: no clothes about: nothing to show that he
had been there that night. Sir Austin felt vaguely apprehensive. Has he gone to
my room to await me? thought the father’s heart. Something like a tear
quivered in his arid eyes as he meditated and hoped this might be so. His own
sleeping-room faced that of his son. He strode to it with a quick heart. It was
empty. Alarm dislodged anger from his jealous heart, and dread of evil put a
thousand questions to him that were answered in air. After pacing up and down
his room he determined to go and ask the boy Thompson, as he called Ripton,
what was known to him.</p>
<p>The chamber assigned to Master Ripton Thompson was at the northern extremity of
the passage, and overlooked Lobourne and the valley to the West. The bed stood
between the window and the door. Six Austin found the door ajar, and the
interior dark. To his surprise, the boy Thompson’s couch, as revealed by
the rays of his lamp, was likewise vacant. He was turning back when he fancied
he heard the sibilation of a whispering in the room. Sir Austin cloaked the
lamp and trod silently toward the window. The heads of his son Richard and the
boy Thompson were seen crouched against the glass, holding excited converse
together. Sir Austin listened, but he listened to a language of which he
possessed not the key. Their talk was of fire, and of delay: of expected
agrarian astonishment: of a farmer’s huge wrath: of violence exercised
upon gentlemen, and of vengeance: talk that the boys jerked out by fits, and
that came as broken links of a chain impossible to connect. But they awake
curiosity. The baronet condescended to play the spy upon his son.</p>
<p>Over Lobourne and the valley lay black night and innumerable stars.</p>
<p>“How jolly I feel!” exclaimed Ripton, inspired by claret; and then,
after a luxurious pause—“I think that fellow has pocketed his
guinea, and cut his lucky.”</p>
<p>Richard allowed a long minute to pass, during which the baronet waited
anxiously for his voice, hardly recognizing it when he heard its altered tones.</p>
<p>“If he has, I’ll go; and I’ll do it myself.”</p>
<p>“You would?” returned Master Ripton. “Well, I’m
hanged!—I say, if you went to school, wouldn’t you get into rows!
Perhaps he hasn’t found the place where the box was stuck in. I think he
funks it. I almost wish you hadn’t done it, upon my honour—eh? Look
there! what was that? That looked like something.—I say! do you think we
shall ever be found out?”</p>
<p>Master Ripton intoned this abrupt interrogation verb seriously.</p>
<p>“I don’t think about it,” said Richard, all his faculties
bent on signs from Lobourne.</p>
<p>“Well, but,” Ripton persisted, “suppose we are found
out?”</p>
<p>“If we are, I must pay for it.”</p>
<p>Sir Austin breathed the better for this reply. He was beginning to gather a
clue to the dialogue. His son was engaged in a plot, and was, moreover, the
leader of the plot. He listened for further enlightenment.</p>
<p>“What was the fellow’s name?” inquired Ripton.</p>
<p>His companion answered, “Tom Bakewell.”</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you what,” continued Ripton. “You let it all
clean out to your cousin and uncle at supper.—How capital claret is with
partridge-pie! What a lot I ate!—Didn’t you see me frown?”</p>
<p>The young sensualist was in an ecstasy of gratitude to his late refection, and
the slightest word recalled him to it. Richard answered him:</p>
<p>“Yes; and felt your kick. It doesn’t matter. Rady’s safe, and
uncle never blabs.”</p>
<p>“Well, my plan is to keep it close. You’re never safe if you
don’t.—I never drank much claret before,” Ripton was off
again. “Won’t I now, though! claret’s my wine. You know, it
may come out any day, and then we’re done for,” he rather
incongruously appended.</p>
<p>Richard only took up the business-thread of his friend’s rambling
chatter, and answered:</p>
<p>“You’ve got nothing to do with it, if we are.”</p>
<p>“Haven’t I, though! I didn’t stick-in the box but I’m
an accomplice, that’s clear. Besides,” added Ripton, “do you
think I should leave you to bear it all on your shoulders? I ain’t that
sort of chap, Ricky, I can tell you.”</p>
<p>Sir Austin thought more highly of the boy Thompson. Still it looked a
detestable conspiracy, and the altered manner of his son impressed him
strangely. He was not the boy of yesterday. To Sir Austin it seemed as if a
gulf had suddenly opened between them. The boy had embarked, and was on the
waters of life in his own vessel. It was as vain to call him back as to attempt
to erase what Time has written with the Judgment Blood! This child, for whom he
had prayed nightly in such a fervour and humbleness to God, the dangers were
about him, the temptations thick on him, and the devil on board piloting. If a
day had done so much, what would years do? Were prayers and all the
watchfulness he had expended of no avail?</p>
<p>A sensation of infinite melancholy overcame the poor gentleman—a thought
that he was fighting with a fate in this beloved boy.</p>
<p>He was half disposed to arrest the two conspirators on the spot, and make them
confess, and absolve themselves; but it seemed to him better to keep an unseen
eye over his son: Sir Austin’s old system prevailed.</p>
<p>Adrian characterized this system well, in saying that Sir Austin wished to be
Providence to his son.</p>
<p>If immeasurable love were perfect wisdom, one human being might almost
impersonate Providence to another. Alas! love, divine as it is, can do no more
than lighten the house it inhabits—must take its shape, sometimes
intensify its narrowness—can spiritualize, but not expel, the old
lifelong lodgers above-stairs and below.</p>
<p>Sir Austin decided to continue quiescent.</p>
<p>The valley still lay black beneath the large autumnal stars, and the
exclamations of the boys were becoming fevered and impatient. By-and-by one
insisted that he had seen a twinkle. The direction he gave was out of their
anticipations. Again the twinkle was announced. Both boys started to their
feet. It was a twinkle in the right direction now.</p>
<p>“He’s done it!” cried Richard, in great heat. “Now you
may say old Blaize’ll soon be old Blazes, Rip. I hope he’s
asleep.”</p>
<p>“I’m sure he’s snoring!—Look there! He’s alight
fast enough. He’s dry. He’ll burn.—I say,” Ripton
re-assumed the serious intonation, “do you think they’ll ever
suspect us?”</p>
<p>“What if they do? We must brunt it.”</p>
<p>“Of course we will. But, I say! I wish you hadn’t given them the
scent, though. I like to look innocent. I can’t when I know people
suspect me. Lord! look there! Isn’t it just beginning to flare up!”</p>
<p>The farmer’s grounds were indeed gradually standing out in sombre
shadows.</p>
<p>“I’ll fetch my telescope,” said Richard. Ripton, somehow not
liking to be left alone, caught hold of him.</p>
<p>“No; don’t go and lose the best of it. Here, I’ll throw open
the window, and we can see.”</p>
<p>The window was flung open, and the boys instantly stretched half their bodies
out of it; Ripton appearing to devour the rising flames with his mouth: Richard
with his eyes.</p>
<p>Opaque and statuesque stood the figure of the baronet behind them. The wind was
low. Dense masses of smoke hung amid the darting snakes of fire, and a red
malign light was on the neighbouring leafage. No figures could be seen.
Apparently the flames had nothing to contend against, for they were making
terrible strides into the darkness.</p>
<p>“Oh!” shouted Richard, overcome by excitement, “if I had my
telescope! We must have it! Let me go and fetch it! I Will!”</p>
<p>The boys struggled together, and Sir Austin stepped back. As he did so, a cry
was heard in the passage. He hurried out, closed the chamber, and came upon
little Clare lying senseless along the door.</p>
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