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<h2> CHAPTER XII. THE STRANGE BEHAVIOUR OF Mr. NORTH. </h2>
<p>On or about the 8th of December, Mrs. Frere noticed a sudden and
unaccountable change in the manner of the chaplain. He came to her one
afternoon, and, after talking for some time, in a vague and unconnected
manner, about the miseries of the prison and the wretched condition of
some of the prisoners, began to question her abruptly concerning Rufus
Dawes.</p>
<p>"I do not wish to think of him," said she, with a shudder. "I have the
strangest, the most horrible dreams about him. He is a bad man. He tried
to murder me when a child, and had it not been for my husband, he would
have done so. I have only seen him once since then—at Hobart Town,
when he was taken." "He sometimes speaks to me of you," said North, eyeing
her. "He asked me once to give him a rose plucked in your garden."</p>
<p>Sylvia turned pale. "And you gave it him?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I gave it him. Why not?"</p>
<p>"It was valueless, of course, but still—to a convict?"</p>
<p>"You are not angry?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no! Why should I be angry?" she laughed constrainedly. "It was a
strange fancy for the man to have, that's all."</p>
<p>"I suppose you would not give me another rose, if I asked you."</p>
<p>"Why not?" said she, turning away uneasily. "You? You are a gentleman."</p>
<p>"Not I—you don't know me."</p>
<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
<p>"I mean that it would be better for you if you had never seen me."</p>
<p>"Mr. North!" Terrified at the wild gleam in his eyes, she had risen
hastily. "You are talking very strangely."</p>
<p>"Oh, don't be alarmed, madam. I am not drunk!"—he pronounced the
word with a fierce energy. "I had better leave you. Indeed, I think the
less we see of each other the better."</p>
<p>Deeply wounded and astonished at this extraordinary outburst, Sylvia
allowed him to stride away without a word. She saw him pass through the
garden and slam the little gate, but she did not see the agony on his
face, or the passionate gesture with which—when out of eyeshot—he
lamented the voluntary abasement of himself before her. She thought over
his conduct with growing fear. It was not possible that he was intoxicated—such
a vice was the last one of which she could have believed him guilty. It
was more probable that some effects of the fever, which had recently
confined him to his house, yet lingered. So she thought; and, thinking,
was alarmed to realize of how much importance the well-being of this man
was to her.</p>
<p>The next day he met her, and, bowing, passed swiftly. This pained her.
Could she have offended him by some unlucky word? She made Maurice ask him
to dinner, and, to her astonishment, he pleaded illness as an excuse for
not coming. Her pride was hurt, and she sent him back his books and music.
A curiosity that was unworthy of her compelled her to ask the servant who
carried the parcel what the clergyman had said. "He said nothing—only
laughed." Laughed! In scorn of her foolishness! His conduct was
ungentlemanly and intemperate. She would forget, as speedily as possible,
that such a being had ever existed. This resolution taken, she was
unusually patient with her husband.</p>
<p>So a week passed, and Mr. North did not return. Unluckily for the poor
wretch, the very self-sacrifice he had made brought about the precise
condition of things which he was desirous to avoid. It is possible that,
had the acquaintance between them continued on the same staid footing, it
would have followed the lot of most acquaintanceships of the kind—other
circumstances and other scenes might have wiped out the memory of all but
common civilities between them, and Sylvia might never have discovered
that she had for the chaplain any other feeling but that of esteem. But
the very fact of the sudden wrenching away of her soul-companion, showed
her how barren was the solitary life to which she had been fated. Her
husband, she had long ago admitted, with bitter self-communings, was
utterly unsuited to her. She could find in his society no enjoyment, and
for the sympathy which she needed was compelled to turn elsewhere. She
understood that his love for her had burnt itself out—she confessed,
with intensity of self-degradation, that his apparent affection had been
born of sensuality, and had perished in the fires it had itself kindled.
Many women have, unhappily, made some such discovery as this, but for most
women there is some distracting occupation. Had it been Sylvia's fate to
live in the midst of fashion and society, she would have found relief in
the conversation of the witty, or the homage of the distinguished. Had
fortune cast her lot in a city, Mrs. Frere might have become one of those
charming women who collect around their supper-tables whatever of male
intellect is obtainable, and who find the husband admirably useful to open
his own champagne bottles. The celebrated women who have stepped out of
their domestic circles to enchant or astonish the world, have almost
invariably been cursed with unhappy homes. But poor Sylvia was not
destined to this fortune. Cast back upon herself, she found no surcease of
pain in her own imaginings, and meeting with a man sufficiently her elder
to encourage her to talk, and sufficiently clever to induce her to seek
his society and his advice, she learnt, for the first time, to forget her
own griefs; for the first time she suffered her nature to expand under the
sun of a congenial influence. This sun, suddenly withdrawn, her soul,
grown accustomed to the warmth and light, shivered at the gloom, and she
looked about her in dismay at the dull and barren prospect of life which
lay before her. In a word, she found that the society of North had become
so far necessary to her that to be deprived of it was a grief—notwithstanding
that her husband remained to console her.</p>
<p>After a week of such reflections, the barrenness of life grew
insupportable to her, and one day she came to Maurice and begged to be
sent back to Hobart Town. "I cannot live in this horrible island," she
said. "I am getting ill. Let me go to my father for a few months,
Maurice." Maurice consented. His wife was looking ill, and Major Vickers
was an old man—a rich old man—who loved his only daughter. It
was not undesirable that Mrs. Frere should visit her father; indeed, so
little sympathy was there between the pair that, the first astonishment
over, Maurice felt rather glad to get rid of her for a while. "You can go
back in the Lady Franklin if you like, my dear," he said. "I expect her
every day." At this decision—much to his surprise—she kissed
him with more show of affection than she had manifested since the death of
her child.</p>
<p>The news of the approaching departure became known, but still North did
not make his appearance. Had it not been a step beneath the dignity of a
woman, Mrs. Frere would have gone herself and asked him the meaning of his
unaccountable rudeness, but there was just sufficient morbidity in the
sympathy she had for him to restrain her from an act which a young girl—though
not more innocent—would have dared without hesitation. Calling one
day upon the wife of the surgeon, however, she met the chaplain face to
face, and with the consummate art of acting which most women possess,
rallied him upon his absence from her house. The behaviour of the poor
devil, thus stabbed to the heart, was curious. He forgot gentlemanly
behaviour and the respect due to a woman, flung one despairingly angry
glance at her and abruptly retired. Sylvia flushed crimson, and
endeavoured to excuse North on account of his recent illness. The
surgeon's wife looked askance, and turned the conversation. The next time
Sylvia bowed to this lady, she got a chilling salute in return that made
her blood boil. "I wonder how I have offended Mrs. Field?" she asked
Maurice. "She almost cut me to-day." "Oh, the old cat!" returned Maurice.
"What does it matter if she did?" However, a few days afterwards, it
seemed that it did matter, for Maurice called upon Field and conversed
seriously with him. The issue of the conversation being reported to Mrs.
Frere, the lady wept indignant tears of wounded pride and shame. It
appeared that North had watched her out of the house, returned, and
related—in a "stumbling, hesitating way", Mrs. Field said—how
he disliked Mrs. Frere, how he did not want to visit her, and how flighty
and reprehensible such conduct was in a married woman of her rank and
station. This act of baseness—or profound nobleness—achieved
its purpose. Sylvia noticed the unhappy priest no more. Between the
Commandant and the chaplain now arose a coolness, and Frere set himself,
by various petty tyrannies, to disgust North, and compel him to a
resignation of his office. The convict-gaolers speedily marked the
difference in the treatment of the chaplain, and their demeanour changed.
For respect was substituted insolence; for alacrity, sullenness; for
prompt obedience, impertinent intrusion. The men whom North favoured were
selected as special subjects for harshness, and for a prisoner to be seen
talking to the clergyman was sufficient to ensure for him a series of
tyrannies. The result of this was that North saw the souls he laboured to
save slipping back into the gulf; beheld the men he had half won to love
him meet him with averted faces; discovered that to show interest in a
prisoner was to injure him, not to serve him. The unhappy man grew thinner
and paler under this ingenious torment. He had deprived himself of that
love which, guilty though it might be, was, nevertheless, the only true
love he had known; and he found that, having won this victory, he had
gained the hatred of all living creatures with whom he came in contact.
The authority of the Commandant was so supreme that men lived but by the
breath of his nostrils. To offend him was to perish and the man whom the
Commandant hated must be hated also by all those who wished to exist in
peace. There was but one being who was not to be turned from his
allegiance—the convict murderer, Rufus Dawes, who awaited death. For
many days he had remained mute, broken down beneath his weight of sorrow
or of sullenness; but North, bereft of other love and sympathy, strove
with that fighting soul, if haply he might win it back to peace. It seemed
to the fancy of the priest—a fancy distempered, perhaps, by excess,
or superhumanly exalted by mental agony—that this convict, over whom
he had wept, was given to him as a hostage for his own salvation. "I must
save him or perish," he said. "I must save him, though I redeem him with
my own blood."</p>
<p>Frere, unable to comprehend the reason of the calmness with which the
doomed felon met his taunts and torments, thought that he was shamming
piety to gain some indulgence of meat and drink, and redoubled his
severity. He ordered Dawes to be taken out to work just before the hour at
which the chaplain was accustomed to visit him. He pretended that the man
was "dangerous", and directed a gaoler to be present at all interviews,
"lest the chaplain might be murdered". He issued an order that all civil
officers should obey the challenges of convicts acting as watchmen; and
North, coming to pray with his penitent, would be stopped ten times by
grinning felons, who, putting their faces within a foot of his, would roar
out, "Who goes there?" and burst out laughing at the reply. Under pretence
of watching more carefully over the property of the chaplain, he directed
that any convict, acting as constable, might at any time "search
everywhere and anywhere" for property supposed to be in the possession of
a prisoner. The chaplain's servant was a prisoner, of course; and North's
drawers were ransacked twice in one week by Troke. North met these
impertinences with unruffled brow, and Frere could in no way account for
his obstinacy, until the arrival of the Lady Franklin explained the
chaplain's apparent coolness. He had sent in his resignation two months
before, and the saintly Meekin had been appointed in his stead. Frere,
unable to attack the clergyman, and indignant at the manner in which he
had been defeated, revenged himself upon Rufus Dawes.</p>
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