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<h2> CHAPTER XXXII </h2>
<h3> AT HOME </h3>
<p>Some of the miserable, and I might say strange, things which had befallen
me from time to time unseasonably, now began to force their remembrance
upon me. Such dark figures always seem to make the most of a nervous
moment, when solid reason yields to fluttering fear and small misgivings.
There any body seems to lie, as a stranded sailor lies, at the foot of
perpendicular cliffs of most inhuman humanity, with all the world frowning
down over the crest, and no one to throw a rope down. Often and often had
I felt this want of any one to help me, but the only way out of it seemed
to be to do my best to help myself.</p>
<p>Even, now I had little hope, having been so often dashed, and knowing that
my father's cousin possessed no share of my father's strength. He might,
at the utmost, give good advice, and help me with kind feeling; but if he
wanted to do more, surely he might have tried ere now. But my thoughts
about this were cut short by a message that he would be glad to see me,
and I followed the servant to the library.</p>
<p>Here I found Lord Castlewood sitting in a high-backed chair, uncushioned
and uncomfortable. When he saw me near him he got up and took my hand, and
looked at me, and I was pleased to find his face well-meaning, brave, and
generous. But even to rise from his chair was plainly no small effort to
him, and he leaned upon a staff or crutch as he offered me a small white
hand.</p>
<p>"Miss Castlewood," he said, with a very weak yet clear and silvery voice,
"for many years I have longed in vain and sought in vain to hear of you. I
have not escaped all self-reproach through my sense of want of energy;
yet, such as I am, I have done my best, or I do my best to think so."</p>
<p>"I am sure you have," I replied, without thinking, knowing his kindness to
my father, and feeling the shame of my own hot words to Mr. Shovelin about
him. "I owe you more gratitude than I can tell, for your goodness to my
dear father. I am not come now to trouble you, but because it was my
duty."</p>
<p>While I was speaking he managed to lead me, feebly as himself could walk,
to a deep chair for reading, or some such use, whereof I have had few
chances. And in every step and word and gesture I recognized that foreign
grace which true-born Britons are proud to despise on both sides of the
Atlantic. And, being in the light, I watched him well, because I am not a
foreigner.</p>
<p>In the clear summer light of the westering sun (which is better for
accurate uses than the radiance of the morning) I saw a firm, calm face,
which might in good health have been powerful—a face which might be
called the moonlight image of my father's. I could not help turning away
to cry, and suspicion fled forever.</p>
<p>"My dear young cousin," he said, as soon as I was fit to speak to, "your
father trusted me, and so must you. You may think that I have forgotten
you, or done very little to find you out. It was no indifference, no
forgetfulness: I have not been able to work myself, and I have had very
deep trouble of my own."</p>
<p>He leaned on his staff, and looked down at me, for I had sat down when
thus overcome, and I knew that the forehead and eyes were those of a
learned and intellectual man. How I knew this it is impossible to say, for
I never had met with such a character as this, unless it were the Abbe of
Flechon, when I was only fourteen years old, and valued his great skill in
spinning a top tenfold more than all his deep learning. Lord Castlewood
had long, silky hair, falling in curls of silver gray upon either side of
his beautiful forehead, and the gaze of his soft dark eyes was sad,
gentle, yet penetrating. Weak health and almost constant pain had
chastened his delicate features to an expression almost feminine, though
firm thin lips and rigid lines showed masculine will and fortitude. And
when he spoke of his own trouble (which, perhaps, he would not have done
except for consolation's sake), I knew that he meant something even more
grievous than bodily anguish.</p>
<p>"It is hard," he said, "that you, so young and healthy and full of high
spirit as you are (unless your face belies you), should begin the best
years of your life, as common opinion puts such things, in such a cloud of
gloom and shame."</p>
<p>"There is no shame at all," I answered; "and if there is gloom, I am used
to that; and so was my father for years and years. What is my trouble
compared with his?"</p>
<p>"Your trouble is nothing when compared with his, so far as regards the
mere weight of it; but he was a strong man to carry his load; you are a
young and a sensitive woman. The burden may even be worse for you. Now
tell me all about yourself, and what has brought you to me."</p>
<p>His voice was so quiet and soothing that I seemed to rest beneath it. He
had not spoken once of religion or the will of God, nor plied me at all
with those pious allusions, which even to the reverent mind are like
illusions when so urged. Lord Castlewood had too deep a sense of the will
of God to know what it is; and he looked at me wistfully as at one who
might have worse experience of it.</p>
<p>Falling happily under his influence, as his clear, kind eyes met mine, I
told him every thing I could think of about my father and myself, and all
I wanted to do next, and how my heart and soul were set upon getting to
the bottom of every thing. And while I spoke with spirit, or softness, or,
I fear, sometimes with hate, I could not help seeing that he was
surprised, but not wholly displeased, with my energy. And then, when all
was exhausted, came the old question I had heard so often, and found so
hard to answer—</p>
<p>"And what do you propose to do next, Erema?"</p>
<p>"To go to the very place itself," I said, speaking strongly under
challenge, though quite unresolved about such a thing before; "to live in
the house where my father lived, and my mother and all of the family died;
and from day to day to search every corner and fish up every bit of
evidence, until I get hold of the true man at last, of the villain who did
it—who did it, and left my father and all the rest of us to be
condemned and die for it."</p>
<p>"Erema," replied my cousin, as he had told me now to call him, "you are
too impetuous for such work, and it is wholly unfit for you. For such a
task, persons of trained sagacity and keen observation are needed. And
after all these eighteen years, or nearly nineteen now it must be, there
can not be any thing to discover there."</p>
<p>"But if I like, may I go there, cousin, if only to satisfy my own mind? I
am miserable now at Bruntsea, and Sir Montague Hockin wears me out."</p>
<p>"Sir Montague Hockin!" Lord Castlewood exclaimed; "why, you did not tell
me that he was there. Wherever he is, you should not be."</p>
<p>"I forgot to speak of him. He does not live there, but is continually to
and fro for bathing, or fishing, or rabbit-shooting, or any other pretext.
And he makes the place very unpleasant to me, kind as the Major and Mrs.
Hockin are, because I can never make him out at all."</p>
<p>"Do not try to do so," my cousin answered, looking at me earnestly; "be
content to know nothing of him, my dear. If you can put up with a very
dull house, and a host who is even duller, come here and live with me, as
your father would have wished, and as I, your nearest relative, now ask
and beg of you."</p>
<p>This was wonderfully kind, and for a moment I felt tempted. Lord
Castlewood being an elderly man, and, as the head of our family, my
natural protector, there could be nothing wrong, and there might be much
that was good, in such an easy arrangement. But, on the other hand, it
seemed to me that after this my work would languish. Living in comfort and
prosperity under the roof of my forefathers, beyond any doubt I should
begin to fall into habits of luxury, to take to the love of literature,
which I knew to be latent within me, to lose the clear, strong, practical
sense of the duty for which I, the last of seven, was spared, and in some
measure, perhaps, by wanderings and by hardships, fitted. And then I
thought of my host's weak health, continual pain (the signs of which were
hardly repressed even while he was speaking), and probably also his
secluded life. Was it fair to force him, by virtue of his inborn kindness
and courtesy, to come out of his privileges and deal with me, who could
not altogether be in any place a mere nobody? And so I refused his offer.</p>
<p>"I am very much obliged to you indeed," I said, "but I think you might be
sorry for it. I will come and stop with you every now and then, when your
health is better, and you ask me. But to live here altogether would not
do; I should like it too well, and do nothing else."</p>
<p>"Perhaps you are right," he replied, with the air of one who cares little
for any thing, which is to me the most melancholy thing, and worse than
any distress almost; "you are very young, my dear, and years should be
allowed to pass before you know what full-grown sorrow is. You have had
enough, for your age, of it. You had better not live in this house; it is
not a house for cheerfulness."</p>
<p>"Then if I must neither live here nor at Bruntsea," I asked, with sudden
remonstrance, feeling as if every body desired to be quit of me or to
worry me, "to what place in all the world am I to go, unless it is back to
America? I will go at once to Shoxford, and take lodgings of my own."</p>
<p>"Perhaps you had better wait a little while," Lord Castlewood answered,
gently, "although I would much rather have you at Shoxford than where you
are at present. But please to remember, my good Erema, that you can not go
to Shoxford all alone. I have a most faithful and trusty man—the one
who opened the door to you. He has been here before his remembrance. He
disdains me still as compared with your father. Will you have him to
superintend you? I scarcely see how you can do any good, but if you do go,
you must go openly, and as your father's daughter."</p>
<p>"I have no intention whatever of going in any other way, Lord Castlewood;
but perhaps," I continued, "it would be as well to make as little stir as
possible. Of an English village I know nothing but the little I have seen
at Bruntsea, but there they make a very great fuss about any one who comes
down with a man-servant."</p>
<p>"To be sure," replied my cousin, with a smile; "they would not be true
Britons otherwise. Perhaps you would do better without Stixon; but of
course you must not go alone. Could you by any means persuade your old
nurse Betsy to go with you?"</p>
<p>"How good of you to think of it!—how wise you are!" I really could
not help saying, as I gazed at his delicate and noble face. "I am sure
that if Betsy can come, she will; though of course she must be compensated
well for the waste all her lodgers will make of it. They are very wicked,
and eat most dreadfully if she even takes one day's holiday. What do you
think they even do? She has told me with tears in her eyes of it. They are
all allowed a pat of butter, a penny roll, and two sardines for breakfast.
No sooner do they know that her back is turned—"</p>
<p>"Erema!" cried my cousin, with some surprise; and being so recalled, I was
ashamed. But I never could help taking interest in very little things
indeed, until my own common-sense, or somebody else, came to tell me what
a child I was. However, I do believe that Uncle Sam liked me all the
better for this fault.</p>
<p>"My dear, I did not mean to blame you," Lord Castlewood said, most kindly;
"it must be a great relief for you to look on at other people. But tell me—or
rather, since you have told me almost every thing you know—let me,
if only in one way I can help you, help you at least in that way."</p>
<p>Knowing that he must mean money, I declined, from no false pride, but a
set resolve to work out my work, if possible, through my own resources.
But I promised to apply to him at once if scarcity should again befall me,
as had happened lately. And then I longed to ask him why he seemed to have
so low an opinion of Sir Montague Hockin. That question, however, I feared
to put, because it might not be a proper one, and also because my cousin
had spoken in a very strange tone, as if of some private dislike or
reserve on that subject. Moreover, it was too evident that I had tried his
courtesy long enough. From time to time pale shades of bodily pain, and
then hot flushes, had flitted across his face, like clouds on a windy
summer evening. And more than once he had glanced at the time-piece, not
to hurry me, but as if he dreaded its announcements. It was a beautiful
clock, and struck with a silvery sound every quarter of an hour. And now,
as I rose to say good-by, to catch my evening train, it struck a quarter
to five, and my cousin stood up, with his weight upon his staff, and
looked at me with an inexpressible depth of weary misery.</p>
<p>"I have only a few minutes left," he said, "during which I can say any
thing. My time is divided into two sad parts: the time when I am capable
of very little, and the time when I am capable of nothing; and the latter
part is twice the length of the other. For sixteen hours of every day, far
better had I be dead than living, so far as our own little insolence may
judge. But I speak of it only to excuse bad manners, and perhaps I show
worse by doing so. I shall not be able to see you again until to-morrow
morning. Do not go; they will arrange all that. Send a note to Major
Hockin by Stixon's boy. Stixon and Mrs. Price will see to your comfort, if
those who are free from pain require any other comfort. Forgive me; I did
not mean to be rude. Sometimes I can not help giving way."</p>
<p>Less enviable than the poorest slave, Lord Castlewood sank upon his hard
stiff chair, and straightened his long narrow hands upon his knees, and
set his thin lips in straight blue lines. Each hand was as rigid as the
ivory handle of an umbrella or walking-stick, and his lips were like
clamped wire. This was his regular way of preparing for the onset of the
night, so that no grimace, no cry, no moan, or other token of fierce agony
should be wrung from him.</p>
<p>"My lord will catch it stiff to-night," said Mr. Stixon, who came as I
rang, and then led me away to the drawing-room; "he always have it ten
times worse after any talking or any thing to upset him like. And so,
then, miss—excuse a humble servant—did I understand from him
that you was the Captain's own daughter?"</p>
<p>"Yes; but surely your master wants you—he is in such dreadful pain.
Do please to go to him, and do something."</p>
<p>"There is nothing to be done, miss," Stixon answered, with calm
resignation; "he is bound to stay so for sixteen hours, and then he eases
off again. But bless my heart, miss—excuse me in your presence—his
lordship is thoroughly used to it. It is my certain knowledge that for
seven years now he has never had seven minutes free from pain—seven
minutes all of a heap, I mean. Some do say, miss, as the Lord doeth every
thing according to His righteousness, that the reason is not very far to
seek."</p>
<p>I asked him what he meant, though I ought, perhaps, to have put a stop to
his loquacity; and he pretended not to hear, which made me ask him all the
more.</p>
<p>"A better man never lived than my lord," he answered, with a little shock
at my misprision; "but it has been said among censoorous persons that
nobody ever had no luck as came in suddenly to a property and a high state
of life on the top of the heads of a family of seven."</p>
<p>"What a poor superstition!" I cried, though I was not quite sure of its
being a wicked one. "But what is your master's malady, Stixon? Surely
there might be something done to relieve his violent pain, even if there
is no real cure for it?"</p>
<p>"No, miss, nothing can be done. The doctors have exorced themselves. They
tried this, that, and the other, but nature only flew worse against them.
'Tis a thing as was never heard of till the Constitooshon was knocked on
the head and to pieces by the Reform Bill. And though they couldn't cure
it, they done what they could do, miss. They discovered a very good name
for it—they christened it the 'New-rager!'"</p>
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