<p>"JOHN LOSCOMBE." <SPAN name="link2H_4_0062" id="link2H_4_0062"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE LAST SCENE. </h2>
<h3> AARON'S BUILDINGS </h3>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0046" id="link2HCH0046"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER I. </h2>
<p>ON the seventh of June, the owners of the merchantman <i>Deliverance</i>
received news that the ship had touched at Plymouth to land passengers,
and had then continued her homeward voyage to the Port of London. Five
days later, the vessel was in the river, and was towed into the East India
Docks.</p>
<p>Having transacted the business on shore for which he was personally
responsible, Captain Kirke made the necessary arrangements, by letter, for
visiting his brother-in-law's parsonage in Suffolk, on the seventeenth of
the month. As usual in such cases, he received a list of commissions to
execute for his sister on the day before he left London. One of these
commissions took him into the neighborhood of Camden Town. He drove to his
destination from the Docks; and then, dismissing the vehicle, set forth to
walk back southward, toward the New Road.</p>
<p>He was not well acquainted with the district; and his attention wandered
further and further away from the scene around him as he went on. His
thoughts, roused by the prospect of seeing his sister again, had led his
memory back to the night when he had parted from her, leaving the house on
foot. The spell so strangely laid on him, in that past time, had kept its
hold through all after-events. The face that had haunted him on the lonely
road had haunted him again on the lonely sea. The woman who had followed
him, as in a dream, to his sister's door, had followed him—thought
of his thought, and spirit of his spirit—to the deck of his ship.
Through storm and calm on the voyage out, through storm and calm on the
voyage home, she had been with him. In the ceaseless turmoil of the London
streets, she was with him now. He knew what the first question on his lips
would be, when he had seen his sister and her boys. "I shall try to talk
of something else," he thought; "but when Lizzie and I am alone, it will
come out in spite of me."</p>
<p>The necessity of waiting to let a string of carts pass at a turning before
he crossed awakened him to present things. He looked about in a momentary
confusion. The street was strange to him; he had lost his way.</p>
<p>The first foot passenger of whom he inquired appeared to have no time to
waste in giving information. Hurriedly directing him to cross to the other
side of the road, to turn down the first street he came to on his right
hand, and then to ask again, the stranger unceremoniously hastened on
without waiting to be thanked.</p>
<p>Kirke followed his directions and took the turning on his right. The
street was short and narrow, and the houses on either side were of the
poorer order. He looked up as he passed the corner to see what the name of
the place might be. It was called "Aaron's Buildings."</p>
<p>Low down on the side of the "Buildings" along which he was walking, a
little crowd of idlers was assembled round two cabs, both drawn up before
the door of the same house. Kirke advanced to the crowd, to ask his way of
any civil stranger among them who might <i>not</i> be in a hurry this
time. On approaching the cabs, he found a woman disputing with the
drivers; and heard enough to inform him that two vehicles had been sent
for by mistake, where only one was wanted.</p>
<p>The house door was open; and when he turned that way next, he looked
easily into the passage, over the heads of the people in front of him.</p>
<p>The sight that met his eyes should have been shielded in pity from the
observation of the street. He saw a slatternly girl, with a frightened
face, standing by an old chair placed in the middle of the passage, and
holding a woman on the chair, too weak and helpless to support herself—a
woman apparently in the last stage of illness, who was about to be
removed, when the dispute outside was ended, in one of the cabs. Her head
was drooping when he first saw her, and an old shawl which covered it had
fallen forward so as to hide the upper part of her face.</p>
<p>Before he could look away again, the girl in charge of her raised her head
and restored the shawl to its place. The action disclosed her face to
view, for an instant only, before her head drooped once more on her bosom.
In that instant he saw the woman whose beauty was the haunting remembrance
of his life—whose image had been vivid in his mind not five minutes
since.</p>
<p>The shock of the double recognition—the recognition, at the same
moment, of the face, and of the dreadful change in it—struck him
speechless and helpless. The steady presence of mind in all emergencies
which had become a habit of his life, failed him for the first time. The
poverty-stricken street, the squalid mob round the door, swam before his
eyes. He staggered back and caught at the iron railings of the house
behind him.</p>
<p>"Where are they taking her to?" he heard a woman ask, close at his side.</p>
<p>"To the hospital, if they will have her," was the reply. "And to the
work-house, if they won't."</p>
<p>That horrible answer roused him. He pushed his way through the crowd and
entered the house.</p>
<p>The misunderstanding on the pavement had been set right, and one of the
cabs had driven off.</p>
<p>As he crossed the threshold of the door he confronted the people of the
house at the moment when they were moving her. The cabman who had remained
was on one side of the chair, and the woman who had been disputing with
the two drivers was on the other. They were just lifting her, when Kirke's
tall figure darkened the door.</p>
<p>"What are you doing with that lady?" he asked.</p>
<p>The cabman looked up with the insolence of his reply visible in his eyes,
before his lips could utter it. But the woman, quicker than he, saw the
suppressed agitation in Kirke's face, and dropped her hold of the chair in
an instant.</p>
<p>"Do you know her, sir?" asked the woman, eagerly. "Are you one of her
friends?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Kirke, without hesitation.</p>
<p>"It's not my fault, sir," pleaded the woman, shirking under the look he
fixed on her. "I would have waited patiently till her friends found her—I
would, indeed!"</p>
<p>Kirke made no reply. He turned, and spoke to the cabman.</p>
<p>"Go out," he said, "and close the door after you. I'll send you down your
money directly. What room in the house did you take her from, when you
brought her here?" he resumed, addressing himself to the woman again.</p>
<p>"The first floor back, sir."</p>
<p>"Show me the way to it."</p>
<p>He stooped, and lifted Magdalen in his arms. Her head rested gently on the
sailor's breast; her eyes looked up wonderingly into the sailor's face.
She smiled, and whispered to him vacantly. Her mind had wandered back to
old days at home; and her few broken words showed that she fancied herself
a child again in her father's arms. "Poor papa!" she said, softly. "Why do
you look so sorry? Poor papa!"</p>
<p>The woman led the way into the back room on the first floor. It was very
small; it was miserably furnished. But the little bed was clean, and the
few things in the room were neatly kept. Kirke laid her tenderly on the
bed. She caught one of his hands in her burning fingers. "Don't distress
mamma about me," she said. "Send for Norah." Kirke tried gently to release
his hand; but she only clasped it the more eagerly. He sat down by the
bedside to wait until it pleased her to release him. The woman stood
looking at them and crying, in a corner of the room. Kirke observed her
attentively. "Speak," he said, after an interval, in low, quiet tones.
"Speak in <i>her</i> presence; and tell me the truth."</p>
<p>With many words, with many tears, the woman spoke.</p>
<p>She had let her first floor to the lady a fortnight since. The lady had
paid a week's rent, and had given the name of Gray. She had been out from
morning till night, for the first three days, and had come home again, on
every occasion, with a wretchedly weary, disappointed look. The woman of
the house had suspected that she was in hiding from her friends, under a
false name; and that she had been vainly trying to raise money, or to get
some employment, on the three days when she was out for so long, and when
she looked so disappointed on coming home. However that might be, on the
fourth day she had fallen ill, with shivering fits and hot fits, turn and
turn about. On the fifth day she was worse; and on the sixth, she was too
sleepy at one time, and too light-headed at another, to be spoken to. The
chemist (who did the doctoring in those parts) had come and looked at her,
and had said he thought it was a bad fever. He had left a "saline
draught," which the woman of the house had paid for out of her own pocket,
and had administered without effect. She had ventured on searching the
only box which the lady had brought with her; and had found nothing in it
but a few necessary articles of linen—no dresses, no ornaments, not
so much as the fragment of a letter which might help in discovering her
friends. Between the risk of keeping her under these circumstances, and
the barbarity of turning a sick woman into the street, the landlady
herself had not hesitated. She would willingly have kept her tenant, on
the chance of the lady's recovery, and on the chance of her friends
turning up. But not half an hour since, her husband—who never came
near the house, except to take her money—had come to rob her of her
little earnings, as usual. She had been obliged to tell him that no rent
was in hand for the first floor, and that none was likely to be in hand
until the lady recovered, or her friends found her. On hearing this, he
had mercilessly insisted—well or ill—that the lady should go.
There was the hospital to take her to; and if the hospital shut its doors,
there was the workhouse to try next. If she was not out of the place in an
hour's time, he threatened to come back and take her out himself. His wife
knew but too well that he was brute enough to be as good as his word; and
no other choice had been left her but to do as she had done, for the sake
of the lady herself.</p>
<p>The woman told her shocking story, with every appearance of being honestly
ashamed of it. Toward the end, Kirke felt the clasp of the burning fingers
slackening round his hand. He looked back at the bed again. Her weary eyes
were closing; and, with her face still turned toward the sailor, she was
sinking into sleep.</p>
<p>"Is there any one in the front room?" said Kirke, in a whisper. "Come in
there; I have something to say to you."</p>
<p>The woman followed him through the door of communication between the
rooms.</p>
<p>"How much does she owe you?" he asked.</p>
<p>The landlady mentioned the sum. Kirke put it down before her on the table.</p>
<p>"Where is your husband?" was his next question.</p>
<p>"Waiting at the public-house, sir, till the hour is up."</p>
<p>"You can take him the money or not, as you think right," said Kirke,
quietly. "I have only one thing to tell you, as far as your husband is
concerned. If you want to see every bone in his skin broken, let him come
to the house while I am in it. Stop! I have something more to say. Do you
know of any doctor in the neighborhood who can be depended on?"</p>
<p>"Not in our neighborhood, sir. But I know of one within half an hour's
walk of us."</p>
<p>"Take the cab at the door; and, if you find him at home, bring him back in
it. Say I am waiting here for his opinion on a very serious case. He shall
be well paid, and you shall be well paid. Make haste!"</p>
<p>The woman left the room.</p>
<p>Kirke sat down alone, to wait for her return. He hid his face in his
hands, and tried to realize the strange and touching situation in which
the accident of a moment had placed him.</p>
<p>Hidden in the squalid by-ways of London under a false name; cast,
friendless and helpless, on the mercy of strangers, by illness which had
struck her prostrate, mind and body alike—so he met her again, the
woman who had opened a new world of beauty to his mind; the woman who had
called Love to life in him by a look! What horrible misfortune had struck
her so cruelly, and struck her so low? What mysterious destiny had guided
him to the last refuge of her poverty and despair, in the hour of her
sorest need? "If it is ordered that I am to see her again, I <i>shall</i>
see her." Those words came back to him now—the memorable words that
he had spoken to his sister at parting. With that thought in his heart, he
had gone where his duty called him. Months and months had passed;
thousands and thousands of miles, protracting their desolate length on the
unresting waters had rolled between them. And through the lapse of time,
and over the waste of oceans—day after day, and night after night,
as the winds of heaven blew, and the good ship toiled on before them—he
had advanced nearer and nearer to the end that was waiting for him; he had
journeyed blindfold to the meeting on the threshold of that miserable
door. "What has brought me here?" he said to himself in a whisper. "The
mercy of chance? No. The mercy of God."</p>
<p>He waited, unregardful of the place, unconscious of the time, until the
sound of footsteps on the stairs came suddenly between him and his
thoughts. The door opened, and the doctor was shown into the room.</p>
<p>"Dr. Merrick," said the landlady, placing a chair for him.</p>
<p>"<i>Mr.</i> Merrick," said the visitor, smiling quietly as he took the
chair. "I am not a physician—I am a surgeon in general practice."</p>
<p>Physician or surgeon, there was something in his face and manner which
told Kirke at a glance that he was a man to be relied on.</p>
<p>After a few preliminary words on either side, Mr. Merrick sent the
landlady into the bedroom to see if his patient was awake or asleep. The
woman returned, and said she was "betwixt the two, light in the head
again, and burning hot." The doctor went at once into the bedroom, telling
the landlady to follow him, and to close the door behind her.</p>
<p>A weary time passed before he came back into the front room. When he
re-appeared, his face spoke for him, before any question could be asked.</p>
<p>"Is it a serious illness?" said Kirke his voice sinking low, his eyes
anxiously fixed on the doctor's face.</p>
<p>"It is a <i>dangerous</i> illness," said Mr. Merrick, with an emphasis on
the word.</p>
<p>He drew his chair nearer to Kirke and looked at him attentively.</p>
<p>"May I ask you some questions which are not strictly medical?" he
inquired.</p>
<p>Kirke bowed.</p>
<p>"Can you tell me what her life has been before she came into this house,
and before she fell ill?"</p>
<p>"I have no means of knowing. I have just returned to England after a long
absence."</p>
<p>"Did you know of her coming here?"</p>
<p>"I only discovered it by accident."</p>
<p>"Has she no female relations? No mother? no sister? no one to take care of
her but yourself?"</p>
<p>"No one—unless I can succeed in tracing her relations. No one but
myself."</p>
<p>Mr. Merrick was silent. He looked at Kirke more attentively than ever.
"Strange!" thought the doctor. "He is here, in sole charge of her—and
is this all he knows?"</p>
<p>Kirke saw the doubt in his face; and addressed himself straight to that
doubt, before another word passed between them,</p>
<p>"I see my position here surprises you," he said, simply. "Will you
consider it the position of a relation—the position of her brother
or her father—until her friends can be found?" His voice faltered,
and he laid his hand earnestly on the doctor's arm. "I have taken this
trust on myself," he said; "and as God shall judge me, I will not be
unworthy of it!"</p>
<p>The poor weary head lay on his breast again, the poor fevered fingers
clasped his hand once more, as he spoke those words.</p>
<p>"I believe you," said the doctor, warmly. "I believe you are an honest
man.—Pardon me if I have seemed to intrude myself on your
confidence. I respect your reserve—from this moment it is sacred to
me. In justice to both of us, let me say that the questions I have asked
were not prompted by mere curiosity. No common cause will account for the
illness which has laid my patient on that bed. She has suffered some
long-continued mental trial, some wearing and terrible suspense—and
she has broken down under it. It might have helped me if I could have
known what the nature of the trial was, and how long or how short a time
elapsed before she sank under it. In that hope I spoke."</p>
<p>"When you told me she was dangerously ill," said Kirke, "did you mean
danger to her reason or to her life?"</p>
<p>"To both," replied Mr. Merrick. "Her whole nervous system has given way;
all the ordinary functions of her brain are in a state of collapse. I can
give you no plainer explanation than that of the nature of the malady. The
fever which frightens the people of the house is merely the effect. The
cause is what I have told you. She may lie on that bed for weeks to come;
passing alternately, without a gleam of consciousness, from a state of
delirium to a state of repose. You must not be alarmed if you find her
sleep lasting far beyond the natural time. That sleep is a better remedy
than any I can give, and nothing must disturb it. All our art can
accomplish is to watch her, to help her with stimulants from time to time,
and to wait for what Nature will do."</p>
<p>"Must she remain here? Is there no hope of our being able to remove her to
a better place?"</p>
<p>"No hope whatever, for the present. She has already been disturbed, as I
understand, and she is seriously the worse for it. Even if she gets
better, even if she comes to herself again, it would still be a dangerous
experiment to move her too soon—the least excitement or alarm would
be fatal to her. You must make the best of this place as it is. The
landlady has my directions; and I will send a good nurse to help her.
There is nothing more to be done. So far as her life can be said to be in
any human hands, it is as much in your hands now as in mine. Everything
depends on the care that is taken of her, under your direction, in this
house." With those farewell words he rose and quitted the room.</p>
<p>Left by himself, Kirke walked to the door of communication, and, knocking
at it softly, told the landlady he wished to speak with her.</p>
<p>He was far more composed, far more like his own resolute self, after his
interview with the doctor, than he had been before it. A man living in the
artificial social atmosphere which <i>this</i> man had never breathed
would have felt painfully the worldly side of the situation—its
novelty and strangeness; the serious present difficulty in which it placed
him; the numberless misinterpretations in the future to which it might
lead. Kirke never gave the situation a thought. He saw nothing but the
duty it claimed from him—a duty which the doctor's farewell words
had put plainly before his mind. Everything depended on the care taken of
her, under his direction, in that house. There was his responsibility, and
he unconsciously acted under it, exactly as he would have acted in a case
of emergency with women and children on board his own ship. He questioned
the landlady in short, sharp sentences; the only change in him was in the
lowered tone of his voice, and in the anxious looks which he cast, from
time to time, at the room where she lay.</p>
<p>"Do you understand what the doctor has told you?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"The house must be kept quiet. Who lives in the house?"</p>
<p>"Only me and my daughter, sir; we live in the parlors. Times have gone
badly with us since Lady Day. Both the rooms above this are to let."</p>
<p>"I will take them both, and the two rooms down here as well. Do you know
of any active trustworthy man who can run on errands for me?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir. Shall I go—?"</p>
<p>"No; let your daughter go. You must not leave the house until the nurse
comes. Don't send the messenger up here. Men of that sort tread heavily.
I'll go down, and speak to him at the door."</p>
<p>He went down when the messenger came, and sent him first to purchase pen,
ink, and paper. The man's next errand dispatched him to make inquiries for
a person who could provide for deadening the sound of passing wheels in
the street by laying down tan before the house in the usual way. This
object accomplished, the messenger received two letters to post. The first
was addressed to Kirke's brother-in-law. It told him, in few and plain
words, what had happened; and left him to break the news to his wife as he
thought best. The second letter was directed to the landlord of the
Aldborough Hotel. Magdalen's assumed name at North Shingles was the only
name by which Kirke knew her; and the one chance of tracing her relatives
that he could discern was the chance of discovering her reputed uncle and
aunt by means of inquiries starting from Aldborough.</p>
<p>Toward the close of the afternoon a decent middle-aged woman came to the
house, with a letter from Mr. Merrick. She was well known to the doctor as
a trustworthy and careful person, who had nursed his own wife; and she
would be assisted, from time to time, by a lady who was a member of a
religious Sisterhood in the district, and whose compassionate interest had
been warmly aroused in the case. Toward eight o'clock that evening the
doctor himself would call and see that his patient wanted for nothing.</p>
<p>The arrival of the nurse, and the relief of knowing that she was to be
trusted, left Kirke free to think of himself. His luggage was ready packed
for his contemplated journey to Suffolk the next day. It was merely
necessary to transport it from the hotel to the house in Aaron's
Buildings.</p>
<p>He stopped once only on his way to the hotel to look at a toyshop in one
of the great thoroughfares. The miniature ships in the window reminded him
of his nephew. "My little name-sake will be sadly disappointed at not
seeing me to-morrow," he thought. "I must make it up to the boy by sending
him something from his uncle." He went into the shop and bought one of the
ships. It was secured in a box, and packed and directed in his presence.
He put a ca rd on the deck of the miniature vessel before the cover of the
box was nailed on, bearing this inscription: "A ship for the little
sailor, with the big sailor's love."—"Children like to be written
to, ma'am," he said, apologetically, to the woman behind the counter.
"Send the box as soon as you can—I am anxious the boy should get it
to-morrow."</p>
<p>Toward the dusk of the evening he returned with his luggage to Aaron's
Buildings. He took off his boots in the passage and carried his trunk
upstairs himself; stopping, as he passed the first floor, to make his
inquiries. Mr. Merrick was present to answer them.</p>
<p>"She was awake and wandering," said the doctor, "a few minutes since. But
we have succeeded in composing her, and she is sleeping now."</p>
<p>"Have no words escaped her, sir, which might help us to find her friends?"</p>
<p>Mr. Merrick shook his head.</p>
<p>"Weeks and weeks may pass yet," he said, "and that poor girl's story may
still be a sealed secret to all of us. We can only wait."</p>
<p>So the day ended—the first of many days that were to come.</p>
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