<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0057" id="link2HCH0057"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter 7 </h2>
<h3> BETTER TO BE ABEL THAN CAIN </h3>
<p>Day was breaking at Plashwater Weir Mill Lock. Stars were yet visible, but
there was dull light in the east that was not the light of night. The moon
had gone down, and a mist crept along the banks of the river, seen through
which the trees were the ghosts of trees, and the water was the ghost of
water. This earth looked spectral, and so did the pale stars: while the
cold eastern glare, expressionless as to heat or colour, with the eye of
the firmament quenched, might have been likened to the stare of the dead.</p>
<p>Perhaps it was so likened by the lonely Bargeman, standing on the brink of
the lock. For certain, Bradley Headstone looked that way, when a chill air
came up, and when it passed on murmuring, as if it whispered something
that made the phantom trees and water tremble—or threaten—for
fancy might have made it either.</p>
<p>He turned away, and tried the Lock-house door. It was fastened on the
inside.</p>
<p>'Is he afraid of me?' he muttered, knocking.</p>
<p>Rogue Riderhood was soon roused, and soon undrew the bolt and let him in.</p>
<p>'Why, T'otherest, I thought you had been and got lost! Two nights away! I
a'most believed as you'd giv' me the slip, and I had as good as half a
mind for to advertise you in the newspapers to come for'ard.'</p>
<p>Bradley's face turned so dark on this hint, that Riderhood deemed it
expedient to soften it into a compliment.</p>
<p>'But not you, governor, not you,' he went on, stolidly shaking his head.
'For what did I say to myself arter having amused myself with that there
stretch of a comic idea, as a sort of a playful game? Why, I says to
myself; "He's a man o' honour." That's what I says to myself. "He's a man
o' double honour."'</p>
<p>Very remarkably, Riderhood put no question to him. He had looked at him on
opening the door, and he now looked at him again (stealthily this time),
and the result of his looking was, that he asked him no question.</p>
<p>'You'll be for another forty on 'em, governor, as I judges, afore you
turns your mind to breakfast,' said Riderhood, when his visitor sat down,
resting his chin on his hand, with his eyes on the ground. And very
remarkably again: Riderhood feigned to set the scanty furniture in order,
while he spoke, to have a show of reason for not looking at him.</p>
<p>'Yes. I had better sleep, I think,' said Bradley, without changing his
position.</p>
<p>'I myself should recommend it, governor,' assented Riderhood. 'Might you
be anyways dry?'</p>
<p>'Yes. I should like a drink,' said Bradley; but without appearing to
attend much.</p>
<p>Mr Riderhood got out his bottle, and fetched his jug-full of water, and
administered a potation. Then, he shook the coverlet of his bed and spread
it smooth, and Bradley stretched himself upon it in the clothes he wore.
Mr Riderhood poetically remarking that he would pick the bones of his
night's rest, in his wooden chair, sat in the window as before; but, as
before, watched the sleeper narrowly until he was very sound asleep. Then,
he rose and looked at him close, in the bright daylight, on every side,
with great minuteness. He went out to his Lock to sum up what he had seen.</p>
<p>'One of his sleeves is tore right away below the elber, and the t'other's
had a good rip at the shoulder. He's been hung on to, pretty tight, for
his shirt's all tore out of the neck-gathers. He's been in the grass and
he's been in the water. And he's spotted, and I know with what, and with
whose. Hooroar!'</p>
<p>Bradley slept long. Early in the afternoon a barge came down. Other barges
had passed through, both ways, before it; but the Lock-keeper hailed only
this particular barge, for news, as if he had made a time calculation with
some nicety. The men on board told him a piece of news, and there was a
lingering on their part to enlarge upon it.</p>
<p>Twelve hours had intervened since Bradley's lying down, when he got up.
'Not that I swaller it,' said Riderhood, squinting at his Lock, when he
saw Bradley coming out of the house, 'as you've been a sleeping all the
time, old boy!'</p>
<p>Bradley came to him, sitting on his wooden lever, and asked what o'clock
it was? Riderhood told him it was between two and three.</p>
<p>'When are you relieved?' asked Bradley.</p>
<p>'Day arter to-morrow, governor.'</p>
<p>'Not sooner?'</p>
<p>'Not a inch sooner, governor.'</p>
<p>On both sides, importance seemed attached to this question of relief.
Riderhood quite petted his reply; saying a second time, and prolonging a
negative roll of his head, 'n—n—not a inch sooner, governor.'</p>
<p>'Did I tell you I was going on to-night?' asked Bradley.</p>
<p>'No, governor,' returned Riderhood, in a cheerful, affable, and
conversational manner, 'you did not tell me so. But most like you meant to
it and forgot to it. How, otherways, could a doubt have come into your
head about it, governor?'</p>
<p>'As the sun goes down, I intend to go on,' said Bradley.</p>
<p>'So much the more necessairy is a Peck,' returned Riderhood. 'Come in and
have it, T'otherest.'</p>
<p>The formality of spreading a tablecloth not being observed in Mr
Riderhood's establishment, the serving of the 'peck' was the affair of a
moment; it merely consisting in the handing down of a capacious baking
dish with three-fourths of an immense meat pie in it, and the production
of two pocket-knives, an earthenware mug, and a large brown bottle of
beer.</p>
<p>Both ate and drank, but Riderhood much the more abundantly. In lieu of
plates, that honest man cut two triangular pieces from the thick crust of
the pie, and laid them, inside uppermost, upon the table: the one before
himself, and the other before his guest. Upon these platters he placed two
goodly portions of the contents of the pie, thus imparting the unusual
interest to the entertainment that each partaker scooped out the inside of
his plate, and consumed it with his other fare, besides having the sport
of pursuing the clots of congealed gravy over the plain of the table, and
successfully taking them into his mouth at last from the blade of his
knife, in case of their not first sliding off it.</p>
<p>Bradley Headstone was so remarkably awkward at these exercises, that the
Rogue observed it.</p>
<p>'Look out, T'otherest!' he cried, 'you'll cut your hand!'</p>
<p>But, the caution came too late, for Bradley gashed it at the instant. And,
what was more unlucky, in asking Riderhood to tie it up, and in standing
close to him for the purpose, he shook his hand under the smart of the
wound, and shook blood over Riderhood's dress.</p>
<p>When dinner was done, and when what remained of the platters and what
remained of the congealed gravy had been put back into what remained of
the pie, which served as an economical investment for all miscellaneous
savings, Riderhood filled the mug with beer and took a long drink. And now
he did look at Bradley, and with an evil eye.</p>
<p>'T'otherest!' he said, hoarsely, as he bent across the table to touch his
arm. 'The news has gone down the river afore you.'</p>
<p>'What news?'</p>
<p>'Who do you think,' said Riderhood, with a hitch of his head, as if he
disdainfully jerked the feint away, 'picked up the body? Guess.'</p>
<p>'I am not good at guessing anything.'</p>
<p>'She did. Hooroar! You had him there agin. She did.'</p>
<p>The convulsive twitching of Bradley Headstone's face, and the sudden hot
humour that broke out upon it, showed how grimly the intelligence touched
him. But he said not a single word, good or bad. He only smiled in a
lowering manner, and got up and stood leaning at the window, looking
through it. Riderhood followed him with his eyes. Riderhood cast down his
eyes on his own besprinkled clothes. Riderhood began to have an air of
being better at a guess than Bradley owned to being.</p>
<p>'I have been so long in want of rest,' said the schoolmaster, 'that with
your leave I'll lie down again.'</p>
<p>'And welcome, T'otherest!' was the hospitable answer of his host. He had
laid himself down without waiting for it, and he remained upon the bed
until the sun was low. When he arose and came out to resume his journey,
he found his host waiting for him on the grass by the towing-path outside
the door.</p>
<p>'Whenever it may be necessary that you and I should have any further
communication together,' said Bradley, 'I will come back. Good-night!'</p>
<p>'Well, since no better can be,' said Riderhood, turning on his heel,
'Good-night!' But he turned again as the other set forth, and added under
his breath, looking after him with a leer: 'You wouldn't be let to go like
that, if my Relief warn't as good as come. I'll catch you up in a mile.'</p>
<p>In a word, his real time of relief being that evening at sunset, his mate
came lounging in, within a quarter of an hour. Not staying to fill up the
utmost margin of his time, but borrowing an hour or so, to be repaid again
when he should relieve his reliever, Riderhood straightway followed on the
track of Bradley Headstone.</p>
<p>He was a better follower than Bradley. It had been the calling of his life
to slink and skulk and dog and waylay, and he knew his calling well. He
effected such a forced march on leaving the Lock House that he was close
up with him—that is to say, as close up with him as he deemed it
convenient to be—before another Lock was passed. His man looked back
pretty often as he went, but got no hint of him. HE knew how to take
advantage of the ground, and where to put the hedge between them, and
where the wall, and when to duck, and when to drop, and had a thousand
arts beyond the doomed Bradley's slow conception.</p>
<p>But, all his arts were brought to a standstill, like himself when Bradley,
turning into a green lane or riding by the river-side—a solitary
spot run wild in nettles, briars, and brambles, and encumbered with the
scathed trunks of a whole hedgerow of felled trees, on the outskirts of a
little wood—began stepping on these trunks and dropping down among
them and stepping on them again, apparently as a schoolboy might have
done, but assuredly with no schoolboy purpose, or want of purpose.</p>
<p>'What are you up to?' muttered Riderhood, down in the ditch, and holding
the hedge a little open with both hands. And soon his actions made a most
extraordinary reply. 'By George and the Draggin!' cried Riderhood, 'if he
ain't a going to bathe!'</p>
<p>He had passed back, on and among the trunks of trees again, and has passed
on to the water-side and had begun undressing on the grass. For a moment
it had a suspicious look of suicide, arranged to counterfeit accident.
'But you wouldn't have fetched a bundle under your arm, from among that
timber, if such was your game!' said Riderhood. Nevertheless it was a
relief to him when the bather after a plunge and a few strokes came out.
'For I shouldn't,' he said in a feeling manner, 'have liked to lose you
till I had made more money out of you neither.'</p>
<p>Prone in another ditch (he had changed his ditch as his man had changed
his position), and holding apart so small a patch of the hedge that the
sharpest eyes could not have detected him, Rogue Riderhood watched the
bather dressing. And now gradually came the wonder that he stood up,
completely clothed, another man, and not the Bargeman.</p>
<p>'Aha!' said Riderhood. 'Much as you was dressed that night. I see. You're
a taking me with you, now. You're deep. But I knows a deeper.'</p>
<p>When the bather had finished dressing, he kneeled on the grass, doing
something with his hands, and again stood up with his bundle under his
arm. Looking all around him with great attention, he then went to the
river's edge, and flung it in as far, and yet as lightly as he could. It
was not until he was so decidedly upon his way again as to be beyond a
bend of the river and for the time out of view, that Riderhood scrambled
from the ditch.</p>
<p>'Now,' was his debate with himself 'shall I foller you on, or shall I let
you loose for this once, and go a fishing?' The debate continuing, he
followed, as a precautionary measure in any case, and got him again in
sight. 'If I was to let you loose this once,' said Riderhood then, still
following, 'I could make you come to me agin, or I could find you out in
one way or another. If I wasn't to go a fishing, others might.—I'll
let you loose this once, and go a fishing!' With that, he suddenly dropped
the pursuit and turned.</p>
<p>The miserable man whom he had released for the time, but not for long,
went on towards London. Bradley was suspicious of every sound he heard,
and of every face he saw, but was under a spell which very commonly falls
upon the shedder of blood, and had no suspicion of the real danger that
lurked in his life, and would have it yet. Riderhood was much in his
thoughts—had never been out of his thoughts since the
night-adventure of their first meeting; but Riderhood occupied a very
different place there, from the place of pursuer; and Bradley had been at
the pains of devising so many means of fitting that place to him, and of
wedging him into it, that his mind could not compass the possibility of
his occupying any other. And this is another spell against which the
shedder of blood for ever strives in vain. There are fifty doors by which
discovery may enter. With infinite pains and cunning, he double locks and
bars forty-nine of them, and cannot see the fiftieth standing wide open.</p>
<p>Now, too, was he cursed with a state of mind more wearing and more
wearisome than remorse. He had no remorse; but the evildoer who can hold
that avenger at bay, cannot escape the slower torture of incessantly doing
the evil deed again and doing it more efficiently. In the defensive
declarations and pretended confessions of murderers, the pursuing shadow
of this torture may be traced through every lie they tell. If I had done
it as alleged, is it conceivable that I would have made this and this
mistake? If I had done it as alleged, should I have left that unguarded
place which that false and wicked witness against me so infamously deposed
to? The state of that wretch who continually finds the weak spots in his
own crime, and strives to strengthen them when it is unchangeable, is a
state that aggravates the offence by doing the deed a thousand times
instead of once; but it is a state, too, that tauntingly visits the
offence upon a sullen unrepentant nature with its heaviest punishment
every time.</p>
<p>Bradley toiled on, chained heavily to the idea of his hatred and his
vengeance, and thinking how he might have satiated both in many better
ways than the way he had taken. The instrument might have been better, the
spot and the hour might have been better chosen. To batter a man down from
behind in the dark, on the brink of a river, was well enough, but he ought
to have been instantly disabled, whereas he had turned and seized his
assailant; and so, to end it before chance-help came, and to be rid of
him, he had been hurriedly thrown backward into the river before the life
was fully beaten out of him. Now if it could be done again, it must not be
so done. Supposing his head had been held down under water for a while.
Supposing the first blow had been truer. Supposing he had been shot.
Supposing he had been strangled. Suppose this way, that way, the other
way. Suppose anything but getting unchained from the one idea, for that
was inexorably impossible.</p>
<p>The school reopened next day. The scholars saw little or no change in
their master's face, for it always wore its slowly labouring expression.
But, as he heard his classes, he was always doing the deed and doing it
better. As he paused with his piece of chalk at the black board before
writing on it, he was thinking of the spot, and whether the water was not
deeper and the fall straighter, a little higher up, or a little lower
down. He had half a mind to draw a line or two upon the board, and show
himself what he meant. He was doing it again and improving on the manner,
at prayers, in his mental arithmetic, all through his questioning, all
through the day.</p>
<p>Charley Hexam was a master now, in another school, under another head. It
was evening, and Bradley was walking in his garden observed from behind a
blind by gentle little Miss Peecher, who contemplated offering him a loan
of her smelling salts for headache, when Mary Anne, in faithful
attendance, held up her arm.</p>
<p>'Yes, Mary Anne?'</p>
<p>'Young Mr Hexam, if you please, ma'am, coming to see Mr Headstone.'</p>
<p>'Very good, Mary Anne.'</p>
<p>Again Mary Anne held up her arm.</p>
<p>'You may speak, Mary Anne?'</p>
<p>'Mr Headstone has beckoned young Mr Hexam into his house, ma'am, and he
has gone in himself without waiting for young Mr Hexam to come up, and now
HE has gone in too, ma'am, and has shut the door.'</p>
<p>'With all my heart, Mary Anne.'</p>
<p>Again Mary Anne's telegraphic arm worked.</p>
<p>'What more, Mary Anne?'</p>
<p>'They must find it rather dull and dark, Miss Peecher, for the parlour
blind's down, and neither of them pulls it up.'</p>
<p>'There is no accounting,' said good Miss Peecher with a little sad sigh
which she repressed by laying her hand on her neat methodical boddice,
'there is no accounting for tastes, Mary Anne.'</p>
<p>Charley, entering the dark room, stopped short when he saw his old friend
in its yellow shade.</p>
<p>'Come in, Hexam, come in.'</p>
<p>Charley advanced to take the hand that was held out to him; but stopped
again, short of it. The heavy, bloodshot eyes of the schoolmaster, rising
to his face with an effort, met his look of scrutiny.</p>
<p>'Mr Headstone, what's the matter?'</p>
<p>'Matter? Where?'</p>
<p>'Mr Headstone, have you heard the news? This news about the fellow, Mr
Eugene Wrayburn? That he is killed?'</p>
<p>'He is dead, then!' exclaimed Bradley.</p>
<p>Young Hexam standing looking at him, he moistened his lips with his
tongue, looked about the room, glanced at his former pupil, and looked
down. 'I heard of the outrage,' said Bradley, trying to constrain his
working mouth, 'but I had not heard the end of it.'</p>
<p>'Where were you,' said the boy, advancing a step as he lowered his voice,
'when it was done? Stop! I don't ask that. Don't tell me. If you force
your confidence upon me, Mr Headstone, I'll give up every word of it.
Mind! Take notice. I'll give up it, and I'll give up you. I will!'</p>
<p>The wretched creature seemed to suffer acutely under this renunciation. A
desolate air of utter and complete loneliness fell upon him, like a
visible shade.</p>
<p>'It's for me to speak, not you,' said the boy. 'If you do, you'll do it at
your peril. I am going to put your selfishness before you, Mr Headstone—your
passionate, violent, and ungovernable selfishness—to show you why I
can, and why I will, have nothing more to do with you.'</p>
<p>He looked at young Hexam as if he were waiting for a scholar to go on with
a lesson that he knew by heart and was deadly tired of. But he had said
his last word to him.</p>
<p>'If you had any part—I don't say what—in this attack,' pursued
the boy; 'or if you know anything about it—I don't say how much—or
if you know who did it—I go no closer—you did an injury to me
that's never to be forgiven. You know that I took you with me to his
chambers in the Temple when I told him my opinion of him, and made myself
responsible for my opinion of you. You know that I took you with me when I
was watching him with a view to recovering my sister and bringing her to
her senses; you know that I have allowed myself to be mixed up with you,
all through this business, in favouring your desire to marry my sister.
And how do you know that, pursuing the ends of your own violent temper,
you have not laid me open to suspicion? Is that your gratitude to me, Mr
Headstone?'</p>
<p>Bradley sat looking steadily before him at the vacant air. As often as
young Hexam stopped, he turned his eyes towards him, as if he were waiting
for him to go on with the lesson, and get it done. As often as the boy
resumed, Bradley resumed his fixed face.</p>
<p>'I am going to be plain with you, Mr Headstone,' said young Hexam, shaking
his head in a half-threatening manner, 'because this is no time for
affecting not to know things that I do know—except certain things at
which it might not be very safe for you, to hint again. What I mean is
this: if you were a good master, I was a good pupil. I have done you
plenty of credit, and in improving my own reputation I have improved yours
quite as much. Very well then. Starting on equal terms, I want to put
before you how you have shown your gratitude to me, for doing all I could
to further your wishes with reference to my sister. You have compromised
me by being seen about with me, endeavouring to counteract this Mr Eugene
Wrayburn. That's the first thing you have done. If my character, and my
now dropping you, help me out of that, Mr Headstone, the deliverance is to
be attributed to me, and not to you. No thanks to you for it!'</p>
<p>The boy stopping again, he moved his eyes again.</p>
<p>'I am going on, Mr Headstone, don't you be afraid. I am going on to the
end, and I have told you beforehand what the end is. Now, you know my
story. You are as well aware as I am, that I have had many disadvantages
to leave behind me in life. You have heard me mention my father, and you
are sufficiently acquainted with the fact that the home from which I, as I
may say, escaped, might have been a more creditable one than it was. My
father died, and then it might have been supposed that my way to
respectability was pretty clear. No. For then my sister begins.'</p>
<p>He spoke as confidently, and with as entire an absence of any tell-tale
colour in his cheek, as if there were no softening old time behind him.
Not wonderful, for there WAS none in his hollow empty heart. What is there
but self, for selfishness to see behind it?</p>
<p>'When I speak of my sister, I devoutly wish that you had never seen her,
Mr Headstone. However, you did see her, and that's useless now. I confided
in you about her. I explained her character to you, and how she interposed
some ridiculous fanciful notions in the way of our being as respectable as
I tried for. You fell in love with her, and I favoured you with all my
might. She could not be induced to favour you, and so we came into
collision with this Mr Eugene Wrayburn. Now, what have you done? Why, you
have justified my sister in being firmly set against you from first to
last, and you have put me in the wrong again! And why have you done it?
Because, Mr Headstone, you are in all your passions so selfish, and so
concentrated upon yourself that you have not bestowed one proper thought
on me.'</p>
<p>The cool conviction with which the boy took up and held his position,
could have been derived from no other vice in human nature.</p>
<p>'It is,' he went on, actually with tears, 'an extraordinary circumstance
attendant on my life, that every effort I make towards perfect
respectability, is impeded by somebody else through no fault of mine! Not
content with doing what I have put before you, you will drag my name into
notoriety through dragging my sister's—which you are pretty sure to
do, if my suspicions have any foundation at all—and the worse you
prove to be, the harder it will be for me to detach myself from being
associated with you in people's minds.'</p>
<p>When he had dried his eyes and heaved a sob over his injuries, he began
moving towards the door.</p>
<p>'However, I have made up my mind that I will become respectable in the
scale of society, and that I will not be dragged down by others. I have
done with my sister as well as with you. Since she cares so little for me
as to care nothing for undermining my respectability, she shall go her way
and I will go mine. My prospects are very good, and I mean to follow them
alone. Mr Headstone, I don't say what you have got upon your conscience,
for I don't know. Whatever lies upon it, I hope you will see the justice
of keeping wide and clear of me, and will find a consolation in completely
exonerating all but yourself. I hope, before many years are out, to
succeed the master in my present school, and the mistress being a single
woman, though some years older than I am, I might even marry her. If it is
any comfort to you to know what plans I may work out by keeping myself
strictly respectable in the scale of society, these are the plans at
present occurring to me. In conclusion, if you feel a sense of having
injured me, and a desire to make some small reparation, I hope you will
think how respectable you might have been yourself and will contemplate
your blighted existence.'</p>
<p>Was it strange that the wretched man should take this heavily to heart?
Perhaps he had taken the boy to heart, first, through some long laborious
years; perhaps through the same years he had found his drudgery lightened
by communication with a brighter and more apprehensive spirit than his
own; perhaps a family resemblance of face and voice between the boy and
his sister, smote him hard in the gloom of his fallen state. For
whichsoever reason, or for all, he drooped his devoted head when the boy
was gone, and shrank together on the floor, and grovelled there, with the
palms of his hands tight-clasping his hot temples, in unutterable misery,
and unrelieved by a single tear.</p>
<p>Rogue Riderhood had been busy with the river that day. He had fished with
assiduity on the previous evening, but the light was short, and he had
fished unsuccessfully. He had fished again that day with better luck, and
had carried his fish home to Plashwater Weir Mill Lock-house, in a bundle.</p>
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