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"Certainly not."
"There is a theory which must be investigated, and I should like to employ him. You know nothing against him, nor do I."
"Suppose we go to our beds?" resumed the old gentleman, having finished his cigar.
A door at either side opened from the dressing-room, by whose fire they had been sitting.
"See which room is meant for me--Jacque will have placed my things there."
The young man did as he was bid, and made his report.
"Well, get you to bed, Guy, and remember--no friends.h.i.+ps and no follies."
And so the old man rose, and shook his companion's hand, not smiling, but with a solemn and thoughtful countenance, and they separated for the night.
Next morning as the Rev. Dives Marlowe stood in his natty and unexceptionable clerical costume on the hall-door steps, looking with a pompous and, perhaps, a somewhat forbidding countenance upon the morning prospect before him, his brother joined him.
"Early bird, Dives, pick the worm--eh? Healthy and wise already, and wealthy to be. Slept well, eh?"
"Always well here," answered the parson. He was less of a parson and more like himself with Jekyl than with anyone else. His brother was so uncomfortably amused with his clerical airs, knew him so well, and so undisguisedly esteemed him of the earth earthy, that the cleric, although the abler as well as the better read man, always felt invariably a little sheepish before him, in his silk vest and single-breasted coat with the standing collar, and the demi-shovel, which under other eyes he felt to be imposing properties.
"You look so like that exemplary young man in Watt's hymns, in the old-fas.h.i.+oned toggery, Dives--the fellow with the handsome round cheeks, you know, piously saluting the morning sun that's rising with a lot of spokes stuck out of it, don't you remember?"
"I look like something that's ugly, I dare say," said the parson, who had not got up in a good temper. "There never was a Marlowe yet who hadn't ugly points about him. But a young man, though never so ugly, is rather a bold comparison--eh? seeing I'm but two years your junior, Jekyl."
"Bitterly true--every word--my dear boy. But let us be pleasant. I've had a line to say that old Moulders is very ill, and really dying this time. Just read this melancholy little bulletin."
With an air which seemed to say, "well, to please you," he took the note and read it. It was from his steward, to mention that the Rev. Abraham Moulders was extremely ill of his old complaint, and that there was something even worse the matter, and that Doctor Winters had said that morning he could not possibly get over this attack.
"Well, Dives, there is a case of 'sick and weak' for you; you'll have prayers for him at Queen's Chorleigh, eh?"
"Poor old man!" said Dives, solemnly, with his head thrown back, and his thick eyebrows elevated a little, and looking straight before him as he returned the note, "he's very ill, indeed, unless this reports much too unfavourably."
"Too favourably, you mean," suggested the Baronet.
"But you know, poor old man, it is only wonderful he has lived so long.
The old people about there say he is eighty-seven. Upon my word, old Jenkins says he told him, two years ago, himself, he was eighty-five; and Doctor Winters, no chicken--just sixty--says his father was in the same college with him, at Cambridge, nearly sixty-seven years ago. You know, my dear Jekyl, when a man comes to that time of life, it's all idle--a mere pull against wind and tide, and everything. It is appointed unto all men once to die, you know, and the natural term is threescore years and ten. All idle--all in vain!"
And delivering this, the Rev. Dives Marlowe shook his head with a supercilious melancholy, as if the Rev. Abraham Moulders' holding out in that way against the inevitable was a piece of melancholy bravado, against which, on the part of modest mortality, it was his sad duty to protest.
Jekyl's cynicism was tickled, although there was care at his heart, and he chuckled.
"And how do you know you have any interest in the old fellow's demise?"
The Rector coughed a little, and flushed, and looked as careless as he could, while he answered--
"I said nothing of the kind; but you have always told me you meant the living for me. I've no reason, only your goodness, Jekyl."
"No goodness at all," said Jekyl, kindly. "You shall have it, of course.
I always meant it for you, Dives, and I wish it were better, and I'm very glad, for I'm fond of you, old fellow."
Hereupon they both laughed a little, shaking hands very kindly.
"Come to the stable, Dives," said the Baronet, taking his arm. "You must choose a horse. You don't hunt now?"
"I have not been at a cover for _ten_ years," answered the reverend gentleman, speaking with a consciousness of the demi-shovel.
"Well, come along," continued the Baronet. "I want to ask you--let's be serious" (everybody likes to be serious over his own business). "What do you think of these foreign personages?"
"The elder, I should say, an able man," answered Dives; "I dare say could be agreeable. It is not easy to a.s.sign his exact rank though, nor his profession or business. You remarked he seems to know something in detail and technically of nearly every business one mentions."
"Yes; and about the young man--that Mr. Guy Strangways, with his foreign accent and manner--did anything strike you about him?"
"Yes, certainly, could not fail. The most powerful likeness, I think, I ever saw in my life."
They both stopped, and exchanged a steady and anxious look, as if each expected the other to say more; and after a while the Rev. Dives Marlowe added, with an awful sort of nod--
"Guy Deverell."
The Baronet nodded in reply.
"Well, in fact, he appeared to me something _more_ than like--the same--identical."
"And old Lady Alice saw him in Wardlock Church, and was made quite ill," said the Baronet gloomily. "But you know he's gone these thirty years; and there is no necromancy now-a-days; only I wish you would take any opportunity, and try and make out all about him, and what they want.
I brought them here to pump them, by Jove; but that old fellow seems deuced reserved and wary. Only, like a good fellow, if you can find or make an opportunity, you must get the young fellow on the subject--for I don't care to tell you, Dives, I have been devilish uneasy about it.
There are things that make me confoundedly uncomfortable; and I have a sort of foreboding it would have been better for me to have blown up this house than to have come here; but ten to one--a hundred to one--there's nothing, and I'm only a fool."
As they thus talked they entered the gate of the stable-yard.
CHAPTER XVI.
Containing a Variety of Things.
"Guy Deverell left no issue," said Dives.
"No; none in the world; neither chick nor child. I need not care a bra.s.s farthing about any that can't inherit, if there were any; but there isn't one; there's no real danger, you see. In fact, there _can't_ be _any_--eh? _I_ don't see it. Do _you_? You were a sharp fellow always, Dives. _Can_ you see anything threatening in it?"
"_It! What?_" said the Rev. Dives Marlowe. "I see _nothing--nothing whatever--absolutely_ nothing. Surely you can't fancy that a mere resemblance, however strong, where there can't possibly be ident.i.ty, and the fact that the young man's name is Guy, will make a case for alarm!"
"Guy _Strangways_, you know," said Sir Jekyl.
"Well, what of Strangways? I don't see."
"Why, Strangways, you remember, or _don't_ remember, was the name of the fellow that was always with--with--that cross-grained m.u.f.f."