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Before the blaze of that righteous wrath, Cargrim, livid and trembling, crept away like a beaten hound.
CHAPTER x.x.xIX
ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL
'Bell! Bell! do not give me up.'
'I must, Gabriel; it is my duty.'
'It is your cruelty! Ah, you never loved me as I love you.'
'That is truer than you think, my poor boy. I thought that I loved you, but I was wrong. It was your position which made me anxious to marry you; it was your weak nature which made me pity you. But I do not love you; I never did love you; and it is better that you should know the truth before we part.'
'Part? Oh, Bell! Bell!'
'Part,' repeated Bell, firmly, 'and for ever.'
Gabriel's head drooped on his breast, and he sighed as one, long past tears, who hears the clods falling on the coffin in which his beloved lies. He and Bell Mosk were seated in the little parlour at the back of the bar, and they were alone in the house, save for one upstairs, in the room of Mrs Mosk, who watched beside the dead. On hearing of her husband's rash act, the poor wife, miserable as she had been with the man, yet felt her earlier love for him so far revive as to declare that her heart was broken. She moaned and wept and refused all comfort, until one night she closed her eyes on the world which had been so harsh and bitter. So Bell was an orphan, bereft of father and mother, and crushed to the earth by sorrow and shame. In her own way she had loved her father, and his evil deed and evil end had struck her to the heart. She was even glad when her mother died, for she well knew that the sensitive woman would never have held up her head again, after the disgrace which had befallen her. And Bell, with a white face and dry eyes, long past weeping, sat in the dingy parlour, refusing the only comfort which the world could give her weary heart. Poor Bell! poor, pretty Bell!
'Think, Gabriel,' she continued, in a hard, tearless voice, 'think what shame I would bring upon you were I weak enough to consent to become your wife. I had not much to give you before; I have less than nothing now. I never pretended to be a lady; but I thought that, as your wife, I should never disgrace you. That's all past and done with now. I always knew you were a true gentleman--honourable and kind. No one but a gentleman like you would have kept his word with the daughter of a murderer. But you have done so, dear, and I thank and bless you for your kindness. The only way in which I can show how grateful I am is to give you back your ring. Take it, Gabriel, and G.o.d be good to you for your upright kindness.'
There was that in her tone which made Gabriel feel that her decision was irrevocable. He mechanically took the ring she returned to him and slipped it on his finger. Never again was it removed from where he placed it at that moment; and in after days it often reminded him of the one love of his life. With a second sigh, hopeless and resigned, he rose to his feet, and looked at the dark figure in the twilight of the room.
'What are your plans, Bell?' he asked in an unemotional voice, which he hardly recognised as his own.
'I am going away from Beorminster next week,' answered the girl, listlessly. 'Sir Harry has arranged all about this hotel, and has been most kind in every way. I have a little money, as Sir Harry paid me for the furniture and the stock-in-trade. Of course I had to pay f--father's debts'--she could hardly speak the words--'so there is not much left.
Still, I have sufficient to take me to London and keep me until I can get a situation.'
'As--as a barmaid?' asked Gabriel, in a low voice.
'As a barmaid,' she replied coldly. 'What else am I fit for?'
'Can I not help you?'
'No; you have given me all the help you could, by showing me how much you respect me.'
'I do more than respect you, Bell; I love you.' 'I am glad of that,'
replied Bell, softly; 'it is a great thing for a miserable girl like me to be loved.'
'Bell! Bell! no one can cast a stone at you.'
'I am the daughter of a murderer, Gabriel; and I know better than you what the world's charity is. Do you think I would stay in this place, where cruel people would remind me daily and hourly of my father's sin?
Ah, my dear, I know what would be said, and I don't wish to hear it. I shall bury my poor mother, and go away, never to return.'
'My poor Bell! G.o.d has indeed laid a heavy burden upon you.'
'Don't!' Her voice broke and the long-absent tears came into her eyes.
'Don't speak kindly to me, Gabriel; I can't bear kindness. I have made up my mind to bear the worst. Go away; your goodness only makes things the harder for me. After all, I am only a woman, and as a woman I must w-e-e-p.' She broke down, and her tears flowed quickly.
'I shall go,' said Gabriel, feeling helpless, for indeed he could do nothing. 'Good-bye, Bell!' he faltered.
'Good-bye!' she sobbed. 'G.o.d bless you!'
Gabriel, with a sick heart, moved slowly towards the door. Just as he reached it, Bell rose swiftly, and crossing the room threw her arms round his neck, weeping as though her overcharged heart would break. 'I shall never kiss you again,' she wailed,'never, never again!'
'G.o.d bless and keep you, my poor darling!' faltered Gabriel.
'And G.o.d bless you! for a good man you have been to me,' she sobbed, and then they parted, never to meet again in this world.
And that was the end of Gabriel Pendle's romance. At first he thought of going to the South Seas as a missionary, but his father's entreaties that he should avoid so extreme a course prevailed, and in the end he went no further from Beorminster than Heathcroft Vicarage. Mr Leigh died a few days after Bell vanished from the little county town: and Gabriel was presented with the living by the bishop. He is a conscientious worker, an earnest priest, a popular vicar, but his heart is still sore for Bell, who so n.o.bly gave him up to bear her own innocent disgrace alone. Where Bell is now he does not know; n.o.body in Beorminster knows--not even Mrs Pansey--for she has disappeared like a drop of water in the wild waste ocean of London town. And Gabriel works on amid the poor and needy with a cheerful face but a sore heart; for it is early days yet, and his heart-wounds are recent. No one save the bishop knows how he loved and lost poor Bell; but Mrs Pendle, with the double instinct of woman and mother, guesses that her favourite son has his own pitiful romance, and would fain know of it, that she might comfort him in his sorrow. But Gabriel has never told her; he will never tell her, but go silent and unmarried through life, true to the memory of the rough, commonplace woman who proved herself so n.o.ble and honourable in adversity. And so no more of these poor souls.
It is more pleasant to talk of the Which.e.l.lo-Pansey war. '_Bella matronis detestata_,' saith the Latin poet, who knew little of the s.e.x to make such a remark. To be sure, he was talking of public wars, and not of domestic or social battles; but he should have been more explicit. Women are born fighters--with their tongues; and an ill.u.s.tration of this truth was given in Beorminster when Miss Which.e.l.lo threw down the gage to Mrs Pansey. The little old lady knew well enough that when George and Mab were married, the archdeacon's widow would use her famous memory to recall the scandals she had set afloat nearly thirty years before. Therefore, to defeat Mrs Pansey once and for all, she called on that good lady and dared her to say that there was any disgrace attached to Mab's parentage. Mrs Pansey, antic.i.p.ating an easy victory, shook out her skirts, and was up in arms at once.
'I know for a fact that your sister Ann did not marry the man she eloped with,' cried Mrs Pansey, shaking her head viciously.
'Who told you this fact?' demanded Miss Which.e.l.lo, indignantly.
'I--I can't remember at present, but that's no matter--it's true.'
'It is not true, and you know it is an invention of your own spiteful mind, Mrs Pansey. My sister was married on the day she left home, and I have her marriage certificate to prove it. I showed it to Bishop Pendle, because you poisoned his mind with your malicious lies, and he is quite satisfied.'
'Oh, any story would satisfy the bishop,' sneered Mrs Pansey; 'we all know what he is!'
'We do--an honourable Christian gentleman; and we all know what you are--a scandalmongering, spiteful, soured cat.'
'Hoity-toity! fine language this.'
'It is the kind of language you deserve, ma'am. All your life you have been making mischief with your vile tongue!'
'Woman,' roared Mrs Pansey, white with wrath, 'no one ever dared to speak like this to me.'
'It's a pity they didn't, then,' retorted the undaunted Miss Which.e.l.lo; 'it would have been the better for you, and for Beorminster also.'
'Would it indeed, ma'am?' gasped her adversary, beginning to feel nervous; 'oh, really!' with a hysterical t.i.tter, 'you and your certificate--I don't believe you have it.'
'Ask the bishop if I have not. He is satisfied, and that is all that is necessary, you wicked old woman.'
'You--you leave my house.'
'I shall do no such thing. Here I am, and here I'll stay until I speak my mind,' and Miss Which.e.l.lo thumped the floor with her umbrella, while she gathered breath to continue. 'I haven't the certificate of my sister's marriage--haven't I? I'll show it to you in a court of law, Mrs Pansey, when you are in the dock--the dock, ma'am!'
'Me in the dock?' screeched Mrs Pansey, shaking all over, but more from fear than wrath. 'How--how--dare you?'
'I dare anything to stop your wicked tongue. Everybody hates you; some people are fools enough to fear you, but I don't,' cried Miss Which.e.l.lo, erecting her crest; 'no, not a bit. One word against me, or against Mab, and I'll have you up for defamation of character, as sure as my name's Selina Which.e.l.lo.'