A Life's Secret. Henry Wood
And it was over: so, what signified talking of it?'
'Why did she attack you?' pursued Dr. Bevary.
'She evidently, if there was reason in her at all, mistook me for somebody else. All sorts of diabolical things she was beginning to accuse me of; that of having evaded her for some great number of years, amongst the rest. I stopped her; telling her I had no mind to be the depository of other people's secrets.'
'She solemnly protested to me, after you rode away, sir, that you were the man who had done her family some wrong,' interposed Austin. 'I told her I felt certain she was mistaken; and so drew down her anger upon me.'
'Of what nature was the wrong?' asked Dr. Bevary.
'I cannot tell,' said Austin. 'I seemed to gather from her words that the wrong was upon her family, or upon some portion of her family, rather than upon her. I remember she made use of the expression, that it had broken up her happy home.'
'And you did not know her?' exclaimed the doctor, looking at Mr. Henry Hunter.
'Know her?' he returned, 'I never set eyes on her in all my life until that day. I never was in the place before, or in its neighbourhood. If I ever did work her wrong, or ill, I must have done it in my sleep; and with miles of distance intervening. Who is she? What is her name? You told it me, Mr. Clay, but I forget what it was.'
'Her name is Gwinn,' replied Austin. 'The brother is a lawyer and has scraped together a business. One morning, many years ago, a lady arrived at his house, without warning, and took up her abode with him. She turned out to be his sister, and the people at Ketterford think she is mad. It is said they come from Wales. The little boys call after her, "the mad Welsh woman." Sometimes Miss Gwinn.'
'What did you say the name was?' interrupted Dr. Bevary, with startling emphasis. 'Gwinn?—and from Wales?'
'Yes.'
Dr. Bevary paused, as if in deep thought. 'What is her Christian name?' he presently inquired.
'It is a somewhat uncommon one,' replied Austin. 'Agatha.'
The doctor nodded his head, as if expecting the answer. 'A tall, spare, angular woman, of great strength,' he remarked.
'Why, what do you know of her?' exclaimed Mr. Henry Hunter to the doctor, in a surprised tone.
'Not a great deal. We medical men come across all sorts of persons occasionally,' was the physician's reply. And it was given in a concise, laconic manner, as if he did not care to be questioned further. Mr. Henry Hunter pursued the subject.
'If you know her, Bevary, perhaps you can tell whether she is mad or sane.'
'She is sane, I believe: I have no reason to think her otherwise. But she is one who can allow angry passion to master her at moments: I have seen it do so. Do you say her brother is a lawyer?' he continued, to Austin Clay.
'Yes, he is. And not one of the first water, as to reputation; a grasping, pettifogging practitioner, who will take up any dirty case that may be brought to him. And in that, I fancy, he is a contrast to his sister; for, with all her strange ways, I should not judge her to be dishonourable. It is said he speculates, and that he is not over particular whose money he gets to do it with.'
'I wonder that she never told me about this brother,' dreamily exclaimed the doctor, in an inward tone, as if forgetting that he spoke aloud.
'Where did you meet with her? When did you know her?' interposed Mr. Henry Hunter.
'Are you sure that you know nothing about her?' was the doctor's rejoinder, turning a searching glance upon Mr. Henry Hunter.
'Come, Bevary, what have you got in your head? I do not know her. I never met with her until she saw and accosted me. Are you acquainted with her history?'
'With a dark page in it.'
'What is the page?'
Dr. Bevary shook his head. 'In the course of a physician's practice he becomes cognisant of many odds and ends of romance, dark or fair; things that he must hold sacred, and may not give utterance to.'
Mr. Henry Hunter looked vexed. 'Perhaps you can understand the reason of her attacking me?'
'I could understand it, but for your assertion of being a stranger to her. If it is so, I can only believe that she mistook you for another.'
'If it is so,' repeated Mr. Henry Hunter. 'I am not in the habit of asserting an untruth, Bevary.'
'Nor, on the other hand, is Miss Gwinn one to be deceived. She is keen as a razor.'
'Bevary, what are you driving at?'
'At nothing. Don't be alarmed, Henry. I have no cause to suppose you know the woman, or she you. I only thought—and think—she is one whom it is almost impossible to deceive. It must, however, have been a mistake.'
'It was a mistake—so far as her suspicion that she knew me went,' decisively returned Mr. Henry Hunter.
'Ay,' acquiesced Dr. Bevary. 'But here am I gossiping my morning away, when a host of patients are waiting for me. We poor doctors never get a holiday, as you more favoured mortals do.'
He laughed as he went out, nodding a friendly farewell to Austin. Mr. Henry Hunter stepped out after him. Then Mr. Hunter, who had not taken part in the discussion, but had stood looking from the window while they carried it on, wheeled round to Austin and spoke in a low, earnest tone.
'What is this tale—this mystery—that my brother and the doctor seem to be picking up?'
'Sir, I know no more than you have heard me say. I witnessed her attack on Mr. Henry Hunter.'
'I should like to know further about it: about her. Will you–Hush! here comes my brother back again. Hush!'
His voice died away in the faintest whisper, for Mr. Henry Hunter was already within the room. Was Mr. Hunter suspecting that his brother had more cognisance of the affair than he seemed willing to avow? The thought, that it must be so, crossed Austin Clay; or why that warning 'hush' twice repeated?
It happened that business was remarkably brisk that season at Hunter and Hunter's. They could scarcely get hands enough, or the work done. And when Austin explained the cause which had brought him to town, and frankly proffered the question of whether they could recommend him to employment, they were glad to offer it themselves. He produced his credentials of capacity and character, and waited. Mr. Henry Hunter turned to him with a smile.
'I suppose you are not above your work, Mr. Clay?'
'I am not above anything in the world that is right, sir. I have come to seek work.'
He was engaged forthwith. His duties at present were to lie partly in the counting-house, partly in overlooking the men; and the salary offered was twenty-five pounds per quarter.
'I can rise above that in time, I suppose,' remarked Austin, 'if I give satisfaction?'
Mr. Hunter smiled. 'Ay, you can rise above that, if you choose. But when you get on, you'll be doing, I expect, as some of the rest do.'
'What is that, sir?'
'Leaving us, to set up for yourself. Numbers have done so as soon as they have become valuable. I do not speak of the men, you understand, but of those who have been with us in a higher capacity. A few of the men, though, have done the same; some have risen into influence.'
'How can they do that without capital?' inquired Austin. 'It must take money, and a good deal of it, to set up for themselves.'
'Not so much as you may think. They begin in a small way—take piece-work, and work early and late, often fourteen and fifteen hours a day, husbanding their earnings, and getting a capital together by slow but sure degrees. Many of our most important firms have so risen, and owe their present positions to sheer hard work, patience, and energy.'
'It was the way in which Mr. Thornimett first rose,' observed Austin. 'He was once a journeyman at fourteen shillings a week. He got together money by working over hours.'
'Ay, there's nothing like it for the industrious man,' said Mr. Hunter.
Preliminaries