The Old Wives' Tale
Book II
CONSTANCE
Chapter V
ANOTHER CRIME
I
One night—it was late in the afternoon of
the same year, about six months after the tragedy of the florin—Samuel Povey was
wakened up by a hand on his shoulder and a voice that whispered: "Father!"
The thief and the liar was standing in his night-shirt by the
bed.
Samuel's sleepy eyes could just descry him in the thick gloom.
"What—what?" questioned the father, gradually coming to
consciousness.
"What are you doing there?"
"I didn't want to wake mother up," the boy whispered. "There's
someone been throwing dirt or something at our windows, and has been for a long
time."
"Eh, what?"
Samuel stared at the dim form of the thief and liar. The boy was
tall, not in the least like a little boy; and yet, then, he seemed to his father
as quite a little boy, a little 'thing' in a night-shirt, with childish gestures
and childish inflections, and a childish, delicious, quaint anxiety not to
disturb his mother, who had lately been deprived of sleep owing to an illness of
Amy's which had demanded nursing. His father had not so perceived him for years.
In that instant the conviction that Cyril was permanently unfit for human
society finally expired in the father's mind. Time had already weakened it very
considerably. The decision that, be Cyril what he might, the summer holiday must
be taken as usual, had dealt it a fearful blow. And yet, though Samuel and
Constance had grown so accustomed to the companionship of a criminal that they
frequently lost memory of his guilt for long periods, nevertheless the
convention of his leprosy had more or less persisted with Samuel until that
moment: when it vanished with strange suddenness, to Samuel's conscious
relief.
There was a rain of pellets on the window.
"Hear that?" demanded Cyril, whispering dramatically. "And it's
been like that on my window too."
Samuel arose. "Go back to your room!" he ordered in the same
dramatic whisper; but not as father to son—rather as conspirator to
conspirator.
Constance slept. They could hear her regular breathing.
Barefooted, the elderly gowned figure followed the younger, and
one after the other they creaked down the two steps which separated Cyril's room
from his parents'.
"Shut the door quietly!" said Samuel.
Cyril obeyed.
And then, having lighted Cyril's gas, Samuel drew the blind,
unfastened the catch of the window, and began to open it with many precautions
of silence. All the sashes in that house were difficult to manage. Cyril stood
close to his father, shivering without knowing that he shivered, astonished only
that his father had not told him to get back into bed at once. It was, beyond
doubt, the proudest hour of Cyril's career. In addition to the mysterious
circumstances of the night, there was in the situation that thrill which always
communicates itself to a father and son when they are afoot together upon an
enterprise unsuspected by the woman from whom their lives have no secrets.
Samuel put his head out of the window.
A man was standing there.
"That you, Samuel?" The voice came low.
"Yes," replied Samuel, cautiously. "It's not Cousin Daniel, is
it?"
"I want ye," said Daniel Povey, curtly.
Samuel paused. "I'll be down in a minute," he said.
Cyril at length received the command to get back into bed at
once.
"Whatever's up, father?" he asked joyously.
"I don't know. I must put some things on and go and see."
He shut down the window on all the breezes that were pouring into
the room.
"Now quick, before I turn the gas out!" he admonished, his hand on
the gas-tap.
"You'll tell me in the morning, won't you, father?"
"Yes," said Mr. Povey, conquering his habitual impulse to say
'No.'
He crept back to the large bedroom to grope for clothes.
When, having descended to the parlour and lighted the gas there,
he opened the side-door, expecting to let Cousin Daniel in, there was no sign of
Cousin Daniel. Presently he saw a figure standing at the corner of the Square.
He whistled—Samuel had a singular faculty of whistling, the envy of his son—and
Daniel beckoned to him. He nearly extinguished the gas and then ran out,
hatless. He was wearing most of his clothes, except his linen collar and
necktie, and the collar of his coat was turned up.
Daniel advanced before him, without waiting, into the
confectioner's shop opposite. Being part of the most modern building in the
Square, Daniel's shop was provided with the new roll-down iron shutter, by means
of which you closed your establishment with a motion similar to the winding of a
large clock, instead of putting up twenty separate shutters one by one as in the
sixteenth century. The little portal in the vast sheet of armour was ajar, and
Daniel had passed into the gloom beyond. At the same moment a policeman came
along on his beat, cutting off Mr. Povey from Daniel.
"Good-night, officer! Brrr!" said Mr. Povey, gathering his dignity
about him and holding himself as though it was part of his normal habit to take
exercise bareheaded and collarless in St. Luke's Square on cold November nights.
He behaved so because, if Daniel had desired the services of a policeman, Daniel
would of course have spoken to this one.
"Goo' night, sir," said the policeman, after recognizing him.
"What time is it?" asked Samuel, bold.
"A quarter-past one, sir."
The policeman, leaving Samuel at the little open door, went
forward across the lamplit Square, and Samuel entered his cousin's shop.
Daniel Povey was standing behind the door, and as Samuel came in
he shut the door with a startling sudden movement. Save for the twinkle of gas,
the shop was in darkness. It had the empty appearance which a well-managed
confectioner's and baker's always has at night. The large brass scales near the
flour-bins glinted; and the glass cake-stands, with scarce a tart among them,
also caught the faint flare of the gas.
"What's the matter, Daniel? Anything wrong?" Samuel asked, feeling
boyish as he usually did in the presence of Daniel.
The well-favoured white-haired man seized him with one hand by the
shoulder in a grip that convicted Samuel of frailty.
"Look here, Sam'l," said he in his low, pleasant voice, somewhat
altered by excitement. "You know as my wife drinks?"
He stared defiantly at Samuel.
"N—no," said Samuel. "That is—no one's ever SAID——"
This was true. He did not know that Mrs. Daniel Povey, at the age
of fifty, had definitely taken to drink. There had been rumours that she enjoyed
a glass with too much gusto; but 'drinks' meant more than that.
"She drinks," Daniel Povey continued. "And has done this last two
year!"
"I'm very sorry to hear it," said Samuel, tremendously shocked by
this brutal rending of the cloak of decency.
Always, everybody had feigned to Daniel, and Daniel had feigned to
everybody, that his wife was as other wives. And now the man himself had torn to
pieces in a moment the veil of thirty years' weaving.
"And if that was the worst!" Daniel murmured reflectively,
loosening his grip.
Samuel was excessively disturbed. His cousin was hinting at
matters which he himself, at any rate, had never hinted at even to Constance, so
abhorrent were they; matters unutterable, which hung like clouds in the social
atmosphere of the town, and of which at rare intervals one conveyed one's
cognizance, not by words, but by something scarce perceptible in a glance, an
accent. Not often is a town such as Bursley starred with such a woman as Mrs.
Daniel Povey.
"But what's wrong?" Samuel asked, trying to be firm.
And, "What is wrong?" he asked himself. "What does all this mean,
at after one o'clock in the morning?"
"Look here, Sam'l," Daniel recommenced, seizing his shoulder
again. "I went to Liverpool corn market to-day, and missed the last train, so I
came by mail from Crewe. And what do I find? I find Dick sitting on the stairs
in the dark pretty high naked."
"Sitting on the stairs? Dick?"
"Ay! This is what I come home to!"
"But—"
"Hold on! He's been in bed a couple of days with a feverish cold,
caught through lying in damp sheets as his mother had forgot to air. She brings
him no supper to-night. He calls out. No answer. Then he gets up to go
down-stairs and see what's happened, and he slips on th' stairs and breaks his
knee, or puts it out or summat. Sat there hours, seemingly! Couldn't walk
neither up nor down."
"And was your—wife—was Mrs.—?"
"Dead drunk in the parlour, Sam'l."
"But the servant?"
"Servant!" Daniel Povey laughed. "We can't keep our servants. They
won't stay. YOU know that."
He did. Mrs. Daniel Povey's domestic methods and idiosyncrasies
could at any rate be freely discussed, and they were.
"And what have you done?"
"Done? Why, I picked him up in my arms and carried him upstairs
again.
And a fine job I had too! Here! Come here!"
Daniel strode impulsively across the shop—the counterflap was
up—and opened a door at the back. Samuel followed. Never before had he
penetrated so far into his cousin's secrets. On the left, within the doorway,
were the stairs, dark; on the right a shut door; and in front an open door
giving on to a yard. At the extremity of the yard he discerned a building,
vaguely lit, and naked figures strangely moving in it.
"What's that? Who's there?" he asked sharply.
"That's the bakehouse," Daniel replied, as if surprised at such a
question. "It's one of their long nights."
Never, during the brief remainder of his life, did Samuel eat a
mouthful of common bread without recalling that midnight apparition. He had
lived for half a century, and thoughtlessly eaten bread as though loaves grew
ready-made on trees.
"Listen!" Daniel commanded him.
He cocked his ear, and caught a feeble, complaining wail from an
upper floor.
"That's Dick! That is!" said Daniel Povey.
It sounded more like the distress of a child than of an
adventurous young man of twenty-four or so.
"But is he in pain? Haven't you fetched the doctor?"
"Not yet," answered Daniel, with a vacant stare.
Samuel gazed at him closely for a second. And Daniel seemed to him
very old and helpless and pathetic, a man unequal to the situation in which he
found himself; and yet, despite the dignified snow of his age, wistfully boyish.
Samuel thought swiftly: "This has been too much for him. He's almost out of his
mind. That's the explanation. Some one's got to take charge, and I must." And
all the courageous resolution of his character braced itself to the crisis.
Being without a collar, being in slippers, and his suspenders imperfectly
fastened anyhow,—these things seemed to be a part of the crisis.
"I'll just run upstairs and have a look at him," said Samuel, in a
matter-of-fact tone.
Daniel did not reply.
There was a glimmer at the top of the stairs. Samuel mounted,
found the gas-jet, and turned it on full. A dingy, dirty, untidy passage was
revealed, the very antechamber of discomfort. Guided by the moans, Samuel
entered a bedroom, which was in a shameful condition of neglect, and lighted
only by a nearly expired candle. Was it possible that a house-mistress could so
lose her self-respect? Samuel thought of his own abode, meticulously and
impeccably 'kept,' and a hard bitterness against Mrs. Daniel surged up in his
soul.
"Is that you, doctor?" said a voice from the bed; the moans
ceased.
Samuel raised the candle.
Dick lay there, his face, on which was a beard of several days'
growth, distorted by anguish, sweating; his tousled brown hair was limp with
sweat.
"Where the hell's the doctor?" the young man demanded brusquely.
Evidently he had no curiosity about Samuel's presence; the one thing that struck
him was that Samuel was not the doctor.
"He's coming, he's coming," said Samuel, soothingly.
"Well, if he isn't here soon I shall be damn well dead," said
Dick, in feeble resentful anger. "I can tell you that."
Samuel deposited the candle and ran downstairs. "I say, Daniel,"
he said, roused and hot, "this is really ridiculous. Why on earth didn't you
fetch the doctor while you were waiting for me? Where's the missis?"
Daniel Povey was slowly emptying grains of Indian corn out of his
jacket-pocket into one of the big receptacles behind the counter on the baker's
side of the shop. He had provisioned himself with Indian corn as ammunition for
Samuel's bedroom window; he was now returning the surplus.
"Are ye going for Harrop?" he questioned hesitatingly.
"Why, of course!" Samuel exclaimed. "Where's the missis?"
"Happen you'd better go and have a look at her," said Daniel
Povey.
"She's in th' parlour."
He preceded Samuel to the shut door on the right. When he opened
it the parlour appeared in full illumination.
"Here! Go in!" said Daniel.
Samuel went in, afraid. In a room as dishevelled and filthy as the
bedroom, Mrs. Daniel Povey lay stretched awkwardly on a worn horse-hair sofa,
her head thrown back, her face discoloured, her eyes bulging, her mouth wet and
yawning: a sight horribly offensive. Samuel was frightened; he was struck with
fear and with disgust. The singing gas beat down ruthlessly on that dreadful
figure. A wife and mother! The lady of a house! The centre of order! The fount
of healing! The balm for worry, and the refuge of distress! She was vile. Her
scanty yellow-grey hair was dirty, her hollowed neck all grime, her hands
abominable, her black dress in decay. She was the dishonour of her sex, her
situation, and her years. She was a fouler obscenity than the inexperienced
Samuel had ever conceived. And by the door stood her husband, neat, spotless,
almost stately, the man who for thirty years had marshalled all his immense
pride to suffer this woman, the jolly man who had laughed through thick and
thin! Samuel remembered when they were married. And he remembered when, years
after their marriage, she was still as pretty, artificial, coquettish, and
adamantine in her caprices as a young harlot with a fool at her feet. Time and
the slow wrath of God had changed her.
He remained master of himself and approached her; then
stopped.
"But—" he stammered.
"Ay, Sam'l, lad!" said the old man from the door. "I doubt I've
killed her! I doubt I've killed her! I took and shook her. I got her by the
neck. And before I knew where I was, I'd done it. She'll never drink brandy
again. This is what it's come to!"
He moved away.
All Samuel's flesh tingled as a heavy wave of emotion rolled
through his being. It was just as if some one had dealt him a blow unimaginably
tremendous. His heart shivered, as a ship shivers at the mountainous crash of
the waters. He was numbed. He wanted to weep, to vomit, to die, to sink away.
But a voice was whispering to him: "You will have to go through with this. You
are in charge of this." He thought of HIS wife and child, innocently asleep in
the cleanly pureness of HIS home. And he felt the roughness of his coat-collar
round his neck and the insecurity of his trousers. He passed out of the room,
shutting the door. And across the yard he had a momentary glimpse of those nude
nocturnal forms, unconsciously attitudinizing in the bakehouse. And down the
stairs came the protests of Dick, driven by pain into a monotonous silly
blasphemy.
"I'll fetch Harrop," he said, melancholily, to his cousin.
The doctor's house was less than fifty yards off, and the doctor
had a night-bell, which, though he was a much older man than his father had been
at his age, he still answered promptly. No need to bombard the doctor's premises
with Indian corn! While Samuel was parleying with the doctor through a window,
the question ran incessantly through his mind: "What about telling the
police?"
But when, in advance of old Harrop, he returned to Daniel's shop,
lo! the policeman previously encountered had returned upon his beat, and Daniel
was talking to him in the little doorway. No other soul was about. Down King
Street, along Wedgwood Street, up the Square, towards Brougham Street, nothing
but gaslamps burning with their everlasting patience, and the blind facades of
shops. Only in the second storey of the Bank Building at the top of the Square a
light showed mysteriously through a blind. Somebody ill there!
The policeman was in a high state of nervous excitement. That had
happened to him which had never happened to him before. Of the sixty policemen
in Bursley, just he had been chosen by fate to fit the socket of destiny. He was
startled.
"What's this, what's this, Mr. Povey?" he turned hastily to
Samuel.
"What's this as Mr. Councillor Povey is a-telling me?"
"You come in, sergeant," said Daniel.
"If I come in," said the policeman to Samuel, "you mun' go
along
Wedgwood Street, Mr. Povey, and bring my mate. He should be on
Duck
Bank, by rights."
It was astonishing, when once the stone had begun to roll, how
quickly it ran. In half an hour Samuel had actually parted from Daniel at the
police-office behind the Shambles, and was hurrying to rouse his wife so that
she could look after Dick Povey until he might be taken off to Pirehill
Infirmary, as old Harrop had instantly, on seeing him, decreed.
"Ah!" he reflected in the turmoil of his soul: "God is not
mocked!" That was his basic idea: God is not mocked! Daniel was a good fellow,
honourable, brilliant; a figure in the world. But what of his licentious tongue?
What of his frequenting of bars? (How had he come to miss that train from
Liverpool? How?) For many years he, Samuel, had seen in Daniel a living
refutation of the authenticity of the old Hebrew menaces. But he had been wrong,
after all! God is not mocked! And Samuel was aware of a revulsion in himself
towards that strict codified godliness from which, in thought, he had perhaps
been slipping away.
And with it all he felt, too, a certain officious self-importance,
as he woke his wife and essayed to break the news to her in a manner tactfully
calm. He had assisted at the most overwhelming event ever known in the history
of the town.
II
"Your muffler—I'll get it," said Constance. "Cyril, run upstairs
and get father's muffler. You know the drawer."
Cyril ran. It behoved everybody, that morning, to be prompt and
efficient.
"I don't need any muffler, thank you," said Samuel, coughing and
smothering the cough.
"Oh! But, Sam—" Constance protested.
"Now please don't worry me!" said Samuel with frigid finality.
"I've got quite enough—!" He did not finish.
Constance sighed as her husband stepped, nervous and
self-important, out of the side-door into the street. It was early, not yet
eight o'clock, and the shop still unopened.
"Your father couldn't wait," Constance said to Cyril when he had
thundered down the stairs in his heavy schoolboy boots. "Give it to me." She
went to restore the muffler to its place.
The whole house was upset, and Amy still an invalid! Existence was
disturbed; there vaguely seemed to be a thousand novel things to be done, and
yet she could think of nothing whatever that she needed to do at that moment; so
she occupied herself with the muffler. Before she reappeared Cyril had gone to
school, he who was usually a laggard. The truth was that he could no longer
contain within himself a recital of the night, and in particular of the fact
that he had been the first to hear the summons of the murderer on the
window-pane. This imperious news had to be imparted to somebody, as a
preliminary to the thrilling of the whole school; and Cyril had issued forth in
search of an appreciative and worthy confidant. He was scarcely five minutes
after his father.
In St. Luke's Square was a crowd of quite two hundred persons,
standing moveless in the November mud. The body of Mrs. Daniel Povey had already
been taken to the Tiger Hotel, and young Dick Povey was on his way in a covered
wagonette to Pirehill Infirmary on the other side of Knype. The shop of the
crime was closed, and the blinds drawn at the upper windows of the house. There
was absolutely nothing to be seen, not even a policeman. Nevertheless the crowd
stared with an extraordinary obstinate attentiveness at the fatal building in
Boulton Terrace. Hypnotized by this face of bricks and mortar, it had apparently
forgotten all earthly ties, and, regardless of breakfast and a livelihood, was
determined to stare at it till the house fell down or otherwise rendered up its
secret. Most of its component individuals wore neither overcoats nor collars,
but were kept warm by a scarf round the neck and by dint of forcing their
fingers into the furthest inch of their pockets. Then they would slowly lift one
leg after the other. Starers of infirm purpose would occasionally detach
themselves from the throng and sidle away, ashamed of their fickleness. But
reinforcements were continually arriving. And to these new-comers all that had
been said in gossip had to be repeated and repeated: the same questions, the
same answers, the same exclamations, the same proverbial philosophy, the same
prophecies recurred in all parts of the Square with an uncanny iterance.
Well-dressed men spoke to mere professional loiterers; for this unparalleled and
glorious sensation, whose uniqueness grew every instant more impressive, brought
out the essential brotherhood of mankind. All had a peculiar feeling that the
day was neither Sunday nor week-day, but some eighth day of the week. Yet in the
St. Luke's Covered Market close by, the stall-keepers were preparing their
stalls just as though it were Saturday, just as though a Town Councillor had not
murdered his wife—at last! It was stated, and restated infinitely, that the
Povey baking had been taken over by Brindley, the second-best baker and
confectioner, who had a stall in the market. And it was asserted, as a
philosophical truth, and reasserted infinitely, that there would have been no
sense in wasting good food.
Samuel's emergence stirred the multitude. But Samuel passed up the
Square with a rapt expression; he might have been under an illusion, caused by
the extreme gravity of his preoccupations, that he was crossing a deserted
Square. He hurried past the Bank and down the Turnhill Road, to the private
residence of 'Young Lawton,' son of the deceased 'Lawyer Lawton.' Young Lawton
followed his father's profession; he was, as his father had been, the most
successful solicitor in the town (though reputed by his learned rivals to be a
fool), but the custom of calling men by their occupations had died out with
horse-cars. Samuel caught young Lawton at his breakfast, and presently drove
with him, in the Lawton buggy, to the police-station, where their arrival
electrified a crowd as large as that in St. Luke's Square. Later, they drove
together to Hanbridge, informally to brief a barrister; and Samuel, not
permitted to be present at the first part of the interview between the solicitor
and the barrister, was humbled before the pomposity of legal etiquette.
It seemed to Samuel a game. The whole rigmarole of police and
police-cells and formalities seemed insincere. His cousin's case was not like
any other case, and, though formalities might be necessary, it was rather absurd
to pretend that it was like any other case. In what manner it differed from
other cases Samuel did not analytically inquire. He thought young Lawton was
self-important, and Daniel too humble, in the colloquy of these two, and he
endeavoured to indicate, by the dignity of his own demeanour, that in his
opinion the proper relative tones had not been set. He could not understand
Daniel's attitude, for he lacked imagination to realize what Daniel had been
through. After all, Daniel was not a murderer; his wife's death was due to
accident, was simply a mishap.
But in the crowded and stinking court-room of the Town Hall,
Samuel began to feel qualms. It occurred that the Stipendiary Magistrate was
sitting that morning at Bursley. He sat alone, as not one of the Borough
Justices cared to occupy the Bench while a Town Councillor was in the dock. The
Stipendiary, recently appointed, was a young man, from the southern part of the
county; and a Town Councillor of Bursley was no more to him than a petty
tradesman to a man of fashion. He was youthfully enthusiastic for the majesty
and the impartiality of English justice, and behaved as though the entire
responsibility for the safety of that vast fabric rested on his shoulders. He
and the barrister from Hanbridge had had a historic quarrel at Cambridge, and
their behaviour to each other was a lesson to the vulgar in the art of chill and
consummate politeness. Young Lawton, having been to Oxford, secretly scorned the
pair of them, but, as he had engaged counsel, he of course was precluded from
adding to the eloquence, which chagrined him. These three were the aristocracy
of the court-room; they knew it; Samuel Povey knew it; everybody knew it, and
felt it. The barrister brought an unexceptionable zeal to the performance of his
duties; be referred in suitable terms to Daniel's character and high position in
the town, but nothing could hide the fact that for him too his client was a
petty tradesman accused of simple murder. Naturally the Stipendiary was bound to
show that before the law all men are equal—the Town Councillor and the common
tippler; he succeeded. The policeman gave his evidence, and the Inspector swore
to what Daniel Povey had said when charged. The hearing proceeded so smoothly
and quickly that it seemed naught but an empty rite, with Daniel as a lay figure
in it. The Stipendiary achieved marvellously the illusion that to him a murder
by a Town Councillor in St. Luke's Square was quite an everyday matter. Bail was
inconceivable, and the barrister, being unable to suggest any reason why the
Stipendiary should grant a remand—indeed, there was no reason—Daniel Povey was
committed to the Stafford Assizes for trial. The Stipendiary instantly turned to
the consideration of an alleged offence against the Factory Acts by a large
local firm of potters. The young magistrate had mistaken his vocation. With his
steely calm, with his imperturbable detachment from weak humanity, he ought to
have been a General of the Order of Jesuits.
Daniel was removed—he did not go: he was removed, by two
bare-headed constables. Samuel wanted to have speech with him, and could not.
And later, Samuel stood in the porch of the Town Hall, and Daniel appeared out
of a corridor, still in the keeping of two policemen, helmeted now. And down
below at the bottom of the broad flight of steps, up which passed dancers on the
nights of subscription balls, was a dense crowd, held at bay by other policemen;
and beyond the crowd a black van. And Daniel—to his cousin a sort of Christ
between thieves—was hurried past the privileged loafers in the corridor, and
down the broad steps. A murmuring wave agitated the crowd. Unkempt idlers and
ne'er-do-wells in corduroy leaped up like tigers in the air, and the policemen
fought them back furiously. And Daniel and his guardians shot through the little
living lane. Quick! Quick! For the captive is more sacred even than a messiah.
The law has him in charge! And like a feat of prestidigitation Daniel
disappeared into the blackness of the van. A door slammed loudly, triumphantly,
and a whip cracked. The crowd had been balked. It was as though the crowd had
yelled for Daniel's blood and bones, and the faithful constables had saved him
from their lust.
Yes, Samuel had qualms. He had a sickness in the stomach.
The aged Superintendent of Police walked by, with the aged Rector.
The
Rector was Daniel's friend. Never before had the Rector spoken to
the
Nonconformist Samuel, but now he spoke to him; he squeezed his
hand.
"Ah, Mr. Povey!" he ejaculated grievously.
"I—I'm afraid it's serious!" Samuel stammered. He hated to admit
that it was serious, but the words came out of his mouth.
He looked at the Superintendent of Police, expecting the
Superintendent to assure him that it was not serious; but the Superintendent
only raised his small white-bearded chin, saying nothing. The Rector shook his
head, and shook a senile tear out of his eye.
After another chat with young Lawton, Samuel, on behalf of Daniel,
dropped his pose of the righteous man to whom a mere mishap has occurred, and
who is determined, with the lofty pride of innocence, to indulge all the whims
of the law, to be more royalist than the king. He perceived that the law must be
fought with its own weapons, that no advantage must be surrendered, and every
possible advantage seized. He was truly astonished at himself that such a pose
had ever been adopted. His eyes were opened; he saw things as they were.
He returned home through a Square that was more interested than
ever in the facade of his cousin's house. People were beginning to come from
Hanbridge, Knype, Longshaw, Turnhill, and villages such as Moorthorne, to gaze
at that facade. And the fourth edition of the Signal, containing a full report
of what the Stipendiary and the barrister had said to each other, was being
cried.
In his shop he found customers, as absorbed in the trivialities of
purchase as though nothing whatever had happened. He was shocked; he resented
their callousness.
"I'm too busy now," he said curtly to one who accosted him.
"Sam!" his wife called him in a low voice. She was standing behind
the till.
"What is it?" He was ready to crush, and especially to crush
indiscreet babble in the shop. He thought she was going to vent her womanly
curiosity at once.
"Mr. Huntbach is waiting for you in the parlour," said
Constance.
"Mr. Huntbach?"
"Yes, from Longshaw." She whispered, "It's Mrs. Povey's cousin.
He's come to see about the funeral and so on, the—the inquest, I suppose."
Samuel paused. "Oh, has he!" said he defiantly. "Well, I'll see
him. If he WANTS to see me, I'll see him."
That evening Constance learned all that was in his mind of
bitterness against the memory of the dead woman whose failings had brought
Daniel Povey to Stafford gaol and Dick to the Pirehill Infirmary. Again and
again, in the ensuing days, he referred to the state of foul discomfort which he
had discovered in Daniel's house. He nursed a feud against all her relatives,
and when, after the inquest, at which he gave evidence full of resentment, she
was buried, he vented an angry sigh of relief, and said: "Well, SHE'S out of the
way!" Thenceforward he had a mission, religious in its solemn intensity, to
defend and save Daniel. He took the enterprise upon himself, spending the whole
of himself upon it, to the neglect of his business and the scorn of his health.
He lived solely for Daniel's trial, pouring out money in preparation for it. He
thought and spoke of nothing else. The affair was his one preoccupation. And as
the weeks passed, he became more and more sure of success, more and more sure
that he would return with Daniel to Bursley in triumph after the assize. He was
convinced of the impossibility that 'anything should happen' to Daniel; the
circumstances were too clear, too overwhelmingly in Daniel's favour.
When Brindley, the second-best baker and confectioner, made an
offer for Daniel's business as a going concern, he was indignant at first. Then
Constance, and the lawyer, and Daniel (whom he saw on every permitted occasion)
between them persuaded him that if some arrangement was not made, and made
quickly, the business would lose all its value, and he consented, on Daniel's
behalf, to a temporary agreement under which Brindley should reopen the shop and
manage it on certain terms until Daniel regained his freedom towards the end of
January. He would not listen to Daniel's plaintive insistence that he would
never care to be seen in Bursley again. He pooh-poohed it. He protested
furiously that the whole town was seething with sympathy for Daniel; and this
was true. He became Daniel's defending angel, rescuing Daniel from Daniel's own
weakness and apathy. He became, indeed, Daniel.
One morning the shop-shutter was wound up, and Brindley, inflated
with the importance of controlling two establishments, strutted in and out under
the sign of Daniel Povey. And traffic in bread and cakes and flour was resumed.
Apparently the sea of time had risen and covered Daniel and all that was his;
for his wife was under earth, and Dick lingered at Pirehill, unable to stand,
and Daniel was locked away. Apparently, in the regular flow of the life of the
Square, Daniel was forgotten. But not in Samuel Povey's heart was he forgotten!
There, before an altar erected to the martyr, the sacred flame of a new faith
burned with fierce consistency. Samuel, in his greying middle-age, had inherited
the eternal youth of the apostle.
III
On the dark winter morning when Samuel set off to the grand
assize, Constance did not ask his views as to what protection he would adopt
against the weather. She silently ranged special underclothing, and by the
warmth of the fire, which for days she had kept ablaze in the bedroom, Samuel
silently donned the special underclothing. Over that, with particular fastidious
care, he put his best suit. Not a word was spoken. Constance and he were not
estranged, but the relations between them were in a state of feverish
excitation. Samuel had had a cold on his flat chest for weeks, and nothing that
Constance could invent would move it. A few days in bed or even in one room at a
uniform temperature would have surely worked the cure. Samuel, however, would
not stay in one room: he would not stay in the house, nor yet in Bursley. He
would take his lacerating cough on chilly trains to Stafford. He had no ears for
reason; he simply could not listen; he was in a dream. After Christmas a crisis
came. Constance grew desperate. It was a battle between her will and his that
occurred one night when Constance, marshalling all her forces, suddenly insisted
that he must go out no more until he was cured. In the fight Constance was
scarcely recognizable. She deliberately gave way to hysteria; she was no longer
soft and gentle; she flung bitterness at him like vitriol; she shrieked like a
common shrew. It seems almost incredible that Constance should have gone so far;
but she did. She accused him, amid sobs, of putting his cousin before his wife
and son, of not caring whether or not she was left a widow as the result of this
obstinacy. And she ended by crying passionately that she might as well talk to a
post. She might just as well have talked to a post. Samuel answered quietly and
coldly. He told her that it was useless for her to put herself about, as he
should act as he thought fit. It was a most extraordinary scene, and quite
unique in their annals. Constance was beaten. She accepted the defeat, gradually
controlling her sobs and changing her tone to the tone of the vanquished. She
kissed him in bed, kissing the rod. And he gravely kissed her.
Henceforward she knew, in practice, what the inevitable, when you
have to live with it, may contain of anguish wretched and humiliating. Her
husband was risking his life, so she was absolutely convinced, and she could do
nothing; she had come to the bed-rock of Samuel's character. She felt that, for
the time being, she had a madman in the house, who could not be treated
according to ordinary principles. The continual strain aged her. Her one source
of relief was to talk with Cyril. She talked to him without reserve, and the
words 'your father,' 'your father,' were everlastingly on her complaining
tongue. Yes, she was utterly changed. Often she would weep when alone.
Nevertheless she frequently forgot that she had been beaten. She
had no notion of honourable warfare. She was always beginning again, always
firing under a flag of truce; and thus she constituted a very inconvenient
opponent. Samuel was obliged, while hardening on the main point, to compromise
on lesser questions. She too could be formidable, and when her lips took a
certain pose, and her eyes glowed, he would have put on forty mufflers had she
commanded. Thus it was she who arranged all the details of the supreme journey
to Stafford. Samuel was to drive to Knype, so as to avoid the rigours of the
Loop Line train from Bursley and the waiting on cold platforms. At Knype he was
to take the express, and to travel first-class.
After he was dressed on that gas-lit morning, he learnt bit by bit
the extent of her elaborate preparations. The breakfast was a special breakfast,
and he had to eat it all. Then the cab came, and he saw Amy put hot bricks into
it. Constance herself put goloshes over his boots, not because it was damp, but
because indiarubber keeps the feet warm. Constance herself bandaged his neck,
and unbuttoned his waistcoat and stuck an extra flannel under his dickey.
Constance herself warmed his woollen gloves, and enveloped him in his largest
overcoat.
Samuel then saw Cyril getting ready to go out. "Where are you
off?" he demanded.
"He's going with you as far as Knype," said Constance grimly.
"He'll see you into the train and then come back here in the cab."
She had sprung this indignity upon him. She glared. Cyril glanced
with timid bravado from one to the other. Samuel had to yield.
Thus in the winter darkness—for it was not yet dawn—Samuel set
forth to the trial, escorted by his son. The reverberation of his appalling
cough from the cab was the last thing that Constance heard.
During most of the day Constance sat in 'Miss Insull's corner' in
the shop. Twenty years ago this very corner had been hers. But now, instead of
large millinery-boxes enwrapped in brown paper, it was shut off from the rest of
the counter by a rich screen of mahogany and ground-glass, and within the
enclosed space all the apparatus necessary to the activity of Miss Insull had
been provided for. However, it remained the coldest part of the whole shop, as
Miss Insull's fingers testified. Constance established herself there more from a
desire to do something, to interfere in something, than from a necessity of
supervising the shop, though she had said to Samuel that she would keep an eye
on the shop. Miss Insull, whose throne was usurped, had to sit by the stove with
less important creatures; she did not like it, and her underlings suffered
accordingly.
It was a long day. Towards tea-time, just before Cyril was due
from school, Mr. Critchlow came surprisingly in. That is to say, his arrival was
less of a surprise to Miss Insull and the rest of the staff than to Constance.
For he had lately formed an irregular habit of popping in at tea-time, to chat
with Miss Insull. Mr. Critchlow was still defying time. He kept his long, thin
figure perfectly erect. His features had not altered. His hair and beard could
not have been whiter than they had been for years past. He wore his long white
apron, and over that a thick reefer jacket. In his long, knotty fingers he
carried a copy of the Signal.
Evidently he had not expected to find the corner occupied by
Constance.
She was sewing.
"So it's you!" he said, in his unpleasant, grating voice, not even
glancing at Miss Insull. He had gained the reputation of being the rudest old
man in Bursley. But his general demeanour expressed indifference rather than
rudeness. It was a manner that said: "You've got to take me as I am. I may be an
egotist, hard, mean, and convinced; but those who don't like it can lump it. I'm
indifferent."
He put one elbow on the top of the screen, showing the Signal.
"Mr. Critchlow!" said Constance, primly; she had acquired Samuel's
dislike of him.
"It's begun!" he observed with mysterious glee.
"Has it?" Constance said eagerly. "Is it in the paper
already?"
She had been far more disturbed about her husband's health than
about the trial of Daniel Povey for murder, but her interest in the trial was of
course tremendous. And this news, that it had actually begun, thrilled her.
"Ay!" said Mr. Critchlow. "Didn't ye hear the Signal boy hollering
just now all over the Square?"
"No," said Constance. For her, newspapers did not exist. She never
had the idea of opening one, never felt any curiosity which she could not
satisfy, if she could satisfy it at all, without the powerful aid of the press.
And even on this day it had not occurred to her that the Signal might be worth
opening.
"Ay!" repeated Mr. Critchlow. "Seemingly it began at two
o'clock—or thereabouts." He gave a moment of his attention to a noisy gas-jet,
which he carefully lowered.
"What does it say?"
"Nothing yet!" said Mr. Critchlow; and they read the few brief
sentences, under their big heading, which described the formal commencement of
the trial of Daniel Povey for the murder of his wife. "There was some as said,"
he remarked, pushing up his spectacles, "that grand jury would alter the charge,
or summat!" He laughed, grimly tolerant of the extreme absurdity. "Ah!" he added
contemplatively, turning his head to see if the assistants were listening. They
were. It would have been too much, on such a day, to expect a strict adherence
to the etiquette of the shop.
Constance had been hearing a good deal lately of grand juries, but
she had understood nothing, nor had she sought to understand.
"I'm very glad it's come on so soon," she said. "In a sense, that
is! I was afraid Sam might be kept at Stafford for days. Do you think it will
last long?"
"Not it!" said Mr. Critchlow, positively. "There's naught in it to
spin out."
Then a silence, punctuated by the sound of stitching.
Constance would really have preferred not to converse with the old
man; but the desire for reassurance, for the calming of her own fears, forced
her to speak, though she knew well that Mr. Critchlow was precisely the last man
in the town to give moral assistance if he thought it was wanted.
"I do hope everything will be all right!" she murmured.
"Everything'll be all right!" he said gaily. "Everything'll be all
right. Only it'll be all wrong for Dan."
"Whatever do you mean, Mr. Critchlow?" she protested.
Nothing, she reflected, could rouse pity in that heart, not even a
tragedy like Daniel's. She bit her lip for having spoken.
"Well," he said in loud tones, frankly addressing the girls round
the stove as much as Constance. "I've met with some rare good arguments this new
year, no mistake! There's been some as say that Dan never meant to do it. That's
as may be. But if it's a good reason for not hanging, there's an end to capital
punishment in this country. 'Never meant'! There's a lot of 'em as 'never
meant'! Then I'm told as she was a gallivanting woman and no housekeeper, and as
often drunk as sober. I'd no call to be told that. If strangling is a right
punishment for a wife as spends her time in drinking brandy instead of sweeping
floors and airing sheets, then Dan's safe. But I don't seem to see Judge Lindley
telling the jury as it is. I've been a juryman under Judge Lindley myself—and
more than once—and I don't seem to see him, like!" He paused with his mouth
open. "As for all them nobs," he continued, "including th' rector, as have gone
to Stafford to kiss the book and swear that Dan's reputation is second to
none—if they could ha' sworn as Dan wasn't in th' house at all that night, if
they could ha' sworn he was in Jericho, there'd ha' been some sense in their
going. But as it is, they'd ha' done better to stop at home and mind their
business. Bless us! Sam wanted ME to go!"
He laughed again, in the faces of the horrified and angry
women.
"I'm surprised at you, Mr. Critchlow! I really am!" Constance
exclaimed.
And the assistants inarticulately supported her with vague sounds.
Miss Insull got up and poked the stove. Every soul in the establishment was
loyally convinced that Daniel Povey would be acquitted, and to breathe a doubt
on the brightness of this certainty was a hideous crime. The conviction was not
within the domain of reason; it was an act of faith; and arguments merely
fretted, without in the slightest degree disturbing it.
"Ye may be!" Mr. Critchlow gaily concurred. He was very
content.
Just as he shuffled round to leave the shop, Cyril entered.
"Good afternoon, Mr. Critchlow," said Cyril, sheepishly
polite.
Mr. Critchlow gazed hard at the boy, then nodded his head several
times rapidly, as though to say: "Here's another fool in the making! So the
generations follow one another!" He made no answer to the salutation, and
departed.
Cyril ran round to his mother's corner, pitching his bag on to the
showroom stairs as he passed them. Taking off his hat, he kissed her, and she
unbuttoned his overcoat with her cold hands.
"What's old Methuselah after?" he demanded.
"Hush!" Constance softly corrected him. "He came in to tell me the
trial had started."
"Oh, I knew that! A boy bought a paper and I saw it. I say,
mother, will father be in the paper?" And then in a different tone: "I say,
mother, what is there for tea?"
When his stomach had learnt exactly what there was for tea, the
boy began to show an immense and talkative curiosity in the trial. He would not
set himself to his home-lessons. "It's no use, mother," he said, "I can't." They
returned to the shop together, and Cyril would go every moment to the door to
listen for the cry of a newsboy. Presently he hit upon the idea that perhaps
newsboys might be crying the special edition of the Signal in the market-place,
in front of the Town Hall, to the neglect of St. Luke's Square. And nothing
would satisfy him but he must go forth and see. He went, without his overcoat,
promising to run. The shop waited with a strange anxiety. Cyril had created, by
his restless movements to and fro, an atmosphere of strained expectancy. It
seemed now as if the whole town stood with beating heart, fearful of tidings and
yet burning to get them. Constance pictured Stafford, which she had never seen,
and a court of justice, which she had never seen, and her husband and Daniel in
it. And she waited.
Cyril ran in. "No!" he announced breathlessly. "Nothing yet."
"Don't take cold, now you're hot," Constance advised.
But he would keep near the door. Soon he ran off again.
And perhaps fifteen seconds after he had gone, the strident cry of
a Signal boy was heard in the distance, faint and indistinct at first, then
clearer and louder.
"There's a paper!" said the apprentice.
"Sh!" said Constance, listening.
"Sh!" echoed Miss Insull.
"Yes, it is!" said Constance. "Miss Insull, just step out and get
a paper. Here's a halfpenny."
The halfpenny passed quickly from one thimbled hand to another.
Miss
Insull scurried.
She came in triumphantly with the sheet, which Constance
tremblingly took. Constance could not find the report at first. Miss Insull
pointed to it, and read—
"'Summing up!' Lower down, lower down! 'After an absence of
thirty-five minutes the jury found the prisoner guilty of murder, with a
recommendation to mercy. The judge assumed the black cap and pronounced sentence
of death, saying that he would forward the recommendation to the proper
quarter.'"
Cyril returned. "Not yet!" he was saying—when he saw the paper
lying on the counter. His crest fell.
Long after the shop was shut, Constance and Cyril waited in the
parlour for the arrival of the master of the house. Constance was in the
blackest despair. She saw nothing but death around her. She thought: misfortunes
never come singly. Why did not Samuel come? All was ready for him, everything
that her imagination could suggest, in the way of food, remedies, and the means
of warmth. Amy was not allowed to go to bed, lest she might be needed. Constance
did not even hint that Cyril should go to bed. The dark, dreadful minutes ticked
themselves off on the mantelpiece until only five minutes separated Constance
from the moment when she would not know what to do next. It was twenty-five
minutes past eleven. If at half-past Samuel did not appear, then he could not
come that night, unless the last train from Stafford was inconceivably late.
The sound of a carriage! It ceased at the door. Mother and son
sprang up.
Yes, it was Samuel! She beheld him once more. And the sight of his
condition, moral and physical, terrified her. His great strapping son and Amy
helped him upstairs. "Will he ever come down those stairs again?" This thought
lanced Constance's heart. The pain was come and gone in a moment, but it had
surprised her tranquil commonsense, which was naturally opposed to, and gently
scornful of, hysterical fears. As she puffed, with her stoutness, up the stairs,
that bland cheerfulness of hers cost her an immense effort of will. She was
profoundly troubled; great disasters seemed to be slowly approaching her from
all quarters.
Should she send for the doctor? No. To do so would only be a
concession to the panic instinct. She knew exactly what was the matter with
Samuel: a severe cough persistently neglected, no more. As she had expressed
herself many times to inquirers, "He's never been what you may call ill."
Nevertheless, as she laid him in bed and possetted him, how frail and fragile he
looked! And he was so exhausted that he would not even talk about the trial.
"If he's not better to-morrow I shall send for the doctor!" she
said to herself. As for his getting up, she swore she would keep him in bed by
force if necessary.
IV
The next morning she was glad and proud that she had not yielded
to a scare. For he was most strangely and obviously better. He had slept
heavily, and she had slept a little. True that Daniel was condemned to death!
Leaving Daniel to his fate, she was conscious of joy springing in her heart. How
absurd to have asked herself: "Will he ever come down those stairs again?"!
A message reached her from the forgotten shop during the morning,
that Mr. Lawton had called to see Mr. Povey. Already Samuel had wanted to arise,
but she had forbidden it in the tone of a woman who is dangerous, and Samuel had
been very reasonable. He now said that Mr. Lawton must be asked up. She glanced
round the bedroom. It was 'done'; it was faultlessly correct as a sick chamber.
She agreed to the introduction into it of the man from another sphere, and after
a preliminary minute she left the two to talk together. This visit of young
Lawton's was a dramatic proof of Samuel's importance, and of the importance of
the matter in hand. The august occasion demanded etiquette, and etiquette said
that a wife should depart from her husband when he had to transact affairs
beyond the grasp of a wife.
The idea of a petition to the Home Secretary took shape at this
interview, and before the day was out it had spread over the town and over the
Five Towns, and it was in the Signal. The Signal spoke of Daniel Povey as 'the
condemned man.' And the phrase startled the whole district into an indignant
agitation for his reprieve. The district woke up to the fact that a Town
Councillor, a figure in the world, an honest tradesman of unspotted character,
was cooped solitary in a little cell at Stafford, waiting to be hanged by the
neck till he was dead. The district determined that this must not and should not
be. Why! Dan Povey had actually once been Chairman of the Bursley Society for
the Prosecution of Felons, that association for annual eating and drinking,
whose members humorously called each other 'felons'! Impossible, monstrous, that
an ex-chairman of the 'Felons' should be a sentenced criminal!
However, there was nothing to fear. No Home Secretary would dare
to run counter to the jury's recommendation and the expressed wish of the whole
district. Besides, the Home Secretary's nephew was M.P. for the Knype division.
Of course a verdict of guilty had been inevitable. Everybody recognized that
now. Even Samuel and all the hottest partisans of Daniel Povey recognized it.
They talked as if they had always foreseen it, directly contradicting all that
they had said on only the previous day. Without any sense of any inconsistency
or of shame, they took up an absolutely new position. The structure of blind
faith had once again crumbled at the assault of realities, and unhealthy,
un-English truths, the statement of which would have meant ostracism twenty-four
hours earlier, became suddenly the platitudes of the Square and the
market-place.
Despatch was necessary in the affair of the petition, for the
condemned man had but three Sundays. But there was delay at the beginning,
because neither young Lawton nor any of his colleagues was acquainted with the
proper formula of a petition to the Home Secretary for the reprieve of a
criminal condemned to death. No such petition had been made in the district
within living memory. And at first, young Lawton could not get sight or copy of
any such petition anywhere, in the Five Towns or out of them. Of course there
must exist a proper formula, and of course that formula and no other could be
employed. Nobody was bold enough to suggest that young Lawton should commence
the petition, "To the Most Noble the Marquis of Welwyn, K.C.B., May it please
your Lordship," and end it, "And your petitioners will ever pray!" and insert
between those phrases a simple appeal for the reprieve, with a statement of
reasons. No! the formula consecrated by tradition must be found. And, after
Daniel had arrived a day and a half nearer death, it was found. A lawyer at
Alnwick had the draft of a petition which had secured for a murderer in
Northumberland twenty years' penal servitude instead of sudden death, and on
request he lent it to young Lawton. The prime movers in the petition felt that
Daniel Povey was now as good as saved. Hundreds of forms were printed to receive
signatures, and these forms, together with copies of the petition, were laid on
the counters of all the principal shops, not merely in Bursley, but in the other
towns. They were also to be found at the offices of the Signal, in railway
waiting-rooms, and in the various reading-rooms; and on the second of Daniel's
three Sundays they were exposed in the porches of churches and chapels.
Chapel-keepers and vergers would come to Samuel and ask with the heavy inertia
of their stupidity: "About pens and ink, sir?" These officials had the air of
audaciously disturbing the sacrosanct routine of centuries in order to confer a
favour.
Samuel continued to improve. His cough shook him less, and his
appetite increased. Constance allowed him to establish himself in the
drawing-room, which was next to the bedroom, and of which the grate was
particularly efficient. Here, in an old winter overcoat, he directed the vast
affair of the petition, which grew daily to vaster proportions. Samuel dreamed
of twenty thousand signatures. Each sheet held twenty signatures, and several
times a day he counted the sheets; the supply of forms actually failed once, and
Constance herself had to hurry to the printers to order more. Samuel was put
into a passion by this carelessness of the printers. He offered Cyril sixpence
for every sheet of signatures which the boy would obtain. At first Cyril was too
shy to canvass, but his father made him blush, and in a few hours Cyril had
developed into an eager canvasser. One whole day he stayed away from school to
canvas. Altogether he earned over fifteen shillings, quite honestly except that
he got a companion to forge a couple of signatures with addresses lacking at the
end of a last sheet, generously rewarding him with sixpence, the value of the
entire sheet.
When Samuel had received a thousand sheets with twenty thousand
signatures, he set his heart on twenty-five thousand signatures. And he also
announced his firm intention of accompanying young Lawton to London with the
petition. The petition had, in fact, become one of the most remarkable petitions
of modern times. So the Signal said. The Signal gave a daily account of its
progress, and its progress was astonishing. In certain streets every householder
had signed it. The first sheets had been reserved for the signatures of members
of Parliament, ministers of religion, civic dignitaries, justices of the peace,
etc. These sheets were nobly filled. The aged Rector of Bursley signed first of
all; after him the Mayor of Bursley, as was right; then sundry M.P.'s.
Samuel emerged from the drawing-room. He went into the parlour,
and, later, into the shop; and no evil consequence followed. His cough was
nearly, but not quite, cured. The weather was extraordinarily mild for the
season. He repeated that he should go with the petition to London; and he went;
Constance could not validly oppose the journey. She, too, was a little
intoxicated by the petition. It weighed considerably over a hundredweight. The
crowning signature, that of the M.P. for Knype, was duly obtained in London, and
Samuel's one disappointment was that his hope of twenty-five thousand signatures
had fallen short of realization—by only a few score. The few score could have
been got had not time urgently pressed. He returned from London a man of mark,
full of confidence; but his cough was worse again.
His confidence in the power of public opinion and the inherent
virtue of justice might have proved to be well placed, had not the Home
Secretary happened to be one of your humane officials. The Marquis of Welwyn was
celebrated through every stratum of the governing classes for his humane
instincts, which were continually fighting against his sense of duty.
Unfortunately his sense of duty, which he had inherited from several centuries
of ancestors, made havoc among his humane instincts on nearly every occasion of
conflict. It was reported that he suffered horribly in consequence. Others also
suffered, for he was never known to advise a remission of a sentence of
flogging. Certain capital sentences he had commuted, but he did not commute
Daniel Povey's. He could not permit himself to be influenced by a wave of
popular sentiment, and assuredly not by his own nephew's signature. He gave to
the case the patient, remorseless examination which he gave to every case. He
spent a sleepless night in trying to discover a reason for yielding to his
humane instincts, but without success. As Judge Lindley remarked in his
confidential report, the sole arguments in favour of Daniel were provocation and
his previous high character; and these were no sort of an argument. The
provocation was utterly inadequate, and the previous high character was quite
too ludicrously beside the point. So once more the Marquis's humane instincts
were routed and he suffered horribly.
On the Sunday morning after the day on which the Signal had
printed the menu of Daniel Povey's supreme breakfast, and the exact length of
the 'drop' which the executioner had administered to him, Constance and Cyril
stood together at the window of the large bedroom. The boy was in his best
clothes; but Constance's garments gave no sign of the Sabbath. She wore a large
apron over an old dress that was rather tight for her. She was pale and looked
ill.
"Oh, mother!" Cyril exclaimed suddenly. "Listen! I'm sure I can
hear the band."
She checked him with a soundless movement of her lips; and they
both glanced anxiously at the silent bed, Cyril with a gesture of apology for
having forgotten that he must make no noise.
The strains of the band came from down King Street, in the
direction of St. Luke's Church. The music appeared to linger a long time in the
distance, and then it approached, growing louder, and the Bursley Town Silver
Prize Band passed under the window at the solemn pace of Handel's "Dead March."
The effect of that requiem, heavy with its own inherent beauty and with the vast
weight of harrowing tradition, was to wring the tears from Constance's eyes;
they fell on her aproned bosom, and she sank into a chair. And though, the
cheeks of the trumpeters were puffed out, and though the drummer had to protrude
his stomach and arch his spine backwards lest he should tumble over his drum,
there was majesty in the passage of the band. The boom of the drum, desolating
the interruptions of the melody, made sick the heart, but with a lofty grief;
and the dirge seemed to be weaving a purple pall that covered every
meanness.
The bandsmen were not all in black, but they all wore crape on
their sleeves and their instruments were knotted with crape. They carried in
their hats a black-edged card. Cyril held one of these cards in his hands. It
ran thus:
SACRED TO THE MEMORY OF DANIEL POVEY A TOWN COUNCILLOR OF THIS
TOWN JUDICIALLY MURDERED AT 8 O'CLOCK IN THE MORNING 8TH FEBRUARY 1888 "HE WAS
MORE SINNED AGAINST THAN SINNING."
In the wake of the band came the aged Rector, bare-headed, and
wearing a surplice over his overcoat; his thin white hair was disarranged by the
breeze that played in the chilly sunshine; his hands were folded on a gilt-edged
book. A curate, churchwardens, and sidesmen followed. And after these, tramping
through the dark mud in a procession that had apparently no end, wound the
unofficial male multitude, nearly all in mourning, and all, save the more
aristocratic, carrying the memorial card in their hats. Loafers, women, and
children had collected on the drying pavements, and a window just opposite
Constance was ornamented with the entire family of the landlord of the Sun
Vaults. In the great bar of the Vaults a barman was craning over the pitchpine
screen that secured privacy to drinkers. The procession continued without break,
eternally rising over the verge of King Street 'bank,' and eternally vanishing
round the corner into St. Luke's Square; at intervals it was punctuated by a
clergyman, a Nonconformist minister, a town crier, a group of foremen, or a few
Rifle Volunteers. The watching crowd grew as the procession lengthened. Then
another band was heard, also playing the march from Saul. The first band had now
reached the top of the Square, and was scarcely audible from King Street. The
reiterated glitter in the sun of memorial cards in hats gave the fanciful
illusion of an impossible whitish snake that was straggling across the town.
Three-quarters of an hour elapsed before the tail of the snake came into view,
and a rabble of unkempt boys closed in upon it, filling the street.
"I shall go to the drawing-room window, mother," said Cyril.
She nodded. He crept out of the bedroom.
St. Luke's Square was a sea of hats and memorial cards. Most of
the occupiers of the Square had hung out flags at half-mast, and a flag at
half-mast was flying over the Town Hall in the distance. Sightseers were at
every window. The two bands had united at the top of the Square; and behind
them, on a North Staffordshire Railway lorry, stood the white-clad Rector and
several black figures. The Rector was speaking; but only those close to the
lorry could hear his feeble treble voice.
Such was the massive protest of Bursley against what Bursley
regarded as a callous injustice. The execution of Daniel Povey had most
genuinely excited the indignation of the town. That execution was not only an
injustice; it was an insult, a humiliating snub. And the worst was that the rest
of the country had really discovered no sympathetic interest in the affair.
Certain London papers, indeed, in commenting casually on the execution, had
slurred the morals and manners of the Five Towns, professing to regard the
district as notoriously beyond the realm of the Ten Commandments. This had
helped to render furious the townsmen. This, as much as anything, had encouraged
the spontaneous outburst of feeling which had culminated in a St. Luke's Square
full of people with memorial cards in their hats. The demonstration had scarcely
been organized; it had somehow organized itself, employing the places of worship
and a few clubs as centres of gathering. And it proved an immense success. There
were seven or eight thousand people in the Square, and the pity was that England
as a whole could not have had a glimpse of the spectacle. Since the execution of
the elephant, nothing had so profoundly agitated Bursley. Constance, who left
the bedroom momentarily for the drawing-room, reflected that the death and
burial of Cyril's honoured grandfather, though a resounding event, had not
caused one-tenth of the stir which she beheld. But then John Baines had killed
nobody.
The Rector spoke too long; every one felt that. But at length he
finished. The bands performed the Doxology, and the immense multitudes began to
disperse by the eight streets that radiate from the Square. At the same time one
o'clock struck, and the public-houses opened with their customary admirable
promptitude. Respectable persons, of course, ignored the public-houses and
hastened homewards to a delayed dinner. But in a town of over thirty thousand
souls there are sufficient dregs to fill all the public-houses on an occasion of
ceremonial excitement. Constance saw the bar of the Vaults crammed with
individuals whose sense of decent fitness was imperfect. The barman and the
landlord and the principal members of the landlord's family were hard put to it
to quench that funereal thirst. Constance, as she ate a little meal in the
bedroom, could not but witness the orgy. A bandsman with his silver instrument
was prominent at the counter. At five minutes to three the Vaults spewed forth a
squirt of roysterers who walked on the pavement as on a tight-rope; among them
was the bandsman, his silver instrument only half enveloped in its bag of green
serge. He established an equilibrium in the gutter. It would not have mattered
so seriously if he had not been a bandsman. The barman and the landlord pushed
the ultimate sot by force into the street and bolted the door (till six o'clock)
just as a policeman strolled along, the first policeman of the day. It became
known that similar scenes were enacting at the thresholds of other inns. And the
judicious were sad.
VI
When the altercation between the policeman and the musician in the
gutter was at its height, Samuel Povey became restless; but since he had
scarcely stirred through the performances of the bands, it was probably not the
cries of the drunkard that had aroused him.
He had shown very little interest in the preliminaries of the
great demonstration. The flame of his passion for the case of Daniel Povey
seemed to have shot up on the day before the execution, and then to have
expired. On that day he went to Stafford in order, by permit of the prison
governor, to see his cousin for the last time. His condition then was
undoubtedly not far removed from monomania. 'Unhinged' was the conventional
expression which frequently rose in Constance's mind as a description of the
mind of her husband; but she fought it down; she would not have it; it was too
crude—with its associations. She would only admit that the case had 'got on' his
mind. A startling proof of this was that he actually suggested taking Cyril with
him to see the condemned man. He wished Cyril to see Daniel; he said gravely
that he thought Cyril ought to see him. The proposal was monstrous,
inexplicable—or explicable only by the assumption that his mind, while not
unhinged, had temporarily lost its balance. Constance opposed an absolute
negative, and Samuel being in every way enfeebled, she overcame. As for Cyril,
he was divided between fear and curiosity. On the whole, perhaps Cyril regretted
that he would not be able to say at school that he had had speech with the most
celebrated killer of the age on the day before his execution.
Samuel returned hysterical from Stafford. His account of the
scene, which he gave in a very loud voice, was a most absurd and yet pathetic
recital, obviously distorted by memory. When he came to the point of the
entrance of Dick Povey, who was still at the hospital, and who had been
specially driven to Stafford and carried into the prison, he wept without
restraint. His hysteria was painful in a very high degree.
He went to bed—of his own accord, for his cough had improved
again. And on the following day, the day of the execution, he remained in bed
till the afternoon. In the evening the Rector sent for him to the Rectory to
discuss the proposed demonstration. On the next day, Saturday, he said he should
not get up. Icy showers were sweeping the town, and his cough was worse after
the evening visit to the Rector. Constance had no apprehensions about him. The
most dangerous part of the winter was over, and there was nothing now to force
him into indiscretions. She said to herself calmly that he should stay in bed as
long as he liked, that he could not have too much repose after the cruel
fatigues, physical and spiritual, which he had suffered. His cough was short,
but not as troublesome as in the past; his face flushed, dusky, and settled in
gloom; and he was slightly feverish, with quick pulse and quick breathing—the
symptoms of a renewed cold. He passed a wakeful night, broken by brief dreams in
which he talked. At dawn he had some hot food, asked what day it was, frowned,
and seemed to doze off at once. At eleven o'clock he had refused food. And he
had intermittently dozed during the progress of the demonstration and its
orgiastic sequel.
Constance had food ready for his waking, and she approached the
bed and leaned over him. The fever had increased somewhat, the breathing was
more rapid, and his lips were covered with tiny purple pimples. He feebly shook
his head, with a disgusted air, at her mention of food. It was this obstinate
refusal of food which first alarmed her. A little uncomfortable suspicion shot
up in her: Surely there's nothing the MATTER with him?
Something—impossible to say what—caused her to bend still lower,
and put her ear to his chest. She heard within that mysterious box a rapid
succession of thin, dry, crackling sounds: sounds such as she would have
produced by rubbing her hair between her fingers close to her ear. The
crepitation ceased, then recommenced, and she perceived that it coincided with
the intake of his breath. He coughed; the sounds were intensified; a spasm of
pain ran over his face; and he put his damp hand to his side.
"Pain in my side!" he whispered with difficulty.
Constance stepped into the drawing-room, where Cyril was sketching
by the fire.
"Cyril," she said, "go across and ask Dr. Harrop to come round at
once.
And if he isn't in, then his new partner."
"Is it for father?"
"Yes."
"What's the matter?"
"Now do as I say, please," said Constance, sharply, adding: "I
don't know what's the matter. Perhaps nothing. But I'm not satisfied."
The venerable Harrop pronounced the word 'pneumonia.' It was acute
double pneumonia that Samuel had got. During the three worst months of the year,
he had escaped the fatal perils which await a man with a flat chest and a
chronic cough, who ignores his condition and defies the weather. But a journey
of five hundred yards to the Rectory had been one journey too many. The Rectory
was so close to the shop that he had not troubled to wrap himself up as for an
excursion to Stafford. He survived the crisis of the disease and then died of
toxsemia, caused by a heart that would not do its duty by the blood. A casual
death, scarce noticed in the reaction after the great febrile demonstration!
Besides, Samuel Povey never could impose himself on the burgesses. He lacked
individuality. He was little. I have often laughed at Samuel Povey. But I liked
and respected him. He was a very honest man. I have always been glad to think
that, at the end of his life, destiny took hold of him and displayed, to the
observant, the vein of greatness which runs through every soul without
exception. He embraced a cause, lost it, and died of it.