“I know nothing more, doctor, but just they’re going off to Australia,” said the landlady, mournfully; “and Miss has started packing the big boxes as have been in the hattic since ever they come: they’re going off back where they come from—that’s all as I know.”
“Impossible!” cried the doctor.
“I’d have said so myself this morning,” said Mrs. Smith; “but there ain’t nothing impossible, doctor, as Miss takes in her head. Don’t you go and rush out after her, Dr. Rider. I beg of you upon my knees, if it was my last word! I said to Smith I’d come up and tell the doctor, that he mightn’t hear from nobody promiscuous as couldn’t explain, and mightn’t come rushing down to the cottage to know the rights of it and find the gentleman there unexpected. If there’s one thing I’m afeard of, it’s a quarrel between gentlemen in my house. So, doctor, for the love of peace, don’t you go anear the cottage. I’ll tell you everything if you listen to me.”
The doctor, who had snatched up his hat and made a rapid step towards the door, came back and seized hold of his visitor’s shoulder, all his benignity having been put to flight by her unlooked-for revelation. “Look here! I want the truth, and no gossip! What do you mean—what gentleman? What is it all about?” cried Dr. Rider, hoarse with sudden passion.
“Oh, bless you, doctor, don’t blame it upon me, sir,” cried Mrs. Smith. “It ain’t neither my fault nor my business, but that you’ve always been kind, and my heart warms to Miss. It’s the gentleman from Australia as has come and come again; and being an unmarried gentleman, and Miss—you know what she is, sir—and I ask you, candid, Dr. Rider, what was anybody to suppose?”
The doctor grew wildly red up to his hair. He bit his lips over some furious words which Carlingford would have been horrified to hear, and grasped Mrs. Smith’s shoulder with a closer pressure. “What did she tell you?” said the doctor. “Let me have it word for word. Did she say she was going away?—did she speak of this—this—fellow?” exclaimed the doctor, with an adjective over which charity drops a tear. “Can’t you tell me without any supposes, what did she say?”
“I’m not the woman to stand being shook—let me go this minute, sir,” cried Mrs. Smith. “The Australian gentleman is a very nice-spoken civil man, as was always very respectful to me. She came into my back-parlour, doctor, if you will know so particular—all shining and flashing, like as she does when something’s happened. I don’t make no doubt they had been settling matters, them two, and so I told Smith. ‘Mrs. Smith,’ said Miss, in her hasty way, enough to catch your breath coming all of a sudden, ‘I can’t stand this no longer—I shall have to go away—it ain’t no good resisting.’ Them were her very words, Dr. Rider. ‘Get me out the big boxes, please,’ said Miss. ‘It’s best done quietly. You must take your week’s notice, Mrs. Smith, from this day;’ and with that she kept moving about the room all in a flutter like, not able to rest. ‘Do go and get me out those boxes; there’s always a ship on the 24th,’ she says, taking up my knitting and falling to work at it to keep her hands steady. ‘The day afore Christmas!’ says I; ‘and oh, Miss, it’s running in the face of Providence to sail at this time of the year. You’ll have dreadful weather, as sure as life.’ You should have seen her, doctor! She gave a sort of smile up at me, all flashing as if those eyes of her were the sides of a lantern, and the light bursting out both there and all over. ‘All the better,’ she says, as if she’d have liked to fight the very wind and sea, and have her own way even there. Bless you, she’s dreadful for having her own way. A good easy gentleman now, as didn’t mind much—Dr. Rider—Doctor!—you’re not a-going, after all I’ve told you? Doctor, doctor, I say—”
But what Mrs. Smith said was inaudible to Edward Rider. The door rang in her ears as he dashed it after him, leaving her mistress of the field. There, where he had once left Nettie, he now, all-forgetful of his usual fastidious dislike of gossip, left Mrs. Smith sole occupant of his most private territories. At this unlooked-for crisis the doctor had neither a word nor a moment to spend on anyone. He rushed out of the house, oblivious of all those professional necessities which limit the comings and goings of a doctor in great practice; he did not even know what he was going to do. Perhaps it was an anxious husband or father whom he all but upset as he came out, with sudden impetuosity, into the unfrequented street; but he did not stop to see. Pale and desperate, he faced the cold wind which rushed up between the blank garden-walls of Grange Lane. At Mr. Wodehouse’s door he stumbled against young Wentworth coming out, and passed him with a muttered exclamation which startled the curate. All the floating momentary jealousies of the past rushed back upon the doctor’s mind as he passed that tall figure in the wintry road: how he had snatched Nettie from the vague kindnesses of the young clergyman—the words he had addressed to her on this very road—the answer she had given him once, which had driven him wild with passion and resentment. Impossible! the Australian, it appeared, had found nothing impossible in those circumstances in which Nettie had intrenched herself. Had the doctor’s wisdom been monstrous folly, and his prudence the blindest shortsightedness? He asked himself the question as he rushed on towards that lighted window shining far along the dark road—the same window which he had seen Nettie’s shadow cross, which