If you heed my warning
It will save you much.--A. A. PROCTOR.
Clement Underwood was so much better as to be arrived at taking
solitary rides and walks, these suiting him better than having
companions, as he liked to go his own pace, and preferred silence.
His sister had become much engrossed with her painting, and saw
likewise that in this matter of exercise it was better to let him go
his own way, and he declared that this time of thought and reading
was an immense help to him, restoring that balance of life which he
seemed to himself to have lost in the whirl of duties at St.
Matthew's after Felix's death.
The shore, with the fresh, monotonous plash of the waves, when the
tide served, was his favourite resort. He could stand still and look
out over the expanse of ripples, or wander on, as he pleased,
watching the sea-gulls float along--
"As though life's only call and care
Were graceful motion."
There had been a somewhat noisy luncheon, for Edward Harewood, a
midshipman in the Channel Fleet, which was hovering in the offing,
had come over on a day's leave with Horner, a messmate whose parents
lived in the town. He was a big lad, a year older than Gerald, and
as soon as a little awe of Uncle Clement and Aunt Cherry had worn
off, he showed himself of the original Harewood type, directing
himself chiefly to what he meant to be teasing Gerald about Vale
Leston and Penbeacon.
"All the grouse there were on the bit of moor are snapped up."
"Those precious surveyors and engineers that Walsh brings down can
give an account of them! As soon as you come of age, you'll have to
double your staff of keepers, I can tell you."
"I thought your father did all that was required in that line," said
Clement.
"Not since duffers and land-lubbers have been marauding over
Penbeacon--aye, and elsewhere. What would you say to an engineer
poaching away one of the august house of Vanderkist?"
"The awful cad! I'd soon show him what I thought of his cheek,"
cried Adrian, with a flourish of his knife.
"Ha, ha! I bet that he will be shooting over Ironbeam Park long
before you are of age."
"Not improbably there will be nothing else to shoot by that time,"
quietly said Gerald.
"I shall have a keeper in every lodge, and bring up four or five
hundred pheasants every year," boasted the little baronet, quite
alive to the pride of possession, though he had never seen Ironbeam
in his life.
Edward laughed a "Don't you wish you may get it," and the others, who
knew very well the futility of the poor boy's expectations, even if
Gerald's augury were not fulfilled, hastened to turn away the
conversation to plans for the afternoon. Anna asked the visitor if
he would ride out with her and Gerald to Clipstone or to the moor,
and was relieved when he declined, saying he had promised to meet
Horner.
"You will come in to tea at five?" said his aunt, "and bring him if
you like."
"Thanks awfully, but we hardly can. We have to start from the quay
at six sharp."
All had gone their several ways, and Clement, after the heat of the
day, was pacing towards a secluded cove out of an inner bay which lay
nearer than Anscombe Cove, but was not much frequented. However, he
smelt tobacco, and heard sounds of boyish glee, and presently saw
Adrian and Fergus Merrifield, bare-legged, digging in the mud.
"Ha! youngsters! Do you know the tide has turned? I thought you had
had enough of that."
"I thought I might find my aralia!" sighed Fergus. "The tide was
almost as low."
Just then there resounded from behind a projecting rock a peal of
undesirable singing, a shout of laughter, and an oath, with--
"Holloa, those little beasts of teetotallers have hooked it."
There were confused cries--"Haul 'em back! Drench 'em. Give 'em a
roll in the mud!" and Adrian shrank behind his uncle, taking hold of
his coat, as there burst from behind the rock a party of boys, headed
by the two cadets, all shouting loudly, till brought to a sudden
standstill by the sight of "Parson! By Jove!" as the Horner mid
muttered, taking out his pipe, while Edward Harewood mumbled
something about "Horner's brother's tuck-out." One or two other boys
were picking up the remains of the feast, which had been on lobsters,
jam tarts, clotted cream, and the like delicacies dear to the
juvenile mind. The two biggest school-boys came forward, one voluble
and thick of speech about Horner's tuck-out, and "I assure you, sir,
it is nothing--not a taste. Never thought of such--" Just then the
other lad, staggering about, had almost lurched over into the
deepening channel; but Clement caught him by the collar and held him
fast, demanding in a low voice, very terrible to his hearers--
"You two, Adrian and Fergus, run to the quay and fetch a cab as near
this place as it can come," said Clement. "You little fellows, you
had better run home at once. I hope you will take warning by the
shame and disgrace of this spectacle."
The boys were glad enough to disperse, being terrified by the
condition of the prisoner, as well as by the detection; but the two
who were encumbered with the baskets containing the bottles, jam-
pots, and tin of cream remained, and so did the two young sailors,
Horner saying civilly--
"You'll not be hard on the kids, sir, for just a spree carried a
little too far."
"I certainly shall not be hard on the children, whom you seem to have
tempted," was the answer as they moved along; and as the younger
Horner turned towards a little shop near the end of the steps to
restore the goods, he asked--"Were you supplied from hence?"
"Yes," said Horner, who was perhaps hardly sober enough for caution.
"Mother Butterfly is a jolly old soul."
Looking up. Clement saw no licence to sell spirituous liquors under
the name of Sarah Schnetterling, tobacconist. The window had the
placard 'Ici on parle Francais', and was adorned in a tasteful manner
with ornamental pipes, fishing-rods and flies, jars of sweets, sheets
of foreign stamps, pictorial advertisements of innocuous beverages.
A woman with black grizzling hair, fashionably dressed, flashing dark
eyes, long gold ear-rings, gold beads and gaudy attire, came out to
reclaim her property. A word or two passed about payment, during
which Clement had a strange thrill of puzzled recollection. The
bottles bore the labels of raspberry vinegar and lemonade, but he had
seen too much not to say--
"Ah, sir, young people will be gourmands," she said, with a foreign
accent. "Ah, that poor young gentleman is very ill. Will he not
come in and lie down to recover?"
"No, thank you," said Clement. "A carriage is coming to take him
home."
Something about the fat in the fire was passing between the cadets,
and the younger of them began to repeat that he had come for his
brother's birthday, and that he feared they had brought the
youngsters into a scrape by carrying the joke too far.
"I have nothing to say to you, sir," said the Vicar of St. Matthew's,
looking very majestic, "except that it is time you were returning to
your ship. As to you," turning to Edward Harewood, "I can only say
that if you are aware of the peculiar circumstances of Adrian
Vanderkist, your conduct can only be called fiendish."
Fergus and Adrian came running up with tidings that the cab was
waiting. Edward Harewood stood sullen, but the other lad said--
"Unlucky. We are sorry to have got the little fellows into trouble."
He held out his hand, and Clement did not refuse it, as he did that
of his own nephew. Still, there was a certain satisfaction at his
heart as he beheld the clear, honest young faces of the other two
boys, and he bade Adrian run home and wait for him, saying to Fergus-
-
"You seem to have been a good friend to my little nephew. Thank
you."
Fergus coloured up, speechless between pleasure at the warm tone of
commendation and the obligations of school-boy honour, nor, with
young Campbell on their hands, was there space for questions. That
youth subsided into a heavy doze in the cab, and so continued till
the arrival at No. 7, Devereux Buildings, where a capable-looking
maid-servant opened the door, and he was deposited into her hands,
the Vicar leaving his card with his present address, but feeling
equal to nothing more, and hardly able to speak.
He drove home, finding his nephew in the doorway. Signing to the
maid to pay the driver, and to the boy to follow him, he reached his
study, and sank into his easy-chair, Adrian opening frightened eyes
and saying--
"Uncle Clement," said Adrian then, "we weren't doing anything.
Merrifield thought his old bit of auralia, or whatever he calls it,
was there."
"I saw--I saw, my boy. To find you--as you were, made me most
thankful. You must have resisted. Tell me, were you of this party,
or did you come on them by accident?"
"Horner asked me," said Adrian, twisting from one leg to another.
Clement saw the crisis was come which he had long expected, and
rejoiced at the form it had taken, though he knew he should suffer
from pursuing the subject.
"Adrian," he said, "I am much pleased with you. I don't want to get
you into a row, but I should be much obliged if you would tell me how
all this happened."
"It wouldn't," returned Adrian, "but for that Ted and the other
chap."
"Do you mean that there would have been none of this--drinking--but
for them? Don't be afraid to tell me all. Was the stuff all got
from that Mrs. Schnetter--?"
"Mother Butterfly's? Oh yes. She keeps bottles of grog with those
labels, and it is such a lark for her to be even with the gangers
that our fellows generally get some after cricket, or for a tuck-
out."
"Oh no; he's captain, you know, but he is two years younger than
Campbell and Horner, and they can't bear him, and when he made a jaw
about it--he can jaw awfully, you know--and he is stuck up, and
Horner major swore he would make him know his bearings--"
"Well, Horner asked him, and he can't get those fossils that were
lost out of his head, and he thought they might be washed up. He
said too, he knew they would be up to something if he wasn't there."
"Oh!" said Clement, with an odd recollection, "but I suppose he did
not know about these cadets?"
"No, the big Horner sent up to Mother Butterfly's for some more
stuff, not so mild, and then Ted set upon me, and said it was all
because of me that Vale Leston had to live like a boiling of teetotal
frogs and toads, just to please the little baronet's lady mamma, but
I was a Dutchman all the same, and should sell them yet--I sucked it
in so well, and they talked of seeing how much I could stand.
Something about my governor, and here--that word in the Catechism."
"Ah!" gasped Clement, fairly clutching his arm, "and what spared
you?"
"Horner came down, and Sweetie Bob, that's the errand-boy, and there
was a bother about the money, for Bob wasn't to leave anything
without being paid, and while they were jawing about that, Merry laid
hold of me and said, 'Come and look for the aralia.' They got to
shouting and singing, and I don't think they saw what was doing.
They were nasty songs, and Merry touched me and said, 'Let us go
after the aralia.' We got away without their missing us at first,
but they ran after us when they found it out, and if you had not been
there, Uncle Clem--"
"Thank God I was! Now, Adrian, first tell me, did you taste this
stuff? You said you sucked it in."
"Well, I did, a little. You know, uncle, one cannot always be made a
baby. Women don't understand, you know, and don't know what a fool
it makes a man to have them always after him, and have everything put
out of his way like a precious infant, and people drinking it on the
sly like Gerald, or--"
"Or me, eh, Adrian? I can tell you that I never tasted it for thirty
years, and now only as a medicine. Lance, never."
"But they did not treat you like a baby, and never let you see so
much as a glass of beer."
"Well, I am going to treat you like a man, but it is a sorrowful
history that I have to tell you. You know that your mother and Aunt
Wilmet are twin sisters ?"
"Oh yes, though Aunt Wilmet is stout and jolly, and mother ever so
much prettier and more delicate and nice."
"Yes, from ill-health. She is never free from suffering."
"I know. Old Dr. May said there was no help for it."
"Do you know what caused that ill-health? My boy, they spoke of your
father to-day--brutes that they were," he could not help muttering.
"He had ruined himself when quite a young man, body, soul, and
estate--and you too, beforehand, in estate, and broken your mother's
heart and health by being given up to that miserable habit from which
we want to save you."
"I thought it was only poor men that got drunk and beat their wives"
(more knowledge, by the bye, than he was supposed to possess). "He
did not beat her?"
"Oh no, no," said Clement, "but he as surely destroyed all her
happiness, and made you and your sisters very poor for your station
in life, so that it is really hard to educate you, and you will have
to work for yourself and them. And at only thirty-six years old his
life was cut off."
"Was that what D. T. meant? I heard Ted whisper something about
that."
"It was well," thought Clement, "that he had grace enough to whisper.
Yes, my poor boy, it is only too true. I was sent for to find your
father dying of delirium tremens--you just born, your mother nearly
dead, the desolation of your sisters unspeakable. He was only
thirty-six, and that vice, together with racing, had devoured him and
all the property that should have come to his children. I think he
tried to repent at the very last, but there was little time, little
power, only he put you and your sisters in my charge, and begged me
to save you from being like him."
"Did they mean that I was sure to be like that? Like a pointer
puppy, pointing."
"They meant it. And, Adrian, it is so far true that there is an
inheritance--with some more, with some less--of our forefathers'
nature. Some have tendencies harder to repress than others. But, my
dear boy, you know that we all have had a force given us wherewith to
repress and conquer those tendencies, and that we can."
"When we were baptized, God the Holy Spirit," said Adrian, under his
breath.
"You know it, you can believe now. Your uncle Lance and I prayed
that the old nature might be put down, the new raised up. We pray,
your mother and sisters have prayed ever since, that so it may be,
that you may conquer any evil tendencies that may be in you; but,
Adrian, no one can save you from the outside if you do not strive
yourself. Now you see why your poor mother has been so anxious to
keep all temptation out of your reach."
"But I'm growing a man now. I can't always go on so."
"No, you can't. You shall be treated as a man while you are with me.
But I do very seriously advise you--nay, I entreat of you, not to
begin taking any kind of liquor, for it would incite the taste to
grow upon you, till it might become uncontrollable, and be your
tyrant. If you have reason to think the pledge would be a protection
to you, come to me, or to Uncle Bill."
He was interrupted by Sibby coming in with his cup of tea, and--
"Now, Mr. Clement, whatever have you been after now? Up to your
antics the minute Miss Cherry is out of the way. Aye, ye needn't go
to palavering me. I hear it in your breath," and she darted at the
stimulant.