Coelebs - Coelebs Part 2
Library

Coelebs Part 2

The vicar smiled at her indulgently.

"I've a rebel, you see, John, in my own household. Mary only requires a kindred spirit to break into open revolt. The coming of Mrs Chadwick may create an upheaval."

"I doubt whether the advent of Mrs Chadwick will work any great change," John Musgrave returned in his heavy, serious fashion. "We are too settled to have the current of our ideas disturbed by a fresh arrival. She will adapt herself, possibly, to our ways."

Mrs Errol rose with a little shrug of the shoulders, and left the room.

Had John Musgrave, she wondered, ever treated any subject other than seriously? In anyone else this habit of bringing the weight of the mind to bear on every trivial matter would have seemed priggish; but it sat on John Musgrave so naturally that, beyond experiencing a passing irritation at times, she could not feel severe towards him. He would have made, in her opinion, an admirable bishop.

The vicar followed her exit with his glance, and then dropped leisurely into a chair and stretched his feet towards the fire.

"When is Mrs Sommers coming this way again?" he asked, not so much conversationally as because he liked John Musgrave's sister, and was always glad when she returned to her childhood's home, which she did at fitful and infrequent intervals.

The man whom he addressed leaned back in his chair and stared thoughtfully into the flickering flames. The question recalled his own lonely fireside, the solitariness of which always struck him more forcibly while seated beside the cheery vicarage hearth. He missed Belle more as the years passed.

"She did not say," he answered. "She has many claims upon her time since Charlie entered Parliament. I wish it were otherwise. I miss Belle."

"That's only natural," the other answered. "She is so bright."

"Yes." John Musgrave looked directly at the speaker. "She is bright.

She's companionable. I expect that's what Charlie thought."

Walter Errol laughed.

"No doubt," he agreed.

"Yes, she's bright," John Musgrave repeated, as though the realisation of this fact, striking him for the first time, accounted for what he had been at a loss to comprehend before. "I expect that's why Charlie married her."

"My dear fellow," the other said, with a hardly repressed smile, "did it never occur to you that Charlie might have had a better reason?"

"A better reason?" John Musgrave echoed.

"Yes. Don't you think it possible that he married her for love?"

John Musgrave flushed deeply.

"For love!" he said.

The vicar smiled openly now.

"People do marry for love occasionally," he remarked.

"Do they?... Do they indeed?"

John Musgrave was gazing into the fire again, his expression doubtful, faintly discomfited--almost, it seemed to the man watching him in puzzled amusement, shocked.

"Dear me!" he ejaculated softly, and seemed disquieted at the presentment of this extraordinary idea. "Dear me!" he repeated slowly.

The vicar broke into a hearty laugh.

"Oh, Coelebs, my dear old Coelebs," he said; "it was not without a sufficient reason you gained that nickname at Oxford. What have you been doing, to live in the world so long and never to have learned the biggest and simplest of life's lessons? From the bottom of my heart I wish it may yet fall to your lot to get some practical experience. Find some one to fill Belle's place in your home, dear old fellow, and then you will miss her no longer."

"I wish, Walter," John Musgrave said, frowning heavily, "that you were given to a greater seriousness in your conversation."

"I wish, John," the other retorted amiably, "that you were inclined towards a lesser seriousness. As for me, I was never more in earnest in my life. Fill Belle's place, and then you will be relieved of the necessity for engaging such a sour-faced person as opened your front door to me yesterday."

"You mean Eliza?" said John Musgrave, surprised. "She is a most respectable woman."

"Guaranteed respectability has no need to be so disagreeably assertive of its claim to recognition," the vicar returned, unmoved. "The lack of amiability in one's expression suggests an unamiable disposition. A cheerful heart is the supremest of virtues."

He rose to his feet in response to the agreeable summons of the supper-gong, and placed a hand affectionately on John Musgrave's shoulder.

"Adam was the first man to take a bite out of an apple," he said, "but since he created the precedent for eating the fruit, men have developed the taste for apples."

"For a clergyman, Walter," his friend returned disapprovingly, "your conversation is at times highly irreverent."

CHAPTER THREE.

A few weeks later John Musgrave set out across the fields in search of the vicar. The vicar on that particular morning was engaged in a search of quite another description, a search which necessitated the company of his sexton, armed with the iron rod with which he prodded in the moundless graveyard where the poor of the parish lay sleeping, to discover where he might, without disturbing an older resident, dig a grave for a fresh interment.

The nature of the soil in the Moresby churchyard was such that it was quite safe, after the lapse of a certain number of years, to bury the present generation in the resting-places of their predecessors. There were no headstones to suggest ownership in this little acre of the dead; and, owing to a whim of the old squire, who during his lifetime had ruled the parish with the despotism of an autocrat, the graves had been dug level with the rest of the ground. Since the advent of the present vicar mounds were insisted upon, and headstones encouraged; so that a man might feel assured when he was laid to rest that his resting-place would remain undisturbed. The old order was changing, even in the matter of interments.

For a while Robert prodded unsuccessfully; wherever he drove his rod in, after a few feet of solid earth it sank suddenly into the unresisting depths of an uncollapsed grave.

"Time most o' these 'ad a failed in," he grumbled. "It grows more difficult to find a spot wi' each fresh buryin'."

"Try here," suggested the vicar.

Robert drove his rod in once again. To the depth of about six feet it pierced firm, resisting soil.

"Reckon that's got it, sir," he said, as he drew the rod out from the ground. "I'll carry this back along, an' fetch my spade."

At this moment the vicar looked up and beheld John Musgrave bearing towards him. He stepped off the grass, where the quiet dead lay unmarked beneath his feet, and went to meet him.

"Are you busy?" Mr Musgrave asked, turning, and falling into step with him as he walked along the broad gravelled path beneath the scanty shade of the thinning trees.

"Not particularly. I have time to spare you, if you want me. We've a funeral this afternoon."

"Yes. Blackmoor, of course; Martha informed me he was to be buried to-day. Mrs Blackmoor assists Martha in the kitchen when she requires help. A very respectable woman." Walter Errol smiled.

"She is," he agreed. She had not always been so, as he and John both knew; but a call to grace in later life atoned for the indiscretions of youth. "Blackmoor had his failings," he added, "but he was a good-hearted man; and that goes a long way towards the redeeming virtues. What was it you wished to see me about, John?"

Mr Musgrave looked worried--more than worried; he appeared annoyed. He did not answer immediately. He passed through the little wicket gate into the lane, which led past the schoolhouse to the vicarage, in a preoccupied silence, upon which the unmusical singing of the school-children broke inharmoniously. Presently he said:

"I have received a very inconsiderate letter from Belle this morning.

She writes to say she is coming to me next week--"

"But that's great," interposed Walter Errol. "You'll enjoy that."

"I should enjoy having Belle," Mr Musgrave answered quietly. "But she proposes bringing Mrs Chadwick with her. I was not agreeably prepossessed with this lady, and I do not anticipate pleasure from the visit. The Hall is to be got ready for their immediate occupation, and she wishes to superintend matters, I understand. I do not see the necessity for her superintending the redecoration of the Hall from my house. She could have stayed in Rushleigh."