“Is anything wrong, Hartley?” said Mary, while Leo bent lower over her book.
“Wrong? Yes! There always is something wrong. Poor Horace is unwell this morning, and cannot attend the vestry.”
Leo’s heart gave a bound. Her brave, strong lover had beaten the wretched intruder, and he had curled up in his hole, afraid to come out. There was nothing to fear from Horace North but his contempt, and she could meet that with her scorn.
“My poor people’s cottages!” sighed Salis. “They’ll have to wait. Well, I’m not malignant, but if a fever is generated there, I hope the landlord will be the first to catch it.”
“Hartley!” cried Mary, in remonstrant tones.
“I didn’t say and be cut off,” cried Salis, laughing, glancing at the window. “I meant to read him a severe lesson. Hallo! Job redivivus! I’m Job. Here comes another messenger. Why, what does old Moredock want?”
Leo’s heart sank. She felt that she knew, and shrank from the ordeal, as Dally meekly opened the breakfast-room door.
“Please, sir, gran’fa says can he speak to you a minute?”
“Certainly, Dally; bring him in. Port wine, Mary!” he added, as soon as the maid had left the room; and he recalled certain words he had let fall about the missing bottles of tent, and his promise to give the old fellow wine if he were unwell.
“Surely, Hartley, you are not going to have that dreadful old man in here!” panted Leo, who felt half suffocated by her emotion, as she recalled the last night’s scene in the vestry. “Why not, dear?”
“It is too horrible – the sexton!”
“Nonsense, child! Poor old fellow! His stay on earth cannot be for long; let’s make it as free from social thorns as we can. Morning, Moredock!” he cried, as Dally ushered the old man in, to stand bowing to Mary and her sister before making a scrape or two before the curate.
“Mornin’, young ladies! Mornin’, sir! Smart mornin’, sir! Sorry to trouble you at braxfus, but I was obliged to come.”
Leo acknowledged the bow without rising, bent lower over her book, and, with teeth set hard, stole one hand under the cloth to grasp the edge of the table and grip it with all her might.
“What, about the vestry meeting – to tell me Dr North was ill?”
“Doctor ill! Is he though, sir?” croaked Moredock, as his red eyes wandered from face to face.
“Yes, he is unwell, Moredock, and cannot come.”
“Bad job – bad job, sir! Doctors has no business to be ill. S’p’ose I was took bad, I shouldn’t like to trust Dr Benson. I never did have no faith in King’s Hampton folk at all. But it warn’t about that.”
“What, then? Nothing serious, I hope?”
“Ay; but it be, sir,” croaked the old man, staring for a moment at Mary, and then fixing his eyes upon Leo. “It is very ser’ous. Some un’s been in the night and made a burgly in the chutch.”
“What!” cried Salis, starting up. “Great heavens, Moredock! is this true?”
“Ay, it be true enough, parson.”
“But they haven’t taken the plate?”
“Nay, the plate be safe, though.”
“The poor-boxes, then? Thank goodness, Mary, I emptied them the day before yesterday. How providential!”
“They never touched poor-boxes,” croaked Moredock: “and if I might make so bold, parson, I’m a bit weak i’ th’ legs yet, and I’d like to sit down.”
“Yes, yes, sit down, Moredock; but pray speak out.”
“Well, you see, sir, they didn’t get into my chutch: only into vestry.”
Leo felt that she must get up and leave the room, but she lacked the power.
“The vestry!” cried Salis. “What have they taken?”
“Well, as far as I can make out, sir, they broke in at window, and then they must ha’ been skeered, for they only thieved one thing.”
“What! – the wine?”
“Nay, nay, nay. Wine’s all right – locked up in the cupboard,” croaked Moredock. “They’ve stole your surplus, sir.”
“Impossible!” cried Salis, giving the table a sounding thump with his closed fist, and bursting into a roar of laughter.
“Impossible, Mary. I haven’t any surplus for them to steal.”
“Ay, well,” grumbled the old sexton, looking wonderingly at the curate and then at Leo and Mary in turn; “you may say so, parson, but I know. It were a hanging up on peg alongside o’ the gownd, and they’d pulled ’em both down to take away, when they must have been skeered, and they chowked the gownd down in the corner by the oak chesty, and the surplus is gone.”
“Ah, well, it might have been worse,” said Salis, with a sigh. “It was my new one, though, and the old one is terribly darned. Leo, dear, you will have to get out the old one again. Mary has the keys.”
“It be a bad job, parson.”
“It is, Moredock, a very bad job; but I’m glad the wretches were scared. I won’t believe it was any one from Duke’s Hampton.”
“Nay, it were some of the King’s Hampton lot, safe, parson. Ugh! they’re a bad set out yunder. I thought it my dooty to come on and tell you, sir, and now I’m going away back.”
“Let me give you a cup of tea, Moredock,” said Mary; “you look tired.”
“Bless your sweet eyes and heart, miss, and thankye kindly,” said Moredock. “Cup o’ tea’s a great comfort to a lone old man. And thankye kindly for undertaking to take care o’ my Dally, as wants it, like most young gels. Why, Miss Mary, I’ve know’d you since you was quite a little thin slip.”
“You have, Moredock,” said Mary, smiling, as she handed the tea to her brother for the old man, who paid no farther heed to Leo. “I was only fifteen when I first saw you.”
“Ay, and you was as bright and quick as now you’re – Well, never mind that, my dear. Better be an angel as can’t walk about than some beautiful gels as can.”
“Why, Moredock,” said Salis, laughing, “was that meant for a compliment?”
“I dunno, parson,” said the old man, staring hard at Mary; “’tis only what I felt. Heaven bless her! I never see her face wi’out thinking o’ stained glass windows, wi’ wire outside to keep away the stones; and I says, may no stones never be throwed at her.”
The old man gulped down his tea, and rose to go.
“You’ll be on at vestry room, sir?”
“Yes, Moredock; and once more I’m glad it’s no worse.”
“Like me to go over in Badley’s donkey-cart, sir, to tell the police?”