Wessex Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 312 pages of information about Wessex Tales.

Wessex Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 312 pages of information about Wessex Tales.

‘Ah, I am sorry to hear it,’ said the stranger.  ’But it is so many years since I last visited this town that I could hardly expect it should be otherwise.’  After a short silence he continued—­’And is the firm of Barnet, Browse, and Company still in existence?—­they used to be large flax-merchants and twine-spinners here?’

’The firm is still going on, sir, but they have dropped the name of Barnet.  I believe that was a sort of fancy name—­at least, I never knew of any living Barnet.  ‘Tis now Browse and Co.’

‘And does Andrew Jones still keep on as architect?’

‘He’s dead, sir.’

‘And the Vicar of St. Mary’s—­Mr. Melrose?’

‘He’s been dead a great many years.’

‘Dear me!’ He paused yet longer, and cleared his voice.  ’Is Mr. Downe, the solicitor, still in practice?’

‘No, sir, he’s dead.  He died about seven years ago.’

Here it was a longer silence still; and an attentive observer would have noticed that the paper in the stranger’s hand increased its imperceptible tremor to a visible shake.  That gray-haired gentleman noticed it himself, and rested the paper on the counter.  ’Is Mrs. Downe still alive?’ he asked, closing his lips firmly as soon as the words were out of his mouth, and dropping his eyes.

‘Yes, sir, she’s alive and well.  She’s living at the old place.’

‘In East Street?’

’O no; at Chateau Ringdale.  I believe it has been in the family for some generations.’

‘She lives with her children, perhaps?’

’No; she has no children of her own.  There were some Miss Downes; I think they were Mr. Downe’s daughters by a former wife; but they are married and living in other parts of the town.  Mrs. Downe lives alone.’

‘Quite alone?’

‘Yes, sir; quite alone.’

The newly-arrived gentleman went back to the hotel and dined; after which he made some change in his dress, shaved back his beard to the fashion that had prevailed twenty years earlier, when he was young and interesting, and once more emerging, bent his steps in the direction of the harbour-road.  Just before getting to the point where the pavement ceased and the houses isolated themselves, he overtook a shambling, stooping, unshaven man, who at first sight appeared like a professional tramp, his shoulders having a perceptible greasiness as they passed under the gaslight.  Each pedestrian momentarily turned and regarded the other, and the tramp-like gentleman started back.

’Good—­why—­is that Mr. Barnet?  ‘Tis Mr. Barnet, surely!’

‘Yes; and you are Charlson?’

’Yes—­ah—­you notice my appearance.  The Fates have rather ill-used me.  By-the-bye, that fifty pounds.  I never paid it, did I? . . .  But I was not ungrateful!’ Here the stooping man laid one hand emphatically on the palm of the other.  ’I gave you a chance, Mr. George Barnet, which many men would have thought full value received—­the chance to marry your Lucy.  As far as the world was concerned, your wife was a drowned woman, hey?’

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Wessex Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.