Part 43 (1/2)

”Well, sir, we're rather upside-down just now--and--”

”Oh! I won't disturb you more than a minute,” came the other voice again. There were footsteps in the pa.s.sage, and the next instant, past the unwilling hostess, there came a young, fresh-colored clergyman, carrying a silk hat, into the lamplight of the kitchen. Frank stood up instantly, and the Major went so far as to take down his feet. Then he, too, stood up.

”Good evening!” said the clergyman. ”May I just come in for a minute or two? I heard you had come, and as it's in my district--May I sit down, Mrs. Partington?”

Mrs. Partington with sternly knit lips, swept a brown teapot, a stocking, a comb, a cup and a crumby plate off the single unoccupied chair, and set it a little forward near the fire. Clergymen were, to her mind, one of those mysterious dispensations of the world for which there was no adequate explanation at all--like policemen and men's gamblings and horse-races. There they were, and there was no more to be said. They were mildly useful for entertaining the children and taking them to Southend, and in cases of absolute despair they could be relied upon for soup-tickets or even half-crowns; but the big mysterious church, with its gilded screen, its curious dark gla.s.s, and its white little side-chapel, with the Morris hangings, the great clergy-house, the ladies, the parish magazine and all the rest of it--these were simply inexplicable. Above all inexplicable was the pa.s.sion displayed for district-visiting--that strange impulse that drove four highly-cultivated young men in black frock-coats and high hats and ridiculous little collars during five afternoons in the week to knock at door after door all over the district and conduct well-mannered conversations with bored but polite mothers of families. It was one of the phenomena that had to be accepted. She supposed it stood for something beyond her perceptions.

”I thought I must come in and make your acquaintance,” said the clergyman, nursing his hat and smiling at the company. (He, too, occasionally shared Mrs. Partington's wonder as to the object of all this; but he, too, submitted to it as part of the system.) ”People come and go so quickly, you know--”

”Very pleased to see a clergyman,” said the Major smoothly. ”No objection to smoke, sir, I presume?” He indicated his pipe.

”Not at all,” said the clergyman. ”In fact, I smoke myself; and if Mrs.

Partington will allow me--” He produced a small pink and gilded packet of Cinderellas. (I think he thought it brought him vaguely nearer the people to smoke Cinderellas.)

”Oh! no objection at all, sir,” put in Mrs. Partington, still a little grimly. (She was still secretly resenting being called upon at half-past six. You were usually considered immune from this kind of thing after five o'clock.)

”So I thought I must just look in and catch you one evening,” explained the clergyman once more, ”and tell you that we're your friends here--the clergy, you know--and about the church and all that.”

He was an extremely conscientious young man--this Mr. Parham-Carter--an old Etonian, of course, and now in his first curacy. It was all pretty bewildering to him, too, this great and splendid establishment, the glorious church by Bodley, with the Magnificat in Gothic lettering below the roof, the well-built and furnished clergy-house, the ladies' house, the zeal, the self-devotion, the parochial machinery, the Band of Hope, the men's and boys' clubs, and, above all, the furious district-visiting. Of course, it produced results, it kept up the standards of decency and civilization and ideals; it was a weight in the balances on the side of right and good living; the clubs kept men from the public-house to some extent, and made it possible for boys to grow up with some chance on their side. Yet he wondered, in fits of despondency, whether there were not something wrong somewhere.... But he accepted it: it was the approved method, and he himself was a learner, not a teacher.

”Very kind of you, sir,” said the Major, replacing his feet on the mantelshelf. ”And at what time are the services on Sunday?”

The clergyman jumped. He was not accustomed to that sort of question.

”I ...” he began.

”I'm a strong Churchman, sir,” said the Major. ”And even if I were not, one must set an example, you know. I may be narrow-minded, but I'm particular about all that sort of thing. I shall be with you on Sunday.”

He nodded rea.s.suringly at Mr. Parham-Carter.

”Well, we have morning prayer at ten-thirty next Sunday, and the Holy Eucharist at eleven--and, of course, at eight.”

”No vestments, I hope?” said the Major sternly.

Mr. Parham-Carter faltered a little. Vestments were not in use, but to his regret.

”Well, we don't use vestments,” he said, ”but--”

The Major resumed his pipe with a satisfied air.

”That's all right,” he said. ”Now, I'm not bigoted--my friend here's a Roman Catholic, but--”

The clergyman looked up sharply, and for the first time became consciously conscious of the second man. Frank had sat back again on the bed, with Jimmie beside him, and was watching the little scene quietly and silently, and the clergyman met his eyes full. Some vague shock thrilled through him; Frank's clean-shaven brown face seemed somehow familiar--or was it something else?

Mr. Parham-Carter considered the point for a little while in silence, only half attending to the Major, who was now announcing his views on the Establishment and the Reformation settlement. Frank said nothing at all, and there grew on the clergyman a desire to hear his voice. He made an opportunity at last.

”Yes, I see,” he said to the Major; ”and you--I don't know your name?”