"What did you think of Panky?"
"I could not make him out. If he had not been a Bridgeford
Professor I might have liked him; but you know how we all of us
distrust those people."
"Where did you meet him?"
"About two hours lower down than the statues."
"At what o'clock?"
"It might be between two and half-past."
"I suppose he did not say that at that hour he was in bed at his
hotel in Sunch'ston. Hardly! Tell me what passed between you."
"He had his permit open before we were within speaking distance. I
think he feared I should attack him without making sure whether he
was a foreign devil or no. I have told you he said he was
Professor Panky."
"I suppose he had a dark complexion and black hair like the rest of
us?"
"Dark complexion and hair purplish rather than black. I was
surprised to see that his eyelashes were as light as my own, and
his eyes were blue like mine--but you will have noticed this at
dinner."
"No, my dear, I did not, and I think I should have done so if it
had been there to notice."
"Oh, but it was so indeed."
"Perhaps. Was there anything strange about his way of talking?"
"A little about his grammar, but these Bridgeford Professors have
often risen from the ranks. His pronunciation was nearly like
yours and mine."
"Was his manner friendly?"
"Very; more so than I could understand at first. I had not,
however, been with him long before I saw tears in his eyes, and
when I asked him whether he was in distress, he said I reminded him
of a son whom he had lost and had found after many years, only to
lose him almost immediately for ever. Hence his cordiality towards
me."
"Then," said Yram half hysterically to herself, "he knew who you
were. Now, how, I wonder, did he find that out?" All vestige of
doubt as to who the man might be had now left her.
"Certainly he knew who I was. He spoke about you more than once,
and wished us every kind of prosperity, baring his head reverently
as he spoke."
"Poor fellow! Did he say anything about Higgs?"
"A good deal, and I was surprised to find he thought about it all
much as we do. But when I said that if I could go down into the
hell of which Higgs used to talk to you while he was in prison, I
should expect to find him in its hottest fires, he did not like
it."
"Possibly not, my dear. Did you tell him how the other boys, when
you were at school, used sometimes to say you were son to this man
Higgs, and that the people of Sunch'ston used to say so also, till
the Mayor trounced two or three people so roundly that they held
their tongues for the future?"
"Not all that, but I said that silly people had believed me to be
the Sunchild's son, and what a disgrace I should hold it to be son
to such an impostor."
"What did he say to this?"
"He asked whether I should feel the disgrace less if Higgs were to
undo the mischief he had caused by coming back and shewing himself
to the people for what he was. But he said it would be no use for
him to do so, inasmuch as people would kill him but would not
believe him."
"And you said?"
"Let him come back, speak out, and chance what might befall him.
In that case, I should honour him, father or no father."
"And he?"
"He asked if that would be a bargain; and when I said it would, he
grasped me warmly by the hand on Higgs's behalf--though what it
could matter to him passes my comprehension."
"But he saw that even though Higgs were to shew himself and say who
he was, it would mean death to himself and no good to any one
else?"
"Perfectly."
"Then he can have meant nothing by shaking hands with you. It was
an idle jest. And now for your poachers. You do not know who they
were? I will tell you. The two who sat on the one side the fire
were Professors Hanky and Panky from the City of the People who are
above Suspicion."
"No," said George vehemently. "Impossible."
"Yes, my dear boy, quite possible, and whether possible or
impossible, assuredly true."
"And the third man?"
"The third man was dressed in the old costume. He was in
possession of several brace of birds. The Professors vowed they
had not eaten any--"
"Oh yes, but they had," blurted out George.
"Of course they had, my dear; and a good thing too. Let us return
to the man in the old costume."
"That is puzzling. Who did he say he was?"
"He said he was one of your men; that you had instructed him to
provide you with three dozen quails for Sunday; and that you let
your men wear the old costume if they had any of it left, provided-
-"
This was too much for George; he started to his feet. "What, my
dearest mother, does all this mean? You have been playing with me
all through. What is coming?"
"A very little more, and you shall hear. This man staid with the
Professors till nearly midnight, and then left them on the plea
that he would finish the night in the Ranger's shelter--"
"Ranger's shelter, indeed! Why--"
"Hush, my darling boy, be patient with me. He said he must be up
betimes, to run down the rest of the quails you had ordered him to
bring you. But before leaving the Professors he beguiled them into
giving him up their permit."
"Then, said George, striding about the room with his face flushed
and his eyes flashing, "he was the man with whom I walked down this
afternoon."
"Exactly so."
"And he must have changed his dress?"
"Exactly so."
"But where and how?"
"At some place not very far down on the other side the range, where
he had hidden his old clothes."
"And who, in the name of all that we hold most sacred, do you take
him to have been--for I see you know more than you have yet told
me?"
"My son, he was Higgs the Sunchild, father to that boy whom I love
next to my husband more dearly than any one in the whole world."
She folded her arms about him for a second, without kissing him,
and left him. "And now," she said, the moment she had closed the
door--"and now I may cry."
* * *
She did not cry for long, and having removed all trace of tears as
far as might be, she returned to her son outwardly composed and
cheerful. "Shall I say more now," she said, seeing how grave he
looked, "or shall I leave you, and talk further with you to-
morrow?"
"Now--now--now!"
"Good! A little before Higgs came here, the Mayor, as he now is,
poor, handsome, generous to a fault so far as he had the
wherewithal, was adored by all the women of his own rank in
Sunch'ston. Report said that he had adored many of them in return,
but after having known me for a very few days, he asked me to marry
him, protesting that he was a changed man. I liked him, as every
one else did, but I was not in love with him, and said so; he said
he would give me as much time as I chose, if I would not point-
blank refuse him; and so the matter was left.
"Within a week or so Higgs was brought to the prison, and he had
not been there long before I found, or thought I found, that I
liked him better than I liked Strong. I was a fool--but there! As
for Higgs, he liked, but did not love me. If I had let him alone
he would have done the like by me; and let each other alone we did,
till the day before he was taken down to the capital. On that day,
whether through his fault or mine I know not--we neither of us
meant it--it was as though Nature, my dear, was determined that you
should not slip through her fingers--well, on that day we took it
into our heads that we were broken-hearted lovers--the rest
followed. And how, my dearest boy, as I look upon you, can I feign
repentance?
"My husband, who never saw Higgs, and knew nothing about him except
the too little that I told him, pressed his suit, and about a month
after Higgs had gone, having recovered my passing infatuation for
him, I took kindly to the Mayor and accepted him, without telling
him what I ought to have told him--but the words stuck in my
throat. I had not been engaged to him many days before I found
that there was something which I should not be able to hide much
longer.
"You know, my dear, that my mother had been long dead, and I never
had a sister or any near kinswoman. At my wits' end who I should
consult, instinct drew me to Mrs. Humdrum, then a woman of about
five-and-forty. She was a grand lady, while I was about the rank
of one of my own housemaids. I had no claim on her; I went to her
as a lost dog looks into the faces of people on a road, and singles
out the one who will most surely help him. I had had a good look
at her once as she was putting on her gloves, and I liked the way
she did it. I marvel at my own boldness. At any rate, I asked to
see her, and told her my story exactly as I have now told it to
you.
"'You have no mother?' she said, when she had heard all.
"'No.'
"'Then, my dear, I will mother you myself. Higgs is out of the
question, so Strong must marry you at once. We will tell him
everything, and I, on your behalf, will insist upon it that the
engagement is at an end. I hear good reports of him, and if we are
fair towards him he will be generous towards us. Besides, I
believe he is so much in love with you that he would sell his soul
to get you. Send him to me. I can deal with him better than you
can.'"
"And what," said George, "did my father, as I shall always call
him, say to all this?
"Truth bred chivalry in him at once. 'I will marry her,' he said,
with hardly a moment's hesitation, 'but it will be better that I
should not be put on any lower footing than Higgs was. I ought not
to be denied anything that has been allowed to him. If I am
trusted, I can trust myself to trust and think no evil either of
Higgs or her. They were pestered beyond endurance, as I have been
ere now. If I am held at arm's length till I am fast bound, I
shall marry Yram just the same, but I doubt whether she and I shall
ever be quite happy.'
"'Come to my house this evening,' said Mrs. Humdrum, 'and you will
find Yram there.' He came, he found me, and within a fortnight we
were man and wife."
"How much does not all this explain," said George, smiling but very
gravely. "And you are going to ask me to forgive you for robbing
me of such a father."
"He has forgiven me, my dear, for robbing him of such a son. He
never reproached me. From that day to this he has never given me a
harsh word or even syllable. When you were born he took to you at
once, as, indeed, who could help doing? for you were the sweetest
child both in looks and temper that it is possible to conceive.
Your having light hair and eyes made things more difficult; for
this, and your being born, almost to the day, nine months after
Higgs had left us, made people talk--but your father kept their
tongues within bounds. They talk still, but they liked what little
they saw of Higgs, they like the Mayor and me, and they like you
the best of all; so they please themselves by having the thing both
ways. Though, therefore, you are son to the Mayor, Higgs cast some
miraculous spell upon me before he left, whereby my son should be
in some measure his as well as the Mayor's. It was this miraculous
spell that caused you to be born two months too soon, and we called
you by Higgs's first name as though to show that we took that view
of the matter ourselves.
"Mrs. Humdrum, however, was very positive that there was no spell
at all. She had repeatedly heard her father say that the Mayor's
grandfather was light-haired and blue-eyed, and that every third
generation in that family a light-haired son was born. The people
believe this too. Nobody disbelieves Mrs. Humdrum, but they like
the miracle best, so that is how it has been settled.
"I never knew whether Mrs. Humdrum told her husband, but I think
she must; for a place was found almost immediately for my husband
in Mr. Humdrum's business. He made himself useful; after a few
years he was taken into partnership, and on Mr. Humdrum's death
became head of the firm. Between ourselves, he says laughingly
that all his success in life was due to Higgs and me."
"I shall give Mrs. Humdrum a double dose of kissing," said George
thoughtfully, "next time I see her."
"Oh, do, do; she will so like it. And now, my darling boy, tell
your poor mother whether or no you can forgive her."
He clasped her in his arms, and kissed her again and again, but for
a time he could find no utterance. Presently he smiled, and said,
"Of course I do, but it is you who should forgive me, for was it
not all my fault?"
When Yram, too, had become more calm, she said, "It is late, and we
have no time to lose. Higgs's coming at this time is mere
accident; if he had had news from Erewhon he would have known much
that he did not know. I cannot guess why he has come--probably
through mere curiosity, but he will hear or have heard--yes, you
and he talked about it--of the temple; being here, he will want to
see the dedication. From what you have told me I feel sure that he
will not make a fool of himself by saying who he is, but in spite
of his disguise he may be recognised. I do not doubt that he is
now in Sunch'ston; therefore, to-morrow morning scour the town to
find him. Tell him he is discovered, tell him you know from me
that he is your father, and that I wish to see him with all good-
will towards him. He will come. We will then talk to him, and
show him that he must go back at once. You can escort him to the
statues; after passing them he will be safe. He will give you no
trouble, but if he does, arrest him on a charge of poaching, and
take him to the gaol, where we must do the best we can with him--
but he will give you none. We need say nothing to the Professors.
No one but ourselves will know of his having been here."
On this she again embraced her son and left him. If two
photographs could have been taken of her, one as she opened the
door and looked fondly back on George, and the other as she closed
it behind her, the second portrait would have seemed taken ten
years later than the first.
As for George, he went gravely but not unhappily to his own room.
"So that ready, plausible fellow," he muttered to himself, "was my
own father. At any rate, I am not son to a fool--and he liked me."