On the morning after the interview with her son described in a
foregoing chapter, Yram told her husband what she had gathered from
the Professors, and said that she was expecting Higgs every moment,
inasmuch as she was confident that George would soon find him.
"Do what you like, my dear," said the Mayor. "I shall keep out of
the way, for you will manage him better without me. You know what
I think of you."
He then went unconcernedly to his breakfast, at which the
Professors found him somewhat taciturn. Indeed they set him down
as one of the dullest and most uninteresting people they had ever
met.
When George returned and told his mother that though he had at last
found the inn at which my father had slept, my father had left and
could not be traced, she was disconcerted, but after a few minutes
she said -
"He will come back here for the dedication, but there will be such
crowds that we may not see him till he is inside the temple, and it
will save trouble if we can lay hold on him sooner. Therefore,
ride either to Clearwater or Fairmead, and see if you can find him.
Try Fairmead first; it is more out of the way. If you cannot hear
of him there, come back, get another horse, and try Clearwater. If
you fail here too, we must give him up, and look out for him in the
temple to-morrow morning."
"Are you going to say anything to the Professors?"
"Not if you can bring Higgs here before night-fall. If you cannot
do this I must talk it over with my husband; I shall have some
hours in which to make up my mind. Now go--the sooner the better."
It was nearly eleven, and in a few minutes George was on his way.
By noon he was at Fairmead, where he tried all the inns in vain for
news of a person answering the description of my father--for not
knowing what name my father might choose to give, he could trust
only to description. He concluded that since my father could not
be heard of in Fairmead by one o'clock (as it nearly was by the
time he had been round all the inns) he must have gone somewhere
else; he therefore rode back to Sunch'ston, made a hasty lunch, got
a fresh horse, and rode to Clearwater, where he met with no better
success. At all the inns both at Fairmead and Clearwater he left
word that if the person he had described came later in the day, he
was to be told that the Mayoress particularly begged him to return
at once to Sunch'ston, and come to the Mayor's house.
Now all the time that George was at Fairmead my father was inside
the Musical Bank, which he had entered before going to any inn.
Here he had been sitting for nearly a couple of hours, resting,
dreaming, and reading Bishop Gurgoyle's pamphlet. If he had left
the Bank five minutes earlier, he would probably have been seen by
George in the main street of Fairmead--as he found out on reaching
the inn which he selected and ordering dinner.
He had hardly got inside the house before the waiter told him that
young Mr. Strong, the Ranger from Sunch'ston, had been enquiring
for him and had left a message for him, which was duly delivered.
My father, though in reality somewhat disquieted, showed no
uneasiness, and said how sorry he was to have missed seeing Mr.
Strong. "But," he added, "it does not much matter; I need not go
back this afternoon, for I shall be at Sunch'ston to-morrow morning
and will go straight to the Mayor's."
He had no suspicion that he was discovered, but he was a good deal
puzzled. Presently he inclined to the opinion that George, still
believing him to be Professor Panky, had wanted to invite him to
the banquet on the following day--for he had no idea that Hanky and
Panky were staying with the Mayor and Mayoress. Or perhaps the
Mayor and his wife did not like so distinguished a man's having
been unable to find a lodging in Sunch'ston, and wanted him to stay
with them. Ill satisfied as he was with any theory he could form,
he nevertheless reflected that he could not do better than stay
where he was for the night, inasmuch as no one would be likely to
look for him a second time at Fairmead. He therefore ordered his
room at once.
It was nearly seven before George got back to Sunch'ston. In the
meantime Yram and the Mayor had considered the question whether
anything was to be said to the Professors or no. They were
confident that my father would not commit himself--why, indeed,
should he have dyed his hair and otherwise disguised himself, if he
had not intended to remain undiscovered? Oh no; the probability
was that if nothing was said to the Professors now, nothing need
ever be said, for my father might be escorted back to the statues
by George on the Sunday evening and be told that he was not to
return. Moreover, even though something untoward were to happen
after all, the Professors would have no reason for thinking that
their hostess had known of the Sunchild's being in Sunch'ston.
On the other hand, they were her guests, and it would not be
handsome to keep Hanky, at any rate, in the dark, when the
knowledge that the Sunchild was listening to every word he said
might make him modify his sermon not a little. It might or it
might not, but that was a matter for him, not her. The only
question for her was whether or no it would be sharp practice to
know what she knew and say nothing about it. Her husband hated
finesse as much as she did, and they settled it that though the
question was a nice one, the more proper thing to do would be to
tell the Professors what it might so possibly concern one or both
of them to know.
On George's return without news of my father, they found he thought
just as they did; so it was arranged that they should let the
Professors dine in peace, but tell them about the Sunchild's being
again in Erewhon as soon as dinner was over.
"Happily," said George, "they will do no harm. They will wish
Higgs's presence to remain unknown as much as we do, and they will
be glad that he should be got out of the country immediately."
"Not so, my dear," said Yram. "'Out of the country' will not do
for those people. Nothing short of 'out of the world' will satisfy
them."
"That," said George promptly, "must not be."
"Certainly not, my dear, but that is what they will want. I do not
like having to tell them, but I am afraid we must."
"Never mind," said the Mayor, laughing. "Tell them, and let us see
what happens."
They then dressed for dinner, where Hanky and Panky were the only
guests. When dinner was over Yram sent away her other children,
George alone remaining. He sat opposite the Professors, while the
Mayor and Yram were at the two ends of the table.
"I am afraid, dear Professor Hanky," said Yram, "that I was not
quite open with you last night, but I wanted time to think things
over, and I know you will forgive me when you remember what a
number of guests I had to attend to." She then referred to what
Hanky had told her about the supposed ranger, and shewed him how
obvious it was that this man was a foreigner, who had been for some
time in Erewhon more than seventeen years ago, but had had no
communication with it since then. Having pointed sufficiently, as
she thought, to the Sunchild, she said, "You see who I believe this
man to have been. Have I said enough, or shall I say more?"
"I understand you," said Hanky, "and I agree with you that the
Sunchild will be in the temple to-morrow. It is a serious
business, but I shall not alter my sermon. He must listen to what
I may choose to say, and I wish I could tell him what a fool he was
for coming here. If he behaves himself, well and good: your son
will arrest him quietly after service, and by night he will be in
the Blue Pool. Your son is bound to throw him there as a foreign
devil, without the formality of a trial. It would be a most
painful duty to me, but unless I am satisfied that that man has
been thrown into the Blue Pool, I shall have no option but to
report the matter at headquarters. If, on the other hand, the poor
wretch makes a disturbance, I can set the crowd on to tear him in
pieces."
George was furious, but he remained quite calm, and left everything
to his mother.
"I have nothing to do with the Blue Pool," said Yram drily. "My
son, I doubt not, will know how to do his duty; but if you let the
people kill this man, his body will remain, and an inquest must be
held, for the matter will have been too notorious to be hushed up.
All Higgs's measurements and all marks on his body were recorded,
and these alone would identify him. My father, too, who is still
master of the gaol, and many another, could swear to him. Should
the body prove, as no doubt it would, to be that of the Sunchild,
what is to become of Sunchildism?"
Hanky smiled. "It would not be proved. The measurements of a man
of twenty or thereabouts would not correspond with this man's. All
we Professors should attend the inquest, and half Bridgeford is now
in Sunch'ston. No matter though nine-tenths of the marks and
measurements corresponded, so long as there is a tenth that does
not do so, we should not be flesh and blood if we did not ignore
the nine points and insist only on the tenth. After twenty years
we shall find enough to serve our turn. Think of what all the
learning of the country is committed to; think of the change in all
our ideas and institutions; think of the King and of Court
influence. I need not enlarge. We shall not permit the body to be
the Sunchild's. No matter what evidence you may produce, we shall
sneer it down, and say we must have more before you can expect us
to take you seriously; if you bring more, we shall pay no
attention; and the more you bring the more we shall laugh at you.
No doubt those among us who are by way of being candid will admit
that your arguments ought to be considered, but you must not expect
that it will be any part of their duty to consider them.
"And even though we admitted that the body had been proved up to
the hilt to be the Sunchild's, do you think that such a trifle as
that could affect Sunchildism? Hardly. Sunch'ston is no match for
Bridgeford and the King; our only difficulty would lie in settling
which was the most plausible way of the many plausible ways in
which the death could be explained. We should hatch up twenty
theories in less than twenty hours, and the last state of
Sunchildism would be stronger than the first. For the people want
it, and so long as they want it they will have it. At the same
time the supposed identification of the body, even by some few
ignorant people here, might lead to a local heresy that is as well
avoided, and it will be better that your son should arrest the man
before the dedication, if he can be found, and throw him into the
Blue Pool without any one but ourselves knowing that he has been
here at all."
I need not dwell on the deep disgust with which this speech was
listened to, but the Mayor, and Yram, and George said not a word.
"But, Mayoress," said Panky, who had not opened his lips so far,
"are you sure that you are not too hasty in believing this stranger
to be the Sunchild? People are continually thinking that such and
such another is the Sunchild come down again from the sun's palace
and going to and fro among us. How many such stories, sometimes
very plausibly told, have we not had during the last twenty years?
They never take root, and die out of themselves as suddenly as they
spring up. That the man is a poacher can hardly be doubted; I
thought so the moment I saw him; but I think I can also prove to
you that he is not a foreigner, and, therefore, that he is not the
Sunchild. He quoted the Sunchild's prayer with a corruption that
can have only reached him from an Erewhonian source--"
Here Hanky interrupted him somewhat brusquely. "The man, Panky,"
said he, "was the Sunchild; and he was not a poacher, for he had no
idea that he was breaking the law; nevertheless, as you say,
Sunchildism on the brain has been a common form of mania for
several years. Several persons have even believed themselves to be
the Sunchild. We must not forget this, if it should get about that
Higgs has been here."
Then, turning to Yram, he said sternly, "But come what may, your
son must take him to the Blue Pool at nightfall."
"Sir," said George, with perfect suavity, "you have spoken as
though you doubted my readiness to do my duty. Let me assure you
very solemnly that when the time comes for me to act, I shall act
as duty may direct."
"I will answer for him," said Yram, with even more than her usual
quick, frank smile, "that he will fulfil his instructions to the
letter, unless," she added, "some black and white horses come down
from heaven and snatch poor Higgs out of his grasp. Such things
have happened before now."
"I should advise your son to shoot them if they do," said Hanky
drily and sub-defiantly.
Here the conversation closed; but it was useless trying to talk of
anything else, so the Professors asked Yram to excuse them if they
retired early, in view of the fact that they had a fatiguing day
before them. This excuse their hostess readily accepted.
"Do not let us talk any more now," said Yram as soon as they had
left the room. "It will be quite time enough when the dedication
is over. But I rather think the black and white horses will come."
"I think so too, my dear," said the Mayor laughing.
"They shall come," said George gravely; "but we have not yet got
enough to make sure of bringing them. Higgs will perhaps be able
to help me to-morrow."
* * *
"Now what," said Panky as they went upstairs, "does that woman
mean--for she means something? Black and white horses indeed!"
"I do not know what she means to do," said the other, "but I know
that she thinks she can best us."
"I wish we had not eaten those quails."
"Nonsense, Panky; no one saw us but Higgs, and the evidence of a
foreign devil, in such straits as his, could not stand for a
moment. We did not eat them. No, no; she has something that she
thinks better than that. Besides, it is absolutely impossible that
she should have heard what happened. What I do not understand is,
why she should have told us about the Sunchild's being here at all.
Why not have left us to find it out or to know nothing about it? I
do not understand it."
So true is it, as Euclid long since observed, that the less cannot
comprehend that which is the greater. True, however, as this is,
it is also sometimes true that the greater cannot comprehend the
less. Hanky went musing to his own room and threw himself into an
easy chair to think the position over. After a few minutes he went
to a table on which he saw pen, ink, and paper, and wrote a short
letter; then he rang the bell.
When the servant came he said, "I want to send this note to the
manager of the new temple, and it is important that he should have
it to-night. Be pleased, therefore, to take it to him and deliver
it into his own hands; but I had rather you said nothing about it
to the Mayor or Mayoress, nor to any of your fellow-servants. Slip
out unperceived if you can. When you have delivered the note, ask
for an answer at once, and bring it to me."
So saying, he slipped a sum equal to about five shillings into the
man's hand.
The servant returned in about twenty minutes, for the temple was
quite near, and gave a note to Hanky, which ran, "Your wishes shall
be attended to without fail."
"Good!" said Hanky to the man. "No one in the house knows of your
having run this errand for me?"
"No one, sir."
"Thank you! I wish you a very good night."