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"Father Jawn Storm!" cried the man in a whisper of fear.
"I want shelter for the night, Jupe. Can you put me up anywhere?"
"You, sir?"
The man was staggered and the long rod in his hand shook like a reed.
Then he began to stammer something about the Bishop and the Archdeacon and his new orders and instructions--how the shelter had been taken over by other authorities, and he was now----
"But d--- it all!" he said, stopping suddenly, putting his foot down firmly, and wagging his head to right and left like a man making a brave resolution, "I'll tyke ye in, sir, and heng it!"
It was the bitterest pill of all, but John swallowed it, and stepped into the house. As he did so he was partly aware of some tumult in a neighbouring street, with the screaming of men and women and the barking of dogs.
The blankets had been served out for the night and the men in the shelter were clambering up to their bunks. In addition to the main apartment there was a little room with a gla.s.s front which hung like a cage near to the ceiling at one end and was entered by a circular iron stair. This was the keeper's own sleeping place, and Jupe was making it ready for John, while John himself sat waiting with the look of a crushed and humiliated man, when the tumult in the street came nearer and at last drew up in front of the house.
"Wot's thet?" the men asked each other, lifting their heads, and Jupe came down and went to the door. When he returned his face was white, the sweat hung on his forehead, and a trembling shook his whole body.
"For Gawd's sake, Father, leave the house at onct!" he whispered in great agitation. "There's a gang outside as'll pull the place dahn if I keep you."
There was silence for a moment, save for the shouting outside, and then John said, with a sigh and a look of resignation, "Very well, let me out, then," and he turned to the door.
"Not that wy, sir--this wy," said Jupe, and at the next moment they were stepping into a dark and narrow lane at the back. "Turn to the left when ye get ter the bottom, Father--mind ye turn ter the left."
But John Storm had scarcely heard him. His heart had failed him at last.
He saw the baseness and ingrat.i.tude of the people whom he had spent himself to relieve and uplift and succour and comfort, and he repented himself of the hopes and aims and efforts which had come to this bankruptcy in the end.
"My G.o.d, my G.o.d, why hast thou forsaken me?"
Yes, yes, that was it! It was not this poor vile race merely, this stupid and ungrateful humanity--it was G.o.d! G.o.d used one man's ignorance, and another man's anger, and another man's hatred, and another man's spite, and worked out his own ends through it all. And G.o.d had rejected him, refused him, turned a deaf ear to his prayer and his repentance, robbed him of friends, of affection, of love, and cast him out of the family of man!
Very well! So be it! What should he do? He would go back to prison and say: "Take me in again--there is no room left for me in the world. I am alone, and my heart is dead within me!"
He was at the end of the dark lane by this time, and forgetting Jupe's warning, and seeing a brightly lighted street running off to his right, he swung round to it and walked boldly along. This was Old Pye Street, and he had come to the corner at which it opens into Brown's Square when his absent mind became conscious of the loud baying of a dog. At the next moment the dog was at his feet, bounding about him with frantic delight, leaping up to him as if trying to kiss him, and uttering meanwhile the most tender, the most true, the most pitiful cries of love.
It was his own dog, the bloodhound Don!
His unworthy thoughts were, chased away at the sight of this one faithful friend remaining, and he was stooping to fondle the great creature, to pull at the long drapery of its ears and the pendulous folds of its glorious forehead, when a short, sharp cry caused him to lift his head.
"Thet's 'im!" said somebody, and then he was aware that a group of men with evil faces had gathered round. He knew them in a moment: the publican with his bandaged head, Sharkey, who had served his time and been released from prison, and Pincher and Hawkins, who were out on bail. They had all been drinking. The publican, who carried a stick, was drunk, and the "knocker-up" was staggering on a crutch.
Then came a hideous scene. The four men began to taunt John Storm, to take off their hats and bow to him in mock honour. "His Lords.h.i.+p, I believe '" said one. "His Reverend Lords.h.i.+p, if you please!" said another.
"Leave me; for G.o.d's sake, leave me!" said John.
But their taunts became more and more menacing. "Wot abart the end uv the world, Father?" "Didn't ye tell me to sell my bit uv biziness?" "And didn't ye say you'd cured me? and look at me now!"
"Don't, I tell you, don't!" cried John, and he moved away.
They followed and began to push him. Then he stopped and cried in a loud voice of struggle and agony: "Do you want to raise the devil in me? Go home! Go home!"
But they only laughed and renewed their torment. His hat fell off and he s.n.a.t.c.hed at it to recover it. In doing so his hand struck somebody in the face. "Strike a cripple, will ye?" said the publican, and he raised his stick and struck a heavy blow on John's shoulder. At the next moment the dog had leaped upon the man, and he was shrieking on the ground. The "knocker-up" lifted his crutch and with the upper end of it he battered at the dog's brains.
"Stop, man! stop, stop!--Don! Don!"
But the dog held on, and the man with the crutch continued to strike at it, until Pincher, who had run to the other side of the street, came back with a clasp knife and plunged it into the dog's neck. Then with a growl and a whine and a pitiful cry the creature let go its hold and rolled over, and the publican got on to his feet.
It was the beginning of the end. John Storm looked down at the dog in its death-throes, and all the devil in his heart came up and mastered him. There was a shop at the corner of the square, and some heavy chairs were standing on the pavement. He took up one of these and swung it round him like a toy, and the men fell on every side.
By this time the street was in commotion, and people were coming from every court and yard and alley crying:
"A madman!" "Police!" "Lay hold of him!" "He'll kill somebody!" "Down with him!"
John Storm was also shouting at the top of his voice, when suddenly he felt a dull, stunning pain, without exactly knowing where. Then he felt himself moving up, up, up--he was in a train, the train was going through a tunnel, and the guards were screaming; then it was hot and at the next moment it was cold, and still he was floating, floating; and then he saw Glory--he heard her say something--and then he opened his eyes, and lo! the dark sky was above him, and some women were speaking in agitated voices over his face.
"Who is it?"
"It's Father Storm. The brutes! The beasts! And the pore dog, too!"
"Oh, dear! Where's the p'lice? What are we goin' to do with 'im, Aggie?"
"Tyke 'im to my room, thet's what."
Then he heard Big Ben strike twelve, and then---- It was a long, long journey, and the tunnel seemed to go on and on.
XIV.
Half an hour afterward there came to the door of the Orphanage the single loud thud that is the knock of the poor. An upper window was opened, and a tremulous voice from the street below cried, "Glory! Miss Gloria!"
It was Agatha Jones. Glory hastened downstairs and found the girl in great agitation. One glance at her face in the candlelight seemed to tell all.
"You've found him?"
"Yes; he's hurt. He's----"
"Be calm, child; tell me everything," said Glory, and Aggie delivered her message.
Since leaving Holloway, Father Storm had been followed and found by means of the dog. The crowd had set on him and knocked him down and injured him. He was now lying in Aggie's room. There had been nowhere else to take him to, for the men had disappeared the moment he was down, and the women were afraid to take him in. The police had come at last and they were now gone for the parish doctor. Mrs. Pincher was with the Father, and the poor dog was dead.
Glory held her hand over her heart while Aggie told her story. "I follow you," she said. "Did you tell him I was here? Did he send you to fetch me?"
"He didn't speak," said Aggie.
"Is he unconscious?"
"Yes."
"I'll go with you at once."