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John Storm had heard, but he made no answer; he was turning over the leaves of the pamphlet.
The canon hemmed and cleared his throat. "Mary Elizabeth Love," he said, "you have brought a stain upon this honourable and hitherto irreproachable inst.i.tution, but I trust and believe that ere long, and before your misbegotten child is born, you may see cause to be grateful for our forbearance and our charity. Speaking for myself, I confess it is an occasion of grief to me, and might well, I think, be a cause of sorrow to him who has had your spiritual welfare in his keeping" (here he gave a look toward John), "that you do not seem to realize the position of infamy in which you stand. We have always been taught to think of a woman as sweet and true and pure; a being hallowed to our sympathy by the most sacred a.s.sociations, and endeared to our love by the tenderest ties, and it is only right" (the canon's voice was breaking), "it is only right, I say, that you should be told at once, and in this place--though tardily and too late--that for the woman who wrongs that ideal, as you have wronged it, there is but one name known among persons of good credit and good report--a hard name, a terrible name, a name of contempt and loathing--the name of _prost.i.tute!_"
Crus.h.i.+ng the pamphlet in his hand, John Storm had taken a step toward the canon, but he was too late. Some one was there before him. It was Glory. With her head erect and her eyes flas.h.i.+ng, she stood between the weeping girl and the black-coated judge, and everybody could see the swelling and heaving of her bosom.
"How dare you!" she cried. "You say you have been taught to think of a woman as sweet and pure. Well, _I_ have been taught to think of a _man_ as strong and brave, and tender and merciful to every living creature, but most of all to a woman, if she is erring and fallen. But you are not brave and tender; you are cruel and cowardly, and I despise you and hate you!"
The men at the tables were rising from their seats.
"Oh, you have discharged my friend," she said, "and you may discharge me, too, if you like--if you _dare_! But I will tell everybody that it was because I would not let you insult a poor girl with a cruel and shameful name, and trample upon her when she was down. And everybody will believe me, because it is the truth; and anything else you may say will be a lie, and all the world will know it!"
The matron was shambling up also.
"How dare you, miss! Go back to your ward this instant! Do you know whom you are speaking to?"
"Oh, it's not the first time I've spoken to a clergyman, ma'am. I'm the daughter of a clergyman, and the granddaughter of a clergyman, and I know what a clergyman is when he is brave and good, and gentle and merciful to all women, and when he is a man and a gentleman--not a Pharisee and a crocodile!"
"Please take that girl away," said the chairman.
But John Storm was by her side in a moment.
"No, sir," he said, "n.o.body shall do that."
But now Glory had broken down too, and the girls, like two lost children, were crying on each other's b.r.e.a.s.t.s. John opened the door and led them up to it.
"Take your friend to her room, nurse: I shall be with you presently."
Then he turned back to the chairman, still holding the crumpled pamphlet in his hand, and said calmly and respectfully:
"And now that you have finished with the woman, sir, may I ask what you intend to do with the man?"
"What man?"
"Though I did not feel myself qualified to sit in judgment on the broken heart of a fallen girl, I happen to know the name which she was forbidden to mention, and I find it here, sir--here in your list of subscribers and governors."
"Well, what of it?"
"You have wiped the girl out of your books, sir. Now I ask you to wipe the man out also."
"Gentlemen," said the chairman, rising, "the business of the board is at an end."
XVIII.
John Storm wrote a letter to Mrs. Callender explaining Polly Love's situation and asking her to call on the girl immediately, and then he went out in search of Lord Robert Ure at the address he had discovered in the report.
He found the man alone on his arrival, but Drake came in soon afterward.
Lord Robert received him with a chilly bow; Drake offered his hand coldly; neither of them requested him to sit.
"You are surprised at my visit, gentlemen," said John, "but I have just now been present at a painful scene, and I thought it necessary that you should know something about it."
Then he described what had occurred in the board room, and in doing so dwelt chiefly on the abjectness of the girl's humiliation. Lord Robert stood by the window rapping a tune on the window pane, and Drake sat in a low chair with his legs stretched out and his hands in his trousers pockets.
"But I am at a loss to understand why you have thought it necessary to come here to tell that story," said Lord Robert.
"Lord Robert," said John, "you understand me perfectly."
"Excuse me, Mr. Storm, I do not understand you in the least."
"Then I will not ask you if you are responsible for the girl's position."
"Don't."
"But I will ask you a simpler and easier question."
"What is it?"
"When are you going to marry her?"
Lord Robert burst into ironical laughter and faced round to Drake.
"Well, these men--these curates--their a.s.surance, don't you know...
May I ask your reverence what is _your_ position in this matter--your standing, don't you know?"
"That of chaplain of the hospital."
"But you say she has been, turned out of it."
"Very well, Lord Robert, merely that of a man who intends to protect an injured woman."
"Oh, I know," said Lord Robert dryly, "I understand these heroics. I've heard of your sermons, Mr. Storm--your interviews with ladies, and so forth."
"And I have heard of your doings with girls," said John. "What are you going to do for this one?"
"Exactly what I please."
"Take care! You know what the girl is. It's precisely such girls---- At this moment she is tottering on the brink of h.e.l.l, Lord Robert. If anything further should happen--if you should disappoint her--she is looking to you and building up hopes--if she should fall still lower and destroy herself body and soul----"
"My dear Mr. Storm, please understand that I shall do everything or nothing for the girl exactly as I think well, don't you know, without the counsel or coercion of any clergyman."
There was a short silence, and then John Storm said quietly: "It is no worse than I expected. But I had to hear it from your own lips, and I have heard it. Good-day."
He went back to the hospital and asked for Glory. She was banished with Polly to the housekeeper's room. Polly was catching flies on the window (which overlooked the park) and humming, "Sigh no more, ladies." Glory's eyes were red with weeping. John drew Glory aside.
"I have written to Mrs. Callender, and she will be here presently," he said.