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ANDREW AT LAST.
Having at length persuaded the woman to go with him, Falconer made
her take his arm, and led her off the bridge. In Parliament Street
he was looking about for a cab as they walked on, when a man he did
not know, stopped, touched his hat, and addressed him.
'I'm thinkin', sir, ye'll be sair wantit at hame the nicht It wad be
better to gang at ance, an' lat the puir fowk luik efter themsels
for ae nicht.'
'I'm sorry I dinna ken ye, man. Do ye ken me?'
'Fine that, Mr. Falconer. There's mony ane kens you and praises
God.'
'God be praised!' returned Falconer. 'Why am I wanted at home?'
''Deed I wad raither not say, sir.--Hey!'
This last exclamation was addressed to a cab just disappearing down
King Street from Whitehall. The driver heard, turned, and in a
moment more was by their side.
'Ye had better gang into her an' awa' hame, and lea' the poor lassie
to me. I'll tak guid care o' her.'
She clung to Falconer's arm. The man opened the door of the cab.
Falconer put her in, told the driver to go to Queen Square, and if
he could not make haste, to stop the first cab that could, got in
himself, thanked his unknown friend, who did not seem quite
satisfied, and drove off.
Happily Miss St. John was at home, and there was no delay. Neither
was any explanation of more than six words necessary. He jumped
again into the cab and drove home. Fortunately for his mood, though
in fact it mattered little for any result, the horse was fresh, and
both able and willing.
When he entered John Street, he came to observe before reaching his
own door that a good many men were about in little quiet
groups--some twenty or so, here and there. When he let himself in
with his pass-key, there were two men in the entry. Without
stopping to speak, he ran up to his own chambers. When he got into
his sitting-room, there stood De Fleuri, who simply waved his hand
towards the old sofa. On it lay an elderly man, with his eyes half
open, and a look almost of idiocy upon his pale, puffed face, which
was damp and shining. His breathing was laboured, but there was no
further sign of suffering. He lay perfectly still. Falconer saw at
once that he was under the influence of some narcotic, probably
opium; and the same moment the all but conviction darted into his
mind that Andrew Falconer, his grandmother's son, lay there before
him. That he was his own father he had no feeling yet. He turned
to De Fleuri.
'Thank you, friend,' he said. 'I shall find time to thank you.'
'Are we right?' asked De Fleuri.
'I don't know. I think so,' answered Falconer; and without another
word the man withdrew.
His first mood was very strange. It seemed as if all the romance
had suddenly deserted his life, and it lay bare and hopeless. He
felt nothing. No tears rose to the brim of their bottomless
wells--the only wells that have no bottom, for they go into the
depths of the infinite soul. He sat down in his chair, stunned as
to the heart and all the finer chords of his nature. The man on the
horsehair sofa lay breathing--that was all. The gray hair about the
pale ill-shaven face glimmered like a cloud before him. What should
he do or say when he awaked? How approach this far-estranged soul?
How ever send the cry of father into that fog-filled world? Could
he ever have climbed on those knees and kissed those lips, in the
far-off days when the sun and the wind of that northern atmosphere
made his childhood blessed beyond dreams? The actual--that is the
present phase of the ever-changing--looked the ideal in the face;
and the mirror that held them both, shook and quivered at the
discord of the faces reflected. A kind of moral cold seemed to
radiate from the object before him, and chill him to the very bones.
This could not long be endured. He fled from the actual to the
source of all the ideal--to that Saviour who, the infinite mediator,
mediates between all hopes and all positions; between the most
debased actual and the loftiest ideal; between the little scoffer of
St. Giles's and his angel that ever beholds the face of the Father
in heaven. He fell on his knees, and spoke to God, saying that he
had made this man; that the mark of his fingers was on the man's
soul somewhere. He prayed to the making Spirit to bring the man to
his right mind, to give him once more the heart of a child, to begin
him yet again at the beginning. Then at last, all the evil he had
done and suffered would but swell his gratitude to Him who had
delivered him from himself and his own deeds. Having breathed this
out before the God of his life, Falconer rose, strengthened to meet
the honourable debased soul when it should at length look forth from
the dull smeared windows of those ill-used eyes.
He felt his pulse. There was no danger from the narcotic. The coma
would pass away. Meantime he would get him to bed. When he began
to undress him a new reverence arose which overcame all disgust at
the state in which he found him. At length one sad little fact
about his dress, revealing the poverty-stricken attempt of a man to
preserve the shadow of decency, called back the waters of the
far-ebbed ocean of his feelings. At the prick of a pin the heart's
blood will flow: at the sight of--a pin it was--Robert burst into
tears, and wept like a child; the deadly cold was banished from his
heart, and he not only loved, but knew that he loved--felt the love
that was there. Everything then about the worn body and shabby
garments of the man smote upon the heart of his son, and through his
very poverty he was sacred in his eyes. The human heart awakened
the filial--reversing thus the ordinary process of Nature, who by
means of the filial, when her plans are unbroken, awakes the human;
and he reproached himself bitterly for his hardness, as he now
judged his late mental condition--unfairly, I think. He soon had
him safe in bed, unconscious of the helping hands that had been busy
about him in his heedless sleep; unconscious of the radiant planet
of love that had been folding him round in its atmosphere of
affection.
But while he thus ministered, a new question arose in his mind--to
meet with its own new, God-given answer. What if this should not be
the man after all?--if this love had been spent in mistake, and did
not belong to him at all? The answer was, that he was a man. The
love Robert had given he could not, would not withdraw. The man who
had been for a moment as his father he could not cease to regard
with devotion. At least he was a man with a divine soul. He might
at least be somebody's father. Where love had found a moment's rest
for the sole of its foot, there it must build its nest.
When he had got him safe in bed, he sat down beside him to think
what he would do next. This sleep gave him very needful leisure to
think. He could determine nothing--not even how to find out if he
was indeed his father. If he approached the subject without guile,
the man might be fearful and cunning--might have reasons for being
so, and for striving to conceal the truth. But this was the first
thing to make sure of, because, if it was he, all the hold he had
upon him lay in his knowing it for certain. He could not think. He
had had little sleep the night before. He must not sleep this
night. He dragged his bath into his sitting-room, and refreshed his
faculties with plenty of cold water, then lighted his pipe and went
on thinking--not without prayer to that Power whose candle is the
understanding of man. All at once he saw how to begin. He went
again into the chamber, and looked at the man, and handled him, and
knew by his art that a waking of some sort was nigh. Then he went
to a corner of his sitting-room, and from beneath the table drew out
a long box, and from the box lifted Dooble Sandy's auld wife, tuned
the somewhat neglected strings, and laid the instrument on the
table.
When, keeping constant watch over the sleeping man, he judged at
length that his soul had come near enough to the surface of the
ocean of sleep to communicate with the outer world through that
bubble his body, which had floated upon its waves all the night
unconscious, he put his chair just outside the chamber door, which
opened from his sitting-room, and began to play gently, softly, far
away. For a while he extemporized only, thinking of Rothieden, and
the grandmother, and the bleach-green, and the hills, and the waste
old factory, and his mother's portrait and letters. As he dreamed
on, his dream got louder, and, he hoped, was waking a more and more
vivid dream in the mind of the sleeper. 'For who can tell,' thought
Falconer, 'what mysterious sympathies of blood and childhood's
experience there may be between me and that man?--such, it may be,
that my utterance on the violin will wake in his soul the very
visions of which my soul is full while I play, each with its own
nebulous atmosphere of dream-light around it.' For music wakes its
own feeling, and feeling wakes thought, or rather, when perfected,
blossoms into thought, thought radiant of music as those lilies that
shine phosphorescent in the July nights. He played more and more
forcefully, growing in hope. But he had been led astray in some
measure by the fulness of his expectation. Strange to tell, doctor
as he was, he had forgotten one important factor in his calculation:
how the man would awake from his artificial sleep. He had not
reckoned of how the limbeck of his brain would be left discoloured
with vile deposit, when the fumes of the narcotic should have
settled and given up its central spaces to the faintness of
desertion.
Robert was very keen of hearing. Indeed he possessed all his senses
keener than any other man I have known. He heard him toss on his
bed. Then he broke into a growl, and damned the miauling, which, he
said, the strings could never have learned anywhere but in a cat's
belly. But Robert was used to bad language; and there are some bad
things which, seeing that there they are, it is of the greatest
consequence to get used to. It gave him, no doubt, a pang of
disappointment to hear such an echo to his music from the soul which
he had hoped especially fitted to respond in harmonious unison with
the wail of his violin. But not for even this moment did he lose
his presence of mind. He instantly moderated the tone of the
instrument, and gradually drew the sound away once more into the
distance of hearing. But he did not therefore let it die. Through
various changes it floated in the thin æther of the soul, changes
delicate as when the wind leaves the harp of the reeds by a river's
brink, and falls a-ringing at the heather bells, or playing with the
dry silvery pods of honesty that hang in the poor man's garden, till
at length it drew nearer once more, bearing on its wings the wail of
red Flodden, the Flowers of the Forest. Listening through the
melody for sounds of a far different kind, Robert was aware that
those sounds had ceased; the growling was still; he heard no more
turnings to and fro. How it was operating he could not tell,
further than that there must be some measure of soothing in its
influence. He ceased quite, and listened again. For a few moments
there was no sound. Then he heard the half-articulate murmuring of
one whose organs have been all but overcome by the beneficent
paralysis of sleep, but whose feeble will would compel them to
utterance. He was nearly asleep again. Was it a fact, or a fancy
of Robert's eager heart? Did the man really say,
'Play that again, father. It's bonnie, that! I aye likit the
Flooers o' the Forest. Play awa'. I hae had a frichtsome dream. I
thocht I was i' the ill place. I doobt I'm no weel. But yer fiddle
aye did me gude. Play awa', father!'
All the night through, till the dawn of the gray morning, Falconer
watched the sleeping man, all but certain that he was indeed his
father. Eternities of thought passed through his mind as he
watched--this time by the couch, as he hoped, of a new birth. He
was about to see what could be done by one man, strengthened by all
the aids that love and devotion could give, for the redemption of
his fellow. As through the darkness of the night and a sluggish fog
to aid it, the light of a pure heaven made its slow irresistible
way, his hope grew that athwart the fog of an evil life, the
darkness that might be felt, the light of the Spirit of God would
yet penetrate the heart of the sinner, and shake the wickedness out
of it. Deeper and yet deeper grew his compassion and his sympathy,
in prospect of the tortures the man must go through, before the will
that he had sunk into a deeper sleep than any into which opium could
sink his bodily being, would shake off its deathly lethargy, and
arise, torn with struggling pain, to behold the light of a new
spiritual morning. All that he could do he was prepared to do,
regardless of entreaty, regardless of torture, anger, and hate, with
the inexorable justice of love, the law that will not, must not,
dares not yield--strong with an awful tenderness, a wisdom that
cannot be turned aside, to redeem the lost soul of his father. And
he strengthened his heart for the conflict by saying that if he
would do thus for his father, what would not God do for his child?
Had He not proved already, if there was any truth in the grand
story of the world's redemption through that obedience unto the
death, that his devotion was entire, and would leave nothing undone
that could be done to lift this sheep out of the pit into whose
darkness and filth he had fallen out of the sweet Sabbath of the
universe?
He removed all his clothes, searched the pockets, found in them one
poor shilling and a few coppers, a black cutty pipe, a box of snuff,
a screw of pigtail, a knife with a buckhorn handle and one broken
blade, and a pawn-ticket for a keyed flute, on the proceeds of which
he was now sleeping--a sleep how dearly purchased, when he might
have had it free, as the gift of God's gentle darkness! Then he
destroyed the garments, committing them to the fire as the hoped
farewell to the state of which they were the symbols and signs.
He found himself perplexed, however, by the absence of some of the
usual symptoms of the habit of opium, and concluded that his poor
father was in the habit of using stimulants as well as narcotics,
and that the action of the one interfered with the action of the
other.
He called his housekeeper. She did not know whom her master
supposed his guest to be, and regarded him only as one of the many
objects of his kindness. He told her to get some tea ready, as the
patient would most likely wake with a headache. He instructed her
to wait upon him as a matter of course, and explain nothing. He had
resolved to pass for the doctor, as indeed he was; and he told her
that if he should be at all troublesome, he would be with her at
once. She must keep the room dark. He would have his own breakfast
now; and if the patient remained quiet, would sleep on the sofa.
He woke murmuring, and evidently suffered from headache and nausea.
Mrs. Ashton took him some tea. He refused it with an oath--more of
discomfort than of ill-nature--and was too unwell to show any
curiosity about the person who had offered it. Probably he was
accustomed to so many changes of abode, and to so many bewilderments
of the brain, that he did not care to inquire where he was or who
waited upon him. But happily for the heart's desire of Falconer,
the debauchery of his father had at length reached one of many
crises. He had caught cold before De Fleuri and his comrades found
him. He was now ill--feverish and oppressed. Through the whole of
the following week they nursed and waited upon him without his
asking a single question as to where he was or who they were; during
all which time Falconer saw no one but De Fleuri and the many poor
fellows who called to inquire after him and the result of their
supposed success. He never left the house, but either watched by
the bedside, or waited in the next room. Often would the patient
get out of bed, driven by the longing for drink or for opium,
gnawing him through all the hallucinations of delirium; but he was
weak, and therefore manageable. If in any lucid moments he thought
where he was, he no doubt supposed that he was in a hospital, and
probably had sense enough to understand that it was of no use to
attempt to get his own way there. He was soon much worn, and his
limbs trembled greatly. It was absolutely necessary to give him
stimulants, or he would have died, but Robert reduced them gradually
as he recovered strength.
But there was an infinite work to be done beyond even curing him of
his evil habits. To keep him from strong drink and opium, even till
the craving after them was gone, would be but the capturing of the
merest outwork of the enemy's castle. He must be made such that,
even if the longing should return with tenfold force, and all the
means for its gratification should lie within the reach of his
outstretched hand, he would not touch them. God only was able to do
that for him. He would do all that he knew how to do, and God would
not fail of his part. For this he had raised him up; to this he had
called him; for this work he had educated him, made him a physician,
given him money, time, the love and aid of his fellows, and, beyond
all, a rich energy of hope and faith in his heart, emboldening him
to attempt whatever his hand found to do.
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