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ANDREW REBELS.
As Andrew Falconer grew better, the longing of his mind after former
excitement and former oblivion, roused and kept alive the longing of
his body, until at length his thoughts dwelt upon nothing but his
diseased cravings. His whole imagination, naturally not a feeble
one, was concentrated on the delights in store for him as soon as he
was well enough to be his own master, as he phrased it, once more.
He soon began to see that, if he was in a hospital, it must be a
private one, and at last, irresolute as he was both from character
and illness, made up his mind to demand his liberty. He sat by his
bedroom fire one afternoon, for he needed much artificial warmth.
The shades of evening were thickening the air. He had just had one
of his frequent meals, and was gazing, as he often did, into the
glowing coals. Robert had come in, and after a little talk was
sitting silent at the opposite corner of the chimney-piece.
'Doctor,' said Andrew, seizing the opportunity, 'you've been very
kind to me, and I don't know how to thank you, but it is time I was
going. I am quite well now. Would you kindly order the nurse to
bring me my clothes to-morrow morning, and I will go.'
This he said with the quavering voice of one who speaks because he
has made up his mind to speak. A certain something, I believe a
vague molluscous form of conscience, made him wriggle and shift
uneasily upon his chair as he spoke.
'No, no,' said Robert, 'you are not fit to go. Make yourself
comfortable, my dear sir. There is no reason why you should go.'
'There is something I don't understand about it. I want to go.'
'It would ruin my character as a professional man to let a patient
in your condition leave the house. The weather is unfavourable. I
cannot--I must not consent.'
'Where am I? I don't understand it. I want to understand it.'
'Your friends wish you to remain where you are for the present.'
'I have no friends.'
'You have one, at least, who puts his house here at your service.'
'There's something about it I don't like. Do you suppose I am
incapable of taking care of myself?'
'I do indeed,' answered his son with firmness.
'Then you are quite mistaken,' said Andrew, angrily. 'I am quite
well enough to go, and have a right to judge for myself. It is very
kind of you, but I am in a free country, I believe.'
'No doubt. All honest men are free in this country. But--'
He saw that his father winced, and said no more. Andrew resumed,
after a pause in which he had been rousing his feeble
drink-exhausted anger,
'I tell you I will not be treated like a child. I demand my clothes
and my liberty.'
'Do you know where you were found that night you were brought here?'
'No. But what has that to do with it? I was ill. You know that as
well as I.'
'You are ill now because you were lying then on the wet ground under
a railway-arch--utterly incapable from the effects of opium, or
drink, or both. You would have been taken to the police-station,
and would probably have been dead long before now, if you had not
been brought here.'
He was silent for some time. Then he broke out,
'I tell you I will go. I do not choose to live on charity. I will
not. I demand my clothes.'
'I tell you it is of no use. When you are well enough to go out you
shall go out, but not now.'
'Where am I? Who are you?'
He looked at Robert with a keen, furtive glance, in which were
mingled bewilderment and suspicion.
'I am your best friend at present.'
He started up--fiercely and yet feebly, for a thought of terror had
crossed him.
'You do not mean I am in a madhouse?'
Robert made no reply. He left him to suppose what he pleased.
Andrew took it for granted that he was in a private asylum, sank
back in his chair, and from that moment was quiet as a lamb. But it
was easy to see that he was constantly contriving how to escape.
This mental occupation, however, was excellent for his recovery;
and Robert dropped no hint of his suspicion. Nor were many
precautions necessary in consequence; for he never left the house
without having De Fleuri there, who was a man of determination,
nerve, and, now that he ate and drank, of considerable strength.
As he grew better, the stimulants given him in the form of medicine
at length ceased. In their place Robert substituted other
restoratives, which prevented him from missing the stimulants so
much, and at length got his system into a tolerably healthy
condition, though at his age, and after so long indulgence, it could
hardly be expected ever to recover its tone.
He did all he could to provide him with healthy amusement--played
backgammon, draughts, and cribbage with him, brought him Sir
Walter's and other novels to read, and often played on his violin,
to which he listened with great delight. At times of depression,
which of course were frequent, the Flowers of the Forest made the
old man weep. Falconer put yet more soul into the sounds than he
had ever put into them before. He tried to make the old man talk of
his childhood, asking him about the place of his birth, the kind of
country, how he had been brought up, his family, and many questions
of the sort. His answers were vague, and often contradictory.
Indeed, the moment the subject was approached, he looked suspicious
and cunning. He said his name was John Mackinnon, and Robert,
although his belief was strengthened by a hundred little
circumstances, had as yet received no proof that he was Andrew
Falconer. Remembering the pawn-ticket, and finding that he could
play on the flute, he brought him a beautiful instrument--in fact a
silver one--the sight of which made the old man's eyes sparkle. He
put it to his lips with trembling hands, blew a note or two, burst
into the tears of weakness, and laid it down. But he soon took it
up again, and evidently found both pleasure in the tones and sadness
in the memories they awakened. At length Robert brought a tailor,
and had him dressed like a gentleman--a change which pleased him
much. The next step was to take him out every day for a drive, upon
which his health began to improve more rapidly. He ate better, grew
more lively, and began to tell tales of his adventures, of the truth
of which Robert was not always certain, but never showed any doubt.
He knew only too well that the use of opium is especially
destructive to the conscience. Some of his stories he believed more
readily than others, from the fact that he suddenly stopped in them,
as if they were leading him into regions of confession which must be
avoided, resuming with matter that did not well connect itself with
what had gone before. At length he took him out walking, and he
comported himself with perfect propriety.
But one day as they were going along a quiet street, Robert met an
acquaintance, and stopped to speak with him. After a few moments'
chat he turned, and found that his father, whom he had supposed to
be standing beside him, had vanished. A glance at the other side of
the street showed the probable refuge--a public-house. Filled but
not overwhelmed with dismay, although he knew that months might be
lost in this one moment, Robert darted in. He was there, with a
glass of whisky in his hand, trembling now more from eagerness than
weakness. He struck it from his hold. But he had already swallowed
one glass, and he turned in a rage. He was a tall and naturally
powerful man--almost as strongly built as his son, with long arms
like his, which were dangerous even yet in such a moment of
factitious strength and real excitement. Robert could not lift his
arm even to defend himself from his father, although, had he judged
it necessary, I believe he would not, in the cause of his
redemption, have hesitated to knock him down, as he had often served
others whom he would rather a thousand times have borne on his
shoulders. He received his father's blow on the cheek. For one
moment it made him dizzy, for it was well delivered. But when the
bar-keeper jumped across the counter and approached with his fist
doubled, that was another matter. He measured his length on the
floor, and Falconer seized his father, who was making for the
street, and notwithstanding his struggles and fierce efforts to
strike again, held him secure and himself scathless, and bore him
out of the house.
A crowd gathers in a moment in London, speeding to a fray as the
vultures to carrion. On the heels of the population of the
neighbouring mews came two policemen, and at the same moment out
came the barman to the assistance of Andrew. But Falconer was as
well known to the police as if he had a ticket-of-leave, and a good
deal better.
'Call a four-wheel cab,' he said to one of them. 'I'm all right.'
The man started at once. Falconer turned to the other.
'Tell that man in the apron,' he said, 'that I'll make him all due
reparation. But he oughtn't to be in such a hurry to meddle. He
gave me no time but to strike hard.'
'Yes, sir,' answered the policeman obediently. The crowd thought he
must be a great man amongst the detectives; but the bar-keeper vowed
he would 'summons' him for the assault.
'You may, if you like,' said Falconer. 'When I think of it, you
shall do so. You know where I live?' he said, turning to the
policeman.
'No, sir, I don't. I only know you well enough.'
'Put your hand in my coat-pocket, then, and you'll find a card-case.
The other. There! Help yourself.'
He said this with his arms round Andrew's, who had ceased to cry out
when he saw the police.
'Do you want to give this gentleman in charge, sir?'
'No. It is a little private affair of my own, this.'
'Hadn't you better let him go, sir, and we'll find him for you when
you want him?'
'No. He may give me in charge if he likes. Or if you should want
him, you will find him at my house.'
Then pinioning his prisoner still more tightly in his arms, he
leaned forward, and whispered in his ear,
'Will you go home quietly, or give me in charge? There is no other
way, Andrew Falconer.'
He ceased struggling. Through all the flush of the contest his face
grew pale. His arms dropped by his side. Robert let him go, and he
stood there without offering to move. The cab came up; the
policeman got out; Andrew stepped in of his own accord, and Robert
followed.
'You see it's all right,' he said. 'Here, give the barman a
sovereign. If he wants more, let me know. He deserved all he got,
but I was wrong. John Street.'
His father did not speak a word, or ask a question all the way home.
Evidently he thought it safer to be silent. But the drink he had
taken, though not enough to intoxicate him, was more than enough to
bring back the old longing with redoubled force. He paced about the
room the rest of the day like a wild beast in a cage, and in the
middle of the night, got up and dressed, and would have crept
through the room in which Robert lay, in the hope of getting out.
But Robert slept too anxiously for that. The captive did not make
the slightest noise, but his very presence was enough to wake his
son. He started at a bound from his couch, and his father retreated
in dismay to his chamber.
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