The Castle Inn - Page 382/559

The man directed him; the place was near at hand. In two minutes Mr.

Fishwick found himself at the door of a small but decent grocer's shop,

over the portal of which a gilded bee seemed to prognosticate more

business than the fact performed. An elderly woman, stout and

comfortable-looking, was behind the counter. Eyeing the attorney as he

came forward, she asked him what she could do for him, and before he

could answer reached for the snuff canister.

He took the hint, requested an ounce of the best Scotch and Havannah

mixed, and while she weighed it, asked her how long she had lived there.

'Twenty-six years, sir,' she answered heartily, 'Old Style. For the New,

I don't hold with it nor them that meddle with things above them. I am

sure it brought me no profit,' she continued, rubbing her nose. 'I have

buried a good husband and two children since they gave it us!' 'Still, I suppose people died Old Style?' the lawyer ventured.

'Well, well, may be.' 'There was a death in this house seventeen years gone this September,'

he said, 'if I remember rightly.' The woman pushed away the snuff and stared at him. 'Two, for the matter

of that,' she said sharply. 'But should I remember you?' 'No.' 'Then, if I may make so bold, what is't to you?' she retorted. 'Do you

come from Jim Masterson?' 'He is dead,' Mr. Fishwick answered.

She threw up her hands. 'Lord! And he a young man, so to speak! Poor

Jim! Poor Jim! It is ten years and more--ay, more--since I heard from

him. And the child? Is that dead too?' 'No, the child is alive,' the lawyer answered, speaking at a venture, 'I

am here on her behalf, to make some inquiries about her kinsfolk.' The woman's honest red face softened and grew motherly. 'You may

inquire,' she said, 'you'll learn no more than I can tell you. There is

no one left that's kin to her. The father was a poor Frenchman, a

monsieur that taught the quality about here; the mother was one of his

people--she came from Canterbury, where I am told there are French and

to spare. But according to her account she had no kin left. He died the

year after the child was born, and she came to lodge with me, and lived

by teaching, as he had; but 'twas a poor livelihood, you may say, and

when she sickened, she died--just as a candle goes out.' 'When?' Mr. Fishwick asked, his eyes glued to the woman's face.

'The week Jim Masterson came to see us bringing the child from foreign

parts--that was buried with her. 'Twas said his child took the fever

from her and got its death that way. But I don't know. I don't know. It

is true they had not brought in the New Style then; but--' 'You knew him before? Masterson, I mean?' 'Why, he had courted me!' was the good-tempered answer. 'You don't know

much if you don't know that. Then my good man came along and I liked him

better, and Jim went into service and married Oxfordshire way. But when

he came to Bristol after his journey in foreign parts, 'twas natural he

should come to see me; and my husband, who was always easy, would keep

him a day or two--more's the pity, for in twenty-four hours the child he

had with him began to sicken, and died. And never was man in such a

taking, though he swore the child was not his, but one he had adopted to

serve a gentleman in trouble; and because his wife had none. Any way, it

was buried along with my lodger, and nothing would serve but he must

adopt the child she had left. It seemed ordained-like, they being of an

age, and all. And I had two children to care for, and was looking for

another that never came; and the mother had left no more than buried her

with a little help. So he took it with him, and we heard from him once

or twice, how it fared, and that his wife took to it, and the like; and

then--well, writing's a burden. But,' with renewed interest, 'she's a

well-grown girl by now, I guess?' 'Yes,' the attorney answered absently, 'she--she's a well-grown girl.' 'And is poor Jim's wife alive?' 'Yes.' 'Ah,' the good woman answered, looking thoughtfully into the street.' If

she were not--I'd think about taking to the girl myself. It's lonely at

times without chick or child. And there's the shop to tend. She could

help with that.' The attorney winced. He was looking ill; wretchedly ill. But he had his

back to the light, and she remarked nothing save that he seemed to be a

sombre sort of body and poor company. 'What was the Frenchman's name?'

he asked after a pause.