Chapter 21ā
Summary: In this chapter, Janet Dempster's sudden disappearance from her home sparks speculation among her servants. Her mother, Mrs. Raynor, reassures them that Janet is safe. Janet attends Paddiford Church with her mother and Mrs. Pettifer, where she is warmly received by the congregation. Despite her initial optimism, Janet's nerves and the absence of alcohol lead her to fear her husband's return. As the churchgoers return home, they find Dempster's body being carried through the streets, though it is unclear whether he is alive or dead.
Main Characters: ['Janet Dempster', 'Mrs. Raynor', 'Mrs. Pettifer', 'Robert Dempster']
Location: Orchard Street and Paddiford Church
Time Period: 19th century
Themes: ['Repentance', 'Fear', 'Religion', 'Alcoholism', 'Domestic Abuse']
Plot Points: ["Janet's sudden disappearance from home", "Janet's attendance at Paddiford Church", "Janet's fear of her husband's return", "Discovery of Dempster's body"]
Significant Quotations: ["'Mother,' she whispered, when Mrs. Raynor urged her to lie down and rest all the afternoon, that she might be the better prepared to see Mr. Tryan in the evening--'mother, donāt let me have anything if I ask for it.'", 'Suddenly a loud murmur arose and spread along the stream of church-goers, and one group after another paused and looked backward. At the far end of the street, men, accompanied by a miscellaneous group of onlookers, were slowly carrying something--a body stretched on a door.']
Chapter Keywords: ['Repentance', 'Church', 'Fear', 'Alcohol', 'Domestic Abuse', 'Body']
Chapter Notes: ["Janet's attendance at the church signifies her repentance and decision to change her life. Her fear of her husband's return underscores the abusive nature of their relationship. The chapter ends on a cliffhanger with the discovery of Dempster's body."]
The servants at Dempsterās felt some surprise when the morning, noon, and evening of Saturday had passed, and still their mistress did not reappear.
āItās very odd,ā said Kitty, the housemaid, as she trimmed her next weekās cap, while Betty, the middle-aged cook, looked on with folded arms. āDo you think as Mrs. Raynor was ill, and sent for the missis afore we was up?ā
āO,ā said Betty, āif it had been that, sheād haā been backāards anā forāards three or four times afore now; leastways, sheād haā sent little Ann to let us know.ā
āThereās summat up more nor usual between her anā the master, that you may depend on,ā said Kitty. āI know those clothes as was lying iā the drawing-room yesterday, when the company was come, meant summat. I shouldnāt wonder if that was what theyāve had a fresh row about. Sheās pāraps gone away, anās made up her mind not to come back again.ā
āAnā iā the right onāt, too,ā said Betty. āIād haā overrun him long afore now, if it had been me. I wouldnāt stanā beinā mauled as she is by no husband, not if he was the biggest lord iā the land. Itās poor work beinā a wife at that price: Iād sooner be a cook wiāout perkises, anā hev roast, anā boil, anā fry, anā bake, all to mind at once. She may well do as she does. I know Iām glad enough of a drop oā summat myself when Iām plagued. I feel very low, like, to-night; I think I shall put my beer iā the saucepan anā warm it.ā
āWhat a one you are for warminā your beer, Betty! I couldnāt abide it--nasty bitter stuff!ā
āItās fine talkinā; if you was a cook youād know what belongs to beinā a cook. Itās none so nice to hev a sinkinā at your stomach, I can tell you. You wouldnāt think so much oā fine ribbins iā your cap then.ā
āWell, well, Betty, donāt be grumpy. Liza Thomson, as is at Phippsās, said to me last Sunday, āI wonder youāll stay at Dempsterās,ā she says, āsuch goins-on as there is.ā But I says, āThereās things to put up wiā in ivery place, anā you may change, anā change, anā not better yourself when allās said anā done.ā Lors! why, Liza told me herself as Mrs. Phipps was as skinny as skinny iā the kitchen, for all they keep so much company; and as for follyers, sheās as cross as a turkey-cock if she finds āem out. Thereās nothinā oā that sort iā the missis. How pretty she come anā spoke to Job last Sunday! There isnāt a good-naturāder woman iā the world, thatās my belief--anā hansome too. I alāys think thereās nobody looks half so well as the missis when sheās got her āair done nice. Lors! I wish Iād got long āair like her--my āairās a-cominā off dreadful.ā
āThereāll be fine work to-morrow, I expect,ā said Betty, āwhen the master comes home, anā Dawes a-swearinā as heāll niver do a stroke oā work for him again. Itāll be good fun if he sets the justice on him for cuttinā him wiā the whip; the masterāll pāraps get his comb cut for once in his life!ā
āWhy, he was in a temper like a fiend this morning,ā said Kitty. āI daresay it was along oā what had happened wiā the missis. We shall hev a pretty house wiā him if she doesnāt come back--heāll want to be leatherinā us, I shouldnāt wonder. He must hev somethinā tā ill-use when heās in a passion.ā
āIād tek care he didnāt leather me--no, not if he was my husbanā ten times oāer; Iād pour hot drippinā on him sooner. But the missis hasnāt a sperrit like me. Heāll mek her come back, youāll see; heāll come round her somehow. Thereās no likelihood of her coming back to-night, though; so I should think we might fasten the doors and go to bed when we like.ā
On Sunday morning, however, Kittyās mind became disturbed by more definite and alarming conjectures about her mistress. While Betty, encouraged by the prospect of unwonted leisure, was sitting down to continue a letter which had long lain unfinished between the leaves of her Bible, Kitty came running into the kitchen and said,--āLor! Betty, Iām all of a tremble; you might knock me down wiā a feather. Iāve just looked into the missisās wardrobe, anā thereās both her bonnets. She must haā gone wiāout her bonnet. Anā then I remember as her night-clothes wasnāt on the bed yisterday morninā; I thought sheād put āem away to be washed; but she hednāt, for Iāve been lookinā. Itās my belief heās murdered her, and shut her up iā that closet as he keeps locked alāys. Heās capible onāt.ā
āLors-haā-massy, why youād better run to Mrs. Raynorās anā see if sheās there, arter all. It was pāraps all a lie.ā
Mrs. Raynor had returned home to give directions to her little maiden, when Kitty, with the elaborate manifestation of alarm which servants delight in, rushed in without knocking, and, holding her hands on her heart as if the consequences to that organ were likely to be very serious, said,--āIf you please ām, is the missis here?ā
āNo, Kitty; why are you come to ask?ā
āBecause ām, sheās niver been at home since yesterday morninā, since afore we was up; anā we thought somethinā must haā happened to her.ā
āNo, donāt be frightened, Kitty. Your mistress is quite safe; I know where she is. Is your master at home?ā
āNo ām; he went out yesterday morninā, anā said he shouldnāt be back afore to-night.ā
āWell, Kitty, thereās nothing the matter with your mistress. You neednāt say anything to any one about her being away from home. I shall call presently and fetch her gown and bonnet. She wants them to put on.ā
Kitty, perceiving there was a mystery she was not to inquire into, returned to Orchard Street, really glad to know that her mistress was safe, but disappointed nevertheless at being told that she was not to be frightened. She was soon followed by Mrs. Raynor in quest of the gown and bonnet. The good mother, on learning that Dempster was not at home, had at once thought that she could gratify Janetās wish to go to Paddiford Church.
āSee, my dear,ā she said, as she entered Mrs. Pettiferās parlour; āIāve brought you your black clothes. Robertās not at home, and is not coming till this evening. I couldnāt find your best black gown, but this will do. I wouldnāt bring anything else, you know; but there canāt be any objection to my fetching clothes to cover you. You can go to Paddiford Church, now, if you like; and I will go with you.ā
āThatās a dear mother! Then weāll all three go together. Come and help me to get ready. Good little Mrs. Crewe! It will vex her sadly that I should go to hear Mr. Tryan. But I must kiss her, and make it up with her.ā
Many eyes were turned on Janet with a look of surprise as she walked up the aisle of Paddiford Church. She felt a little tremor at the notice she knew she was exciting, but it was a strong satisfaction to her that she had been able at once to take a step that would let her neighbours know her change of feeling towards Mr. Tryan: she had left herself now no room for proud reluctance or weak hesitation. The walk through the sweet spring air had stimulated all her fresh hopes, all her yearning desires after purity, strength, and peace. She thought she should find a new meaning in the prayers this morning; her full heart, like an overflowing river, wanted those ready-made channels to pour itself into; and then she should hear Mr. Tryan again, and his words would fall on her like precious balm, as they had done last night. There was a liquid brightness in her eyes as they rested on the mere walls, the pews, the weavers and colliers in their Sunday clothes. The commonest things seemed to touch the spring of love within her, just as, when we are suddenly released from an acute absorbing bodily pain, our heart and senses leap out in new freedom; we think even the noise of streets harmonious, and are ready to hug the tradesman who is wrapping up our change. A door had been opened in Janetās cold dark prison of self-despair, and the golden light of morning was pouring in its slanting beams through the blessed opening. There was sunlight in the world; there was a divine love caring for her; it had given her an earnest of good things: it had been preparing comfort for her in the very moment when she had thought herself most forsaken.
Mr. Tryan might well rejoice when his eye rested on her as he entered his desk; but he rejoiced with trembling. He could not look at the sweet hopeful face without remembering its yesterdayās look of agony; and there was the possibility that that look might return.
Janetās appearance at church was greeted not only by wondering eyes, but by kind hearts, and after the service several of Mr. Tryanās hearers with whom she had been on cold terms of late, contrived to come up to her and take her by the hand.
āMother,ā said Miss Linnet, ādo let us go and speak to Mrs. Dempster. Iām sure thereās a great change in her mind towards Mr. Tryan. I noticed how eagerly she listened to the sermon, and sheās come with Mrs. Pettifer, you see. We ought to go and give her a welcome among us.ā
āWhy, my dear, weāve never spoke friendly these five year. You know sheās been as haughty as anything since I quarrelled with her husband. However, let bygones be bygones: Iāve no grudge againā the poor thing, more particular as she must haā flew in her husbandās face to come anā hear Mr. Tryan. Yes, let us go anā speak to her.ā
The friendly words and looks touched Janet a little too keenly, and Mrs. Pettifer wisely hurried her home by the least-frequented road. When they reached home, a violent fit of weeping, followed by continuous lassitude, showed that the emotions of the morning had overstrained her nerves. She was suffering, too, from the absence of the long-accustomed stimulus which she had promised Mr. Tryan not to touch again. The poor thing was conscious of this, and dreaded her own weakness, as the victim of intermittent insanity dreads the oncoming of the old illusion.
āMother,ā she whispered, when Mrs. Raynor urged her to lie down and rest all the afternoon, that she might be the better prepared to see Mr. Tryan in the evening--āmother, donāt let me have anything if I ask for it.ā
In the motherās mind there was the same anxiety, and in her it was mingled with another fear--the fear lest Janet, in her present excited state of mind, should take some premature step in relation to her husband, which might lead back to all the former troubles. The hint she had thrown out in the morning of her wish to return to him after a time, showed a new eagerness for difficult duties, that only made the long-saddened sober mother tremble. But as evening approached, Janetās morning heroism all forsook her: her imagination influenced by physical depression as well as by mental habits, was haunted by the vision of her husbandās return home, and she began to shudder with the yesterdayās dread. She heard him calling her, she saw him going to her motherās to look for her, she felt sure he would find her out, and burst in upon her.
āPray, pray, donāt leave me, donāt go to church,ā she said to Mrs. Pettifer. āYou and mother both stay with me till Mr. Tryan comes.ā
At twenty minutes past six the church bells were ringing for the evening service, and soon the congregation was streaming along Orchard Street in the mellow sunset. The street opened toward the west. The red half-sunken sun shed a solemn splendour on the everyday houses, and crimsoned the windows of Dempsterās projecting upper storey.
Suddenly a loud murmur arose and spread along the stream of church-goers, and one group after another paused and looked backward. At the far end of the street, men, accompanied by a miscellaneous group of onlookers, were slowly carrying something--a body stretched on a door. Slowly they passed along the middle of the street, lined all the way with awe-struck faces, till they turned aside and paused in the red sunlight before Dempsterās door.
It was Dempsterās body. No one knew whether he was alive or dead.