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<h2> CHAPTER III. </h2>
<h3> THE HARVEST IS REAPED. </h3>
<p>ON their way through the streets, Father Benwell talked as persistently of
the news of the day as if he had nothing else in his thoughts. To keep his
companion's mind in a state of suspense was, in certain emergencies, to
exert a useful preparatory influence over a man of Romayne's character.
Even when they reached his lodgings, the priest still hesitated to
approach the object that he had in view. He made considerate inquiries, in
the character of a hospitable man.</p>
<p>"They breakfast early at The Retreat," he said. "What may I offer you?"</p>
<p>"I want nothing, thank you," Romayne answered, with an effort to control
his habitual impatience of needless delay.</p>
<p>"Pardon me—we have a long interview before us, I fear. Our bodily
necessities, Romayne (excuse me if I take the friendly liberty of
suppressing the formal 'Mr.')—our bodily necessities are not to be
trifled with. A bottle of my famous claret, and a few biscuits, will not
hurt either of us." He rang the bell, and gave the necessary directions
"Another damp day!" he went on cheerfully. "I hope you don't pay the
rheumatic penalties of a winter residence in England? Ah, this glorious
country would be too perfect if it possessed the delicious climate of
Rome!"</p>
<p>The wine and biscuits were brought in. Father Benwell filled the glasses
and bowed cordially to his guest.</p>
<p>"Nothing of this sort at The Retreat!" he said gayly. "Excellent water, I
am told—which is a luxury in its way, especially in London. Well, my
dear Romayne, I must begin by making my apologies. You no doubt thought me
a little abrupt in running away with you from your retirement at a
moment's notice?"</p>
<p>"I believed that you had good reasons, Father—and that was enough
for me."</p>
<p>"Thank you—you do me justice—it was in your best interests
that I acted. There are men of phlegmatic temperament, over whom the wise
monotony of discipline at The Retreat exercises a wholesome influence—I
mean an influence which may be prolonged with advantage. You are not one
of those persons. Protracted seclusion and monotony of life are morally
and mentally unprofitable to a man of your ardent disposition. I abstained
from mentioning these reasons, at the time, out of a feeling of regard for
our excellent resident director, who believes unreservedly in the
institution over which he presides. Very good! The Retreat has done all
that it could usefully do in your case. We must think next of how to
employ that mental activity which, rightly developed, is one of the most
valuable qualities that you possess. Let me ask, first, if you have in
some degree recovered your tranquillity?"</p>
<p>"I feel like a different man, Father Benwell."</p>
<p>"That's right! And your nervous sufferings—I don't ask what they
are; I only want to know if you experience a sense of relief?"</p>
<p>"A most welcome sense of relief," Romayne answered, with a revival of the
enthusiasm of other days. "The complete change in all my thoughts and
convictions which I owe to you—"</p>
<p>"And to dear Penrose," Father Benwell interposed, with the prompt sense of
justice which no man could more becomingly assume. "We must not forget
Arthur."</p>
<p>"Forget him?" Romayne repeated. "Not a day passes without my thinking of
him. It is one of the happy results of the change in me that my mind does
not dwell bitterly on the loss of him now. I think of Penrose with
admiration, as of one whose glorious life, with all its dangers, I should
like to share!"</p>
<p>He spoke with a rising color and brightening eyes. Already, the absorbent
capacity of the Roman Church had drawn to itself that sympathetic side of
his character which was also one of its strongest sides. Already, his love
for Penrose—hitherto inspired by the virtues of the man—had
narrowed its range to sympathy with the trials and privileges of the
priest. Truly and deeply, indeed, had the physician consulted, in bygone
days, reasoned on Romayne's case! That "occurrence of some new and
absorbing influence in his life," of which the doctor had spoken—that
"working of some complete change in his habits of thought"—had found
its way to him at last, after the wife's simple devotion had failed,
through the subtler ministrations of the priest.</p>
<p>Some men, having Father Benwell's object in view, would have taken instant
advantage of the opening offered to them by Romayne's unguarded
enthusiasm. The illustrious Jesuit held fast by the wise maxim which
forbade him to do anything in a hurry.</p>
<p>"No," he said, "your life must not be the life of our dear friend. The
service on which the Church employs Penrose is not the fit service for
you. You have other claims on us."</p>
<p>Romayne looked at his spiritual adviser with a momentary change of
expression—a relapse into the ironical bitterness of the past time.</p>
<p>"Have you forgotten that I am, and can be, only a layman?" he asked. "What
claims can I have, except the common claim of all faithful members of the
Church on the good offices of the priesthood?" He paused for a moment, and
continued with the abruptness of a man struck by a new idea. "Yes! I have
perhaps one small aim of my own—the claim of being allowed to do my
duty."</p>
<p>"In what respect, dear Romayne?"</p>
<p>"Surely you can guess? I am a rich man; I have money lying idle, which it
is my duty (and my privilege) to devote to the charities and necessities
of the Church. And, while I am speaking of this, I must own that I am a
little surprised at your having said nothing to me on the subject. You
have never yet pointed out to me the manner in which I might devote my
money to the best and noblest uses. Was it forgetfulness on your part?"</p>
<p>Father Benwell shook his head. "No," he replied; "I can't honestly say
that."</p>
<p>"Then you had a reason for your silence?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"May I not know it?"</p>
<p>Father Benwell got up and walked to the fireplace. Now there are various
methods of getting up and walking to a fireplace, and they find their way
to outward expression through the customary means of look and manner. We
may feel cold, and may only want to warm ourselves. Or we may feel
restless, and may need an excuse for changing our position. Or we may feel
modestly confused, and may be anxious to hide it. Father Benwell, from
head to foot, expressed modest confusion, and polite anxiety to hide it.</p>
<p>"My good friend," he said, "I am afraid of hurting your feelings."</p>
<p>Romayne was a sincere convert, but there were instincts still left in him
which resented this expression of regard, even when it proceeded from a
man whom he respected and admired. "You will hurt my feelings," he
answered, a little sharply, "if you are not plain with me."</p>
<p>"Then I <i>will</i> be plain with you," Father Benwell rejoined. "The
Church—speaking through me, as her unworthy interpreter—feels
a certain delicacy in approaching You on the subject of money."</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>Father Benwell left the fireplace without immediately answering. He opened
a drawer and took out of it a flat mahogany box. His gracious familiarity
became transformed, by some mysterious process of congelation, into a
dignified formality of manner. The priest took the place of the man.</p>
<p>"The Church, Mr. Romayne, hesitates to receive, as benevolent
contributions, money derived from property of its own, arbitrarily taken
from it, and placed in a layman's hands. No!" he cried, interrupting
Romayne, who instantly understood the allusion to Vange Abbey—"no! I
must beg you to hear me out. I state the case plainly, at your own
request. At the same time, I am bound to admit that the lapse of centuries
has, in the eye of the law, sanctioned the deliberate act of robbery
perpetrated by Henry the Eighth. You have lawfully inherited Vange Abbey
from your ancestors. The Church is not unreasonable enough to assert a
merely moral right against the law of the country. It may feel the act of
spoliation—but it submits." He unlocked the flat mahogany box, and
gently dropped his dignity: the man took the place of the priest. "As the
master of Vange," he said, "you may be interested in looking at a little
historical curiosity which we have preserved. The title-deeds, dear
Romayne, by which the monks held your present property, in <i>their</i>
time. Take another glass of wine."</p>
<p>Romayne looked at the title-deeds, and laid them aside unread.</p>
<p>Father Benwell had roused his pride, his sense of justice, his wild and
lavish instincts of generosity. He, who had always despised money—except
when it assumed its only estimable character, as a means for the
attainment of merciful and noble ends—<i>he</i> was in possession of
property to which he had no moral right: without even the poor excuse of
associations which attached him to the place.</p>
<p>"I hope I have not offended you?" said Father Benwell.</p>
<p>"You have made me ashamed of myself," Romayne answered, warmly. "On the
day when I became a Catholic, I ought to have remembered Vange. Better
late than never. I refuse to take shelter under the law—I respect
the moral right of the Church. I will at once restore the property which I
have usurped."</p>
<p>Father Benwell took both Romayne's hands in his, and pressed them
fervently.</p>
<p>"I am proud of you!" he said. "We shall all be proud of you, when I write
word to Rome of what has passed between us. But—no, Romayne!—this
must not be. I admire you, feel with you; and I refuse. On behalf of the
Church, I say it—I refuse the gift."</p>
<p>"Wait a little, Father Benwell! You don't know the state of my affairs. I
don't deserve the admiration which you feel for me. The loss of the Vange
property will be no pecuniary loss, in my case. I have inherited a fortune
from my aunt. My income from that source is far larger than my income from
the Yorkshire property."</p>
<p>"Romayne, it must not be!"</p>
<p>"Pardon me, it must be. I have more money than I can spend—without
Vange. And I have painful associations with the house which disincline me
ever to enter it again."</p>
<p>Even this confession failed to move Father Benwell. He obstinately crossed
his arms, obstinately tapped his foot on the floor. "No!" he said. "Plead
as generously as you may, my answer is, No."</p>
<p>Romayne only became more resolute on his side. "The property is absolutely
my own," he persisted. "I am without a near relation in the world. I have
no children. My wife is already provided for at my death, out of the
fortune left me by my aunt. It is downright obstinacy—forgive me for
saying so—to persist in your refusal."</p>
<p>"It is downright duty, Romayne. If I gave way to you, I should be the
means of exposing the priesthood to the vilest misinterpretation. I should
be deservedly reprimanded, and your proposal of restitution—if you
expressed it in writing—would, without a moment's hesitation, be
torn up. If you have any regard for me, drop the subject."</p>
<p>Romayne refused to yield, even to this unanswerable appeal.</p>
<p>"Very well," he said, "there is one document you can't tear up. You can't
interfere with my making another will. I shall leave the Vange property to
the Church, and I shall appoint you one of the trustees. You can't object
to that."</p>
<p>Father Benwell smiled sadly.</p>
<p>"The law spares me the ungracious necessity of objecting, in this case,"
he answered. "My friend, you forget the Statutes of Mortmain. They
positively forbid you to carry out the intention which you have just
expressed."</p>
<p>Romayne dismissed this appeal to the law irritably, by waving his hand.
"The Statutes of Mortmain," he rejoined, "can't prevent my bequeathing my
property to an individual. I shall leave Vange Abbey to You. Now, Father
Benwell! have I got the better of you at last?"</p>
<p>With Christian humility the Jesuit accepted the defeat, for which he had
paved the way from the outset of the interview. At the same time, he
shuffled all personal responsibility off his own shoulders. He had gained
the victory for the Church—without (to do him justice) thinking of
himself.</p>
<p>"Your generosity has conquered me," he said. "But I must be allowed to
clear myself of even the suspicion of an interested motive. On the day
when your will is executed, I shall write to the General of our Order at
Rome, leaving my inheritance to him. This proceeding will be followed by a
deed, in due form, conveying the property to the Church. You have no
objection to my taking that course? No? My dear Romayne, words are useless
at such a time as this. My acts shall speak for me. I am too agitated to
say more. Let us talk of something else—let us have some wine."</p>
<p>He filled the glasses; he offered more biscuits.—he was really, and
even perceptibly, agitated by the victory that he had won. But one last
necessity now confronted him—the necessity of placing a serious
obstacle in the way of any future change of purpose on the part of
Romayne. As to the choice of that obstacle, Father Benwell's mind had been
made up for some time past.</p>
<p>"What <i>was</i> it I had to say to you?" he resumed "Surely, I was
speaking on the subject of your future life?"</p>
<p>"You are very kind, Father Benwell. The subject has little interest for
me. My future life is shaped out—domestic retirement, ennobled by
religious duties."</p>
<p>Still pacing the room, Father Benwell stopped at that reply, and put his
hand kindly on Romayne's shoulder.</p>
<p>"We don't allow a good Catholic to drift into domestic retirement, who is
worthy of better things," he said. "The Church, Romayne wishes to make use
of you. I never flattered any one in my life, but I may say before your
face what I have said behind your back. A man of your strict sense of
honor—of your intellect—of your high aspirations—of your
personal charm and influence—is not a man whom we can allow to run
to waste. Open your mind, my friend, fairly to me, and I will open my mind
fairly to you. Let me set the example. I say it with authority; an
enviable future is before you."</p>
<p>Romayne's pale cheeks flushed with excitement. "What future?" he asked,
eagerly. "Am I free to choose? Must I remind you that a man with a wife
cannot think only of himself?"</p>
<p>"Suppose you were <i>not</i> a man with a wife."</p>
<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
<p>"Romayne, I am trying to break my way through that inveterate reserve
which is one of the failings in your character. Unless you can prevail on
yourself to tell me those secret thoughts, those unexpressed regrets,
which you can confide to no other man, this conversation must come to an
end. Is there no yearning, in your inmost soul, for anything beyond the
position which you now occupy?"</p>
<p>There was a pause. The flush on Romayne's face faded away. He was silent.</p>
<p>"You are not in the confessional," Father Benwell reminded him, with
melancholy submission to circumstances. "You are under no obligation to
answer me."</p>
<p>Romayne roused himself. He spoke in low, reluctant tones. "I am afraid to
answer you," he said.</p>
<p>That apparently discouraging reply armed Father Benwell with the absolute
confidence of success which he had thus far failed to feel. He wound his
way deeper and deeper into Romayne's mind, with the delicate ingenuity of
penetration, of which the practice of years had made him master.</p>
<p>"Perhaps I have failed to make myself clearly understood," he said. "I
will try to put it more plainly. You are no half-hearted man, Romayne.
What you believe, you believe fervently. Impressions are not dimly and
slowly produced on <i>your</i> mind. As the necessary result, your
conversion being once accomplished, your whole soul is given to the Faith
that is in you. Do I read your character rightly?"</p>
<p>"So far as I know it—yes."</p>
<p>Father Benwell went on.</p>
<p>"Bear in mind what I have just said," he resumed; "and you will understand
why I feel it my duty to press the question which you have not answered
yet. You have found in the Catholic Faith the peace of mind which you have
failed to obtain by other means. If I had been dealing with an ordinary
man, I should have expected from the change no happier result than this.
But I ask You, has that blessed influence taken no deeper and nobler hold
on your heart? Can you truly say to me, 'I am content with what I have
gained; I wish for no more'?"</p>
<p>"I cannot truly say it," Romayne answered.</p>
<p>The time had now come for speaking plainly. Father Benwell no longer
advanced to his end under cover of a cloud of words.</p>
<p>"A little while since," he said, "you spoke of Penrose as of a man whose
lot in life you longed to share. The career which has associated him with
an Indian mission is, as I told you, only adapted to a man of his special
character and special gifts. But the career which has carried him into the
sacred ranks of the priesthood is open to every man who feels the sense of
divine vocation, which has made Penrose one of Us."</p>
<p>"No, Father Benwell! Not open to every man."</p>
<p>"I say, Yes!"</p>
<p>"It is not open to Me!"</p>
<p>"I say it is open to You. And more—I enjoin, I command, you to
dismiss from your mind all merely human obstacles and discouragements.
They are beneath the notice of a man who feels himself called to the
priesthood. Give me your hand, Romayne! Does your conscience tell you that
you are that man?"</p>
<p>Romayne started to his feet, shaken to the soul by the solemnity of the
appeal.</p>
<p>"I can't dismiss the obstacles that surround me!" he cried, passionately.
"To a man in my position, your advice is absolutely useless. The ties that
bind me are beyond the limit of a priest's sympathies."</p>
<p>"Nothing is beyond the limit of a priest's sympathies."</p>
<p>"Father Benwell, I am married!"</p>
<p>Father Benwell folded his arms over his breast—looked with immovable
resolution straight in Romayne's face—and struck the blow which he
had been meditating for months past.</p>
<p>"Rouse your courage," he said sternly. "You are no more married than I
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