It is certainly not often in this life that improbable dreams of fame and fortune get to be realized as they were in the case of Roland Yorke. Down he went to his native place, Helstonleigh, in all the glory of fame and fortune that his imagination had been wont to picture: the dog, Spot, with him. He paid his creditors their debts twice over he made presents to his mother and the world; he went knocking at old Galloway\'s door, and caused himself to be fully announced, as he had at Gerald\'s--Sir Roland Yorke. He ran in and out of the proctor\'s office at will, took possession of his former stool there, and answered callers as if he were the veritable clerk he used to be. He promised a living to Tom Channing, promotion in India to Charley; made a sweeping bow to William Yorke the first time he met him in the street, and called out to know whether he might be considered a scapegoat still. He put up a tombstone to commemorate the virtues of Jenkins. Meeting Harry Huntley, he nearly cried over Hamish. Hamish Channing\'s book was at length in every heart and home--ah, that he had lived to see it! The good had all come too late for him. Ellen would be wealthy from henceforth, for her father had regained his fortune; her aunt, stiff Miss Huntley, had died, and bequeathed to her the whole of hers; and little Miss Nelly was an heiress.
Not immediately, however, had Roland hastened to quit London for Helstonleigh, and there\'s something to tell about it. He had affairs to attend to first; and it took him some time to forget his daily sorrow for the dead. Roland\'s private belief was that he should never cease to mourn for Hamish; should never rise in the morning, or go to rest at night, without thinking of him and Gerald\'s miserable work. He entered on his abode at Sunny Mead, his home from henceforth, made himself acquainted with his future position, and what his exact revenues would be. In his imperfect way, but honest wish to do right, he apportioned out plenty of work for himself, and not much to spend, resolving above all things to eschew a life of frivolity and idleness. Roland would rather have followed the plough\'s tail day by day, than sink to that.
The first few weeks he divided his time between Sunny Mead and London. When in town, he dropped in upon his old friends with native familiarity: prosperity and a title could not change Roland. The office and clerks saw him very often; Mrs. Jones\'s tea and muffins occasionally suffered by a guest who had a large appetite. He refurnished that tart lady\'s house for her after a rather sharp battle; for at first Mrs. J. would not accept the boon. The first visitor Roland had the honour of entertaining was Lord Carrick. His white-haired lordship was flourishing in London again, and gave Roland a whole week of his hearty, genial good-natured company at Sunny Mead.
The thorn in the flesh was Gerald, and it happened that Mr. Gerald\'s career came to a crisis during the week of Lord Carrick\'s stay at Sunny Mead. On the last day of it, when they were out in the frost, and the peer was imparting to his nephew sundry theories for the best cultivation of land, a servant ran out to announce the arrival of a lady, who had come in great haste from the railway station. She appeared to be in distress, the man added, and said she must at once see Sir Roland.
In distress beyond doubt: for when Roland went clattering in, wondering who it could be, there met him the tear-stained face of Winny. She had brought down a piteous tale. Gerald, arrested the previous day, had lodgings in that savoury prison, Whitecross Street; he had boldly sent her to ask Roland to pay his debts and set him free. Winny, sobbing over some luncheon that Roland good-naturedly set her down to at once, protested that she felt sure one at least of the three little girls would be found in the fire when she got back to them.
Lord Carrick drew Roland aside.
"I\'m not ill-natured, me boy, as ye knew long ago, and I\'d do a good turn for anybody; but I\'d like to give ye a caution. Don\'t begin by paying Gerald\'s debts. If ye do, as sure as ye\'re a living man, ye\'ll never have a minute\'s peace for him to the last day of ye\'re life. Set him free now, and all his thanks would be to run up more for ye to pay. In a year\'s time he\'d be in the same plight again; and he or his creditors would be bothering ye always. Don\'t begin it. Let him fight out his debts as he best can."
"It\'s just what I\'d like to do," said Roland. "I\'d not mind allowing a couple of hundred a year, or so, for Winny and the children. I meant to offer it. It might be paid to her weekly, you know, uncle, and I could slip something more into her hand whenever we met. She might get a bit of peace then. But I don\'t think it would be doing Gerald any real kindness in the long run to release him from his debts."
Lord Carrick nodded most emphatically.
"I need not tell Winny this, Uncle Carrick--only that she and the kittens shall be taken care of from henceforth. She can carry a sealed note back to Gerald."
"I\'ll see to him," said Lord Carrick. "If he is to get any help at all, it must be from me. Ye can write the note to him. It would be the worst day\'s work ye ever entered on if ye attempted to help him. It is nothing else but helping people, Roland, me boy, that has kept me down, and I\'d not like to see you begin it. If Gerald can\'t get clear without assistance, I may come to the rescue later. But he\'ll have to try."
"Perhaps I might be got to allow him a hundred a year, or so, for himself later," added relenting Roland. "But I\'ll never have anything to do with his debts, or suffer him to look to me to pay them."
Could Gerald in his distant and gloomy abode, but have heard this, he had surely been ready to shoot the pair of speakers; and with more intentional malignity, too, than he had shot Sir Vincent.
But we began the chapter at Helstonleigh. For once in its monotonous life that faithful city had found something to arouse it from its jog-trot course; and people flew to their doors and windows to gaze after Sir Roland Yorke. It did not seem much less improbable that the time-honoured cathedral might some night disappear altogether, than that the once improvident schoolboy of not too good repute, the careless run-a-gate who had made a moonlight flitting, and left some fifty pounds\' worth of debts behind him, should come back Sir Roland, like a hero of romance.
Fruition never answers to anticipations--as Roland found, now that his golden visions came to be realized. The romantic charm of the oft-pictured dream was wanting; the green freshness of sanguine boyhood no longer threw its halo on his heart; the vivid glow of imaginative hope had mellowed down to a sober tint. In manner, in gleeful frankness, Roland was nearly as impulsive and boyish as ever; but his mind had gained a good deal of experience, and reflection had come to him. The chances and changes of the world had worked their effect; and the deaths caused directly or indirectly by Gerald, sat heavily on his generous heart. Adam\'s curse lies on all things, and there can be no pleasure without pain.
Roland did not miss it. Enough of charm was left to him. Annabel was staying with her mother, and things seemed to have gone back again to the dear old days before Roland had known the world, or tasted of its cares. Roland went calling upon his acquaintance continually, distant and near, making himself at home everywhere. Ellen Channing, worn to a thread-paper with grief, was visiting her father in her maiden home. Nelly made its charm now. The young widow would probably take up her abode at Helstonleigh, in spite of Roland\'s strong advice that it should be near Sunny Mead.
"I told you I should be sure to get on and make my fortune sometime, Mr. Galloway."
The old proctor, whose health was failing hopelessly, returned a slighting answer. Roland, without ceremony as usual, had dashed into the office, and was sitting on a high desk with his legs dangling. The remark was given in return for some disparaging observation as to Roland\'s former doings.
"You made it! Ugh! A great deal of that."
"Oh--well--I\'ve come into one, at any rate."
"The only way you were ever likely to attain to one. Left to your own exertions, you\'d have got back here with holes in your breeches."
"Now don\'t you be personal, sir," was the laughing rejoinder. "I\'m Sir Roland Yorke, you know."
"And a fine Sir Roland you\'ll be!"
"I\'ll try and be a good one," said Roland emphatically, as he caught Arthur\'s eye--who was seated in the place of state as the head of the office, for the proctor had virtually resigned it. "Arthur knows he can trust me now: ask him, else, sir. Hamish knew it also before he died."
"I should like to hear what business he had to die, and who killed him?" cried old Galloway explosively. "It was done amongst you, I know. A nice thing for my old friend Mr. Huntley to get back to England and find his son-in-law dead: the bright, true young fellow that he loved as the apple of his eye."
"Yes, I think he was killed among us, up there," sadly avowed Roland, his honest face kindling with shame. "But I did not help in it, Mr. Galloway; I\'d have given my life to save his. I wish I could!"
"Wishes won\'t bring him back. I saw his wife yesterday--his widow, that is. I\'m sure I couldn\'t bear to look at her."
"Did you see sweet little Nelly?" cried Roland eagerly, his thoughts taking a turn. "If ever I have a girl of my own I hope she\'ll be like that child."
"Now just you please to take yourself off, Sir Roland, and come in when we\'re a little less busy," returned the pr............