The Last Chronicle of Barset eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,290 pages of information about The Last Chronicle of Barset.

The Last Chronicle of Barset eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,290 pages of information about The Last Chronicle of Barset.
moneys appertaining to the hotel stables, and accounted for them once a week.  Jem Scuttle had simply told him that he had taken the cheque from Mr Soames, and Jem had since gone to New Zealand.  It was quite true that Jem’s departure had followed suspiciously close upon the payment of the rent to Mrs Arabin, and that Jem had been in close amity with Dan Stringer up to the moment of his departure.  That Dan Stringer had not become honestly possessed of the cheque, everybody knew; but, nevertheless, the magistrates were of the opinion, Mr Walker coinciding with them, that there was no evidence against him sufficient to secure a conviction.  The story, however, of Mr Crawley’s injuries was so well known in Barchester, and the feeling against the man who had permitted him to be thus injured was so strong, that Dan Stringer did not altogether escape without punishment.  Some rough spirits in Barchester called one night at ‘The Dragon of Wantly’ and begged Mr Dan Stringer would be kind enough to come and take a walk with them that evening; and when it was intimated to them that Dan Stringer had not just then any desire for exercise, they requested to be allowed to go into the back parlour and make an evening with Dan Stringer in that recess.  There was a terrible row at ’The Dragon of Wantly’ that night, and Dan with difficulty was rescued by the police.  On the following morning he was smuggled out of Barchester by an early train, and has never more been seen in that city.  Rumours of him, however, were soon heard, from which it appeared that he had made himself acquainted with the casual ward of more than one workhouse in London.  His cousin John left the inn almost immediately—­as, indeed, he must have done had there been no question of Mr Soames’s cheque—­and then there was nothing more heard of the Stringers in Barchester.

Mrs Arabin remained in town one day, and would have remained longer, waiting for her husband, had not a letter from her sister impressed upon her that it might be well that she should be with her father as soon as possible.  ’I don’t mean to make you think that there is any immediate danger,’ Mrs Grantly said, ’and, indeed, we cannot say that he is ill; but it seems that the extremity of old age has come upon him almost suddenly, and that he is as weak as a child.  His only delight is with children, especially with Posy, whose gravity in her management of him is wonderful.  He has not left his room now for more than a week, and he eats very little.  It may be that he will live for years; but I should be deceiving you if I did not let you know that both the archdeacon and I think that the time of his departure from us is near at hand.’  After reading this letter, Mrs Arabin could not wait in town for her husband, even though he was expected in two days and though she had been told that her presence in Barchester was not immediately required on behalf of Mr Crawley.

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The Last Chronicle of Barset from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.