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Her head was bent before him, and she gave no answer.
'Can't you speak? What's made her look like that? Have you been quarrelling with her?'
'Quarrelling?'
'You know what I mean well enough. Just tell me what you said. I thought I told you to stay upstairs? What's been going on?'
'I told her she ought to have let us know,' replied Alice, timorous, but affecting the look and voice of a spoilt child.
'Then you've made a fool of yourself!' he exclaimed with subdued violence. 'You've got to learn that when I tell you to do a thing you do it--or I'll know the reason why! You'd no business to come out of your room. Now you'll just find her and apologise. You understand? You'll go and beg her pardon at once.'
Alice raised her eyes in wretched bewilderment.
'Beg her pardon?' she faltered. 'Oh, how can I? Why, what harm have I done, Willis? I'm sure I shan't beg her pardon.'
'You won't? If you talk to me in that way you shall go down on your knees before her. You won't?'
His voice had such concentrated savagery in its suppression that Alice shrank back in terror.
'Willis! How can you speak so! What have I done?'
'You've made a confounded fool of yourself, and most likely spoilt the last chance you had, if you want to know. In future, when I say a thing understand that I mean it; I don't give orders for nothing. Go and find her and beg her pardon. I'll wait here till you've done it.'
'But I _can't_! Willis, you won't force me to do that? I'd rather die than humble myself to her.'
'Do you hear me?'
She stood up, almost driven to bay. Her eyes were wet, her poor, crumpled prettiness made a deplorable spectacle.
'I can't, I can't! Why are you so unkind to me? I have only said what any one would. I hate her! My lips won't speak the words. You've no right to ask me to do such a thing.'
Her wrist was caught in a clutch that seemed to crush the muscles, and she was flung back on to the chair. Terror would not let the scream pa.s.s her lips: she lay with open mouth and staring eyes.
Rodman looked at her for an instant, then seemed to master his fury and laughed.
'That doesn't improve your beauty. Now, no crying out before you're hurt. There's no harm done. Only you've to learn that I mean what I say, that's all. Now I haven't hurt you, so don't pretend.'
'Oh, you _have_ hurt me!' she sobbed wretchedly, with her fingers round her injured wrist. 'I never thought you could be so cruel. Oh, my hand!
What harm have I done? And you used to say you'd never be unkind to me, never! Oh, how miserable I am! Is this how you're going to treat me? As if I could help it! Willis, you won't begin to be cruel? Oh, my hand!'
'Let me look at it. Pooh, what's amiss?' He spoke all at once in his usual good-natured voice. 'Now go and find Adela, whilst I wait here.'
'You're going to force me to do that?'
'You're going to do it. Now don't make me angry again.'
She rose, frightened again by his look. She took a step or two, then turned back to him.
'If I do this, will you be kind to me, the same as before?'
'Of course I will. You don't take me for a brute?'
She held her bruised wrist to him.
'Will you--will you kiss it well again?'
The way in which she said it was as nearly pathetic as anything from poor Alice could be. Her misery was so profound, and this childish forgiveness of an outrage was so true a demonstration of womanly tenderness which her character would not allow to be n.o.ble. Her husband laughed rather uneasily, and did her bidding with an ill grace. But yet she could not go.
'You'll promise never to speak--'
'Yes, yes, of course I promise. Come back to me. Mind, shall know how you did it.'
'But why? What is she to us?'
'I'll tell you afterwards.'
There was a dawning of jealousy in her eyes.
'I don't think you ought to make your wife lower herself--'
His brow darkened.
'Will you do as I tell you?'
She moved towards the door, stopped to dry her wet cheeks, half looked round. What she saw sped her on her way.
Adela was just descending the stairs, dressed to go out. Alice let her go past without speaking, but followed her through the hall and into the garden. Adela turned, saying gently--
'Do you wish to speak to me?'
'I'm sorry I said those things. I didn't mean it. I don't think it was your fault.'
The other smiled; then in that voice which Stella had spoken of as full of forgiveness--
'No, it is not my fault, Alice. It couldn't be otherwise.'
'Don't think of it another moment.'
Alice would gladly have retreated, but durst not omit what seemed to her the essential because the bitterest words.
'I beg your pardon.'
'No, no!' exclaimed Adela quickly. 'Go and lie down a little; you look so tired. Try not to be unhappy, your husband will not let harm come to you.'
Alice returned to the house, hating her sister-in-law with a perfect hatred.
The hated one took her way into Wanley. She had no pleasant mission--that of letting her mother and Letty know what had happened.
The latter she found in the garden behind the house dancing her baby-boy up and down in the sunlight. Letty did not look very matronly, it must be confessed; but what she lacked in mature dignity was made up in blue-eyed and warm-checked happiness. At the sight of Adela she gave a cry of joy.