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"Yes," Henrietta answered. And the girl thanked heaven that though the beating of her heart had nearly choked her a moment before, her tone was as hard and uncompromising as his. He could not guess, he never should guess, what strain she put on nerve and will that she might not quail before him; nor how often, with her quivering face hidden in the pillow, she had told herself, before rising, that it was for once only, once only, and that then she need never see again the man she had wronged.
"I do not know," he continued slowly, "whether you have anything to say?"
"Nothing," she answered. They were standing on the Ambleside road, a short furlong from the inn. Leafless trees climbed the hill-side above them; and a rough slope, unfenced and strewn with boulders and dying bracken, ran down from their feet to the lake.
"Then," he rejoined, with a scarcely perceptible hardening of the mouth, "I had best say as briefly as possible what I am come to say."
"If you please," she said. Hitherto she had faced him regally. Now she averted her eyes ever so slightly, and placed herself so that she looked across the water that gleamed pale under the morning mist.
Yet, even with her eyes turned from him, he did not find it easy to say what he must say. And for a few seconds he was silent. At last "I do not wish to upbraid you," he began in a voice somewhat lower in tone. "You have done a very foolish and a very wicked, wicked thing, and one which cannot be undone in the eyes of the world. That is for all to see. You have left your home and your friends and your family under circ.u.mstances----"
She turned her full face to him suddenly.
"Have they," she said, "empowered you to speak to me?"
"Yes."
"They do not wish to see me themselves?"
"No."
"Nor perhaps--wish me to return to them?"
"No."
She nodded as she looked away again; in sheer defiance, he supposed.
He did not guess that she did it to mask the irrepressible shiver which the news caused her.
He thought her, on the contrary, utterly unrepentant, and it hardened him to speak more austerely, to give his feelings freer vent.
"Had you done this thing with a gentleman," he said, "there had been, however heartless and foolish the act, some hope that the matter might be set straight. And some excuse for yourself; since a man of our cla.s.s might have dazzled you by the possession of qualities which the person you chose could not have. But an elopement with a needy adventurer, without breeding, parts, or honesty--a criminal, and wedded already----"
"If he were not wedded already," she said, "I had been with him now!"
His face grew a shade more severe, but otherwise he did not heed the taunt.
"Such an--an act," he said, "unfits you in your brother's eyes to return to his home." He paused an instant. "Or to the family you have disgraced. I am bound--I have no option, to tell you this."
"You say it as from them?"
"I do. I have said indeed less than they bade me say. And not more, I believe on my honour, than the occasion requires. A young gentlewoman," he continued bitterly, "brought up in the country with every care, sheltered from every temptation, with friends, with home, with every comfort and luxury, and about to be married to a gentleman in her own rank in life, meets secretly, clandestinely, shamefully a man, the lowest of the low, on a par in refinement with her own servants, but less worthy! She deceives with him her friends, her family, her relatives! If"--with some emotion--"I have overstated one of these things, G.o.d forgive me!"
"Pray go on!" she said, with her face averted. And thinking that she was utterly hardened, utterly without heart, thinking that her outward calm spelled callousness, and that she felt nothing, he did continue.
"Can she," he said, "who has been so deceitful herself, complain if the man deceives her? She has chosen a worthless creature before her family and her friends? Is she not richly served if he treats her after his own nature and her example? If, after stooping to the lawless level of such a poor thing, she finds herself involved in his penalties, and her name a scandal and a shame to her family!"
"Is that all?" she asked. But not a quiver of the voice, not a tremour of the shoulders, betrayed what she was feeling, what she suffered, how fiercely the brand was burning into her soul.
"That is all they bade me say," he replied in a calmer and more gentle tone. "And that they would make arrangements--such arrangements as may be possible for your future. But they would not take you back."
"And now--what on your own account?" she asked, almost flippantly.
"Something, I suppose?"
"Yes," he said, answering her slowly, and with a steady look of condemnation. For in all honesty the girl's att.i.tude shocked and astonished him. "I have something to say on my own account. Something.
But it is difficult to say it."
She turned to him and raised her eyebrows.
"Really!" she said. "You seem to speak so easily."
He did not remark how white, even against the pale shimmer of the lake, was the face that mocked him; and her heartlessness seemed dreadful to him.
"I wish," he said, "to say only one thing on my own account."
"There is only one thing you must not say," she retorted, turning on him without warning and speaking with concentrated pa.s.sion. "I have been, it may be, as foolish as you say. I am only nineteen. I may have been, I don't know about that, very wicked--as wicked as you say. And what I have done in my folly and in my--you call it wickedness--may be a disgrace to my family. But I have done nothing, nothing, sir,"--she raised her head proudly--"to disgrace myself personally. Do you believe that?"
And then he did notice how white she was.
"If you tell me that, I do believe it," he said gravely.
"You must believe it," she rejoined with sudden vehemence. "Or you wrong me more cruelly than I have wronged you!"
"I do believe it," he said, conquered for the time by a new emotion.
"Then now I will hear you," she answered, her tone sinking again. "I will hear what you wish to say. Not that it will bend me. I have injured you. I own it, and am sorry for it on your account. On my own I am unhappy, but I had been more unhappy had I married you. You have been frank, let me be frank," she continued, her eyes alight, her tone almost imperious. "You sought not a wife, but a mother for your child!
A woman, a little better bred than a nurse, to whom you could entrust the one being, the only being, you love, with less chance of its contamination," she laughed icily, "by the lower orders! If you had any other motive in choosing me it was that I was your second cousin, of your own respectable family, and you did not derogate. But you forgot that I was young and a woman, as you were a man. You said no word of love to me, you begged for no favour; when you entered a room, you sought my eye no more than another's, you had no more softness for me than for another! If you courted me at all it was before others, and if you talked to me at all it was from the height of wise dullness, and about things I did not understand and things I hated!
Until," she continued viciously, "at last I hated you! What could be more natural? What did you expect?"
A little colour had stolen into his face under the lash of her reproaches. He tried to seem indifferent, but he could not. His tone was forced and constrained when he answered.
"You have strange ideas," he said.
"And you have but two!" she riposted. "Politics and your boy! I cared," with concentrated bitterness, "for neither!"
That stung him to anger and retort.
"I can imagine it," he said. "Your likings appear to be on a different plane."
"They are at least not confined to fifty families!" she rejoined. "I do not think myself divine," she continued with feverish irony, "and all below me clay! I do not think because I and all about me are dull and stupid that all the world is dull and stupid, talking eternally about"--and she deliberately mocked his tone--"'the licence of the press!' and 'the imminence of anarchy!' To talk," with supreme scorn, "of the licence of the press and the imminence of anarchy to a girl of nineteen! It was at least to make the way very smooth for another!"
He looked at her in silence, frowning. Her frankness was an outrage on his dignity--and he, of all men, loved his dignity. But it surprised him at least as much as it shocked him. He remembered the girl sometimes silly, sometimes demure, to whom he had cast the handkerchief; and he had not been more astonished if a sheep had stood up and barked at him. He was here, prepared to meet a frightened, weeping, shamefaced child, imploring pardon, imploring mediation; and he found this! He was here to upbraid, and she scolded him. She marked with unerring eye the joints in his armour, and with her venomous woman's tongue she planted darts that he knew would rankle--rankle long after she was gone and he was alone. And a faint glimpse of the truth broke on him. Was it possible that he had misread the girl; whom he had deemed characterless, when she was not shy? Was it possible that he had under-valued her and slighted her? Was it possible that, while he had been judging her and talking down to her, she had been judging him and laughing in her sleeve?
The thought was not pleasant to a proud nature. And there was another thing he had to weigh. If she were so different in fact from the conception he had formed of her, the course which had occurred to him as the best, and which he was going to propose for her, might not be the best.
But he put that from him. A name for firmness at times compels a man to obstinacy. It was so now. He set his jaw more stiffly, and--
"Will you hear me now?" he asked.
"If there is anything more to be said," she replied. She spoke wearily over her shoulder.