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Title: Desperate Remedies
Author: Hardy, Thomas, 1840-1928
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Desperate Remedies" ***


                      DESPERATE REMEDIES



                           CONTENTS

PREFATORY NOTE
I.     THE EVENTS OF THIRTY YEARS
II.    THE EVENTS OF A FORTNIGHT
III.   THE EVENTS OF EIGHT DAYS
IV.    THE EVENTS OF ONE DAY
V.     THE EVENTS OF ONE DAY
VI.    THE EVENTS OF TWELVE HOURS
VII.   THE EVENTS OF EIGHTEEN DAYS
VIII.  THE EVENTS OF EIGHTEEN DAYS
IX.    THE EVENTS OF TEN WEEKS
X.     THE EVENTS OF A DAY AND NIGHT
XI.    THE EVENTS OF FIVE DAYS
XII.   THE EVENTS OF TEN MONTHS
XIII.  THE EVENTS OF ONE DAY
XIV.   THE EVENTS OF FIVE WEEKS
XV.    THE EVENTS OF THREE WEEKS
XVI.   THE EVENTS OF ONE WEEK
XVII.  THE EVENTS OF ONE DAY
XVIII. THE EVENTS OF THREE DAYS
XIX.   THE EVENTS OF A DAY AND NIGHT
XX.    THE EVENTS OF THREE HOURS
XXI.   THE EVENTS OF EIGHTEEN HOURS
       SEQUEL



                        PREFATORY NOTE

The following story, the first published by the author, was written
nineteen years ago, at a time when he was feeling his way to a
method. The principles observed in its composition are, no doubt,
too exclusively those in which mystery, entanglement, surprise, and
moral obliquity are depended on for exciting interest; but some of
the scenes, and at least one of the characters, have been deemed not
unworthy of a little longer preservation; and as they could hardly
be reproduced in a fragmentary form the novel is reissued complete
--the more readily that it has for some considerable time been
reprinted and widely circulated in America.
January 1889.

To the foregoing note I have only to add that, in the present
edition of 'Desperate Remedies,' some Wessex towns and other places
that are common to the scenes of several of these stories have been
called for the first time by the names under which they appear
elsewhere, for the satisfaction of any reader who may care for
consistency in such matters.

This is the only material change; for, as it happened that certain
characteristics which provoked most discussion in my latest story
were present in this my first--published in 1871, when there was no
French name for them it has seemed best to let them stand unaltered.

T.H.
February 1896.



I. THE EVENTS OF THIRTY YEARS

1. DECEMBER AND JANUARY, 1835-36

In the long and intricately inwrought chain of circumstance which
renders worthy of record some experiences of Cytherea Graye, Edward
Springrove, and others, the first event directly influencing the
issue was a Christmas visit.

In the above-mentioned year, 1835, Ambrose Graye, a young architect
who had just begun the practice of his profession in the midland
town of Hocbridge, to the north of Christminster, went to London to
spend the Christmas holidays with a friend who lived in Bloomsbury.
They had gone up to Cambridge in the same year, and, after
graduating together, Huntway, the friend, had taken orders.

Graye was handsome, frank, and gentle. He had a quality of thought
which, exercised on homeliness, was humour; on nature,
picturesqueness; on abstractions, poetry. Being, as a rule,
broadcast, it was all three.

Of the wickedness of the world he was too forgetful. To discover
evil in a new friend is to most people only an additional
experience: to him it was ever a surprise.

While in London he became acquainted with a retired officer in the
Navy named Bradleigh, who, with his wife and their daughter, lived
in a street not far from Russell Square. Though they were in no
more than comfortable circumstances, the captain's wife came of an
ancient family whose genealogical tree was interlaced with some of
the most illustrious and well-known in the kingdom.

The young lady, their daughter, seemed to Graye by far the most
beautiful and queenly being he had ever beheld. She was about
nineteen or twenty, and her name was Cytherea. In truth she was not
so very unlike country girls of that type of beauty, except in one
respect. She was perfect in her manner and bearing, and they were
not. A mere distinguishing peculiarity, by catching the eye, is
often read as the pervading characteristic, and she appeared to him
no less than perfection throughout--transcending her rural rivals in
very nature. Graye did a thing the blissfulness of which was only
eclipsed by its hazardousness. He loved her at first sight.

His introductions had led him into contact with Cytherea and her
parents two or three times on the first week of his arrival in
London, and accident and a lover's contrivance brought them together
as frequently the week following. The parents liked young Graye,
and having few friends (for their equals in blood were their
superiors in position), he was received on very generous terms. His
passion for Cytherea grew not only strong, but ineffably exalted:
she, without positively encouraging him, tacitly assented to his
schemes for being near her. Her father and mother seemed to have
lost all confidence in nobility of birth, without money to give
effect to its presence, and looked upon the budding consequence of
the young people's reciprocal glances with placidity, if not actual
favour.

Graye's whole impassioned dream terminated in a sad and
unaccountable episode. After passing through three weeks of sweet
experience, he had arrived at the last stage--a kind of moral Gaza
--before plunging into an emotional desert. The second week in
January had come round, and it was necessary for the young architect
to leave town.

Throughout his acquaintanceship with the lady of his heart there had
been this marked peculiarity in her love: she had delighted in his
presence as a sweetheart should do, yet from first to last she had
repressed all recognition of the true nature of the thread which
drew them together, blinding herself to its meaning and only natural
tendency, and appearing to dread his announcement of them. The
present seemed enough for her without cumulative hope: usually,
even if love is in itself an end, it must be regarded as a beginning
to be enjoyed.

In spite of evasions as an obstacle, and in consequence of them as a
spur, he would put the matter off no longer. It was evening. He
took her into a little conservatory on the landing, and there among
the evergreens, by the light of a few tiny lamps, infinitely
enhancing the freshness and beauty of the leaves, he made the
declaration of a love as fresh and beautiful as they.

'My love--my darling, be my wife!'

She seemed like one just awakened. 'Ah--we must part now!' she
faltered, in a voice of anguish. 'I will write to you.' She
loosened her hand and rushed away.

In a wild fever Graye went home and watched for the next morning.
Who shall express his misery and wonder when a note containing these
words was put into his hand?

'Good-bye; good-bye for ever. As recognized lovers something
divides us eternally. Forgive me--I should have told you before;
but your love was sweet! Never mention me.'

That very day, and as it seemed, to put an end to a painful
condition of things, daughter and parents left London to pay off a
promised visit to a relative in a western county. No message or
letter of entreaty could wring from her any explanation. She begged
him not to follow her, and the most bewildering point was that her
father and mother appeared, from the tone of a letter Graye received
from them, as vexed and sad as he at this sudden renunciation. One
thing was plain: without admitting her reason as valid, they knew
what that reason was, and did not intend to reveal it.

A week from that day Ambrose Graye left his friend Huntway's house
and saw no more of the Love he mourned. From time to time his
friend answered any inquiry Graye made by letter respecting her.
But very poor food to a lover is intelligence of a mistress filtered
through a friend. Huntway could tell nothing definitely. He said
he believed there had been some prior flirtation between Cytherea
and her cousin, an officer of the line, two or three years before
Graye met her, which had suddenly been terminated by the cousin's
departure for India, and the young lady's travelling on the
Continent with her parents the whole of the ensuing summer, on
account of delicate health. Eventually Huntway said that
circumstances had rendered Graye's attachment more hopeless still.
Cytherea's mother had unexpectedly inherited a large fortune and
estates in the west of England by the rapid fall of some intervening
lives. This had caused their removal from the small house in
Bloomsbury, and, as it appeared, a renunciation of their old friends
in that quarter.

Young Graye concluded that his Cytherea had forgotten him and his
love. But he could not forget her.

2. FROM 1843 TO 1861

Eight years later, feeling lonely and depressed--a man without
relatives, with many acquaintances but no friends--Ambrose Graye met
a young lady of a different kind, fairly endowed with money and good
gifts. As to caring very deeply for another woman after the loss of
Cytherea, it was an absolute impossibility with him. With all, the
beautiful things of the earth become more dear as they elude
pursuit; but with some natures utter elusion is the one special
event which will make a passing love permanent for ever.

This second young lady and Graye were married. That he did not,
first or last, love his wife as he should have done, was known to
all; but few knew that his unmanageable heart could never be weaned
from useless repining at the loss of its first idol.

His character to some extent deteriorated, as emotional
constitutions will under the long sense of disappointment at having
missed their imagined destiny. And thus, though naturally of a
gentle and pleasant disposition, he grew to be not so tenderly
regarded by his acquaintances as it is the lot of some of those
persons to be. The winning and sanguine receptivity of his early
life developed by degrees a moody nervousness, and when not
picturing prospects drawn from baseless hope he was the victim of
indescribable depression. The practical issue of such a condition
was improvidence, originally almost an unconscious improvidence, for
every debt incurred had been mentally paid off with a religious
exactness from the treasures of expectation before mentioned. But
as years revolved, the same course was continued from the lack of
spirit sufficient for shifting out of an old groove when it has been
found to lead to disaster.

In the year 1861 his wife died, leaving him a widower with two
children. The elder, a son named Owen, now just turned seventeen,
was taken from school, and initiated as pupil to the profession of
architect in his father's office. The remaining child was a
daughter, and Owen's junior by a year.

Her christian name was Cytherea, and it is easy to guess why.

3. OCTOBER THE TWELFTH, 1863

We pass over two years in order to reach the next cardinal event of
these persons' lives. The scene is still the Grayes' native town of
Hocbridge, but as it appeared on a Monday afternoon in the month of
October.

The weather was sunny and dry, but the ancient borough was to be
seen wearing one of its least attractive aspects. First on account
of the time. It was that stagnant hour of the twenty-four when the
practical garishness of Day, having escaped from the fresh long
shadows and enlivening newness of the morning, has not yet made any
perceptible advance towards acquiring those mellow and soothing
tones which grace its decline. Next, it was that stage in the
progress of the week when business--which, carried on under the
gables of an old country place, is not devoid of a romantic sparkle
--was well-nigh extinguished. Lastly, the town was intentionally
bent upon being attractive by exhibiting to an influx of visitors
the local talent for dramatic recitation, and provincial towns
trying to be lively are the dullest of dull things.

Little towns are like little children in this respect, that they
interest most when they are enacting native peculiarities
unconscious of beholders. Discovering themselves to be watched they
attempt to be entertaining by putting on an antic, and produce
disagreeable caricatures which spoil them.

The weather-stained clock-face in the low church tower standing at
the intersection of the three chief streets was expressing half-past
two to the Town Hall opposite, where the much talked-of reading from
Shakespeare was about to begin. The doors were open, and those
persons who had already assembled within the building were noticing
the entrance of the new-comers--silently criticizing their dress
--questioning the genuineness of their teeth and hair--estimating
their private means.

Among these later ones came an exceptional young maiden who glowed
amid the dulness like a single bright-red poppy in a field of brown
stubble. She wore an elegant dark jacket, lavender dress, hat with
grey strings and trimmings, and gloves of a colour to harmonize.
She lightly walked up the side passage of the room, cast a slight
glance around, and entered the seat pointed out to her.

The young girl was Cytherea Graye; her age was now about eighteen.
During her entry, and at various times whilst sitting in her seat
and listening to the reader on the platform, her personal appearance
formed an interesting subject of study for several neighbouring
eyes.

Her face was exceedingly attractive, though artistically less
perfect than her figure, which approached unusually near to the
standard of faultlessness. But even this feature of hers yielded
the palm to the gracefulness of her movement, which was fascinating
and delightful to an extreme degree.

Indeed, motion was her speciality, whether shown on its most
extended scale of bodily progression, or minutely, as in the
uplifting of her eyelids, the bending of her fingers, the pouting of
her lip. The carriage of her head--motion within motion--a glide
upon a glide--was as delicate as that of a magnetic needle. And
this flexibility and elasticity had never been taught her by rule,
nor even been acquired by observation, but, nullo cultu, had
naturally developed itself with her years. In childhood, a stone or
stalk in the way, which had been the inevitable occasion of a fall
to her playmates, had usually left her safe and upright on her feet
after the narrowest escape by oscillations and whirls for the
preservation of her balance. At mixed Christmas parties, when she
numbered but twelve or thirteen years, and was heartily despised on
that account by lads who deemed themselves men, her apt lightness in
the dance covered this incompleteness in her womanhood, and
compelled the self-same youths in spite of resolutions to seize upon
her childish figure as a partner whom they could not afford to
contemn. And in later years, when the instincts of her sex had
shown her this point as the best and rarest feature in her external
self, she was not found wanting in attention to the cultivation of
finish in its details.

Her hair rested gaily upon her shoulders in curls and was of a
shining corn yellow in the high lights, deepening to a definite
nut-brown as each curl wound round into the shade. She had eyes of a
sapphire hue, though rather darker than the gem ordinarily appears;
they possessed the affectionate and liquid sparkle of loyalty and
good faith as distinguishable from that harder brightness which
seems to express faithfulness only to the object confronting them.

But to attempt to gain a view of her--or indeed of any fascinating
woman--from a measured category, is as difficult as to appreciate
the effect of a landscape by exploring it at night with a lantern
--or of a full chord of music by piping the notes in succession.
Nevertheless it may readily be believed from the description here
ventured, that among the many winning phases of her aspect, these
were particularly striking:--

  During pleasant doubt, when her eyes brightened stealthily and
  smiled (as eyes will smile) as distinctly as her lips, and in the
  space of a single instant expressed clearly the whole round of
  degrees of expectancy which lie over the wide expanse between Yea
  and Nay.

  During the telling of a secret, which was involuntarily
  accompanied by a sudden minute start, and ecstatic pressure of
  the listener's arm, side, or neck, as the position and degree
  of intimacy dictated.

  When anxiously regarding one who possessed her affections.

She suddenly assumed the last-mentioned bearing in the progress of
the present entertainment. Her glance was directed out of the
window.

Why the particulars of a young lady's presence at a very mediocre
performance were prevented from dropping into the oblivion which
their intrinsic insignificance would naturally have involved--why
they were remembered and individualized by herself and others
through after years--was simply that she unknowingly stood, as it
were, upon the extreme posterior edge of a tract in her life, in
which the real meaning of Taking Thought had never been known. It
was the last hour of experience she ever enjoyed with a mind
entirely free from a knowledge of that labyrinth into which she
stepped immediately afterwards--to continue a perplexed course along
its mazes for the greater portion of twenty-nine subsequent months.

The Town Hall, in which Cytherea sat, was a building of brown stone,
and through one of the windows could be seen from the interior of
the room the housetops and chimneys of the adjacent street, and also
the upper part of a neighbouring church spire, now in course of
completion under the superintendence of Miss Graye's father, the
architect to the work.

That the top of this spire should be visible from her position in
the room was a fact which Cytherea's idling eyes had discovered with
some interest, and she was now engaged in watching the scene that
was being enacted about its airy summit. Round the conical
stonework rose a cage of scaffolding against the blue sky, and upon
this stood five men--four in clothes as white as the new erection
close beneath their hands, the fifth in the ordinary dark suit of a
gentleman.

The four working-men in white were three masons and a mason's
labourer. The fifth man was the architect, Mr. Graye. He had been
giving directions as it seemed, and retiring as far as the narrow
footway allowed, stood perfectly still.

The picture thus presented to a spectator in the Town Hall was
curious and striking. It was an illuminated miniature, framed in by
the dark margin of the window, the keen-edged shadiness of which
emphasized by contrast the softness of the objects enclosed.

The height of the spire was about one hundred and twenty feet, and
the five men engaged thereon seemed entirely removed from the sphere
and experiences of ordinary human beings. They appeared little
larger than pigeons, and made their tiny movements with a soft,
spirit-like silentness. One idea above all others was conveyed to
the mind of a person on the ground by their aspect, namely,
concentration of purpose: that they were indifferent to--even
unconscious of--the distracted world beneath them, and all that
moved upon it. They never looked off the scaffolding.

Then one of them turned; it was Mr. Graye. Again he stood
motionless, with attention to the operations of the others. He
appeared to be lost in reflection, and had directed his face towards
a new stone they were lifting.

'Why does he stand like that?' the young lady thought at length--up
to that moment as listless and careless as one of the ancient
Tarentines, who, on such an afternoon as this, watched from the
Theatre the entry into their Harbour of a power that overturned the
State.

She moved herself uneasily. 'I wish he would come down,' she
whispered, still gazing at the skybacked picture. 'It is so
dangerous to be absent-minded up there.'

When she had done murmuring the words her father indecisively laid
hold of one of the scaffold-poles, as if to test its strength, then
let it go and stepped back. In stepping, his foot slipped. An
instant of doubling forward and sideways, and he reeled off into the
air, immediately disappearing downwards.

His agonized daughter rose to her feet by a convulsive movement.
Her lips parted, and she gasped for breath. She could utter no
sound. One by one the people about her, unconscious of what had
happened, turned their heads, and inquiry and alarm became visible
upon their faces at the sight of the poor child. A moment longer,
and she fell to the floor.

The next impression of which Cytherea had any consciousness was of
being carried from a strange vehicle across the pavement to the
steps of her own house by her brother and an older man. Recollection
of what had passed evolved itself an instant later, and just as they
entered the door--through which another and sadder burden had been
carried but a few instants before--her eyes caught sight of the
south-western sky, and, without heeding, saw white sunlight shining
in shaft-like lines from a rift in a slaty cloud. Emotions will
attach themselves to scenes that are simultaneous--however foreign
in essence these scenes may be--as chemical waters will crystallize
on twigs and wires. Even after that time any mental agony brought
less vividly to Cytherea's mind the scene from the Town Hall windows
than sunlight streaming in shaft-like lines.

4. OCTOBER THE NINETEENTH

When death enters a house, an element of sadness and an element of
horror accompany it. Sadness, from the death itself: horror, from
the clouds of blackness we designedly labour to introduce.

The funeral had taken place. Depressed, yet resolved in his
demeanour, Owen Graye sat before his father's private escritoire,
engaged in turning out and unfolding a heterogeneous collection of
papers--forbidding and inharmonious to the eye at all times--most of
all to one under the influence of a great grief. Laminae of white
paper tied with twine were indiscriminately intermixed with other
white papers bounded by black edges--these with blue foolscap
wrapped round with crude red tape.

The bulk of these letters, bills, and other documents were submitted
to a careful examination, by which the appended particulars were
ascertained:--

  First, that their father's income from professional sources had
  been very small, amounting to not more than half their expenditure;
  and that his own and his wife's property, upon which he had relied
  for the balance, had been sunk and lost in unwise loans to
  unscrupulous men, who had traded upon their father's too
  open-hearted trustfulness.

  Second, that finding his mistake, he had endeavoured to regain
  his standing by the illusory path of speculation. The most notable
  instance of this was the following. He had been induced, when at
  Plymouth in the autumn of the previous year, to venture all his
  spare capital on the bottomry security of an Italian brig which
  had put into the harbour in distress. The profit was to be
  considerable, so was the risk. There turned out to be no security
  whatever. The circumstances of the case tendered it the most
  unfortunate speculation that a man like himself--ignorant of all
  such matters--could possibly engage in. The vessel went down, and
  all Mr. Graye's money with it.

  Third, that these failures had left him burdened with debts he
  knew not how to meet; so that at the time of his death even the few
  pounds lying to his account at the bank were his only in name.

  Fourth, that the loss of his wife two years earlier had
  awakened him to a keen sense of his blindness, and of his duty by
  his children. He had then resolved to reinstate by unflagging zeal
  in the pursuit of his profession, and by no speculation, at least a
  portion of the little fortune he had let go.

Cytherea was frequently at her brother's elbow during these
examinations. She often remarked sadly--

'Poor papa failed to fulfil his good intention for want of time,
didn't he, Owen? And there was an excuse for his past, though he
never would claim it. I never forget that original disheartening
blow, and how that from it sprang all the ills of his life
--everything connected with his gloom, and the lassitude in
business we used so often to see about him.'

'I remember what he said once,' returned the brother, 'when I sat up
late with him. He said, "Owen, don't love too blindly: blindly you
will love if you love at all, but a little care is still possible to
a well-disciplined heart. May that heart be yours as it was not
mine," father said. "Cultivate the art of renunciation." And I am
going to, Cytherea.'

'And once mamma said that an excellent woman was papa's ruin,
because he did not know the way to give her up when he had lost her.
I wonder where she is now, Owen? We were told not to try to find
out anything about her. Papa never told us her name, did he?'

'That was by her own request, I believe. But never mind her; she
was not our mother.'

The love affair which had been Ambrose Graye's disheartening blow
was precisely of that nature which lads take little account of, but
girls ponder in their hearts.

5. FROM OCTOBER THE NINETEENTH TO JULY THE NINTH

Thus Ambrose Graye's good intentions with regard to the
reintegration of his property had scarcely taken tangible form
when his sudden death put them for ever out of his power.

Heavy bills, showing the extent of his obligations, tumbled in
immediately upon the heels of the funeral from quarters previously
unheard and unthought of. Thus pressed, a bill was filed in
Chancery to have the assets, such as they were, administered by the
Court.

'What will become of us now?' thought Owen continually.

There is in us an unquenchable expectation, which at the gloomiest
time persists in inferring that because we are _ourselves_, there
must be a special future in store for us, though our nature and
antecedents to the remotest particular have been common to
thousands. Thus to Cytherea and Owen Graye the question how their
lives would end seemed the deepest of possible enigmas. To others
who knew their position equally well with themselves the question
was the easiest that could be asked--'Like those of other people
similarly circumstanced.'

Then Owen held a consultation with his sister to come to some
decision on their future course, and a month was passed in waiting
for answers to letters, and in the examination of schemes more or
less futile. Sudden hopes that were rainbows to the sight proved
but mists to the touch. In the meantime, unpleasant remarks,
disguise them as some well-meaning people might, were floating
around them every day. The undoubted truth, that they were the
children of a dreamer who let slip away every farthing of his money
and ran into debt with his neighbours--that the daughter had been
brought up to no profession--that the son who had, had made no
progress in it, and might come to the dogs--could not from the
nature of things be wrapped up in silence in order that it might not
hurt their feelings; and as a matter of fact, it greeted their ears
in some form or other wherever they went. Their few acquaintances
passed them hurriedly. Ancient pot-wallopers, and thriving
shopkeepers, in their intervals of leisure, stood at their
shop-doors--their toes hanging over the edge of the step, and their
obese waists hanging over their toes--and in discourses with friends
on the pavement, formulated the course of the improvident, and
reduced the children's prospects to a shadow-like attenuation. The
sons of these men (who wore breastpins of a sarcastic kind, and
smoked humorous pipes) stared at Cytherea with a stare unmitigated
by any of the respect that had formerly softened it.

Now it is a noticeable fact that we do not much mind what men think
of us, or what humiliating secret they discover of our means,
parentage, or object, provided that each thinks and acts thereupon
in isolation. It is the exchange of ideas about us that we dread
most; and the possession by a hundred acquaintances, severally
insulated, of the knowledge of our skeleton-closet's whereabouts, is
not so distressing to the nerves as a chat over it by a party of
half-a-dozen--exclusive depositaries though these may be.

Perhaps, though Hocbridge watched and whispered, its animus would
have been little more than a trifle to persons in thriving
circumstances. But unfortunately, poverty, whilst it is new, and
before the skin has had time to thicken, makes people susceptible
inversely to their opportunities for shielding themselves. In Owen
was found, in place of his father's impressibility, a larger share
of his father's pride, and a squareness of idea which, if coupled
with a little more blindness, would have amounted to positive
prejudice. To him humanity, so far as he had thought of it at all,
was rather divided into distinct classes than blended from extreme
to extreme. Hence by a sequence of ideas which might be traced if
it were worth while, he either detested or respected opinion, and
instinctively sought to escape a cold shade that mere sensitiveness
would have endured. He could have submitted to separation,
sickness, exile, drudgery, hunger and thirst, with stoical
indifference, but superciliousness was too incisive.

After living on for nine months in attempts to make an income as his
father's successor in the profession--attempts which were utterly
fruitless by reason of his inexperience--Graye came to a simple and
sweeping resolution. They would privately leave that part of
England, drop from the sight of acquaintances, gossips, harsh
critics, and bitter creditors of whose misfortune he was not the
cause, and escape the position which galled him by the only road
their great poverty left open to them--that of his obtaining some
employment in a distant place by following his profession as a
humble under-draughtsman.

He thought over his capabilities with the sensations of a soldier
grinding his sword at the opening of a campaign. What with lack of
employment, owing to the decrease of his late father's practice, and
the absence of direct and uncompromising pressure towards monetary
results from a pupil's labour (which seems to be always the case
when a professional man's pupil is also his son), Owen's progress in
the art and science of architecture had been very insignificant
indeed. Though anything but an idle young man, he had hardly
reached the age at which industrious men who lack an external whip
to send them on in the world, are induced by their own common sense
to whip on themselves. Hence his knowledge of plans, elevations,
sections, and specifications, was not greater at the end of two
years of probation than might easily have been acquired in six
months by a youth of average ability--himself, for instance--amid a
bustling London practice.

But at any rate he could make himself handy to one of the
profession--some man in a remote town--and there fulfil his
indentures. A tangible inducement lay in this direction of survey.
He had a slight conception of such a man--a Mr. Gradfield--who was
in practice in Budmouth Regis, a seaport town and watering-place in
the south of England.

After some doubts, Graye ventured to write to this gentleman, asking
the necessary question, shortly alluding to his father's death, and
stating that his term of apprenticeship had only half expired. He
would be glad to complete his articles at a very low salary for the
whole remaining two years, provided payment could begin at once.

The answer from Mr. Gradfield stated that he was not in want of a
pupil who would serve the remainder of his time on the terms Mr.
Graye mentioned. But he would just add one remark. He chanced to
be in want of some young man in his office--for a short time only,
probably about two months--to trace drawings, and attend to other
subsidiary work of the kind. If Mr. Graye did not object to occupy
such an inferior position as these duties would entail, and to
accept weekly wages which to one with his expectations would be
considered merely nominal, the post would give him an opportunity
for learning a few more details of the profession.

'It is a beginning, and, above all, an abiding-place, away from the
shadow of the cloud which hangs over us here--I will go,' said Owen.

Cytherea's plan for her future, an intensely simple one, owing to
the even greater narrowness of her resources, was already marked
out. One advantage had accrued to her through her mother's
possession of a fair share of personal property, and perhaps only
one. She had been carefully educated. Upon this consideration her
plan was based. She was to take up her abode in her brother's
lodging at Budmouth, when she would immediately advertise for a
situation as governess, having obtained the consent of a lawyer at
Aldbrickham who was winding up her father's affairs, and who knew
the history of her position, to allow himself to be referred to in
the matter of her past life and respectability.

Early one morning they departed from their native town, leaving
behind them scarcely a trace of their footsteps.

Then the town pitied their want of wisdom in taking such a step.
'Rashness; they would have made a better income in Hocbridge, where
they are known! There is no doubt that they would.'

But what is Wisdom really? A steady handling of any means to bring
about any end necessary to happiness.

Yet whether one's end be the usual end--a wealthy position in life
--or no, the name of wisdom is seldom applied but to the means to
that usual end.



II. THE EVENTS OF A FORTNIGHT

1. THE NINTH OF JULY

The day of their departure was one of the most glowing that the
climax of a long series of summer heats could evolve. The wide
expanse of landscape quivered up and down like the flame of a taper,
as they steamed along through the midst of it. Placid flocks of
sheep reclining under trees a little way off appeared of a pale blue
colour. Clover fields were livid with the brightness of the sun
upon their deep red flowers. All waggons and carts were moved to
the shade by their careful owners, rain-water butts fell to pieces;
well-buckets were lowered inside the covers of the well-hole, to
preserve them from the fate of the butts, and generally, water
seemed scarcer in the country than the beer and cider of the
peasantry who toiled or idled there.

To see persons looking with children's eyes at any ordinary scenery,
is a proof that they possess the charming faculty of drawing new
sensations from an old experience--a healthy sign, rare in these
feverish days--the mark of an imperishable brightness of nature.

Both brother and sister could do this; Cytherea more noticeably.
They watched the undulating corn-lands, monotonous to all their
companions; the stony and clayey prospect succeeding those, with its
angular and abrupt hills. Boggy moors came next, now withered and
dry--the spots upon which pools usually spread their waters showing
themselves as circles of smooth bare soil, over-run by a net-work of
innumerable little fissures. Then arose plantations of firs,
abruptly terminating beside meadows cleanly mown, in which
high-hipped, rich-coloured cows, with backs horizontal and straight
as the ridge of a house, stood motionless or lazily fed. Glimpses of
the sea now interested them, which became more and more frequent
till the train finally drew up beside the platform at Budmouth.

'The whole town is looking out for us,' had been Graye's impression
throughout the day. He called upon Mr. Gradfield--the only man who
had been directly informed of his coming--and found that Mr.
Gradfield had forgotten it.

However, arrangements were made with this gentleman--a stout,
active, grey-bearded burgher of sixty--by which Owen was to commence
work in his office the following week.

The same day Cytherea drew up and sent off the advertisement
appended:--


  'A YOUNG LADY is desirous of meeting with an _engagement_ as
  _governess_ or _companion_. She is competent to teach English,
  French, and Music. Satisfactory references--Address, C. G.,
  Post-Office, Budmouth.'


It seemed a more material existence than her own that she saw thus
delineated on the paper. 'That can't be myself; how odd I look!'
she said, and smiled.

2. JULY THE ELEVENTH

On the Monday subsequent to their arrival in Budmouth, Owen Graye
attended at Mr. Gradfield's office to enter upon his duties, and his
sister was left in their lodgings alone for the first time.

Despite the sad occurrences of the preceding autumn, an unwonted
cheerfulness pervaded her spirit throughout the day. Change of
scene--and that to untravelled eyes--conjoined with the sensation of
freedom from supervision, revived the sparkle of a warm young nature
ready enough to take advantage of any adventitious restoratives.
Point-blank grief tends rather to seal up happiness for a time than
to produce that attrition which results from griefs of anticipation
that move onward with the days: these may be said to furrow away
the capacity for pleasure.

Her expectations from the advertisement began to be extravagant. A
thriving family, who had always sadly needed her, was already
definitely pictured in her fancy, which, in its exuberance, led her
on to picturing its individual members, their possible peculiarities,
virtues, and vices, and obliterated for a time the recollection that
she would be separated from her brother.

Thus musing, as she waited for his return in the evening, her eyes
fell on her left hand. The contemplation of her own left fourth
finger by symbol-loving girlhood of this age is, it seems, very
frequently, if not always, followed by a peculiar train of romantic
ideas. Cytherea's thoughts, still playing about her future, became
directed into this romantic groove. She leant back in her chair,
and taking hold of the fourth finger, which had attracted her
attention, she lifted it with the tips of the others, and looked at
the smooth and tapering member for a long time.

She whispered idly, 'I wonder who and what he will be?

'If he's a gentleman of fashion, he will take my finger so, just
with the tips of his own, and with some fluttering of the heart, and
the least trembling of his lip, slip the ring so lightly on that I
shall hardly know it is there--looking delightfully into my eyes all
the time.

'If he's a bold, dashing soldier, I expect he will proudly turn
round, take the ring as if it equalled her Majesty's crown in value,
and desperately set it on my finger thus. He will fix his eyes
unflinchingly upon what he is doing--just as if he stood in battle
before the enemy (though, in reality, very fond of me, of course),
and blush as much as I shall.

'If he's a sailor, he will take my finger and the ring in this way,
and deck it out with a housewifely touch and a tenderness of
expression about his mouth, as sailors do: kiss it, perhaps, with a
simple air, as if we were children playing an idle game, and not at
the very height of observation and envy by a great crowd saying,
"Ah! they are happy now!"

'If he should be rather a poor man--noble-minded and affectionate,
but still poor--'

Owen's footsteps rapidly ascending the stairs, interrupted this
fancy-free meditation. Reproaching herself, even angry with herself
for allowing her mind to stray upon such subjects in the face of
their present desperate condition, she rose to meet him, and make
tea.

Cytherea's interest to know how her brother had been received at Mr.
Gradfield's broke forth into words at once. Almost before they had
sat down to table, she began cross-examining him in the regular
sisterly way.

'Well, Owen, how has it been with you to-day? What is the place
like--do you think you will like Mr. Gradfield?'

'O yes. But he has not been there to-day; I have only had the head
draughtsman with me.'

Young women have a habit, not noticeable in men, of putting on at
a moment's notice the drama of whosoever's life they choose.
Cytherea's interest was transferred from Mr. Gradfield to his
representative.

'What sort of a man is he?'

'He seems a very nice fellow indeed; though of course I can hardly
tell to a certainty as yet. But I think he's a very worthy fellow;
there's no nonsense in him, and though he is not a public school man
he has read widely, and has a sharp appreciation of what's good in
books and art. In fact, his knowledge isn't nearly so exclusive as
most professional men's.'

'That's a great deal to say of an architect, for of all professional
men they are, as a rule, the most professional.'

'Yes; perhaps they are. This man is rather of a melancholy turn of
mind, I think.'

'Has the managing clerk any family?' she mildly asked, after a
while, pouring out some more tea.

'Family; no!'

'Well, dear Owen, how should I know?'

'Why, of course he isn't married. But there happened to be a
conversation about women going on in the office, and I heard him say
what he should wish his wife to be like.'

'What would he wish his wife to be like?' she said, with great
apparent lack of interest.

'O, he says she must be girlish and artless: yet he would be loth
to do without a dash of womanly subtlety, 'tis so piquant. Yes, he
said, that must be in her; she must have womanly cleverness. "And
yet I should like her to blush if only a cock-sparrow were to look
at her hard," he said, "which brings me back to the girl again: and
so I flit backwards and forwards. I must have what comes, I
suppose," he said, "and whatever she may be, thank God she's no
worse. However, if he might give a final hint to Providence," he
said, "a child among pleasures, and a woman among pains was the
rough outline of his requirement."'

'Did he say that? What a musing creature he must be.'

'He did, indeed.'

3. FROM THE TWELFTH TO THE FIFTEENTH OF JULY

As is well known, ideas are so elastic in a human brain, that they
have no constant measure which may be called their actual bulk. Any
important idea may be compressed to a molecule by an unwonted
crowding of others; and any small idea will expand to whatever
length and breadth of vacuum the mind may be able to make over to
it. Cytherea's world was tolerably vacant at this time, and the
young architectural designer's image became very pervasive. The
next evening this subject was again renewed.

'His name is Springrove,' said Owen, in reply to her. 'He is a
thorough artist, but a man of rather humble origin, it seems, who
has made himself so far. I think he is the son of a farmer, or
something of the kind.'

'Well, he's none the worse for that, I suppose.'

'None the worse. As we come down the hill, we shall be continually
meeting people going up.' But Owen had felt that Springrove was a
little the worse nevertheless.

'Of course he's rather old by this time.'

'O no. He's about six-and-twenty--not more.'

'Ah, I see. . . . What is he like, Owen?'

'I can't exactly tell you his appearance: 'tis always such a
difficult thing to do.'

'A man you would describe as short? Most men are those we should
describe as short, I fancy.'

'I should call him, I think, of the middle height; but as I only see
him sitting in the office, of course I am not certain about his form
and figure.'

'I wish you were, then.'

'Perhaps you do. But I am not, you see.'

'Of course not, you are always so provoking. Owen, I saw a man in
the street to-day whom I fancied was he--and yet, I don't see how it
could be, either. He had light brown hair, a snub nose, very round
face, and a peculiar habit of reducing his eyes to straight lines
when he looked narrowly at anything.'

'O no. That was not he, Cytherea.'

'Not a bit like him in all probability.'

'Not a bit. He has dark hair--almost a Grecian nose, regular teeth,
and an intellectual face, as nearly as I can recall to mind.'

'Ah, there now, Owen, you _have_ described him! But I suppose
he's not generally called pleasing, or--'

'Handsome?'

'I scarcely meant that. But since you have said it, is he
handsome?'

'Rather.'

'His tout ensemble is striking?'

'Yes--O no, no--I forgot: it is not. He is rather untidy in his
waistcoat, and neck-ties, and hair.'

'How vexing! . . . it must be to himself, poor thing.'

'He's a thorough bookworm--despises the pap-and-daisy school of
verse--knows Shakespeare to the very dregs of the foot-notes.
Indeed, he's a poet himself in a small way.'

'How delicious!' she said. 'I have never known a poet.'

'And you don't know him,' said Owen dryly.

She reddened. 'Of course I don't. I know that.'

'Have you received any answer to your advertisement?' he inquired.

'Ah--no!' she said, and the forgotten disappointment which had
showed itself in her face at different times during the day, became
visible again.

Another day passed away. On Thursday, without inquiry, she learnt
more of the head draughtsman. He and Graye had become very
friendly, and he had been tempted to show her brother a copy of some
poems of his--some serious and sad--some humorous--which had
appeared in the poets' corner of a magazine from time to time. Owen
showed them now to Cytherea, who instantly began to read them
carefully and to think them very beautiful.

'Yes--Springrove's no fool,' said Owen sententiously.

'No fool!--I should think he isn't, indeed,' said Cytherea, looking
up from the paper in quite an excitement: 'to write such verses as
these!'

'What logic are you chopping, Cytherea? Well, I don't mean on
account of the verses, because I haven't read them; but for what he
said when the fellows were talking about falling in love.'

'Which you will tell me?'

'He says that your true lover breathlessly finds himself engaged to
a sweetheart, like a man who has caught something in the dark. He
doesn't know whether it is a bat or a bird, and takes it to the
light when he is cool to learn what it is. He looks to see if she
is the right age, but right age or wrong age, he must consider her a
prize. Sometime later he ponders whether she is the right kind of
prize for him. Right kind or wrong kind--he has called her his, and
must abide by it. After a time he asks himself, "Has she the
temper, hair, and eyes I meant to have, and was firmly resolved not
to do without?" He finds it is all wrong, and then comes the
tussle--'

'Do they marry and live happily?'

'Who? O, the supposed pair. I think he said--well, I really forget
what he said.'

'That _is_ stupid of you!' said the young lady with dismay.

'Yes.'

'But he's a satirist--I don't think I care about him now.'

'There you are just wrong. He is not. He is, as I believe, an
impulsive fellow who has been made to pay the penalty of his
rashness in some love affair.'

Thus ended the dialogue of Thursday, but Cytherea read the verses
again in private. On Friday her brother remarked that Springrove
had informed him he was going to leave Mr. Gradfield's in a
fortnight to push his fortunes in London.

An indescribable feeling of sadness shot through Cytherea's heart.
Why should she be sad at such an announcement as that, she thought,
concerning a man she had never seen, when her spirits were elastic
enough to rebound after hard blows from deep and real troubles as if
she had scarcely known them? Though she could not answer this
question, she knew one thing, she was saddened by Owen's news.

4. JULY THE TWENTY-FIRST

A very popular local excursion by steamboat to Lulstead Cove was
announced through the streets of Budmouth one Thursday morning by
the weak-voiced town-crier, to start at six o'clock the same day.
The weather was lovely, and the opportunity being the first of the
kind offered to them, Owen and Cytherea went with the rest.

They had reached the Cove, and had walked landward for nearly an
hour over the hill which rose beside the strand, when Graye
recollected that two or three miles yet further inland from this
spot was an interesting mediaeval ruin. He was already familiar
with its characteristics through the medium of an archaeological
work, and now finding himself so close to the reality, felt inclined
to verify some theory he had formed respecting it. Concluding that
there would be just sufficient time for him to go there and return
before the boat had left the shore, he parted from Cytherea on the
hill, struck downwards, and then up a heathery valley.

She remained on the summit where he had left her till the time of
his expected return, scanning the details of the prospect around.
Placidly spread out before her on the south was the open Channel,
reflecting a blue intenser by many shades than that of the sky
overhead, and dotted in the foreground by half-a-dozen small craft
of contrasting rig, their sails graduating in hue from extreme
whiteness to reddish brown, the varying actual colours varied again
in a double degree by the rays of the declining sun.

Presently the distant bell from the boat was heard, warning the
passengers to embark. This was followed by a lively air from the
harps and violins on board, their tones, as they arose, becoming
intermingled with, though not marred by, the brush of the waves when
their crests rolled over--at the point where the check of the
shallows was first felt--and then thinned away up the slope of
pebbles and sand.

She turned her face landward and strained her eyes to discern, if
possible, some sign of Owen's return. Nothing was visible save the
strikingly brilliant, still landscape. The wide concave which lay
at the back of the hill in this direction was blazing with the
western light, adding an orange tint to the vivid purple of the
heather, now at the very climax of bloom, and free from the
slightest touch of the invidious brown that so soon creeps into its
shades. The light so intensified the colours that they seemed to
stand above the surface of the earth and float in mid-air like an
exhalation of red. In the minor valleys, between the hillocks and
ridges which diversified the contour of the basin, but did not
disturb its general sweep, she marked brakes of tall, heavy-stemmed
ferns, five or six feet high, in a brilliant light-green dress--a
broad riband of them with the path in their midst winding like a
stream along the little ravine that reached to the foot of the hill,
and delivered up the path to its grassy area. Among the ferns grew
holly bushes deeper in tint than any shadow about them, whilst the
whole surface of the scene was dimpled with small conical pits, and
here and there were round ponds, now dry, and half overgrown with
rushes.

The last bell of the steamer rang. Cytherea had forgotten herself,
and what she was looking for. In a fever of distress lest Owen
should be left behind, she gathered up in her hand the corners of
her handkerchief, containing specimens of the shells, plants, and
fossils which the locality produced, started off to the sands, and
mingled with the knots of visitors there congregated from other
interesting points around; from the inn, the cottages, and hired
conveyances that had returned from short drives inland. They all
went aboard by the primitive plan of a narrow plank on two wheels
--the women being assisted by a rope. Cytherea lingered till the
very last, reluctant to follow, and looking alternately at the boat
and the valley behind. Her delay provoked a remark from Captain
Jacobs, a thickset man of hybrid stains, resulting from the mixed
effects of fire and water, peculiar to sailors where engines are
the propelling power.

'Now then, missy, if you please. I am sorry to tell 'ee our time's
up. Who are you looking for, miss?'

'My brother--he has walked a short distance inland; he must be here
directly. Could you wait for him--just a minute?'

'Really, I am afraid not, m'm.' Cytherea looked at the stout,
round-faced man, and at the vessel, with a light in her eyes so
expressive of her own opinion being the same, on reflection, as his,
and with such resignation, too, that, from an instinctive feeling of
pride at being able to prove himself more humane than he was thought
to be--works of supererogation are the only sacrifices that entice
in this way--and that at a very small cost, he delayed the boat till
some among the passengers began to murmur.

'There, never mind,' said Cytherea decisively. 'Go on without me--I
shall wait for him.'

'Well, 'tis a very awkward thing to leave you here all alone,' said
the captain. 'I certainly advise you not to wait.'

'He's gone across to the railway station, for certain,' said another
passenger.

'No--here he is!' Cytherea said, regarding, as she spoke, the half
hidden figure of a man who was seen advancing at a headlong pace
down the ravine which lay between the heath and the shore.

'He can't get here in less than five minutes,' a passenger said.
'People should know what they are about, and keep time. Really, if--'

'You see, sir,' said the captain, in an apologetic undertone, 'since
'tis her brother, and she's all alone, 'tis only nater to wait a
minute, now he's in sight. Suppose, now, you were a young woman, as
might be, and had a brother, like this one, and you stood of an
evening upon this here wild lonely shore, like her, why you'd want
us to wait, too, wouldn't you, sir? I think you would.'

The person so hastily approaching had been lost to view during this
remark by reason of a hollow in the ground, and the projecting cliff
immediately at hand covered the path in its rise. His footsteps
were now heard striking sharply upon the flinty road at a distance
of about twenty or thirty yards, but still behind the escarpment.
To save time, Cytherea prepared to ascend the plank.

'Let me give you my hand, miss,' said Captain Jacobs.

'No--please don't touch me,' said she, ascending cautiously by
sliding one foot forward two or three inches, bringing up the other
behind it, and so on alternately--her lips compressed by
concentration on the feat, her eyes glued to the plank, her hand to
the rope, and her immediate thought to the fact of the distressing
narrowness of her footing. Steps now shook the lower end of the
board, and in an instant were up to her heels with a bound.

'O, Owen, I am so glad you are come!' she said without turning.
'Don't, don't shake the plank or touch me, whatever you do. . . .
There, I am up. Where have you been so long?' she continued, in a
lower tone, turning round to him as she reached the top.

Raising her eyes from her feet, which, standing on the firm deck,
demanded her attention no longer, she acquired perceptions of the
new-comer in the following order: unknown trousers; unknown
waistcoat; unknown face. The man was not her brother, but a total
stranger.

Off went the plank; the paddles started, stopped, backed, pattered
in confusion, then revolved decisively, and the boat passed out into
deep water.

One or two persons had said, 'How d'ye do, Mr. Springrove?' and
looked at Cytherea, to see how she bore her disappointment. Her
ears had but just caught the name of the head draughtsman, when she
saw him advancing directly to address her.

'Miss Graye, I believe?' he said, lifting his hat.

'Yes,' said Cytherea, colouring, and trying not to look guilty of a
surreptitious knowledge of him.

'I am Mr. Springrove. I passed Corvsgate Castle about an hour ago,
and soon afterwards met your brother going that way. He had been
deceived in the distance, and was about to turn without seeing the
ruin, on account of a lameness that had come on in his leg or foot.
I proposed that he should go on, since he had got so near; and
afterwards, instead of walking back to the boat, get across to
Anglebury Station--a shorter walk for him--where he could catch the
late train, and go directly home. I could let you know what he had
done, and allay any uneasiness.'

'Is the lameness serious, do you know?'

'O no; simply from over-walking himself. Still, it was just as well
to ride home.'

Relieved from her apprehensions on Owen's score, she was able
slightly to examine the appearance of her informant--Edward
Springrove--who now removed his hat for a while, to cool himself.
He was rather above her brother's height. Although the upper part
of his face and head was handsomely formed, and bounded by lines of
sufficiently masculine regularity, his brows were somewhat too
softly arched, and finely pencilled for one of his sex; without
prejudice, however, to the belief which the sum total of his
features inspired--that though they did not prove that the man who
thought inside them would do much in the world, men who had done
most of all had had no better ones. Across his forehead, otherwise
perfectly smooth, ran one thin line, the healthy freshness of his
remaining features expressing that it had come there prematurely.

Though some years short of the age at which the clear spirit bids
good-bye to the last infirmity of noble mind, and takes to
house-hunting and investments, he had reached the period in a young
man's life when episodic periods, with a hopeful birth and a
disappointing death, have begun to accumulate, and to bear a fruit
of generalities; his glance sometimes seeming to state, 'I have
already thought out the issue of such conditions as these we are
experiencing.' At other times he wore an abstracted look: 'I seem
to have lived through this moment before.'

He was carelessly dressed in dark grey, wearing a rolled-up black
kerchief as a neck-cloth; the knot of which was disarranged, and
stood obliquely--a deposit of white dust having lodged in the
creases.

'I am sorry for your disappointment,' he continued, glancing into
her face. Their eyes having met, became, as it were, mutually
locked together, and the single instant only which good breeding
allows as the length of such a look, became trebled: a clear
penetrating ray of intelligence had shot from each into each, giving
birth to one of those unaccountable sensations which carry home to
the heart before the hand has been touched or the merest compliment
passed, by something stronger than mathematical proof, the
conviction, 'A tie has begun to unite us.'

Both faces also unconsciously stated that their owners had been much
in each other's thoughts of late. Owen had talked to the young
architect of his sister as freely as to Cytherea of the young
architect.

A conversation began, which was none the less interesting to the
parties engaged because it consisted only of the most trivial and
commonplace remarks. Then the band of harps and violins struck up a
lively melody, and the deck was cleared for dancing; the sun dipping
beneath the horizon during the proceeding, and the moon showing
herself at their stern. The sea was so calm, that the soft hiss
produced by the bursting of the innumerable bubbles of foam behind
the paddles could be distinctly heard. The passengers who did not
dance, including Cytherea and Springrove, lapsed into silence,
leaning against the paddle-boxes, or standing aloof--noticing the
trembling of the deck to the steps of the dance--watching the waves
from the paddles as they slid thinly and easily under each other's
edges.

Night had quite closed in by the time they reached Budmouth harbour,
sparkling with its white, red, and green lights in opposition to the
shimmering path of the moon's reflection on the other side, which
reached away to the horizon till the flecked ripples reduced
themselves to sparkles as fine as gold dust.

'I will walk to the station and find out the exact time the train
arrives,' said Springrove, rather eagerly, when they had landed.

She thanked him much.

'Perhaps we might walk together,' he suggested hesitatingly. She
looked as if she did not quite know, and he settled the question by
showing the way.

They found, on arriving there, that on the first day of that month
the particular train selected for Graye's return had ceased to stop
at Anglebury station.

'I am very sorry I misled him,' said Springrove.

'O, I am not alarmed at all,' replied Cytherea.

'Well, it's sure to be all right--he will sleep there, and come by
the first in the morning. But what will you do, alone?'

'I am quite easy on that point; the landlady is very friendly. I
must go indoors now. Good-night, Mr. Springrove.'

'Let me go round to your door with you?' he pleaded.

'No, thank you; we live close by.'

He looked at her as a waiter looks at the change he brings back.
But she was inexorable.

'Don't--forget me,' he murmured. She did not answer.

'Let me see you sometimes,' he said.

'Perhaps you never will again--I am going away,' she replied in
lingering tones; and turning into Cross Street, ran indoors and
upstairs.

The sudden withdrawal of what was superfluous at first, is often
felt as an essential loss. It was felt now with regard to the
maiden. More, too, after a meeting so pleasant and so enkindling,
she had seemed to imply that they would never come together again.

The young man softly followed her, stood opposite the house and
watched her come into the upper room with the light. Presently his
gaze was cut short by her approaching the window and pulling down
the blind--Edward dwelling upon her vanishing figure with a hopeless
sense of loss akin to that which Adam is said by logicians to have
felt when he first saw the sun set, and thought, in his
inexperience, that it would return no more.

He waited till her shadow had twice crossed the window, when,
finding the charming outline was not to be expected again, he left
the street, crossed the harbour-bridge, and entered his own solitary
chamber on the other side, vaguely thinking as he went (for
undefined reasons),

   'One hope is too like despair
   For prudence to smother.'



III. THE EVENTS OF EIGHT DAYS

1. FROM THE TWENTY-SECOND TO THE TWENTY-SEVENTH OF JULY

But things are not what they seem. A responsive love for Edward
Springrove had made its appearance in Cytherea's bosom with all the
fascinating attributes of a first experience, not succeeding to or
displacing other emotions, as in older hearts, but taking up
entirely new ground; as when gazing just after sunset at the pale
blue sky we see a star come into existence where nothing was before.

His parting words, 'Don't forget me,' she repeated to herself a
hundred times, and though she thought their import was probably
commonplace, she could not help toying with them,--looking at them
from all points, and investing them with meanings of love and
faithfulness,--ostensibly entertaining such meanings only as fables
wherewith to pass the time, yet in her heart admitting, for detached
instants, a possibility of their deeper truth. And thus, for hours
after he had left her, her reason flirted with her fancy as a kitten
will sport with a dove, pleasantly and smoothly through easy
attitudes, but disclosing its cruel and unyielding nature at crises.

To turn now to the more material media through which this story
moves, it so happened that the very next morning brought round a
circumstance which, slight in itself, took up a relevant and
important position between the past and the future of the persons
herein concerned.

At breakfast time, just as Cytherea had again seen the postman pass
without bringing her an answer to the advertisement, as she had
fully expected he would do, Owen entered the room.

'Well,' he said, kissing her, 'you have not been alarmed, of course.
Springrove told you what I had done, and you found there was no
train?'

'Yes, it was all clear. But what is the lameness owing to?'

'I don't know--nothing. It has quite gone off now . . . Cytherea,
I hope you like Springrove. Springrove's a nice fellow, you know.'

'Yes. I think he is, except that--'

'It happened just to the purpose that I should meet him there,
didn't it? And when I reached the station and learnt that I could
not get on by train my foot seemed better. I started off to walk
home, and went about five miles along a path beside the railway. It
then struck me that I might not be fit for anything to-day if I
walked and aggravated the bothering foot, so I looked for a place to
sleep at. There was no available village or inn, and I eventually
got the keeper of a gate-house, where a lane crossed the line, to
take me in.'

They proceeded with their breakfast. Owen yawned.

'You didn't get much sleep at the gate-house last night, I'm afraid,
Owen,' said his sister.

'To tell the truth, I didn't. I was in such very close and narrow
quarters. Those gate-houses are such small places, and the man had
only his own bed to offer me. Ah, by-the-bye, Cythie, I have such
an extraordinary thing to tell you in connection with this man!--by
Jove, I had nearly forgotten it! But I'll go straight on. As I was
saying, he had only his own bed to offer me, but I could not afford
to be fastidious, and as he had a hearty manner, though a very queer
one, I agreed to accept it, and he made a rough pallet for himself
on the floor close beside me. Well, I could not sleep for my life,
and I wished I had not stayed there, though I was so tired. For one
thing, there were the luggage trains rattling by at my elbow the
early part of the night. But worse than this, he talked continually
in his sleep, and occasionally struck out with his limbs at
something or another, knocking against the post of the bedstead and
making it tremble. My condition was altogether so unsatisfactory
that at last I awoke him, and asked him what he had been dreaming
about for the previous hour, for I could get no sleep at all. He
begged my pardon for disturbing me, but a name I had casually let
fall that evening had led him to think of another stranger he had
once had visit him, who had also accidentally mentioned the same
name, and some very strange incidents connected with that meeting.
The affair had occurred years and years ago; but what I had said had
made him think and dream about it as if it were but yesterday. What
was the word? I said. "Cytherea," he said. What was the story? I
asked then. He then told me that when he was a young man in London
he borrowed a few pounds to add to a few he had saved up, and opened
a little inn at Hammersmith. One evening, after the inn had been
open about a couple of months, every idler in the neighbourhood ran
off to Westminster. The Houses of Parliament were on fire.

'Not a soul remained in his parlour besides himself, and he began
picking up the pipes and glasses his customers had hastily
relinquished. At length a young lady about seventeen or eighteen
came in. She asked if a woman was there waiting for herself--Miss
Jane Taylor. He said no; asked the young lady if she would wait,
and showed her into the small inner room. There was a glass-pane in
the partition dividing this room from the bar to enable the landlord
to see if his visitors, who sat there, wanted anything. A curious
awkwardness and melancholy about the behaviour of the girl who
called, caused my informant to look frequently at her through the
partition. She seemed weary of her life, and sat with her face
buried in her hands, evidently quite out of her element in such a
house. Then a woman much older came in and greeted Miss Taylor by
name. The man distinctly heard the following words pass between
them:--

'"Why have you not brought him?"

'"He is ill; he is not likely to live through the night."

'At this announcement from the elderly woman, the young lady fell to
the floor in a swoon, apparently overcome by the news. The landlord
ran in and lifted her up. Well, do what they would they could not
for a long time bring her back to consciousness, and began to be
much alarmed. "Who is she?" the innkeeper said to the other woman.
"I know her," the other said, with deep meaning in her tone. The
elderly and young woman seemed allied, and yet strangers.

'She now showed signs of life, and it struck him (he was plainly of
an inquisitive turn), that in her half-bewildered state he might get
some information from her. He stooped over her, put his mouth to
her ear, and said sharply, "What's your name?" "To catch a woman
napping is difficult, even when she's half dead; but I did it," says
the gatekeeper. When he asked her her name, she said immediately--

'"Cytherea"--and stopped suddenly.'

'My own name!' said Cytherea.

'Yes--your name. Well, the gateman thought at the time it might be
equally with Jane a name she had invented for the occasion, that
they might not trace her; but I think it was truth unconsciously
uttered, for she added directly afterwards: "O, what have I said!"
and was quite overcome again--this time with fright. Her vexation
that the woman now doubted the genuineness of her other name was
very much greater than that the innkeeper did, and it is evident
that to blind the woman was her main object. He also learnt from
words the elderly woman casually dropped, that meetings of the same
kind had been held before, and that the falseness of the soi-disant
Miss Jane Taylor's name had never been suspected by this dependent
or confederate till then.

'She recovered, rested there for an hour, and first sending off her
companion peremptorily (which was another odd thing), she left the
house, offering the landlord all the money she had to say nothing
about the circumstance. He has never seen her since, according to
his own account. I said to him again and again, "Did you find any
more particulars afterwards?" "Not a syllable," he said. O, he
should never hear any more of that! too many years had passed since
it happened. "At any rate, you found out her surname?" I said.
"Well, well, that's my secret," he went on. "Perhaps I should never
have been in this part of the world if it hadn't been for that. I
failed as a publican, you know." I imagine the situation of gateman
was given him and his debts paid off as a bribe to silence; but I
can't say. "Ah, yes!" he said, with a long breath. "I have never
heard that name mentioned since that time till to-night, and then
there instantly rose to my eyes the vision of that young lady lying
in a fainting fit." He then stopped talking and fell asleep.
Telling the story must have relieved him as it did the Ancient
Mariner, for he did not move a muscle or make another sound for the
remainder of the night. Now isn't that an odd story?'

'It is indeed,' Cytherea murmured. 'Very, very strange.'

'Why should she have said your most uncommon name?' continued Owen.
'The man was evidently truthful, for there was not motive sufficient
for his invention of such a tale, and he could not have done it
either.'

Cytherea looked long at her brother. 'Don't you recognize anything
else in connection with the story?' she said.

'What?' he asked.

'Do you remember what poor papa once let drop--that Cytherea was the
name of his first sweetheart in Bloomsbury, who so mysteriously
renounced him? A sort of intuition tells me that this was the same
woman.'

'O no--not likely,' said her brother sceptically.

'How not likely, Owen? There's not another woman of the name in
England. In what year used papa to say the event took place?'

'Eighteen hundred and thirty-five.'

'And when were the Houses of Parliament burnt?--stop, I can tell
you.' She searched their little stock of books for a list of dates,
and found one in an old school history.

'The Houses of Parliament were burnt down in the evening of the
sixteenth of October, eighteen hundred and thirty-four.'

'Nearly a year and a quarter before she met father,' remarked Owen.

They were silent. 'If papa had been alive, what a wonderful
absorbing interest this story would have had for him,' said Cytherea
by-and-by. 'And how strangely knowledge comes to us. We might have
searched for a clue to her secret half the world over, and never
found one. If we had really had any motive for trying to discover
more of the sad history than papa told us, we should have gone to
Bloomsbury; but not caring to do so, we go two hundred miles in the
opposite direction, and there find information waiting to be told
us. What could have been the secret, Owen?'

'Heaven knows. But our having heard a little more of her in this
way (if she is the same woman) is a mere coincidence after all--a
family story to tell our friends if we ever have any. But we shall
never know any more of the episode now--trust our fates for that.'

Cytherea sat silently thinking.

'There was no answer this morning to your advertisement, Cytherea?'
he continued.

'None.'

'I could see that by your looks when I came in.'

'Fancy not getting a single one,' she said sadly. 'Surely there
must be people somewhere who want governesses?'

'Yes; but those who want them, and can afford to have them, get them
mostly by friends' recommendations; whilst those who want them, and
can't afford to have them, make use of their poor relations.'

'What shall I do?'

'Never mind it. Go on living with me. Don't let the difficulty
trouble your mind so; you think about it all day. I can keep you,
Cythie, in a plain way of living. Twenty-five shillings a week do
not amount to much truly; but then many mechanics have no more, and
we live quite as sparingly as journeymen mechanics. . . It is a
meagre narrow life we are drifting into,' he added gloomily, 'but it
is a degree more tolerable than the worrying sensation of all the
world being ashamed of you, which we experienced at Hocbridge.'

'I couldn't go back there again,' she said.

'Nor I. O, I don't regret our course for a moment. We did quite
right in dropping out of the world.' The sneering tones of the
remark were almost too laboured to be real. 'Besides,' he
continued, 'something better for me is sure to turn up soon. I wish
my engagement here was a permanent one instead of for only two
months. It may, certainly, be for a longer time, but all is
uncertain.'

'I wish I could get something to do; and I must too,' she said
firmly. 'Suppose, as is very probable, you are not wanted after the
beginning of October--the time Mr. Gradfield mentioned--what should
we do if I were dependent on you only throughout the winter?'

They pondered on numerous schemes by which a young lady might be
supposed to earn a decent livelihood--more or less convenient and
feasible in imagination, but relinquished them all until advertising
had been once more tried, this time taking lower ground. Cytherea
was vexed at her temerity in having represented to the world that so
inexperienced a being as herself was a qualified governess; and had
a fancy that this presumption of hers might be one reason why no
ladies applied. The new and humbler attempt appeared in the
following form:--


  'NURSERY GOVERNESS OR USEFUL COMPANION. A young person wishes to
  hear of a situation in either of the above capacities. Salary very
  moderate. She is a good needle-woman--Address G., 3 Cross Street,
  Budmouth.'


In the evening they went to post the letter, and then walked up and
down the Parade for a while. Soon they met Springrove, said a few
words to him, and passed on. Owen noticed that his sister's face
had become crimson. Rather oddly they met Springrove again in a few
minutes. This time the three walked a little way together, Edward
ostensibly talking to Owen, though with a single thought to the
reception of his words by the maiden at the farther side, upon whom
his gaze was mostly resting, and who was attentively listening
--looking fixedly upon the pavement the while. It has been said
that men love with their eyes; women with their ears.

As Owen and himself were little more than acquaintances as yet, and
as Springrove was wanting in the assurance of many men of his age,
it now became necessary to wish his friends good-evening, or to find
a reason for continuing near Cytherea by saying some nice new thing.
He thought of a new thing; he proposed a pull across the bay. This
was assented to. They went to the pier; stepped into one of the
gaily painted boats moored alongside and sheered off. Cytherea sat
in the stern steering.

They rowed that evening; the next came, and with it the necessity of
rowing again. Then the next, and the next, Cytherea always sitting
in the stern with the tiller ropes in her hand. The curves of her
figure welded with those of the fragile boat in perfect continuation,
as she girlishly yielded herself to its heaving and sinking, seeming
to form with it an organic whole.

Then Owen was inclined to test his skill in paddling a canoe.
Edward did not like canoes, and the issue was, that, having seen
Owen on board, Springrove proposed to pull off after him with a pair
of sculls; but not considering himself sufficiently accomplished to
do finished rowing before a parade full of promenaders when there
was a little swell on, and with the rudder unshipped in addition, he
begged that Cytherea might come with him and steer as before. She
stepped in, and they floated along in the wake of her brother. Thus
passed the fifth evening on the water.

But the sympathetic pair were thrown into still closer companionship,
and much more exclusive connection.

2. JULY THE TWENTY-NINTH

It was a sad time for Cytherea--the last day of Springrove's
management at Gradfield's, and the last evening before his return
from Budmouth to his father's house, previous to his departure for
London.

Graye had been requested by the architect to survey a plot of land
nearly twenty miles off, which, with the journey to and fro, would
occupy him the whole day, and prevent his returning till late in the
evening. Cytherea made a companion of her landlady to the extent of
sharing meals and sitting with her during the morning of her
brother's absence. Mid-day found her restless and miserable under
this arrangement. All the afternoon she sat alone, looking out of
the window for she scarcely knew whom, and hoping she scarcely knew
what. Half-past five o'clock came--the end of Springrove's official
day. Two minutes later Springrove walked by.

She endured her solitude for another half-hour, and then could
endure no longer. She had hoped--while affecting to fear--that
Edward would have found some reason or other for calling, but it
seemed that he had not. Hastily dressing herself she went out, when
the farce of an accidental meeting was repeated. Edward came upon
her in the street at the first turning, and, like the Great Duke
Ferdinand in 'The Statue and the Bust'--

   'He looked at her as a lover can;
   She looked at him as one who awakes--
   The past was a sleep, and her life began.'

'Shall we have a boat?' he said impulsively.

How blissful it all is at first. Perhaps, indeed, the only bliss in
the course of love which can truly be called Eden-like is that which
prevails immediately after doubt has ended and before reflection has
set in--at the dawn of the emotion, when it is not recognized by
name, and before the consideration of what this love is, has given
birth to the consideration of what difficulties it tends to create;
when on the man's part, the mistress appears to the mind's eye in
picturesque, hazy, and fresh morning lights, and soft morning
shadows; when, as yet, she is known only as the wearer of one dress,
which shares her own personality; as the stander in one special
position, the giver of one bright particular glance, and the speaker
of one tender sentence; when, on her part, she is timidly careful
over what she says and does, lest she should be misconstrued or
under-rated to the breadth of a shadow of a hair.

'Shall we have a boat?' he said again, more softly, seeing that to
his first question she had not answered, but looked uncertainly at
the ground, then almost, but not quite, in his face, blushed a
series of minute blushes, left off in the midst of them, and showed
the usual signs of perplexity in a matter of the emotions.

Owen had always been with her before, but there was now a force of
habit in the proceeding, and with Arcadian innocence she assumed
that a row on the water was, under any circumstances, a natural
thing. Without another word being spoken on either side, they went
down the steps. He carefully handed her in, took his seat, slid
noiselessly off the sand, and away from the shore.

They thus sat facing each other in the graceful yellow cockle-shell,
and his eyes frequently found a resting-place in the depths of hers.
The boat was so small that at each return of the sculls, when his
hands came forward to begin the pull, they approached so near to her
that her vivid imagination began to thrill her with a fancy that he
was going to clasp his arms round her. The sensation grew so strong
that she could not run the risk of again meeting his eyes at those
critical moments, and turned aside to inspect the distant horizon;
then she grew weary of looking sideways, and was driven to return to
her natural position again. At this instant he again leant forward
to begin, and met her glance by an ardent fixed gaze. An
involuntary impulse of girlish embarrassment caused her to give a
vehement pull at the tiller-rope, which brought the boat's head
round till they stood directly for shore.

His eyes, which had dwelt upon her form during the whole time of her
look askance, now left her; he perceived the direction in which they
were going.

'Why, you have completely turned the boat, Miss Graye?' he said,
looking over his shoulder. 'Look at our track on the water--a great
semicircle, preceded by a series of zigzags as far as we can see.'

She looked attentively. 'Is it my fault or yours?' she inquired.
'Mine, I suppose?'

'I can't help saying that it is yours.'

She dropped the ropes decisively, feeling the slightest twinge of
vexation at the answer.

'Why do you let go?'

'I do it so badly.'

'O no; you turned about for shore in a masterly way. Do you wish to
return?'

'Yes, if you please.'

'Of course, then, I will at once.'

'I fear what the people will think of us--going in such absurd
directions, and all through my wretched steering.'

'Never mind what the people think.' A pause. 'You surely are not
so weak as to mind what the people think on such a matter as that?'

Those words might almost be called too firm and hard to be given by
him to her; but never mind. For almost the first time in her life
she felt the charming sensation, although on such an insignificant
subject, of being compelled into an opinion by a man she loved.
Owen, though less yielding physically, and more practical, would not
have had the intellectual independence to answer a woman thus. She
replied quietly and honestly--as honestly as when she had stated the
contrary fact a minute earlier--

'I don't mind.'

'I'll unship the tiller that you may have nothing to do going back
but to hold your parasol,' he continued, and arose to perform the
operation, necessarily leaning closely against her, to guard against
the risk of capsizing the boat as he reached his hands astern. His
warm breath touched and crept round her face like a caress; but he
was apparently only concerned with his task. She looked guilty of
something when he seated himself. He read in her face what that
something was--she had experienced a pleasure from his touch. But
he flung a practical glance over his shoulder, seized the oars, and
they sped in a straight line towards the shore.

Cytherea saw that he noted in her face what had passed in her heart,
and that noting it, he continued as decided as before. She was
inwardly distressed. She had not meant him to translate her words
about returning home so literally at the first; she had not intended
him to learn her secret; but more than all she was not able to
endure the perception of his learning it and continuing unmoved.

There was nothing but misery to come now. They would step ashore;
he would say good-night, go to London to-morrow, and the miserable
She would lose him for ever. She did not quite suppose what was the
fact, that a parallel thought was simultaneously passing through his
mind.

They were now within ten yards, now within five; he was only now
waiting for a 'smooth' to bring the boat in. Sweet, sweet Love must
not be slain thus, was the fair maid's reasoning. She was equal to
the occasion--ladies are--and delivered the god--

'Do you want very much to land, Mr. Springrove?' she said, letting
her young violet eyes pine at him a very, very little.

'I? Not at all,' said he, looking an astonishment at her inquiry
which a slight twinkle of his eye half belied. 'But you do?'

'I think that now we have come out, and it is such a pleasant
evening,' she said gently and sweetly, 'I should like a little
longer row if you don't mind? I'll try to steer better than before
if it makes it easier for you. I'll try very hard.'

It was the turn of his face to tell a tale now. He looked, 'We
understand each other--ah, we do, darling!' turned the boat, and
pulled back into the Bay once more.

'Now steer wherever you will,' he said, in a low voice. 'Never mind
the directness of the course--wherever you will.'

'Shall it be Creston Shore?' she said, pointing to a stretch of
beach northward from Budmouth Esplanade.

'Creston Shore certainly,' he responded, grasping the sculls. She
took the strings daintily, and they wound away to the left.

For a long time nothing was audible in the boat but the regular dip
of the oars, and their movement in the rowlocks. Springrove at
length spoke.

'I must go away to-morrow,' he said tentatively.

'Yes,' she replied faintly.

'To endeavour to advance a little in my profession in London.'

'Yes,' she said again, with the same preoccupied softness.

'But I shan't advance.'

'Why not? Architecture is a bewitching profession. They say that
an architect's work is another man's play.'

'Yes. But worldly advantage from an art doesn't depend upon
mastering it. I used to think it did; but it doesn't. Those who
get rich need have no skill at all as artists.'

'What need they have?'

'A certain kind of energy which men with any fondness for art
possess very seldom indeed--an earnestness in making acquaintances,
and a love for using them. They give their whole attention to the
art of dining out, after mastering a few rudimentary facts to serve
up in conversation. Now after saying that, do I seem a man likely
to make a name?'

'You seem a man likely to make a mistake.'

'What's that?'

'To give too much room to the latent feeling which is rather common
in these days among the unappreciated, that because some remarkably
successful men are fools, all remarkably unsuccessful men are
geniuses.'

'Pretty subtle for a young lady,' he said slowly. 'From that remark
I should fancy you had bought experience.'

She passed over the idea. 'Do try to succeed,' she said, with
wistful thoughtfulness, leaving her eyes on him.

Springrove flushed a little at the earnestness of her words, and
mused. 'Then, like Cato the Censor, I shall do what I despise, to
be in the fashion,' he said at last. . . 'Well, when I found all
this out that I was speaking of, what ever do you think I did? From
having already loved verse passionately, I went on to read it
continually; then I went rhyming myself. If anything on earth ruins
a man for useful occupation, and for content with reasonable success
in a profession or trade, it is the habit of writing verses on
emotional subjects, which had much better be left to die from want
of nourishment.'

'Do you write poems now?' she said.

'None. Poetical days are getting past with me, according to the
usual rule. Writing rhymes is a stage people of my sort pass
through, as they pass through the stage of shaving for a beard, or
thinking they are ill-used, or saying there's nothing in the world
worth living for.'

'Then the difference between a common man and a recognized poet is,
that one has been deluded, and cured of his delusion, and the other
continues deluded all his days.'

'Well, there's just enough truth in what you say, to make the remark
unbearable. However, it doesn't matter to me now that I "meditate
the thankless Muse" no longer, but. . .' He paused, as if
endeavouring to think what better thing he did.

Cytherea's mind ran on to the succeeding lines of the poem, and
their startling harmony with the present situation suggested the
fancy that he was 'sporting' with her, and brought an awkward
contemplativeness to her face.

Springrove guessed her thoughts, and in answer to them simply said
'Yes.' Then they were silent again.

'If I had known an Amaryllis was coming here, I should not have made
arrangements for leaving,' he resumed.

Such levity, superimposed on the notion of 'sport', was intolerable
to Cytherea; for a woman seems never to see any but the serious side
of her attachment, though the most devoted lover has all the time a
vague and dim perception that he is losing his old dignity and
frittering away his time.

'But will you not try again to get on in your profession? Try once
more; do try once more,' she murmured. 'I am going to try again. I
have advertised for something to do.'

'Of course I will,' he said, with an eager gesture and smile. 'But
we must remember that the fame of Christopher Wren himself depended
upon the accident of a fire in Pudding Lane. My successes seem to
come very slowly. I often think, that before I am ready to live, it
will be time for me to die. However, I am trying--not for fame now,
but for an easy life of reasonable comfort.'

It is a melancholy truth for the middle classes, that in proportion
as they develop, by the study of poetry and art, their capacity for
conjugal love of the highest and purest kind, they limit the
possibility of their being able to exercise it--the very act putting
out of their power the attainment of means sufficient for marriage.
The man who works up a good income has had no time to learn love to
its solemn extreme; the man who has learnt that has had no time to
get rich.

'And if you should fail--utterly fail to get that reasonable
wealth,' she said earnestly, 'don't be perturbed. The truly great
stand upon no middle ledge; they are either famous or unknown.'

'Unknown,' he said, 'if their ideas have been allowed to flow with a
sympathetic breadth. Famous only if they have been convergent and
exclusive.'

'Yes; and I am afraid from that, that my remark was but
discouragement, wearing the dress of comfort. Perhaps I was not
quite right in--'

'It depends entirely upon what is meant by being truly great. But
the long and the short of the matter is, that men must stick to a
thing if they want to succeed in it--not giving way to over-much
admiration for the flowers they see growing in other people's
borders; which I am afraid has been my case.' He looked into the
far distance and paused.

Adherence to a course with persistence sufficient to ensure success
is possible to widely appreciative minds only when there is also
found in them a power--commonplace in its nature, but rare in such
combination--the power of assuming to conviction that in the
outlying paths which appear so much more brilliant than their own,
there are bitternesses equally great--unperceived simply on account
of their remoteness.



They were opposite Ringsworth Shore. The cliffs here were formed of
strata completely contrasting with those of the further side of the
Bay, whilst in and beneath the water hard boulders had taken the
place of sand and shingle, between which, however, the sea glided
noiselessly, without breaking the crest of a single wave, so
strikingly calm was the air. The breeze had entirely died away,
leaving the water of that rare glassy smoothness which is unmarked
even by the small dimples of the least aerial movement. Purples and
blues of divers shades were reflected from this mirror accordingly
as each undulation sloped east or west. They could see the rocky
bottom some twenty feet beneath them, luxuriant with weeds of
various growths, and dotted with pulpy creatures reflecting a
silvery and spangled radiance upwards to their eyes.

At length she looked at him to learn the effect of her words of
encouragement. He had let the oars drift alongside, and the boat
had come to a standstill. Everything on earth seemed taking a
contemplative rest, as if waiting to hear the avowal of something
from his lips. At that instant he appeared to break a resolution
hitherto zealously kept. Leaving his seat amidships he came and
gently edged himself down beside her upon the narrow seat at the
stern.

She breathed more quickly and warmly: he took her right hand in his
own right: it was not withdrawn. He put his left hand behind her
neck till it came round upon her left cheek: it was not thrust
away. Lightly pressing her, he brought her face and mouth towards
his own; when, at this the very brink, some unaccountable thought or
spell within him suddenly made him halt--even now, and as it seemed
as much to himself as to her, he timidly whispered 'May I?'

Her endeavour was to say No, so denuded of its flesh and sinews that
its nature would hardly be recognized, or in other words a No from
so near the affirmative frontier as to be affected with the Yes
accent. It was thus a whispered No, drawn out to nearly a quarter
of a minute's length, the O making itself audible as a sound like
the spring coo of a pigeon on unusually friendly terms with its
mate. Though conscious of her success in producing the kind of word
she had wished to produce, she at the same time trembled in suspense
as to how it would be taken. But the time available for doubt was
so short as to admit of scarcely more than half a pulsation:
pressing closer he kissed her. Then he kissed her again with a
longer kiss.

It was the supremely happy moment of their experience. The 'bloom'
and the 'purple light' were strong on the lineaments of both. Their
hearts could hardly believe the evidence of their lips.

'I love you, and you love me, Cytherea!' he whispered.

She did not deny it; and all seemed well. The gentle sounds around
them from the hills, the plains, the distant town, the adjacent
shore, the water heaving at their side, the kiss, and the long kiss,
were all 'many a voice of one delight,' and in unison with each
other.

But his mind flew back to the same unpleasant thought which had been
connected with the resolution he had broken a minute or two earlier.
'I could be a slave at my profession to win you, Cytherea; I would
work at the meanest, honest trade to be near you--much less claim
you as mine; I would--anything. But I have not told you all; it is
not this; you don't know what there is yet to tell. Could you
forgive as you can love?' She was alarmed to see that he had become
pale with the question.

'No--do not speak,' he said. 'I have kept something from you, which
has now become the cause of a great uneasiness. I had no right--to
love you; but I did it. Something forbade--'

'What?' she exclaimed.

'Something forbade me--till the kiss--yes, till the kiss came; and
now nothing shall forbid it! We'll hope in spite of all. . . I
must, however, speak of this love of ours to your brother. Dearest,
you had better go indoors whilst I meet him at the station, and
explain everything.'

Cytherea's short-lived bliss was dead and gone. O, if she had known
of this sequel would she have allowed him to break down the barrier
of mere acquaintanceship--never, never!

'Will you not explain to me?' she faintly urged. Doubt--indefinite,
carking doubt had taken possession of her.

'Not now. You alarm yourself unnecessarily,' he said tenderly. 'My
only reason for keeping silence is that with my present knowledge I
may tell an untrue story. It may be that there is nothing to tell.
I am to blame for haste in alluding to any such thing. Forgive me,
sweet--forgive me.' Her heart was ready to burst, and she could not
answer him. He returned to his place and took to the oars.

They again made for the distant Esplanade, now, with its line of
houses, lying like a dark grey band against the light western sky.
The sun had set, and a star or two began to peep out. They drew
nearer their destination, Edward as he pulled tracing listlessly
with his eyes the red stripes upon her scarf, which grew to appear
as black ones in the increasing dusk of evening. She surveyed the
long line of lamps on the sea-wall of the town, now looking small
and yellow, and seeming to send long tap-roots of fire quivering
down deep into the sea. By-and-by they reached the landing-steps.
He took her hand as before, and found it as cold as the water about
them. It was not relinquished till he reached her door. His
assurance had not removed the constraint of her manner: he saw that
she blamed him mutely and with her eyes, like a captured sparrow.
Left alone, he went and seated himself in a chair on the Esplanade.

Neither could she go indoors to her solitary room, feeling as she
did in such a state of desperate heaviness. When Springrove was out
of sight she turned back, and arrived at the corner just in time to
see him sit down. Then she glided pensively along the pavement
behind him, forgetting herself to marble like Melancholy herself as
she mused in his neighbourhood unseen. She heard, without heeding,
the notes of pianos and singing voices from the fashionable houses
at her back, from the open windows of which the lamp-light streamed
to join that of the orange-hued full moon, newly risen over the Bay
in front. Then Edward began to pace up and down, and Cytherea,
fearing that he would notice her, hastened homeward, flinging him a
last look as she passed out of sight. No promise from him to write:
no request that she herself would do so--nothing but an indefinite
expression of hope in the face of some fear unknown to her. Alas,
alas!

When Owen returned he found she was not in the small sitting-room,
and creeping upstairs into her bedroom with a light, he discovered
her there lying asleep upon the coverlet of the bed, still with her
hat and jacket on. She had flung herself down on entering, and
succumbed to the unwonted oppressiveness that ever attends
full-blown love. The wet traces of tears were yet visible upon her
long drooping lashes.

     'Love is a sowre delight, and sugred griefe,
     A living death, and ever-dying life.'

'Cytherea,' he whispered, kissing her. She awoke with a start, and
vented an exclamation before recovering her judgment. 'He's gone!'
she said.

'He has told me all,' said Graye soothingly. 'He is going off early
to-morrow morning. 'Twas a shame of him to win you away from me,
and cruel of you to keep the growth of this attachment a secret.'

'We couldn't help it,' she said, and then jumping up--'Owen, has he
told you _all_?'

'All of your love from beginning to end,' he said simply.

Edward then had not told more--as he ought to have done: yet she
could not convict him. But she would struggle against his fetters.
She tingled to the very soles of her feet at the very possibility
that he might be deluding her.

'Owen,' she continued, with dignity, 'what is he to me? Nothing. I
must dismiss such weakness as this--believe me, I will. Something
far more pressing must drive it away. I have been looking my
position steadily in the face, and I must get a living somehow. I
mean to advertise once more.'

'Advertising is no use.'

'This one will be.' He looked surprised at the sanguine tone of her
answer, till she took a piece of paper from the table and showed it
him. 'See what I am going to do,' she said sadly, almost bitterly.
This was her third effort:--


  'LADY'S-MAID. Inexperienced. Age eighteen.--G., 3 Cross Street,
  Budmouth.'


Owen--Owen the respectable--looked blank astonishment. He repeated
in a nameless, varying tone, the two words--

'Lady's-maid!'

'Yes; lady's-maid. 'Tis an honest profession,' said Cytherea
bravely.

'But _you_, Cytherea?'

'Yes, I--who am I?'

'You will never be a lady's-maid--never, I am quite sure.'

'I shall try to be, at any rate.'

'Such a disgrace--'

'Nonsense! I maintain that it is no disgrace!' she said, rather
warmly. 'You know very well--'

'Well, since you will, you must,' he interrupted. 'Why do you put
"inexperienced?"'

'Because I am.'

'Never mind that--scratch out "inexperienced." We are poor,
Cytherea, aren't we?' he murmured, after a silence, 'and it seems
that the two months will close my engagement here.'

'We can put up with being poor,' she said, 'if they only give us
work to do. . . . Yes, we desire as a blessing what was given us as
a curse, and even that is denied. However, be cheerful, Owen, and
never mind!'

In justice to desponding men, it is as well to remember that the
brighter endurance of women at these epochs--invaluable, sweet,
angelic, as it is--owes more of its origin to a narrower vision that
shuts out many of the leaden-eyed despairs in the van, than to a
hopefulness intense enough to quell them.



IV. THE EVENTS OF ONE DAY

1. AUGUST THE FOURTH. TILL FOUR O'CLOCK

The early part of the next week brought an answer to Cytherea's last
note of hope in the way of advertisement--not from a distance of
hundreds of miles, London, Scotland, Ireland, the Continent--as
Cytherea seemed to think it must, to be in keeping with the means
adopted for obtaining it, but from a place in the neighbourhood of
that in which she was living--a country mansion not twenty miles
off. The reply ran thus:--


                      KNAPWATER HOUSE,
                         August 3, 1864.

'Miss Aldclyffe is in want of a young person as lady's-maid. The
duties of the place are light. Miss Aldclyffe will be in Budmouth
on Thursday, when (should G. still not have heard of a place) she
would like to see her at the Belvedere Hotel, Esplanade, at four
o'clock. No answer need be returned to this note.'


A little earlier than the time named, Cytherea, clothed in a modest
bonnet, and a black silk jacket, turned down to the hotel.
Expectation, the fresh air from the water, the bright, far-extending
outlook, raised the most delicate of pink colours to her cheeks, and
restored to her tread a portion of that elasticity which her past
troubles, and thoughts of Edward, had well-nigh taken away.

She entered the vestibule, and went to the window of the bar.

'Is Miss Aldclyffe here?' she said to a nicely-dressed barmaid in
the foreground, who was talking to a landlady covered with chains,
knobs, and clamps of gold, in the background.

'No, she isn't,' said the barmaid, not very civilly. Cytherea
looked a shade too pretty for a plain dresser.

'Miss Aldclyffe is expected here,' the landlady said to a third
person, out of sight, in the tone of one who had known for several
days the fact newly discovered from Cytherea. 'Get ready her room
--be quick.' From the alacrity with which the order was given and
taken, it seemed to Cytherea that Miss Aldclyffe must be a woman of
considerable importance.

'You are to have an interview with Miss Aldclyffe here?' the
landlady inquired.

'Yes.'

'The young person had better wait,' continued the landlady. With a
money-taker's intuition she had rightly divined that Cytherea would
bring no profit to the house.

Cytherea was shown into a nondescript chamber, on the shady side of
the building, which appeared to be either bedroom or dayroom, as
occasion necessitated, and was one of a suite at the end of the
first-floor corridor. The prevailing colour of the walls, curtains,
carpet, and coverings of furniture, was more or less blue, to which
the cold light coming from the north easterly sky, and falling on a
wide roof of new slates--the only object the small window commanded
--imparted a more striking paleness. But underneath the door,
communicating with the next room of the suite, gleamed an
infinitesimally small, yet very powerful, fraction of contrast--a
very thin line of ruddy light, showing that the sun beamed strongly
into this room adjoining. The line of radiance was the only
cheering thing visible in the place.

People give way to very infantine thoughts and actions when they
wait; the battle-field of life is temporarily fenced off by a hard
and fast line--the interview. Cytherea fixed her eyes idly upon the
streak, and began picturing a wonderful paradise on the other side
as the source of such a beam--reminding her of the well-known good
deed in a naughty world.

Whilst she watched the particles of dust floating before the
brilliant chink she heard a carriage and horses stop opposite the
front of the house. Afterwards came the rustle of a lady's skirts
down the corridor, and into the room communicating with the one
Cytherea occupied.

The golden line vanished in parts like the phosphorescent streak
caused by the striking of a match; there was the fall of a light
footstep on the floor just behind it: then a pause. Then the foot
tapped impatiently, and 'There's no one here!' was spoken
imperiously by a lady's tongue.

'No, madam; in the next room. I am going to fetch her,' said the
attendant.

'That will do--or you needn't go in; I will call her.'

Cytherea had risen, and she advanced to the middle door with the
chink under it as the servant retired. She had just laid her hand
on the knob, when it slipped round within her fingers, and the door
was pulled open from the other side.

2. FOUR O'CLOCK

The direct blaze of the afternoon sun, partly refracted through the
crimson curtains of the window, and heightened by reflections from
the crimson-flock paper which covered the walls, and a carpet on the
floor of the same tint, shone with a burning glow round the form of
a lady standing close to Cytherea's front with the door in her hand.
The stranger appeared to the maiden's eyes--fresh from the blue
gloom, and assisted by an imagination fresh from nature--like a tall
black figure standing in the midst of fire. It was the figure of a
finely-built woman, of spare though not angular proportions.

Cytherea involuntarily shaded her eyes with her hand, retreated a
step or two, and then she could for the first time see Miss
Aldclyffe's face in addition to her outline, lit up by the secondary
and softer light that was reflected from the varnished panels of the
door. She was not a very young woman, but could boast of much
beauty of the majestic autumnal phase.

'O,' said the lady, 'come this way.' Cytherea followed her to the
embrasure of the window.

Both the women showed off themselves to advantage as they walked
forward in the orange light; and each showed too in her face that
she had been struck with her companion's appearance. The warm tint
added to Cytherea's face a voluptuousness which youth and a simple
life had not yet allowed to express itself there ordinarily; whilst
in the elder lady's face it reduced the customary expression, which
might have been called sternness, if not harshness, to grandeur, and
warmed her decaying complexion with much of the youthful richness it
plainly had once possessed.

She appeared now no more than five-and-thirty, though she might
easily have been ten or a dozen years older. She had clear steady
eyes, a Roman nose in its purest form, and also the round prominent
chin with which the Caesars are represented in ancient marbles; a
mouth expressing a capability for and tendency to strong emotion,
habitually controlled by pride. There was a severity about the
lower outlines of the face which gave a masculine cast to this
portion of her countenance. Womanly weakness was nowhere visible
save in one part--the curve of her forehead and brows--there it was
clear and emphatic. She wore a lace shawl over a brown silk dress,
and a net bonnet set with a few blue cornflowers.

'You inserted the advertisement for a situation as lady's-maid
giving the address, G., Cross Street?'

'Yes, madam. Graye.'

'Yes. I have heard your name--Mrs. Morris, my housekeeper,
mentioned you, and pointed out your advertisement.'

This was puzzling intelligence, but there was not time enough to
consider it.

'Where did you live last?' continued Miss Aldclyffe.

'I have never been a servant before. I lived at home.'

'Never been out? I thought too at sight of you that you were too
girlish-looking to have done much. But why did you advertise with
such assurance? It misleads people.'

'I am very sorry: I put "inexperienced" at first, but my brother
said it is absurd to trumpet your own weakness to the world, and
would not let it remain.'

'But your mother knew what was right, I suppose?'

'I have no mother, madam.'

'Your father, then?'

'I have no father.'

'Well,' she said, more softly, 'your sisters, aunts, or cousins.'

'They didn't think anything about it.'

'You didn't ask them, I suppose.'

'No.'

'You should have done so, then. Why didn't you?'

'Because I haven't any of them, either.'

Miss Aldclyffe showed her surprise. 'You deserve forgiveness then
at any rate, child,' she said, in a sort of drily-kind tone.
'However, I am afraid you do not suit me, as I am looking for an
elderly person. You see, I want an experienced maid who knows all
the usual duties of the office.' She was going to add, 'Though I
like your appearance,' but the words seemed offensive to apply to
the ladylike girl before her, and she modified them to, 'though I
like you much.'

'I am sorry I misled you, madam,' said Cytherea.

Miss Aldclyffe stood in a reverie, without replying.

'Good afternoon,' continued Cytherea.

'Good-bye, Miss Graye--I hope you will succeed.'

Cytherea turned away towards the door. The movement chanced to be
one of her masterpieces. It was precise: it had as much beauty as
was compatible with precision, and as little coquettishness as was
compatible with beauty.

And she had in turning looked over her shoulder at the other lady
with a faint accent of reproach in her face. Those who remember
Greuze's 'Head of a Girl,' have an idea of Cytherea's look askance
at the turning. It is not for a man to tell fishers of men how to
set out their fascinations so as to bring about the highest possible
average of takes within the year: but the action that tugs the
hardest of all at an emotional beholder is this sweet method of
turning which steals the bosom away and leaves the eyes behind.

Now Miss Aldclyffe herself was no tyro at wheeling. When Cytherea
had closed the door upon her, she remained for some time in her
motionless attitude, listening to the gradually dying sound of the
maiden's retreating footsteps. She murmured to herself, 'It is
almost worth while to be bored with instructing her in order to have
a creature who could glide round my luxurious indolent body in that
manner, and look at me in that way--I warrant how light her fingers
are upon one's head and neck. . . . What a silly modest young thing
she is, to go away so suddenly as that!' She rang the bell.

'Ask the young lady who has just left me to step back again,' she
said to the attendant. 'Quick! or she will be gone.'

Cytherea was now in the vestibule, thinking that if she had told her
history, Miss Aldclyffe might perhaps have taken her into the
household; yet her history she particularly wished to conceal from a
stranger. When she was recalled she turned back without feeling
much surprise. Something, she knew not what, told her she had not
seen the last of Miss Aldclyffe.

'You have somebody to refer me to, of course,' the lady said, when
Cytherea had re-entered the room.

'Yes: Mr. Thorn, a solicitor at Aldbrickham.'

'And are you a clever needlewoman?'

'I am considered to be.'

'Then I think that at any rate I will write to Mr. Thorn,' said Miss
Aldclyffe, with a little smile. 'It is true, the whole proceeding
is very irregular; but my present maid leaves next Monday, and
neither of the five I have already seen seem to do for me. . . .
Well, I will write to Mr. Thorn, and if his reply is satisfactory,
you shall hear from me. It will be as well to set yourself in
readiness to come on Monday.'

When Cytherea had again been watched out of the room, Miss Aldclyffe
asked for writing materials, that she might at once communicate with
Mr. Thorn. She indecisively played with the pen. 'Suppose Mr.
Thorn's reply to be in any way disheartening--and even if so from
his own imperfect acquaintance with the young creature more than
from circumstantial knowledge--I shall feel obliged to give her up.
Then I shall regret that I did not give her one trial in spite of
other people's prejudices. All her account of herself is reliable
enough--yes, I can see that by her face. I like that face of hers.'

Miss Aldclyffe put down the pen and left the hotel without writing
to Mr. Thorn.



V. THE EVENTS OF ONE DAY

1. AUGUST THE EIGHTH. MORNING AND AFTERNOON

At post-time on that following Monday morning, Cytherea watched so
anxiously for the postman, that as the time which must bring him
narrowed less and less her vivid expectation had only a degree less
tangibility than his presence itself. In another second his form
came into view. He brought two letters for Cytherea.

One from Miss Aldclyffe, simply stating that she wished Cytherea to
come on trial: that she would require her to be at Knapwater House
by Monday evening.

The other was from Edward Springrove. He told her that she was the
bright spot of his life: that her existence was far dearer to him
than his own: that he had never known what it was to love till he
had met her. True, he had felt passing attachments to other faces
from time to time; but they all had been weak inclinations towards
those faces as they then appeared. He loved her past and future, as
well as her present. He pictured her as a child: he loved her. He
pictured her of sage years: he loved her. He pictured her in
trouble; he loved her. Homely friendship entered into his love for
her, without which all love was evanescent.

He would make one depressing statement. Uncontrollable
circumstances (a long history, with which it was impossible to
acquaint her at present) operated to a certain extent as a drag upon
his wishes. He had felt this more strongly at the time of their
parting than he did now--and it was the cause of his abrupt
behaviour, for which he begged her to forgive him. He saw now an
honourable way of freeing himself, and the perception had prompted
him to write. In the meantime might he indulge in the hope of
possessing her on some bright future day, when by hard labour
generated from her own encouraging words, he had placed himself in a
position she would think worthy to be shared with him?

Dear little letter; she huddled it up. So much more important a
love-letter seems to a girl than to a man. Springrove was
unconsciously clever in his letters, and a man with a talent of that
kind may write himself up to a hero in the mind of a young woman who
loves him without knowing much about him. Springrove already stood
a cubit higher in her imagination than he did in his shoes.

During the day she flitted about the room in an ecstasy of pleasure,
packing the things and thinking of an answer which should be worthy
of the tender tone of the question, her love bubbling from her
involuntarily, like prophesyings from a prophet.

In the afternoon Owen went with her to the railway-station, and put
her in the train for Carriford Road, the station nearest to
Knapwater House.

Half-an-hour later she stepped out upon the platform, and found
nobody there to receive her--though a pony-carriage was waiting
outside. In two minutes she saw a melancholy man in cheerful livery
running towards her from a public-house close adjoining, who proved
to be the servant sent to fetch her. There are two ways of getting
rid of sorrows: one by living them down, the other by drowning
them. The coachman drowned his.

He informed her that her luggage would be fetched by a spring-waggon
in about half-an-hour; then helped her into the chaise and drove
off.

Her lover's letter, lying close against her neck, fortified her
against the restless timidity she had previously felt concerning
this new undertaking, and completely furnished her with the
confident ease of mind which is required for the critical
observation of surrounding objects. It was just that stage in the
slow decline of the summer days, when the deep, dark, and vacuous
hot-weather shadows are beginning to be replaced by blue ones that
have a surface and substance to the eye. They trotted along the
turnpike road for a distance of about a mile, which brought them
just outside the village of Carriford, and then turned through large
lodge-gates, on the heavy stone piers of which stood a pair of
bitterns cast in bronze. They then entered the park and wound along
a drive shaded by old and drooping lime-trees, not arranged in the
form of an avenue, but standing irregularly, sometimes leaving the
track completely exposed to the sky, at other times casting a shade
over it, which almost approached gloom--the under surface of the
lowest boughs hanging at a uniform level of six feet above the
grass--the extreme height to which the nibbling mouths of the cattle
could reach.

'Is that the house?' said Cytherea expectantly, catching sight of a
grey gable between the trees, and losing it again.

'No; that's the old manor-house--or rather all that's left of it.
The Aldycliffes used to let it sometimes, but it was oftener empty.
'Tis now divided into three cottages. Respectable people didn't
care to live there.'

'Why didn't they?'

'Well, 'tis so awkward and unhandy. You see so much of it has been
pulled down, and the rooms that are left won't do very well for a
small residence. 'Tis so dismal, too, and like most old houses
stands too low down in the hollow to be healthy.'

'Do they tell any horrid stories about it?'

'No, not a single one.'

'Ah, that's a pity.'

'Yes, that's what I say. 'Tis jest the house for a nice ghastly
hair-on-end story, that would make the parish religious. Perhaps it
will have one some day to make it complete; but there's not a word
of the kind now. There, I wouldn't live there for all that. In
fact, I couldn't. O no, I couldn't.'

'Why couldn't you?'

'The sounds.'

'What are they?'

'One is the waterfall, which stands so close by that you can hear
that there waterfall in every room of the house, night or day, ill
or well. 'Tis enough to drive anybody mad: now hark.'

He stopped the horse. Above the slight common sounds in the air
came the unvarying steady rush of falling water from some spot
unseen on account of the thick foliage of the grove.

'There's something awful in the timing o' that sound, ain't there,
miss?'

'When you say there is, there really seems to be. You said there
were two--what is the other horrid sound?'

'The pumping-engine. That's close by the Old House, and sends water
up the hill and all over the Great House. We shall hear that
directly. . . . There, now hark again.'

From the same direction down the dell they could now hear the
whistling creak of cranks, repeated at intervals of half-a-minute,
with a sousing noise between each: a creak, a souse, then another
creak, and so on continually.

'Now if anybody could make shift to live through the other sounds,
these would finish him off, don't you think so, miss? That machine
goes on night and day, summer and winter, and is hardly ever greased
or visited. Ah, it tries the nerves at night, especially if you are
not very well; though we don't often hear it at the Great House.'

'That sound is certainly very dismal. They might have the wheel
greased. Does Miss Aldclyffe take any interest in these things?'

'Well, scarcely; you see her father doesn't attend to that sort of
thing as he used to. The engine was once quite his hobby. But now
he's getten old and very seldom goes there.'

'How many are there in family?'

'Only her father and herself. He's a' old man of seventy.'

'I had thought that Miss Aldclyffe was sole mistress of the
property, and lived here alone.'

'No, m--' The coachman was continually checking himself thus, being
about to style her miss involuntarily, and then recollecting that he
was only speaking to the new lady's-maid.

'She will soon be mistress, however, I am afraid,' he continued, as
if speaking by a spirit of prophecy denied to ordinary humanity.
'The poor old gentleman has decayed very fast lately.' The man then
drew a long breath.

'Why did you breathe sadly like that?' said Cytherea.

'Ah! . . . When he's dead peace will be all over with us old
servants. I expect to see the old house turned inside out.'

'She will marry, do you mean?'

'Marry--not she! I wish she would. No, in her soul she's as
solitary as Robinson Crusoe, though she has acquaintances in plenty,
if not relations. There's the rector, Mr. Raunham--he's a relation
by marriage--yet she's quite distant towards him. And people say
that if she keeps single there will be hardly a life between Mr.
Raunham and the heirship of the estate. Dang it, she don't care.
She's an extraordinary picture of womankind--very extraordinary.'

'In what way besides?'

'You'll know soon enough, miss. She has had seven lady's-maids this
last twelvemonth. I assure you 'tis one body's work to fetch 'em
from the station and take 'em back again. The Lord must be a
neglectful party at heart, or he'd never permit such overbearen
goings on!'

'Does she dismiss them directly they come!'

'Not at all--she never dismisses them--they go theirselves. Ye see
'tis like this. She's got a very quick temper; she flees in a
passion with them for nothing at all; next mornen they come up and
say they are going; she's sorry for it and wishes they'd stay, but
she's as proud as a lucifer, and her pride won't let her say,
"Stay," and away they go. 'Tis like this in fact. If you say to
her about anybody, "Ah, poor thing!" she says, "Pooh! indeed!" If
you say, "Pooh, indeed!" "Ah, poor thing!" she says directly. She
hangs the chief baker, as mid be, and restores the chief butler, as
mid be, though the devil but Pharaoh herself can see the difference
between 'em.'

Cytherea was silent. She feared she might be again a burden to her
brother.

'However, you stand a very good chance,' the man went on, 'for I
think she likes you more than common. I have never known her send
the pony-carriage to meet one before; 'tis always the trap, but this
time she said, in a very particular ladylike tone, "Roobert, gaow
with the pony-kerriage.". . . There, 'tis true, pony and carriage
too are getten rather shabby now,' he added, looking round upon the
vehicle as if to keep Cytherea's pride within reasonable limits.

''Tis to be hoped you'll please in dressen her to-night.'

'Why to-night?'

'There's a dinner-party of seventeen; 'tis her father's birthday,
and she's very particular about her looks at such times. Now see;
this is the house. Livelier up here, isn't it, miss?'

They were now on rising ground, and had just emerged from a clump of
trees. Still a little higher than where they stood was situated the
mansion, called Knapwater House, the offices gradually losing
themselves among the trees behind.

2. EVENING

The house was regularly and substantially built of clean grey
freestone throughout, in that plainer fashion of Greek classicism
which prevailed at the latter end of the last century, when the
copyists called designers had grown weary of fantastic variations in
the Roman orders. The main block approximated to a square on the
ground plan, having a projection in the centre of each side,
surmounted by a pediment. From each angle of the inferior side ran
a line of buildings lower than the rest, turning inwards again at
their further end, and forming within them a spacious open court,
within which resounded an echo of astonishing clearness. These
erections were in their turn backed by ivy-covered ice-houses,
laundries, and stables, the whole mass of subsidiary buildings being
half buried beneath close-set shrubs and trees.

There was opening sufficient through the foliage on the right hand
to enable her on nearer approach to form an idea of the arrangement
of the remoter or lawn front also. The natural features and contour
of this quarter of the site had evidently dictated the position of
the house primarily, and were of the ordinary, and upon the whole,
most satisfactory kind, namely, a broad, graceful slope running from
the terrace beneath the walls to the margin of a placid lake lying
below, upon the surface of which a dozen swans and a green punt
floated at leisure. An irregular wooded island stood in the midst
of the lake; beyond this and the further margin of the water were
plantations and greensward of varied outlines, the trees
heightening, by half veiling, the softness of the exquisite
landscape stretching behind.

The glimpses she had obtained of this portion were now checked by
the angle of the building. In a minute or two they reached the side
door, at which Cytherea alighted. She was welcomed by an elderly
woman of lengthy smiles and general pleasantness, who announced
herself to be Mrs. Morris, the housekeeper.

'Mrs. Graye, I believe?' she said.

'I am not--O yes, yes, we are all mistresses,' said Cytherea,
smiling, but forcedly. The title accorded her seemed disagreeably
like the first slight scar of a brand, and she thought of Owen's
prophecy.

Mrs. Morris led her into a comfortable parlour called The Room.
Here tea was made ready, and Cytherea sat down, looking, whenever
occasion allowed, at Mrs. Morris with great interest and curiosity,
to discover, if possible, something in her which should give a clue
to the secret of her knowledge of herself, and the recommendation
based upon it. But nothing was to be learnt, at any rate just then.
Mrs. Morris was perpetually getting up, feeling in her pockets,
going to cupboards, leaving the room two or three minutes, and
trotting back again.

'You'll excuse me, Mrs. Graye,' she said, 'but 'tis the old
gentleman's birthday, and they always have a lot of people to dinner
on that day, though he's getting up in years now. However, none of
them are sleepers--she generally keeps the house pretty clear of
lodgers (being a lady with no intimate friends, though many
acquaintances), which, though it gives us less to do, makes it all
the duller for the younger maids in the house.' Mrs. Morris then
proceeded to give in fragmentary speeches an outline of the
constitution and government of the estate.

'Now, are you sure you have quite done tea? Not a bit or drop more?
Why, you've eaten nothing, I'm sure. . . . Well, now, it is rather
inconvenient that the other maid is not here to show you the ways of
the house a little, but she left last Saturday, and Miss Aldclyffe
has been making shift with poor old clumsy me for a maid all
yesterday and this morning. She is not come in yet. I expect she
will ask for you, Mrs. Graye, the first thing. . . . I was going to
say that if you have really done tea, I will take you upstairs, and
show you through the wardrobes--Miss Aldclyffe's things are not laid
out for to-night yet.'

She preceded Cytherea upstairs, pointed out her own room, and then
took her into Miss Aldclyffe's dressing-room, on the first-floor;
where, after explaining the whereabouts of various articles of
apparel, the housekeeper left her, telling her that she had an hour
yet upon her hands before dressing-time. Cytherea laid out upon the
bed in the next room all that she had been told would be required
that evening, and then went again to the little room which had been
appropriated to herself.

Here she sat down by the open window, leant out upon the sill like
another Blessed Damozel, and listlessly looked down upon the
brilliant pattern of colours formed by the flower-beds on the lawn
--now richly crowded with late summer blossom. But the vivacity of
spirit which had hitherto enlivened her, was fast ebbing under the
pressure of prosaic realities, and the warm scarlet of the
geraniums, glowing most conspicuously, and mingling with the vivid
cold red and green of the verbenas, the rich depth of the dahlia,
and the ripe mellowness of the calceolaria, backed by the pale hue
of a flock of meek sheep feeding in the open park, close to the
other side of the fence, were, to a great extent, lost upon her
eyes. She was thinking that nothing seemed worth while; that it was
possible she might die in a workhouse; and what did it matter? The
petty, vulgar details of servitude that she had just passed through,
her dependence upon the whims of a strange woman, the necessity of
quenching all individuality of character in herself, and
relinquishing her own peculiar tastes to help on the wheel of this
alien establishment, made her sick and sad, and she almost longed to
pursue some free, out-of-doors employment, sleep under trees or a
hut, and know no enemy but winter and cold weather, like shepherds
and cowkeepers, and birds and animals--ay, like the sheep she saw
there under her window. She looked sympathizingly at them for
several minutes, imagining their enjoyment of the rich grass.

'Yes--like those sheep,' she said aloud; and her face reddened with
surprise at a discovery she made that very instant.

The flock consisted of some ninety or a hundred young stock ewes:
the surface of their fleece was as rounded and even as a cushion,
and white as milk. Now she had just observed that on the left
buttock of every one of them were marked in distinct red letters the
initials 'E. S.'

'E. S.' could bring to Cytherea's mind only one thought; but that
immediately and for ever--the name of her lover, Edward Springrove.

'O, if it should be--!' She interrupted her words by a resolve.
Miss Aldclyffe's carriage at the same moment made its appearance in
the drive; but Miss Aldclyffe was not her object now. It was to
ascertain to whom the sheep belonged, and to set her surmise at rest
one way or the other. She flew downstairs to Mrs. Morris.

'Whose sheep are those in the park, Mrs. Morris?'

'Farmer Springrove's.'

'What Farmer Springrove is that?' she said quickly.

'Why, surely you know? Your friend, Farmer Springrove, the
cider-maker, and who keeps the Three Tranters Inn; who recommended
you to me when he came in to see me the other day?'

Cytherea's mother-wit suddenly warned her in the midst of her
excitement that it was necessary not to betray the secret of her
love. 'O yes,' she said, 'of course.' Her thoughts had run as
follows in that short interval:--

'Farmer Springrove is Edward's father, and his name is Edward too.

'Edward knew I was going to advertise for a situation of some kind.

'He watched the Times, and saw it, my address being attached.

'He thought it would be excellent for me to be here that we might
meet whenever he came home.

'He told his father that I might be recommended as a lady's-maid;
and he knew my brother and myself.

'His father told Mrs. Morris; Mrs. Morris told Miss Aldclyffe.'

The whole chain of incidents that drew her there was plain, and
there was no such thing as chance in the matter. It was all
Edward's doing.

The sound of a bell was heard. Cytherea did not heed it, and still
continued in her reverie.

'That's Miss Aldclyffe's bell,' said Mrs. Morris.

'I suppose it is,' said the young woman placidly.

'Well, it means that you must go up to her,' the matron continued,
in a tone of surprise.

Cytherea felt a burning heat come over her, mingled with a sudden
irritation at Mrs. Morris's hint. But the good sense which had
recognized stern necessity prevailed over rebellious independence;
the flush passed, and she said hastily--

'Yes, yes; of course, I must go to her when she pulls the bell
--whether I want to or no.'

However, in spite of this painful reminder of her new position in
life, Cytherea left the apartment in a mood far different from the
gloomy sadness of ten minutes previous. The place felt like home to
her now; she did not mind the pettiness of her occupation, because
Edward evidently did not mind it; and this was Edward's own spot.
She found time on her way to Miss Aldclyffe's dressing-room to
hurriedly glide out by a side door, and look for a moment at the
unconscious sheep bearing the friendly initials. She went up to
them to try to touch one of the flock, and felt vexed that they all
stared sceptically at her kind advances, and then ran pell-mell down
the hill. Then, fearing any one should discover her childish
movements, she slipped indoors again, and ascended the staircase,
catching glimpses, as she passed, of silver-buttoned footmen, who
flashed about the passages like lightning.

Miss Aldclyffe's dressing-room was an apartment which, on a casual
survey, conveyed an impression that it was available for almost any
purpose save the adornment of the feminine person. In its hours of
perfect order nothing pertaining to the toilet was visible; even the
inevitable mirrors with their accessories were arranged in a roomy
recess not noticeable from the door, lighted by a window of its own,
called the dressing-window.

The washing-stand figured as a vast oak chest, carved with grotesque
Renaissance ornament. The dressing table was in appearance
something between a high altar and a cabinet piano, the surface
being richly worked in the same style of semi-classic decoration,
but the extraordinary outline having been arrived at by an ingenious
joiner and decorator from the neighbouring town, after months of
painful toil in cutting and fitting, under Miss Aldclyffe's
immediate eye; the materials being the remains of two or three old
cabinets the lady had found in the lumber-room. About two-thirds of
the floor was carpeted, the remaining portion being laid with
parquetry of light and dark woods.

Miss Aldclyffe was standing at the larger window, away from the
dressing-niche. She bowed, and said pleasantly, 'I am glad you have
come. We shall get on capitally, I dare say.'

Her bonnet was off. Cytherea did not think her so handsome as on
the earlier day; the queenliness of her beauty was harder and less
warm. But a worse discovery than this was that Miss Aldclyffe, with
the usual obliviousness of rich people to their dependents'
specialities, seemed to have quite forgotten Cytherea's
inexperience, and mechanically delivered up her body to her handmaid
without a thought of details, and with a mild yawn.

Everything went well at first. The dress was removed, stockings and
black boots were taken off, and silk stockings and white shoes were
put on. Miss Aldclyffe then retired to bathe her hands and face,
and Cytherea drew breath. If she could get through this first
evening, all would be right. She felt that it was unfortunate that
such a crucial test for her powers as a birthday dinner should have
been applied on the threshold of her arrival; but set to again.

Miss Aldclyffe was now arrayed in a white dressing-gown, and dropped
languidly into an easy-chair, pushed up before the glass. The
instincts of her sex and her own practice told Cytherea the next
movement. She let Miss Aldclyffe's hair fall about her shoulders,
and began to arrange it. It proved to be all real; a satisfaction.

Miss Aldclyffe was musingly looking on the floor, and the operation
went on for some minutes in silence. At length her thoughts seemed
to turn to the present, and she lifted her eyes to the glass.

'Why, what on earth are you doing with my head?' she exclaimed, with
widely opened eyes. At the words she felt the back of Cytherea's
little hand tremble against her neck.

'Perhaps you prefer it done the other fashion, madam?' said the
maiden.

'No, no; that's the fashion right enough, but you must make more
show of my hair than that, or I shall have to buy some, which God
forbid!'

'It is how I do my own,' said Cytherea naively, and with a sweetness
of tone that would have pleased the most acrimonious under
favourable circumstances; but tyranny was in the ascendant with Miss
Aldclyffe at this moment, and she was assured of palatable food for
her vice by having felt the trembling of Cytherea's hand.

'Yours, indeed! _Your_ hair! Come, go on.' Considering that
Cytherea possessed at least five times as much of that valuable
auxiliary to woman's beauty as the lady before her, there was at the
same time some excuse for Miss Aldclyffe's outburst. She remembered
herself, however, and said more quietly, 'Now then, Graye
--By-the-bye, what do they call you downstairs?'

'Mrs. Graye,' said the handmaid.

'Then tell them not to do any such absurd thing--not but that it is
quite according to usage; but you are too young yet.'

This dialogue tided Cytherea safely onward through the hairdressing
till the flowers and diamonds were to be placed upon the lady's
brow. Cytherea began arranging them tastefully, and to the very
best of her judgment.

'That won't do,' said Miss Aldclyffe harshly.

'Why?'

'I look too young--an old dressed doll.'

'Will that, madam?'

'No, I look a fright--a perfect fright!'

'This way, perhaps?'

'Heavens! Don't worry me so.' She shut her lips like a trap.

Having once worked herself up to the belief that her head-dress was
to be a failure that evening, no cleverness of Cytherea's in
arranging it could please her. She continued in a smouldering
passion during the remainder of the performance, keeping her lips
firmly closed, and the muscles of her body rigid. Finally,
snatching up her gloves, and taking her handkerchief and fan in her
hand, she silently sailed out of the room, without betraying the
least consciousness of another woman's presence behind her.

Cytherea's fears that at the undressing this suppressed anger would
find a vent, kept her on thorns throughout the evening. She tried
to read; she could not. She tried to sew; she could not. She tried
to muse; she could not do that connectedly. 'If this is the
beginning, what will the end be!' she said in a whisper, and felt
many misgivings as to the policy of being overhasty in establishing
an independence at the expense of congruity with a cherished past.

3. MIDNIGHT

The clock struck twelve. The Aldclyffe state dinner was over. The
company had all gone, and Miss Aldclyffe's bell rang loudly and
jerkingly.

Cytherea started to her feet at the sound, which broke in upon a
fitful sleep that had overtaken her. She had been sitting drearily
in her chair waiting minute after minute for the signal, her brain
in that state of intentness which takes cognizance of the passage of
Time as a real motion--motion without matter--the instants throbbing
past in the company of a feverish pulse. She hastened to the room,
to find the lady sitting before the dressing shrine, illuminated on
both sides, and looking so queenly in her attitude of absolute
repose, that the younger woman felt the awfullest sense of
responsibility at her Vandalism in having undertaken to demolish so
imposing a pile.

The lady's jewelled ornaments were taken off in silence--some by her
own listless hands, some by Cytherea's. Then followed the outer
stratum of clothing. The dress being removed, Cytherea took it in
her hand and went with it into the bedroom adjoining, intending to
hang it in the wardrobe. But on second thoughts, in order that she
might not keep Miss Aldclyffe waiting a moment longer than
necessary, she flung it down on the first resting-place that came to
hand, which happened to be the bed, and re-entered the dressing-room
with the noiseless footfall of a kitten. She paused in the middle
of the room.

She was unnoticed, and her sudden return had plainly not been
expected. During the short time of Cytherea's absence, Miss
Aldclyffe had pulled off a kind of chemisette of Brussels net, drawn
high above the throat, which she had worn with her evening dress as
a semi-opaque covering to her shoulders, and in its place had put
her night-gown round her. Her right hand was lifted to her neck, as
if engaged in fastening her night-gown.

But on a second glance Miss Aldclyffe's proceeding was clearer to
Cytherea. She was not fastening her night-gown; it had been
carelessly thrown round her, and Miss Aldclyffe was really occupied
in holding up to her eyes some small object that she was keenly
scrutinizing. And now on suddenly discovering the presence of
Cytherea at the back of the apartment, instead of naturally
continuing or concluding her inspection, she desisted hurriedly; the
tiny snap of a spring was heard, her hand was removed, and she began
adjusting her robes.

Modesty might have directed her hasty action of enwrapping her
shoulders, but it was scarcely likely, considering Miss Aldclyffe's
temperament, that she had all her life been used to a maid,
Cytherea's youth, and the elder lady's marked treatment of her as if
she were a mere child or plaything. The matter was too slight to
reason about, and yet upon the whole it seemed that Miss Aldclyffe
must have a practical reason for concealing her neck.

With a timid sense of being an intruder Cytherea was about to step
back and out of the room; but at the same moment Miss Aldclyffe
turned, saw the impulse, and told her companion to stay, looking
into her eyes as if she had half an intention to explain something.
Cytherea felt certain it was the little mystery of her late
movements. The other withdrew her eyes; Cytherea went to fetch the
dressing-gown, and wheeled round again to bring it up to Miss
Aldclyffe, who had now partly removed her night-dress to put it on
the proper way, and still sat with her back towards Cytherea.

Her neck was again quite open and uncovered, and though hidden from
the direct line of Cytherea's vision, she saw it reflected in the
glass--the fair white surface, and the inimitable combination of
curves between throat and bosom which artists adore, being brightly
lit up by the light burning on either side.

And the lady's prior proceedings were now explained in the simplest
manner. In the midst of her breast, like an island in a sea of
pearl, reclined an exquisite little gold locket, embellished with
arabesque work of blue, red, and white enamel. That was undoubtedly
what Miss Aldclyffe had been contemplating; and, moreover, not
having been put off with her other ornaments, it was to be retained
during the night--a slight departure from the custom of ladies which
Miss Aldclyffe had at first not cared to exhibit to her new
assistant, though now, on further thought, she seemed to have become
indifferent on the matter.

'My dressing-gown,' she said, quietly fastening her night-dress as
she spoke.

Cytherea came forward with it. Miss Aldclyffe did not turn her
head, but looked inquiringly at her maid in the glass.

'You saw what I wear on my neck, I suppose?' she said to Cytherea's
reflected face.

'Yes, madam, I did,' said Cytherea to Miss Aldclyffe's reflected
face.

Miss Aldclyffe again looked at Cytherea's reflection as if she were
on the point of explaining. Again she checked her resolve, and said
lightly--

'Few of my maids discover that I wear it always. I generally keep
it a secret--not that it matters much. But I was careless with you,
and seemed to want to tell you. You win me to make confidences
that. . .'

She ceased, took Cytherea's hand in her own, lifted the locket with
the other, touched the spring and disclosed a miniature.

'It is a handsome face, is it not?' she whispered mournfully, and
even timidly.

'It is.'

But the sight had gone through Cytherea like an electric shock, and
there was an instantaneous awakening of perception in her, so
thrilling in its presence as to be well-nigh insupportable. The
face in the miniature was the face of her own father--younger and
fresher than she had ever known him--but her father!

Was this the woman of his wild and unquenchable early love? And was
this the woman who had figured in the gate-man's story as answering
the name of Cytherea before her judgment was awake? Surely it was.
And if so, here was the tangible outcrop of a romantic and hidden
stratum of the past hitherto seen only in her imagination; but as
far as her scope allowed, clearly defined therein by reason of its
strangeness.

Miss Aldclyffe's eyes and thoughts were so intent upon the miniature
that she had not been conscious of Cytherea's start of surprise.
She went on speaking in a low and abstracted tone.

'Yes, I lost him.' She interrupted her words by a short meditation,
and went on again. 'I lost him by excess of honesty as regarded my
past. But it was best that it should be so. . . . I was led to
think rather more than usual of the circumstances to-night because
of your name. It is pronounced the same way, though differently
spelt.'

The only means by which Cytherea's surname could have been spelt to
Miss Aldclyffe must have been by Mrs. Morris or Farmer Springrove.
She fancied Farmer Springrove would have spelt it properly if Edward
was his informant, which made Miss Aldclyffe's remark obscure.

Women make confidences and then regret them. The impulsive rush of
feeling which had led Miss Aldclyffe to indulge in this revelation,
trifling as it was, died out immediately her words were beyond
recall; and the turmoil, occasioned in her by dwelling upon that
chapter of her life, found vent in another kind of emotion--the
result of a trivial accident.

Cytherea, after letting down Miss Aldclyffe's hair, adopted some
plan with it to which the lady had not been accustomed. A rapid
revulsion to irritation ensued. The maiden's mere touch seemed to
discharge the pent-up regret of the lady as if she had been a jar of
electricity.

'How strangely you treat my hair!' she exclaimed.

A silence.

'I have told you what I never tell my maids as a rule; of course
_nothing_ that I say in this room is to be mentioned outside it.'
She spoke crossly no less than emphatically.

'It shall not be, madam,' said Cytherea, agitated and vexed that the
woman of her romantic wonderings should be so disagreeable to her.

'Why on earth did I tell you of my past?' she went on.

Cytherea made no answer.

The lady's vexation with herself, and the accident which had led to
the disclosure swelled little by little till it knew no bounds. But
what was done could not be undone, and though Cytherea had shown a
most winning responsiveness, quarrel Miss Aldclyffe must. She
recurred to the subject of Cytherea's want of expertness, like a
bitter reviewer, who finding the sentiments of a poet unimpeachable,
quarrels with his rhymes.

'Never, never before did I serve myself such a trick as this in
engaging a maid!' She waited for an expostulation: none came.
Miss Aldclyffe tried again.

'The idea of my taking a girl without asking her more than three
questions, or having a single reference, all because of her good
l--, the shape of her face and body! It _was_ a fool's trick. There,
I am served right, quite right--by being deceived in such a way.'

'I didn't deceive you,' said Cytherea. The speech was an
unfortunate one, and was the very 'fuel to maintain its fires' that
the other's petulance desired.

'You did,' she said hotly.

'I told you I couldn't promise to be acquainted with every detail of
routine just at first.'

'Will you contradict me in this way! You are telling untruths, I
say.'

Cytherea's lip quivered. 'I would answer the remark if--if--'

'If what?'

'If it were a lady's!'

'You girl of impudence--what do you say? Leave the room this
instant, I tell you.'

'And I tell you that a person who speaks to a lady as you do to me,
is no lady herself!'

'To a lady? A lady's-maid speaks in this way. The idea!'

'Don't "lady's-maid" me: nobody is my mistress I won't have it!'

'Good Heavens!'

'I wouldn't have come--no--I wouldn't! if I had known!'

'What?'

'That you were such an ill-tempered, unjust woman!'

'Possest beyond the Muse's painting,' Miss Aldclyffe exclaimed--

'A Woman, am I! I'll teach you if I am a Woman!' and lifted her
hand as if she would have liked to strike her companion. This stung
the maiden into absolute defiance.

'I dare you to touch me!' she cried. 'Strike me if you dare, madam!
I am not afraid of you--what do you mean by such an action as that?'

Miss Aldclyffe was disconcerted at this unexpected show of spirit,
and ashamed of her unladylike impulse now it was put into words.
She sank back in the chair. 'I was not going to strike you--go to
your room--I beg you to go to your room!' she repeated in a husky
whisper.

Cytherea, red and panting, took up her candlestick and advanced to
the table to get a light. As she stood close to them the rays from
the candles struck sharply on her face. She usually bore a much
stronger likeness to her mother than to her father, but now, looking
with a grave, reckless, and angered expression of countenance at the
kindling wick as she held it slanting into the other flame, her
father's features were distinct in her. It was the first time Miss
Aldclyffe had seen her in a passionate mood, and wearing that
expression which was invariably its concomitant. It was Miss
Aldclyffe's turn to start now; and the remark she made was an
instance of that sudden change of tone from high-flown invective to
the pettiness of curiosity which so often makes women's quarrels
ridiculous. Even Miss Aldclyffe's dignity had not sufficient power
to postpone the absorbing desire she now felt to settle the strange
suspicion that had entered her head.

'You spell your name the common way, G, R, E, Y, don't you?' she
said, with assumed indifference.

'No,' said Cytherea, poised on the side of her foot, and still
looking into the flame.

'Yes, surely? The name was spelt that way on your boxes: I looked
and saw it myself.'

The enigma of Miss Aldclyffe's mistake was solved. 'O, was it?'
said Cytherea.  'Ah, I remember Mrs. Jackson, the lodging-house
keeper at Budmouth, labelled them. We spell our name G, R, A, Y, E.'

'What was your father's trade?'

Cytherea thought it would be useless to attempt to conceal facts any
longer. 'His was not a trade,' she said. 'He was an architect.'

'The idea of your being an architect's daughter!'

'There's nothing to offend, you in that, I hope?'

'O no.'

'Why did you say "the idea"?'

'Leave that alone. Did he ever visit in Gower Street, Bloomsbury,
one Christmas, many years ago?--but you would not know that.'

'I have heard him say that Mr. Huntway, a curate somewhere in that
part of London, and who died there, was an old college friend of
his.'

'What is your Christian name?'

'Cytherea.'

'No! And is it really? And you knew that face I showed you? Yes,
I see you did.' Miss Aldclyffe stopped, and closed her lips
impassibly. She was a little agitated.

'Do you want me any longer?' said Cytherea, standing candle in hand
and looking quietly in Miss Aldclyffe's face.

'Well--no: no longer,' said the other lingeringly.

'With your permission, I will leave the house to morrow morning,
madam.'

'Ah.' Miss Aldclyffe had no notion of what she was saying.

'And I know you will be so good as not to intrude upon me during the
short remainder of my stay?'

Saying this Cytherea left the room before her companion had
answered. Miss Aldclyffe, then, had recognized her at last, and had
been curious about her name from the beginning.

The other members of the household had retired to rest. As Cytherea
went along the passage leading to her room her skirts rustled
against the partition. A door on her left opened, and Mrs. Morris
looked out.

'I waited out of bed till you came up,' she said, 'it being your
first night, in case you should be at a loss for anything. How have
you got on with Miss Aldclyffe?'

'Pretty well--though not so well as I could have wished.'

'Has she been scolding?'

'A little.'

'She's a very odd lady--'tis all one way or the other with her.
She's not bad at heart, but unbearable in close quarters. Those of
us who don't have much to do with her personally, stay on for years
and years.'

'Has Miss Aldclyffe's family always been rich?' said Cytherea.

'O no. The property, with the name, came from her mother's uncle.
Her family is a branch of the old Aldclyffe family on the maternal
side. Her mother married a Bradleigh--a mere nobody at that time
--and was on that account cut by her relations. But very singularly
the other branch of the family died out one by one--three of them,
and Miss Aldclyffe's great-uncle then left all his property,
including this estate, to Captain Bradleigh and his wife--Miss
Aldclyffe's father and mother--on condition that they took the old
family name as well. There's all about it in the "Landed Gentry."
'Tis a thing very often done.'

'O, I see. Thank you. Well, now I am going. Good-night.'



VI. THE EVENTS OF TWELVE HOURS

1. AUGUST THE NINTH. ONE TO TWO O'CLOCK A.M.

Cytherea entered her bedroom, and flung herself on the bed,
bewildered by a whirl of thought. Only one subject was clear in her
mind, and it was that, in spite of family discoveries, that day was
to be the first and last of her experience as a lady's-maid.
Starvation itself should not compel her to hold such a humiliating
post for another instant. 'Ah,' she thought, with a sigh, at the
martyrdom of her last little fragment of self-conceit, 'Owen knows
everything better than I.'

She jumped up and began making ready for her departure in the
morning, the tears streaming down when she grieved and wondered what
practical matter on earth she could turn her hand to next. All
these preparations completed, she began to undress, her mind
unconsciously drifting away to the contemplation of her late
surprises. To look in the glass for an instant at the reflection of
her own magnificent resources in face and bosom, and to mark their
attractiveness unadorned, was perhaps but the natural action of a
young woman who had so lately been chidden whilst passing through
the harassing experience of decorating an older beauty of Miss
Aldclyffe's temper.

But she directly checked her weakness by sympathizing reflections on
the hidden troubles which must have thronged the past years of the
solitary lady, to keep her, though so rich and courted, in a mood so
repellent and gloomy as that in which Cytherea found her; and then
the young girl marvelled again and again, as she had marvelled
before, at the strange confluence of circumstances which had brought
herself into contact with the one woman in the world whose history
was so romantically intertwined with her own. She almost began to
wish she were not obliged to go away and leave the lonely being to
loneliness still.

In bed and in the dark, Miss Aldclyffe haunted her mind more
persistently than ever. Instead of sleeping, she called up staring
visions of the possible past of this queenly lady, her mother's
rival. Up the long vista of bygone years she saw, behind all, the
young girl's flirtation, little or much, with the cousin, that
seemed to have been nipped in the bud, or to have terminated hastily
in some way. Then the secret meetings between Miss Aldclyffe and
the other woman at the little inn at Hammersmith and other places:
the commonplace name she adopted: her swoon at some painful news,
and the very slight knowledge the elder female had of her partner in
mystery. Then, more than a year afterwards, the acquaintanceship of
her own father with this his first love; the awakening of the
passion, his acts of devotion, the unreasoning heat of his rapture,
her tacit acceptance of it, and yet her uneasiness under the
delight. Then his declaration amid the evergreens: the utter
change produced in her manner thereby, seemingly the result of a
rigid determination: and the total concealment of her reason by
herself and her parents, whatever it was. Then the lady's course
dropped into darkness, and nothing more was visible till she was
discovered here at Knapwater, nearly fifty years old, still
unmarried and still beautiful, but lonely, embittered, and haughty.
Cytherea imagined that her father's image was still warmly cherished
in Miss Aldclyffe's heart, and was thankful that she herself had not
been betrayed into announcing that she knew many particulars of this
page of her father's history, and the chief one, the lady's
unaccountable renunciation of him. It would have made her bearing
towards the mistress of the mansion more awkward, and would have
been no benefit to either.

Thus conjuring up the past, and theorizing on the present, she lay
restless, changing her posture from one side to the other and back
again. Finally, when courting sleep with all her art, she heard a
clock strike two. A minute later, and she fancied she could
distinguish a soft rustle in the passage outside her room.

To bury her head in the sheets was her first impulse; then to
uncover it, raise herself on her elbow, and stretch her eyes wide
open in the darkness; her lips being parted with the intentness of
her listening. Whatever the noise was, it had ceased for the time.

It began again and came close to her door, lightly touching the
panels. Then there was another stillness; Cytherea made a movement
which caused a faint rustling of the bed-clothes.

Before she had time to think another thought a light tap was given.
Cytherea breathed: the person outside was evidently bent upon
finding her awake, and the rustle she had made had encouraged the
hope. The maiden's physical condition shifted from one pole to its
opposite. The cold sweat of terror forsook her, and modesty took
the alarm. She became hot and red; her door was not locked.

A distinct woman's whisper came to her through the keyhole:
'Cytherea!'

Only one being in the house knew her Christian name, and that was
Miss Aldclyffe. Cytherea stepped out of bed, went to the door, and
whispered back, 'Yes?'

'Let me come in, darling.'

The young woman paused in a conflict between judgment and emotion.
It was now mistress and maid no longer; woman and woman only. Yes;
she must let her come in, poor thing.

She got a light in an instant, opened the door, and raising her eyes
and the candle, saw Miss Aldclyffe standing outside in her
dressing-gown.

'Now you see that it is really myself; put out the light,' said the
visitor. 'I want to stay here with you, Cythie. I came to ask you
to come down into my bed, but it is snugger here. But remember that
you are mistress in this room, and that I have no business here, and
that you may send me away if you choose. Shall I go?'

'O no; you shan't indeed if you don't want to,' said Cythie
generously.

The instant they were in bed Miss Aldclyffe freed herself from the
last remnant of restraint. She flung her arms round the young girl,
and pressed her gently to her heart.

'Now kiss me,' she said.

Cytherea, upon the whole, was rather discomposed at this change of
treatment; and, discomposed or no, her passions were not so
impetuous as Miss Aldclyffe's. She could not bring her soul to her
lips for a moment, try how she would.

'Come, kiss me,' repeated Miss Aldclyffe.

Cytherea gave her a very small one, as soft in touch and in sound as
the bursting of a bubble.

'More earnestly than that--come.'

She gave another, a little but not much more expressively.

'I don't deserve a more feeling one, I suppose,' said Miss
Aldclyffe, with an emphasis of sad bitterness in her tone. 'I am an
ill-tempered woman, you think; half out of my mind. Well, perhaps I
am; but I have had grief more than you can think or dream of. But I
can't help loving you--your name is the same as mine--isn't it
strange?'

Cytherea was inclined to say no, but remained silent.

'Now, don't you think I must love you?' continued the other.

'Yes,' said Cytherea absently. She was still thinking whether duty
to Owen and her father, which asked for silence on her knowledge of
her father's unfortunate love, or duty to the woman embracing her,
which seemed to ask for confidence, ought to predominate. Here was
a solution. She would wait till Miss Aldclyffe referred to her
acquaintanceship and attachment to Cytherea's father in past times:
then she would tell her all she knew: that would be honour.

'Why can't you kiss me as I can kiss you? Why can't you!' She
impressed upon Cytherea's lips a warm motherly salute, given as if
in the outburst of strong feeling, long checked, and yearning for
something to love and be loved by in return.

'Do you think badly of me for my behaviour this evening, child? I
don't know why I am so foolish as to speak to you in this way. I am
a very fool, I believe. Yes. How old are you?'

'Eighteen.'

'Eighteen! . . . Well, why don't you ask me how old I am?'

'Because I don't want to know.'

'Never mind if you don't. I am forty-six; and it gives me greater
pleasure to tell you this than it does to you to listen. I have not
told my age truly for the last twenty years till now.'

'Why haven't you?'

'I have met deceit by deceit, till I am weary of it--weary, weary
--and I long to be what I shall never be again--artless and innocent,
like you. But I suppose that you, too, will, prove to be not worth
a thought, as every new friend does on more intimate knowledge.
Come, why don't you talk to me, child? Have you said your prayers?'

'Yes--no! I forgot them to-night.'

'I suppose you say them every night as a rule?'

'Yes.'

'Why do you do that?'

'Because I have always done so, and it would seem strange if I were
not to. Do you?'

'I? A wicked old sinner like me! No, I never do. I have thought
all such matters humbug for years--thought so so long that I should
be glad to think otherwise from very weariness; and yet, such is the
code of the polite world, that I subscribe regularly to Missionary
Societies and others of the sort. . . . Well, say your prayers,
dear--you won't omit them now you recollect it. I should like to
hear you very much. Will you?'

'It seems hardly--'

'It would seem so like old times to me--when I was young, and
nearer--far nearer Heaven than I am now. Do, sweet one,'

Cytherea was embarrassed, and her embarrassment arose from the
following conjuncture of affairs. Since she had loved Edward
Springrove, she had linked his name with her brother Owen's in her
nightly supplications to the Almighty. She wished to keep her love
for him a secret, and, above all, a secret from a woman like Miss
Aldclyffe; yet her conscience and the honesty of her love would not
for an instant allow her to think of omitting his dear name, and so
endanger the efficacy of all her previous prayers for his success by
an unworthy shame now: it would be wicked of her, she thought, and
a grievous wrong to him. Under any worldly circumstances she might
have thought the position justified a little finesse, and have
skipped him for once; but prayer was too solemn a thing for such
trifling.

'I would rather not say them,' she murmured first. It struck her
then that this declining altogether was the same cowardice in
another dress, and was delivering her poor Edward over to Satan just
as unceremoniously as before. 'Yes; I will say my prayers, and you
shall hear me,' she added firmly.

She turned her face to the pillow and repeated in low soft tones the
simple words she had used from childhood on such occasions. Owen's
name was mentioned without faltering, but in the other case,
maidenly shyness was too strong even for religion, and that when
supported by excellent intentions. At the name of Edward she
stammered, and her voice sank to the faintest whisper in spite of
her.

'Thank you, dearest,' said Miss Aldclyffe. 'I have prayed too, I
verily believe. You are a good girl, I think.' Then the expected
question came.

'"Bless Owen," and whom, did you say?'

There was no help for it now, and out it came. 'Owen and Edward,'
said Cytherea.

'Who are Owen and Edward?'

'Owen is my brother, madam,' faltered the maid.

'Ah, I remember. Who is Edward?'

A silence.

'Your brother, too?' continued Miss Aldclyffe.

'No.'

Miss Aldclyffe reflected a moment. 'Don't you want to tell me who
Edward is?' she said at last, in a tone of meaning.

'I don't mind telling; only . . .'

'You would rather not, I suppose?'

'Yes.'

Miss Aldclyffe shifted her ground. 'Were you ever in love?' she
inquired suddenly.

Cytherea was surprised to hear how quickly the voice had altered
from tenderness to harshness, vexation, and disappointment.

'Yes--I think I was--once,' she murmured.

'Aha! And were you ever kissed by a man?'

A pause.

'Well, were you?' said Miss Aldclyffe, rather sharply.

'Don't press me to tell--I can't--indeed, I won't, madam!'

Miss Aldclyffe removed her arms from Cytherea's neck. ''Tis now
with you as it is always with all girls,' she said, in jealous and
gloomy accents. 'You are not, after all, the innocent I took you
for. No, no.' She then changed her tone with fitful rapidity.
'Cytherea, try to love me more than you love him--do. I love you
more sincerely than any man can. Do, Cythie: don't let any man
stand between us. O, I can't bear that!' She clasped Cytherea's
neck again.

'I must love him now I have begun,' replied the other.

'Must--yes--must,' said the elder lady reproachfully. 'Yes, women
are all alike. I thought I had at last found an artless woman who
had not been sullied by a man's lips, and who had not practised or
been practised upon by the arts which ruin all the truth and
sweetness and goodness in us. Find a girl, if you can, whose mouth
and ears have not been made a regular highway of by some man or
another! Leave the admittedly notorious spots--the drawing-rooms of
society--and look in the villages--leave the villages and search in
the schools--and you can hardly find a girl whose heart has not been
_had_--is not an old thing half worn out by some He or another! If
men only knew the staleness of the freshest of us! that nine times
out of ten the "first love" they think they are winning from a woman
is but the hulk of an old wrecked affection, fitted with new sails
and re-used. O Cytherea, can it be that you, too, are like the
rest?'

'No, no, no,' urged Cytherea, awed by the storm she had raised in
the impetuous woman's mind. 'He only kissed me once--twice I mean.'

'He might have done it a thousand times if he had cared to, there's
no doubt about that, whoever his lordship is. You are as bad as I
--we are all alike; and I--an old fool--have been sipping at your
mouth as if it were honey, because I fancied no wasting lover knew
the spot. But a minute ago, and you seemed to me like a fresh
spring meadow--now you seem a dusty highway.'

'O no, no!' Cytherea was not weak enough to shed tears except on
extraordinary occasions, but she was fain to begin sobbing now. She
wished Miss Aldclyffe would go to her own room, and leave her and
her treasured dreams alone. This vehement imperious affection was
in one sense soothing, but yet it was not of the kind that
Cytherea's instincts desired. Though it was generous, it seemed
somewhat too rank and capricious for endurance.

'Well,' said the lady in continuation, 'who is he?'

Her companion was desperately determined not to tell his name: she
too much feared a taunt when Miss Aldclyffe's fiery mood again ruled
her tongue.

'Won't you tell me? not tell me after all the affection I have
shown?'

'I will, perhaps, another day.'

'Did you wear a hat and white feather in Budmouth for the week or
two previous to your coming here?'

'Yes.'

'Then I have seen you and your lover at a distance! He rowed you
round the bay with your brother.'

'Yes.'

'And without your brother--fie! There, there, don't let that little
heart beat itself to death: throb, throb: it shakes the bed, you
silly thing. I didn't mean that there was any harm in going alone
with him. I only saw you from the Esplanade, in common with the
rest of the people. I often run down to Budmouth. He was a very
good figure: now who was he?'

'I--I won't tell, madam--I cannot indeed!'

'Won't tell--very well, don't. You are very foolish to treasure up
his name and image as you do. Why, he has had loves before you,
trust him for that, whoever he is, and you are but a temporary link
in a long chain of others like you: who only have your little day
as they have had theirs.'

''Tisn't true! 'tisn't true! 'tisn't true!' cried Cytherea in an
agony of torture. 'He has never loved anybody else, I know--I am
sure he hasn't.'

Miss Aldclyffe was as jealous as any man could have been. She
continued--

'He sees a beautiful face and thinks he will never forget it, but in
a few weeks the feeling passes off, and he wonders how he could have
cared for anybody so absurdly much.'

'No, no, he doesn't--What does he do when he has thought that--Come,
tell me--tell me!'

'You are as hot as fire, and the throbbing of your heart makes me
nervous. I can't tell you if you get in that flustered state.'

'Do, do tell--O, it makes me so miserable! but tell--come tell me!'

'Ah--the tables are turned now, dear!' she continued, in a tone
which mingled pity with derision--

   '"Love's passions shall rock thee
    As the storm rocks the ravens on high,
    Bright reason will mock thee
    Like the sun from a wintry sky."

'What does he do next?--Why, this is what he does next: ruminate on
what he has heard of women's romantic impulses, and how easily men
torture them when they have given way to those feelings, and have
resigned everything for their hero. It may be that though he loves
you heartily now--that is, as heartily as a man can--and you love
him in return, your loves may be impracticable and hopeless, and you
may be separated for ever. You, as the weary, weary years pass by
will fade and fade--bright eyes _will_ fade--and you will perhaps then
die early--true to him to your latest breath, and believing him to
be true to the latest breath also; whilst he, in some gay and busy
spot far away from your last quiet nook, will have married some
dashing lady, and not purely oblivious of you, will long have ceased
to regret you--will chat about you, as you were in long past years
--will say, "Ah, little Cytherea used to tie her hair like that--poor
innocent trusting thing; it was a pleasant useless idle dream--that
dream of mine for the maid with the bright eyes and simple, silly
heart; but I was a foolish lad at that time." Then he will tell the
tale of all your little Wills and Wont's and particular ways, and as
he speaks, turn to his wife with a placid smile.'

'It is not true! He can't, he c-can't be s-so cruel--and you are
cruel to me--you are, you are!' She was at last driven to
desperation: her natural common sense and shrewdness had seen all
through the piece how imaginary her emotions were--she felt herself
to be weak and foolish in permitting them to rise; but even then she
could not control them: be agonized she must. She was only
eighteen, and the long day's labour, her weariness, her excitement,
had completely unnerved her, and worn her out: she was bent hither
and thither by this tyrannical working upon her imagination, as a
young rush in the wind. She wept bitterly. 'And now think how much
I like you,' resumed Miss Aldclyffe, when Cytherea grew calmer. 'I
shall never forget you for anybody else, as men do--never. I will
be exactly as a mother to you. Now will you promise to live with me
always, and always be taken care of, and never deserted?'

'I cannot. I will not be anybody's maid for another day on any
consideration.'

'No, no, no. You shan't be a lady's-maid. You shall be my companion.
I will get another maid.'

Companion--that was a new idea. Cytherea could not resist the
evidently heartfelt desire of the strange-tempered woman for her
presence. But she could not trust to the moment's impulse.

'I will stay, I think. But do not ask for a final answer to-night.'

'Never mind now, then. Put your hair round your mamma's neck, and
give me one good long kiss, and I won't talk any more in that way
about your lover. After all, some young men are not so fickle as
others; but even if he's the ficklest, there is consolation. The
love of an inconstant man is ten times more ardent than that of a
faithful man--that is, while it lasts.'

Cytherea did as she was told, to escape the punishment of further
talk; flung the twining tresses of her long, rich hair over Miss
Aldclyffe's shoulders as directed, and the two ceased conversing,
making themselves up for sleep. Miss Aldclyffe seemed to give
herself over to a luxurious sense of content and quiet, as if the
maiden at her side afforded her a protection against dangers which
had menaced her for years; she was soon sleeping calmly.

2. TWO TO FIVE A.M.

With Cytherea it was otherwise. Unused to the place and
circumstances, she continued wakeful, ill at ease, and mentally
distressed. She withdrew herself from her companion's embrace,
turned to the other side, and endeavoured to relieve her busy brain
by looking at the window-blind, and noticing the light of the rising
moon--now in her last quarter--creep round upon it: it was the
light of an old waning moon which had but a few days longer to live.

The sight led her to think again of what had happened under the rays
of the same month's moon, a little before its full, the ecstatic
evening scene with Edward: the kiss, and the shortness of those
happy moments--maiden imagination bringing about the apotheosis of a
status quo which had had several unpleasantnesses in its earthly
reality.

But sounds were in the ascendant that night. Her ears became aware
of a strange and gloomy murmur.

She recognized it: it was the gushing of the waterfall, faint and
low, brought from its source to the unwonted distance of the House
by a faint breeze which made it distinct and recognizable by reason
of the utter absence of all disturbing sounds. The groom's
melancholy representation lent to the sound a more dismal effect
than it would have had of its own nature. She began to fancy what
the waterfall must be like at that hour, under the trees in the
ghostly moonlight. Black at the head, and over the surface of the
deep cold hole into which it fell; white and frothy at the fall;
black and white, like a pall and its border; sad everywhere.

She was in the mood for sounds of every kind now, and strained her
ears to catch the faintest, in wayward enmity to her quiet of mind.
Another soon came.

The second was quite different from the first--a kind of
intermittent whistle it seemed primarily: no, a creak, a metallic
creak, ever and anon, like a plough, or a rusty wheelbarrow, or at
least a wheel of some kind. Yes, it was, a wheel--the water-wheel
in the shrubbery by the old manor-house, which the coachman had said
would drive him mad.

She determined not to think any more of these gloomy things; but now
that she had once noticed the sound there was no sealing her ears to
it. She could not help timing its creaks, and putting on a dread
expectancy just before the end of each half-minute that brought
them. To imagine the inside of the engine-house, whence these
noises proceeded, was now a necessity. No window, but crevices in
the door, through which, probably, the moonbeams streamed in the
most attenuated and skeleton-like rays, striking sharply upon
portions of wet rusty cranks and chains; a glistening wheel, turning
incessantly, labouring in the dark like a captive starving in a
dungeon; and instead of a floor below, gurgling water, which on
account of the darkness could only be heard; water which laboured up
dark pipes almost to where she lay.

She shivered. Now she was determined to go to sleep; there could be
nothing else left to be heard or to imagine--it was horrid that her
imagination should be so restless. Yet just for an instant before
going to sleep she would think this--suppose another sound _should_
come--just suppose it should! Before the thought had well passed
through her brain, a third sound came.

The third was a very soft gurgle or rattle--of a strange and
abnormal kind--yet a sound she had heard before at some past period
of her life--when, she could not recollect. To make it the more
disturbing, it seemed to be almost close to her--either close
outside the window, close under the floor, or close above the
ceiling. The accidental fact of its coming so immediately upon the
heels of her supposition, told so powerfully upon her excited nerves
that she jumped up in the bed. The same instant, a little dog in
some room near, having probably heard the same noise, set up a low
whine. The watch-dog in the yard, hearing the moan of his
associate, began to howl loudly and distinctly. His melancholy
notes were taken up directly afterwards by the dogs in the kennel a
long way off, in every variety of wail.

One logical thought alone was able to enter her flurried brain. The
little dog that began the whining must have heard the other two
sounds even better than herself. He had taken no notice of them,
but he had taken notice of the third. The third, then, was an
unusual sound.

It was not like water, it was not like wind; it was not the
night-jar, it was not a clock, nor a rat, nor a person snoring.

She crept under the clothes, and flung her arms tightly round Miss
Aldclyffe, as if for protection. Cytherea perceived that the lady's
late peaceful warmth had given place to a sweat. At the maiden's
touch, Miss Aldclyffe awoke with a low scream.

She remembered her position instantly. 'O such a terrible dream!'
she cried, in a hurried whisper, holding to Cytherea in her turn;
'and your touch was the end of it. It was dreadful. Time, with his
wings, hour-glass, and scythe, coming nearer and nearer to me
--grinning and mocking: then he seized me, took a piece of me
only . . . But I can't tell you. I can't bear to think of it. How
those dogs howl! People say it means death.'

The return of Miss Aldclyffe to consciousness was sufficient to
dispel the wild fancies which the loneliness of the night had woven
in Cytherea's mind. She dismissed the third noise as something
which in all likelihood could easily be explained, if trouble were
taken to inquire into it: large houses had all kinds of strange
sounds floating about them. She was ashamed to tell Miss Aldclyffe
her terrors.

A silence of five minutes.

'Are you asleep?' said Miss Aldclyffe.

'No,' said Cytherea, in a long-drawn whisper.

'How those dogs howl, don't they?'

'Yes. A little dog in the house began it.'

'Ah, yes: that was Totsy. He sleeps on the mat outside my father's
bedroom door. A nervous creature.'

There was a silent interval of nearly half-an-hour. A clock on the
landing struck three.

'Are you asleep, Miss Aldclyffe?' whispered Cytherea.

'No,' said Miss Aldclyffe. 'How wretched it is not to be able to
sleep, isn't it?'

'Yes,' replied Cytherea, like a docile child.

Another hour passed, and the clock struck four. Miss Aldclyffe was
still awake.

'Cytherea,' she said, very softly.

Cytherea made no answer. She was sleeping soundly.

The first glimmer of dawn was now visible. Miss Aldclyffe arose,
put on her dressing-gown, and went softly downstairs to her own
room.

'I have not told her who I am after all, or found out the
particulars of Ambrose's history,' she murmured. 'But her being in
love alters everything.'

3. HALF-PAST SEVEN TO TEN O'CLOCK A.M.

Cytherea awoke, quiet in mind and refreshed. A conclusion to remain
at Knapwater was already in possession of her.

Finding Miss Aldclyffe gone, she dressed herself and sat down at the
window to write an answer to Edward's letter, and an account of her
arrival at Knapwater to Owen. The dismal and heart-breaking
pictures that Miss Aldclyffe had placed before her the preceding
evening, the later terrors of the night, were now but as shadows of
shadows, and she smiled in derision at her own excitability.

But writing Edward's letter was the great consoler, the effect of
each word upon him being enacted in her own face as she wrote it.
She felt how much she would like to share his trouble--how well she
could endure poverty with him--and wondered what his trouble was.
But all would be explained at last, she knew.

At the appointed time she went to Miss Aldclyffe's room, intending,
with the contradictoriness common in people, to perform with
pleasure, as a work of supererogation, what as a duty was simply
intolerable.

Miss Aldclyffe was already out of bed. The bright penetrating light
of morning made a vast difference in the elder lady's behaviour to
her dependent; the day, which had restored Cytherea's judgment, had
effected the same for Miss Aldclyffe. Though practical reasons
forbade her regretting that she had secured such a companionable
creature to read, talk, or play to her whenever her whim required,
she was inwardly vexed at the extent to which she had indulged in
the womanly luxury of making confidences and giving way to emotions.
Few would have supposed that the calm lady sitting aristocratically
at the toilet table, seeming scarcely conscious of Cytherea's
presence in the room, even when greeting her, was the passionate
creature who had asked for kisses a few hours before.

It is both painful and satisfactory to think how often these
antitheses are to be observed in the individual most open to our
observation--ourselves. We pass the evening with faces lit up by
some flaring illumination or other: we get up the next morning--the
fiery jets have all gone out, and nothing confronts us but a few
crinkled pipes and sooty wirework, hardly even recalling the outline
of the blazing picture that arrested our eyes before bedtime.

Emotions would be half starved if there were no candle-light.
Probably nine-tenths of the gushing letters of indiscreet confession
are written after nine or ten o'clock in the evening, and sent off
before day returns to leer invidiously upon them. Few that remain
open to catch our glance as we rise in the morning, survive the
frigid criticism of dressing-time.

The subjects uppermost in the minds of the two women who had thus
cooled from their fires, were not the visionary ones of the later
hours, but the hard facts of their earlier conversation. After a
remark that Cytherea need not assist her in dressing unless she
wished to, Miss Aldclyffe said abruptly--

'I can tell that young man's name.' She looked keenly at Cytherea.
'It is Edward Springrove, my tenant's son.'

The inundation of colour upon the younger lady at hearing a name
which to her was a world, handled as if it were only an atom, told
Miss Aldclyffe that she had divined the truth at last.

'Ah--it is he, is it?' she continued. 'Well, I wanted to know for
practical reasons. His example shows that I was not so far wrong in
my estimate of men after all, though I only generalized, and had no
thought of him.' This was perfectly true.

'What do you mean?' said Cytherea, visibly alarmed.

'Mean? Why that all the world knows him to be engaged to be married,
and that the wedding is soon to take place.' She made the remark
bluntly and superciliously, as if to obtain absolution at the hands
of her family pride for the weak confidences of the night.

But even the frigidity of Miss Aldclyffe's morning mood was overcome
by the look of sick and blank despair which the carelessly uttered
words had produced upon Cytherea's face. She sank back into a
chair, and buried her face in her hands.

'Don't be so foolish,' said Miss Aldclyffe. 'Come, make the best of
it. I cannot upset the fact I have told you of, unfortunately. But
I believe the match can be broken off.'

'O no, no.'

'Nonsense. I liked him much as a youth, and I like him now. I'll
help you to captivate and chain him down. I have got over my absurd
feeling of last night in not wanting you ever to go away from me--of
course, I could not expect such a thing as that. There, now I have
said I'll help you, and that's enough. He's tired of his first
choice now that he's been away from home for a while. The love that
no outer attack can frighten away quails before its idol's own
homely ways; it is always so. . . . Come, finish what you are doing
if you are going to, and don't be a little goose about such a
trumpery affair as that.'

'Who--is he engaged to?' Cytherea inquired by a movement of her lips
but no sound of her voice. But Miss Aldclyffe did not answer. It
mattered not, Cytherea thought. Another woman--that was enough for
her: curiosity was stunned.

She applied herself to the work of dressing, scarcely knowing how.
Miss Aldclyffe went on:--

'You were too easily won. I'd have made him or anybody else speak
out before he should have kissed my face for his pleasure. But you
are one of those precipitantly fond things who are yearning to
throw away their hearts upon the first worthless fellow who says
good-morning. In the first place, you shouldn't have loved him so
quickly: in the next, if you must have loved him off-hand, you
should have concealed it. It tickled his vanity: "By Jove, that
girl's in love with me already!" he thought.'

To hasten away at the end of the toilet, to tell Mrs. Morris--who
stood waiting in a little room prepared for her, with tea poured
out, bread-and-butter cut into diaphanous slices, and eggs arranged
--that she wanted no breakfast: then to shut herself alone in her
bedroom, was her only thought. She was followed thither by the
well-intentioned matron with a cup of tea and one piece of
bread-and-butter on a tray, cheerfully insisting that she should
eat it.

To those who grieve, innocent cheerfulness seems heartless levity.
'No, thank you, Mrs. Morris,' she said, keeping the door closed.
Despite the incivility of the action, Cytherea could not bear to let
a pleasant person see her face then.

Immediate revocation--even if revocation would be more effective by
postponement--is the impulse of young wounded natures. Cytherea
went to her blotting-book, took out the long letter so carefully
written, so full of gushing remarks and tender hints, and sealed up
so neatly with a little seal bearing 'Good Faith' as its motto, tore
the missive into fifty pieces, and threw them into the grate. It
was then the bitterest of anguishes to look upon some of the words
she had so lovingly written, and see them existing only in mutilated
forms without meaning--to feel that his eye would never read them,
nobody ever know how ardently she had penned them.

Pity for one's self for being wasted is mostly present in these
moods of abnegation.

The meaning of all his allusions, his abruptness in telling her of
his love, his constraint at first, then his desperate manner of
speaking, was clear. They must have been the last flickerings of a
conscience not quite dead to all sense of perfidiousness and
fickleness. Now he had gone to London: she would be dismissed from
his memory, in the same way as Miss Aldclyffe had said. And here
she was in Edward's own parish, reminded continually of him by what
she saw and heard. The landscape, yesterday so much and so bright
to her, was now but as the banquet-hall deserted--all gone but
herself.

Miss Aldclyffe had wormed her secret out of her, and would now be
continually mocking her for her trusting simplicity in believing
him. It was altogether unbearable: she would not stay there.

She went downstairs and found Miss Aldclyffe had gone into the
breakfast-room, but that Captain Aldclyffe, who rose later with
increasing infirmities, had not yet made his appearance. Cytherea
entered. Miss Aldclyffe was looking out of the window, watching a
trail of white smoke along the distant landscape--signifying a
passing train. At Cytherea's entry she turned and looked inquiry.

'I must tell you now,' began Cytherea, in a tremulous voice.

'Well, what?' Miss Aldclyffe said.

'I am not going to stay with you. I must go away--a very long way.
I am very sorry, but indeed I can't remain!'

'Pooh--what shall we hear next?' Miss Aldclyffe surveyed Cytherea's
face with leisurely criticism. 'You are breaking your heart again
about that worthless young Springrove. I knew how it would be. It
is as Hallam says of Juliet--what little reason you may have
possessed originally has all been whirled away by this love. I
shan't take this notice, mind.'

'Do let me go!'

Miss Aldclyffe took her new pet's hand, and said with severity, 'As
to hindering you, if you are determined to go, of course that's
absurd. But you are not now in a state of mind fit for deciding
upon any such proceeding, and I shall not listen to what you have to
say. Now, Cythie, come with me; we'll let this volcano burst and
spend itself, and after that we'll see what had better be done.'
She took Cytherea into her workroom, opened a drawer, and drew forth
a roll of linen.

'This is some embroidery I began one day, and now I should like it
finished.'

She then preceded the maiden upstairs to Cytherea's own room.
'There,' she said, 'now sit down here, go on with this work, and
remember one thing--that you are not to leave the room on any
pretext whatever for two hours unless I send for you--I insist
kindly, dear. Whilst you stitch--you are to stitch, recollect, and
not go mooning out of the window--think over the whole matter, and
get cooled; don't let the foolish love-affair prevent your thinking
as a woman of the world. If at the end of that time you still say
you must leave me, you may. I will have no more to say in the
matter. Come, sit down, and promise to sit here the time I name.'

To hearts in a despairing mood, compulsion seems a relief; and
docility was at all times natural to Cytherea. She promised, and
sat down. Miss Aldclyffe shut the door upon her and retreated.

She sewed, stopped to think, shed a tear or two, recollected the
articles of the treaty, and sewed again; and at length fell into a
reverie which took no account whatever of the lapse of time.

4. TEN TO TWELVE O'CLOCK A.M.

A quarter of an hour might have passed when her thoughts became
attracted from the past to the present by unwonted movements
downstairs. She opened the door and listened.

There were hurryings along passages, opening and shutting of doors,
trampling in the stable-yard. She went across into another bedroom,
from which a view of the stable-yard could be obtained, and arrived
there just in time to see the figure of the man who had driven her
from the station vanishing down the coach-road on a black horse
--galloping at the top of the animal's speed.

Another man went off in the direction of the village.

Whatever had occurred, it did not seem to be her duty to inquire or
meddle with it, stranger and dependent as she was, unless she were
requested to, especially after Miss Aldclyffe's strict charge to
her. She sat down again, determined to let no idle curiosity
influence her movements.

Her window commanded the front of the house; and the next thing she
saw was a clergyman walk up and enter the door.

All was silent again till, a long time after the first man had left,
he returned again on the same horse, now matted with sweat and
trotting behind a carriage in which sat an elderly gentleman driven
by a lad in livery. These came to the house, entered, and all was
again the same as before.

The whole household--master, mistress, and servants--appeared to
have forgotten the very existence of such a being as Cytherea. She
almost wished she had not vowed to have no idle curiosity.

Half-an-hour later, the carriage drove off with the elderly
gentleman, and two or three messengers left the house, speeding in
various directions. Rustics in smock-frocks began to hang about the
road opposite the house, or lean against trees, looking idly at the
windows and chimneys.

A tap came to Cytherea's door. She opened it to a young
maid-servant.

'Miss Aldclyffe wishes to see you, ma'am.' Cytherea hastened down.

Miss Aldclyffe was standing on the hearthrug, her elbow on the
mantel, her hand to her temples, her eyes on the ground; perfectly
calm, but very pale.

'Cytherea,' she said in a whisper, 'come here.'

Cytherea went close.

'Something very serious has taken place,' she said again, and then
paused, with a tremulous movement of her mouth.

'Yes,' said Cytherea.

'My father. He was found dead in his bed this morning.'

'Dead!' echoed the younger woman. It seemed impossible that the
announcement could be true; that knowledge of so great a fact could
be contained in a statement so small.

'Yes, dead,' murmured Miss Aldclyffe solemnly. 'He died alone,
though within a few feet of me. The room we slept in is exactly
over his own.'

Cytherea said hurriedly, 'Do they know at what hour?'

'The doctor says it must have been between two and three o'clock
this morning.'

'Then I heard him!'

'Heard him?'

'Heard him die!'

'You heard him die? What did you hear?'

'A sound I heard once before in my life--at the deathbed of my
mother. I could not identify it--though I recognized it. Then the
dog howled: you remarked it. I did not think it worth while to
tell you what I had heard a little earlier.' She looked agonized.

'It would have been useless,' said Miss Aldclyffe. 'All was over by
that time.' She addressed herself as much as Cytherea when she
continued, 'Is it a Providence who sent you here at this juncture
that I might not be left entirely alone?'

Till this instant Miss Aldclyffe had forgotten the reason of
Cytherea's seclusion in her own room. So had Cytherea herself. The
fact now recurred to both in one moment.

'Do you still wish to go?' said Miss Aldclyffe anxiously.

'I don't want to go now,' Cytherea had remarked simultaneously with
the other's question. She was pondering on the strange likeness
which Miss Aldclyffe's bereavement bore to her own; it had the
appearance of being still another call to her not to forsake this
woman so linked to her life, for the sake of any trivial vexation.

Miss Aldclyffe held her almost as a lover would have held her, and
said musingly--

'We get more and more into one groove. I now am left fatherless and
motherless as you were.' Other ties lay behind in her thoughts, but
she did not mention them.

'You loved your father, Cytherea, and wept for him?'

'Yes, I did. Poor papa!'

'I was always at variance with mine, and can't weep for him now!
But you must stay here always, and make a better woman of me.'

The compact was thus sealed, and Cytherea, in spite of the failure
of her advertisements, was installed as a veritable Companion. And,
once more in the history of human endeavour, a position which it was
impossible to reach by any direct attempt, was come to by the
seeker's swerving from the path, and regarding the original object
as one of secondary importance.



VII. THE EVENTS OF EIGHTEEN DAYS

1. AUGUST THE SEVENTEENTH

The time of day was four o'clock in the afternoon. The place was
the lady's study or boudoir, Knapwater House. The person was Miss
Aldclyffe sitting there alone, clothed in deep mourning.

The funeral of the old Captain had taken place, and his will had
been read. It was very concise, and had been executed about five
years previous to his death. It was attested by his solicitors,
Messrs. Nyttleton and Tayling, of Lincoln's Inn Fields. The whole
of his estate, real and personal, was bequeathed to his daughter
Cytherea, for her sole and absolute use, subject only to the payment
of a legacy to the rector, their relative, and a few small amounts
to the servants.

Miss Aldclyffe had not chosen the easiest chair of her boudoir to
sit in, or even a chair of ordinary comfort, but an uncomfortable,
high, narrow-backed, oak framed and seated chair, which was allowed
to remain in the room only on the ground of being a companion in
artistic quaintness to an old coffer beside it, and was never used
except to stand in to reach for a book from the highest row of
shelves. But she had sat erect in this chair for more than an hour,
for the reason that she was utterly unconscious of what her actions
and bodily feelings were. The chair had stood nearest her path on
entering the room, and she had gone to it in a dream.

She sat in the attitude which denotes unflagging, intense,
concentrated thought--as if she were cast in bronze. Her feet were
together, her body bent a little forward, and quite unsupported by
the back of the chair; her hands on her knees, her eyes fixed
intently on the corner of a footstool.

At last she moved and tapped her fingers upon the table at her side.
Her pent-up ideas had finally found some channel to advance in.
Motions became more and more frequent as she laboured to carry
further and further the problem which occupied her brain. She sat
back and drew a long breath: she sat sideways and leant her
forehead upon her hand. Later still she arose, walked up and down
the room--at first abstractedly, with her features as firmly set as
ever; but by degrees her brow relaxed, her footsteps became lighter
and more leisurely; her head rode gracefully and was no longer
bowed. She plumed herself like a swan after exertion.

'Yes,' she said aloud. 'To get _him_ here without letting him know
that I have any other object than that of getting a useful man
--that's the difficulty--and that I think I can master.'

She rang for the new maid, a placid woman of forty with a few grey
hairs.

'Ask Miss Graye if she can come to me.'

Cytherea was not far off, and came in.

'Do you know anything about architects and surveyors?' said Miss
Aldclyffe abruptly.

'Know anything?' replied Cytherea, poising herself on her toe to
consider the compass of the question.

'Yes--know anything,' said Miss Aldclyffe.

'Owen is an architect and surveyor's draughtsman,' the maiden said,
and thought of somebody else who was likewise.

'Yes! that's why I asked you. What are the different kinds of work
comprised in an architect's practice? They lay out estates, and
superintend the various works done upon them, I should think, among
other things?'

'Those are, more properly, a land or building steward's duties--at
least I have always imagined so. Country architects include those
things in their practice; city architects don't.'

'I know that, child. But a steward's is an indefinite fast and
loose profession, it seems to me. Shouldn't you think that a man
who had been brought up as an architect would do for a steward?'

Cytherea had doubts whether an architect pure would do.

The chief pleasure connected with asking an opinion lies in not
adopting it. Miss Aldclyffe replied decisively--

'Nonsense; of course he would. Your brother Owen makes plans for
country buildings--such as cottages, stables, homesteads, and so
on?'

'Yes; he does.'

'And superintends the building of them?'

'Yes; he will soon.'

'And he surveys land?'

'O yes.'

'And he knows about hedges and ditches--how wide they ought to be,
boundaries, levelling, planting trees to keep away the winds,
measuring timber, houses for ninety-nine years, and such things?'

'I have never heard him say that; but I think Mr. Gradfield does
those things. Owen, I am afraid, is inexperienced as yet.'

'Yes; your brother is not old enough for such a post yet, of course.
And then there are rent-days, the audit and winding up of
tradesmen's accounts. I am afraid, Cytherea, you don't know much
more about the matter than I do myself. . . . I am going out just
now,' she continued. 'I shall not want you to walk with me to-day.
Run away till dinner-time.'

Miss Aldclyffe went out of doors, and down the steps to the lawn:
then turning to the left, through a shrubbery, she opened a wicket
and passed into a neglected and leafy carriage-drive, leading down
the hill. This she followed till she reached the point of its
greatest depression, which was also the lowest ground in the whole
grove.

The trees here were so interlaced, and hung their branches so near
the ground, that a whole summer's day was scarcely long enough to
change the air pervading the spot from its normal state of coolness
to even a temporary warmth. The unvarying freshness was helped by
the nearness of the ground to the level of the springs, and by the
presence of a deep, sluggish stream close by, equally well shaded by
bushes and a high wall. Following the road, which now ran along at
the margin of the stream, she came to an opening in the wall, on the
other side of the water, revealing a large rectangular nook from
which the stream proceeded, covered with froth, and accompanied by a
dull roar. Two more steps, and she was opposite the nook, in full
view of the cascade forming its further boundary. Over the top
could be seen the bright outer sky in the form of a crescent, caused
by the curve of a bridge across the rapids, and the trees above.

Beautiful as was the scene she did not look in that direction. The
same standing-ground afforded another prospect, straight in the
front, less sombre than the water on the right or the trees all
around. The avenue and grove which flanked it abruptly terminated a
few yards ahead, where the ground began to rise, and on the remote
edge of the greensward thus laid open, stood all that remained of
the original manor-house, to which the dark margin-line of the trees
in the avenue formed an adequate and well-fitting frame. It was the
picture thus presented that was now interesting Miss Aldclyffe--not
artistically or historically, but practically--as regarded its
fitness for adaptation to modern requirements.

In front, detached from everything else, rose the most ancient
portion of the structure--an old arched gateway, flanked by the
bases of two small towers, and nearly covered with creepers, which
had clambered over the eaves of the sinking roof, and up the gable
to the crest of the Aldclyffe family perched on the apex. Behind
this, at a distance of ten or twenty yards, came the only portion of
the main building that still existed--an Elizabethan fragment,
consisting of as much as could be contained under three gables and a
cross roof behind. Against the wall could be seen ragged lines
indicating the form of other destroyed gables which had once joined
it there. The mullioned and transomed windows, containing five or
six lights, were mostly bricked up to the extent of two or three,
and the remaining portion fitted with cottage window-frames
carelessly inserted, to suit the purpose to which the old place was
now applied, it being partitioned out into small rooms downstairs to
form cottages for two labourers and their families; the upper
portion was arranged as a storehouse for divers kinds of roots and
fruit.

The owner of the picturesque spot, after her survey from this point,
went up to the walls and walked into the old court, where the
paving-stones were pushed sideways and upwards by the thrust of the
grasses between them. Two or three little children, with their
fingers in their mouths, came out to look at her, and then ran in to
tell their mothers in loud tones of secrecy that Miss Aldclyffe was
coming. Miss Aldclyffe, however, did not come in. She concluded
her survey of the exterior by making a complete circuit of the
building; then turned into a nook a short distance off where round
and square timber, a saw-pit, planks, grindstones, heaps of building
stone and brick, explained that the spot was the centre of
operations for the building work done on the estate.

She paused, and looked around. A man who had seen her from the
window of the workshops behind, came out and respectfully lifted his
hat to her. It was the first time she had been seen walking outside
the house since her father's death.

'Strooden, could the Old House be made a decent residence of,
without much trouble?' she inquired.

The mechanic considered, and spoke as each consideration completed
itself.

'You don't forget, ma'am, that two-thirds of the place is already
pulled down, or gone to ruin?'

'Yes; I know.'

'And that what's left may almost as well be, ma'am.'

'Why may it?'

''Twas so cut up inside when they made it into cottages, that the
whole carcase is full of cracks.'

'Still by pulling down the inserted partitions, and adding a little
outside, it could be made to answer the purpose of an ordinary six
or eight-roomed house?'

'Yes, ma'am.'

'About what would it cost?' was the question which had invariably
come next in every communication of this kind to which the
superintending workman had been a party during his whole experience.
To his surprise, Miss Aldclyffe did not put it. The man thought her
object in altering an old house must have been an unusually
absorbing one not to prompt what was so instinctive in owners as
hardly to require any prompting at all.

'Thank you: that's sufficient, Strooden,' she said. 'You will
understand that it is not unlikely some alteration may be made here
in a short time, with reference to the management of the affairs.'

Strooden said 'Yes,' in a complex voice, and looked uneasy.

'During the life of Captain Aldclyffe, with you as the foreman of
works, and he himself as his own steward, everything worked well.
But now it may be necessary to have a steward, whose management will
encroach further upon things which have hitherto been left in your
hands than did your late master's. What I mean is, that he will
directly and in detail superintend all.'

'Then--I shall not be wanted, ma'am?' he faltered.

'O yes; if you like to stay on as foreman in the yard and workshops
only. I should be sorry to lose you. However, you had better
consider. I will send for you in a few days.'

Leaving him to suspense, and all the ills that came in its train
--distracted application to his duties, and an undefined number of
sleepless nights and untasted dinners, Miss Aldclyffe looked at her
watch and returned to the House. She was about to keep an
appointment with her solicitor, Mr. Nyttleton, who had been to
Budmouth, and was coming to Knapwater on his way back to London.

2. AUGUST THE TWENTIETH

On the Saturday subsequent to Mr. Nyttleton's visit to Knapwater
House, the subjoined advertisement appeared in the Field and the
Builder newspapers:--


                     'LAND STEWARD.

'A gentleman of integrity and professional skill is required
immediately for the MANAGEMENT of an ESTATE, containing about 1000
acres, upon which agricultural improvements and the erection of
buildings are contemplated. He must be a man of superior education,
unmarried, and not more than thirty years of age. Considerable
preference will be shown for one who possesses an artistic as well
as a practical knowledge of planning and laying out. The
remuneration will consist of a salary of 220 pounds, with the old
manor-house as a residence--Address Messrs. Nyttleton and Tayling,
solicitors, Lincoln's Inn Fields.'


A copy of each paper was sent to Miss Aldclyffe on the day of
publication. The same evening she told Cytherea that she was
advertising for a steward, who would live at the old manor-house,
showing her the papers containing the announcement.

What was the drift of that remark? thought the maiden; or was it
merely made to her in confidential intercourse, as other
arrangements were told her daily. Yet it seemed to have more
meaning than common. She remembered the conversation about
architects and surveyors, and her brother Owen. Miss Aldclyffe knew
that his situation was precarious, that he was well educated and
practical, and was applying himself heart and soul to the details of
the profession and all connected with it. Miss Aldclyffe might be
ready to take him if he could compete successfully with others who
would reply. She hazarded a question:

'Would it be desirable for Owen to answer it?'

'Not at all,' said Miss Aldclyffe peremptorily.

A flat answer of this kind had ceased to alarm Cytherea. Miss
Aldclyffe's blunt mood was not her worst. Cytherea thought of
another man, whose name, in spite of resolves, tears, renunciations
and injured pride, lingered in her ears like an old familiar strain.
That man was qualified for a stewardship under a king.

'Would it be of any use if Edward Springrove were to answer it?' she
said, resolutely enunciating the name.

'None whatever,' replied Miss Aldclyffe, again in the same decided
tone.

'You are very unkind to speak in that way.'

'Now don't pout like a goosie, as you are. I don't want men like
either of them, for, of course, I must look to the good of the
estate rather than to that of any individual. The man I want must
have been more specially educated. I have told you that we are
going to London next week; it is mostly on this account.'

Cytherea found that she had mistaken the drift of Miss Aldclyffe's
peculiar explicitness on the subject of advertising, and wrote to
tell her brother that if he saw the notice it would be useless to
reply.

3. AUGUST THE TWENTY-FIFTH

Five days after the above-mentioned dialogue took place they went to
London, and, with scarcely a minute's pause, to the solicitors'
offices in Lincoln's Inn Fields.

They alighted opposite one of the characteristic entrances about the
place--a gate which was never, and could never be, closed, flanked
by lamp-standards carrying no lamp. Rust was the only active agent
to be seen there at this time of the day and year. The palings
along the front were rusted away at their base to the thinness of
wires, and the successive coats of paint, with which they were
overlaid in bygone days, had been completely undermined by the same
insidious canker, which lifted off the paint in flakes, leaving the
raw surface of the iron on palings, standards, and gate hinges, of a
staring blood-red.

But once inside the railings the picture changed. The court and
offices were a complete contrast to the grand ruin of the outwork
which enclosed them. Well-painted respectability extended over,
within, and around the doorstep; and in the carefully swept yard not
a particle of dust was visible.

Mr. Nyttleton, who had just come up from Margate, where he was
staying with his family, was standing at the top of his own
staircase as the pair ascended. He politely took them inside.

'Is there a comfortable room in which this young lady can sit during
our interview?' said Miss Aldclyffe.

It was rather a favourite habit of hers to make much of Cytherea
when they were out, and snub her for it afterwards when they got
home.

'Certainly--Mr. Tayling's.' Cytherea was shown into an inner room.

Social definitions are all made relatively: an absolute datum is
only imagined. The small gentry about Knapwater seemed unpractised
to Miss Aldclyffe, Miss Aldclyffe herself seemed unpractised to Mr.
Nyttleton's experienced old eyes.

'Now then,' the lady said, when she was alone with the lawyer; 'what
is the result of our advertisement?'

It was late summer; the estate-agency, building, engineering, and
surveying worlds were dull. There were forty-five replies to the
advertisement.

Mr. Nyttleton spread them one by one before Miss Aldclyffe. 'You
will probably like to read some of them yourself, madam?' he said.

'Yes, certainly,' said she.

'I will not trouble you with those which are from persons manifestly
unfit at first sight,' he continued; and began selecting from the
heap twos and threes which he had marked, collecting others into his
hand.

'The man we want lies among these, if my judgment doesn't deceive
me, and from them it would be advisable to select a certain number
to be communicated with.'

'I should like to see every one--only just to glance them over
--exactly as they came,' she said suasively.

He looked as if he thought this a waste of his time, but dismissing
his sentiment unfolded each singly and laid it before her. As he
laid them out, it struck him that she studied them quite as rapidly
as he could spread them. He slyly glanced up from the outer corner
of his eye to hers, and noticed that all she did was look at the
name at the bottom of the letter, and then put the enclosure aside
without further ceremony. He thought this an odd way of inquiring
into the merits of forty-five men who at considerable trouble gave
in detail reasons why they believed themselves well qualified for a
certain post. She came to the final one, and put it down with the
rest.

Then the lady said that in her opinion it would be best to get as
many replies as they possibly could before selecting--'to give us a
wider choice. What do you think, Mr. Nyttleton?'

It seemed to him, he said, that a greater number than those they
already had would scarcely be necessary, and if they waited for
more, there would be this disadvantage attending it, that some of
those they now could command would possibly not be available.

'Never mind, we will run that risk,' said Miss Aldclyffe. 'Let the
advertisement be inserted once more, and then we will certainly
settle the matter.'

Mr. Nyttleton bowed, and seemed to think Miss Aldclyffe, for a
single woman, and one who till so very recently had never concerned
herself with business of any kind, a very meddlesome client. But
she was rich, and handsome still. 'She's a new broom in
estate-management as yet,' he thought. 'She will soon get tired of
this,' and he parted from her without a sentiment which could mar
his habitual blandness.

The two ladies then proceeded westward. Dismissing the cab in
Waterloo Place, they went along Pall Mall on foot, where in place of
the usual well-dressed clubbists--rubicund with alcohol--were to be
seen, in linen pinafores, flocks of house-painters pallid from white
lead. When they had reached the Green Park, Cytherea proposed that
they should sit down awhile under the young elms at the brow of the
hill. This they did--the growl of Piccadilly on their left hand
--the monastic seclusion of the Palace on their right: before them,
the clock tower of the Houses of Parliament, standing forth with a
metallic lustre against a livid Lambeth sky.

Miss Aldclyffe still carried in her hand a copy of the newspaper,
and while Cytherea had been interesting herself in the picture
around, glanced again at the advertisement.

She heaved a slight sigh, and began to fold it up again. In the
action her eye caught sight of two consecutive advertisements on the
cover, one relating to some lecture on Art, and addressed to members
of the Institute of Architects. The other emanated from the same
source, but was addressed to the public, and stated that the
exhibition of drawings at the Institute's rooms would close at the
end of that week.

Her eye lighted up. She sent Cytherea back to the hotel in a cab,
then turned round by Piccadilly into Bond Street, and proceeded to
the rooms of the Institute. The secretary was sitting in the lobby.
After making her payment, and looking at a few of the drawings on
the walls, in the company of three gentlemen, the only other
visitors to the exhibition, she turned back and asked if she might
be allowed to see a list of the members. She was a little connected
with the architectural world, she said, with a smile, and was
interested in some of the names.

'Here it is, madam,' he replied, politely handing her a pamphlet
containing the names.

Miss Aldclyffe turned the leaves till she came to the letter M. The
name she hoped to find there was there, with the address appended,
as was the case with all the rest.

The address was at some chambers in a street not far from Charing
Cross. 'Chambers,' as a residence, had always been assumed by the
lady to imply the condition of a bachelor. She murmured two words,
'There still.'

Another request had yet to be made, but it was of a more noticeable
kind than the first, and might compromise the secrecy with which she
wished to act throughout this episode. Her object was to get one of
the envelopes lying on the secretary's table, stamped with the die
of the Institute; and in order to get it she was about to ask if she
might write a note.

But the secretary's back chanced to be turned, and he now went
towards one of the men at the other end of the room, who had called
him to ask some question relating to an etching on the wall. Quick
as thought, Miss Aldclyffe stood before the table, slipped her hand
behind her, took one of the envelopes and put it in her pocket.

She sauntered round the rooms for two or three minutes longer, then
withdrew and returned to her hotel.

Here she cut the Knapwater advertisement from the paper, put it into
the envelope she had stolen, embossed with the society's stamp, and
directed it in a round clerkly hand to the address she had seen in
the list of members' names submitted to her:--

     AENEAS MANSTON, ESQ.,
          WYKEHAM CHAMBERS,
               SPRING GARDENS.

This ended her first day's work in London.

4. FROM AUGUST THE TWENTY-SIXTH TO SEPTEMBER THE FIRST

The two Cythereas continued at the Westminster Hotel, Miss Aldclyffe
informing her companion that business would detain them in London
another week. The days passed as slowly and quietly as days can
pass in a city at that time of the year, the shuttered windows about
the squares and terraces confronting their eyes like the white and
sightless orbs of blind men. On Thursday Mr. Nyttleton called,
bringing the whole number of replies to the advertisement. Cytherea
was present at the interview, by Miss Aldclyffe's request--either
from whim or design.

Ten additional letters were the result of the second week's
insertion, making fifty-five in all. Miss Aldclyffe looked them
over as before. One was signed--

AENEAS MANSTON,
     133, TURNGATE STREET,
          LIVERPOOL.

'Now, then, Mr. Nyttleton, will you make a selection, and I will add
one or two,' Miss Aldclyffe said.

Mr. Nyttleton scanned the whole heap of letters, testimonials, and
references, sorting them into two heaps. Manston's missive, after a
mere glance, was thrown amongst the summarily rejected ones.

Miss Aldclyffe read, or pretended to read after the lawyer. When he
had finished, five lay in the group he had selected. 'Would you
like to add to the number?' he said, turning to the lady.

'No,' she said carelessly. 'Well, two or three additional ones
rather took my fancy,' she added, searching for some in the larger
collection.

She drew out three. One was Manston's.

'These eight, then, shall be communicated with,' said the lawyer,
taking up the eight letters and placing them by themselves.

They stood up. 'If I myself, Miss Aldclyffe, were only concerned
personally,' he said, in an off-hand way, and holding up a letter
singly, 'I should choose this man unhesitatingly. He writes
honestly, is not afraid to name what he does not consider himself
well acquainted with--a rare thing to find in answers to
advertisements; he is well recommended, and possesses some qualities
rarely found in combination. Oddly enough, he is not really a
steward. He was bred a farmer, studied building affairs, served on
an estate for some time, then went with an architect, and is now
well qualified as architect, estate agent, and surveyor. That man
is sure to have a fine head for a manor like yours.' He tapped the
letter as he spoke. 'Yes, I should choose him without hesitation
--speaking personally.'

'And I think,' she said artificially, 'I should choose this one as a
matter of mere personal whim, which, of course, can't be given way
to when practical questions have to be considered.'

Cytherea, after looking out of the window, and then at the
newspapers, had become interested in the proceedings between the
clever Miss Aldclyffe and the keen old lawyer, which reminded her of
a game at cards. She looked inquiringly at the two letters--one in
Miss Aldclyffe's hand, the other in Mr. Nyttleton's.

'What is the name of your man?' said Miss Aldclyffe.

'His name--' said the lawyer, looking down the page; 'what is his
name?--it is Edward Springrove.'

Miss Aldclyffe glanced towards Cytherea, who was getting red and
pale by turns. She looked imploringly at Miss Aldclyffe.

'The name of my man,' said Miss Aldclyffe, looking at her letter in
turn; 'is, I think--yes--AEneas Manston.'

5. SEPTEMBER THE THIRD

The next morning but one was appointed for the interviews, which
were to be at the lawyer's offices. Mr. Nyttleton and Mr. Tayling
were both in town for the day, and the candidates were admitted one
by one into a private room. In the window recess was seated Miss
Aldclyffe, wearing her veil down.

The lawyer had, in his letters to the selected number, timed each
candidate at an interval of ten or fifteen minutes from those
preceding and following. They were shown in as they arrived, and
had short conversations with Mr. Nyttleton--terse, and to the point.
Miss Aldclyffe neither moved nor spoke during this proceeding; it
might have been supposed that she was quite unmindful of it, had it
not been for what was revealed by a keen penetration of the veil
covering her countenance--the rays from two bright black eyes,
directed towards the lawyer and his interlocutor.

Springrove came fifth; Manston seventh. When the examination of all
was ended, and the last man had retired, Nyttleton, again as at the
former time, blandly asked his client which of the eight she
personally preferred. 'I still think the fifth we spoke to,
Springrove, the man whose letter I pounced upon at first, to be by
far the best qualified, in short, most suitable generally.'

'I am sorry to say that I differ from you; I lean to my first notion
still--that Mr.--Mr. Manston is most desirable in tone and bearing,
and even specifically; I think he would suit me best in the
long-run.'

Mr. Nyttleton looked out of the window at the whitened wall of the
court.

'Of course, madam, your opinion may be perfectly sound and reliable;
a sort of instinct, I know, often leads ladies by a short cut to
conclusions truer than those come to by men after laborious
round-about calculations, based on long experience. I must say I
shouldn't recommend him.'

'Why, pray?'

'Well, let us look first at his letter of answer to the
advertisement. He didn't reply till the last insertion; that's one
thing. His letter is bold and frank in tone, so bold and frank that
the second thought after reading it is that not honesty, but
unscrupulousness of conscience dictated it. It is written in an
indifferent mood, as if he felt that he was humbugging us in his
statement that he was the right man for such an office, that he
tried hard to get it only as a matter of form which required that he
should neglect no opportunity that came in his way.'

'You may be right, Mr. Nyttleton, but I don't quite see the grounds
of your reasoning.'

'He has been, as you perceive, almost entirely used to the office
duties of a city architect, the experience we don't want. You want
a man whose acquaintance with rural landed properties is more
practical and closer--somebody who, if he has not filled exactly
such an office before, has lived a country life, knows the ins and
outs of country tenancies, building, farming, and so on.'

'He's by far the most intellectual looking of them all.'

'Yes; he may be--your opinion, Miss Aldclyffe, is worth more than
mine in that matter. And more than you say, he is a man of parts
--his brain power would soon enable him to master details and fit
him for the post, I don't much doubt that. But to speak clearly'
(here his words started off at a jog-trot) 'I wouldn't run the risk
of placing the management of an estate of mine in his hands on any
account whatever. There, that's flat and plain, madam.'

'But, definitely,' she said, with a show of impatience, 'what is
your reason?'

'He is a voluptuary with activity; which is a very bad form of man
--as bad as it is rare.'

'Oh. Thank you for your explicit statement, Mr. Nyttleton,' said
Miss Aldclyffe, starting a little and flushing with displeasure.

Mr. Nyttleton nodded slightly, as a sort of neutral motion, simply
signifying a receipt of the information, good or bad.

'And I really think it is hardly worth while to trouble you further
in this,' continued the lady. 'He's quite good enough for a little
insignificant place like mine at Knapwater; and I know that I could
not get on with one of the others for a single month. We'll try
him.'

'Certainly, Miss Aldclyffe,' said the lawyer. And Mr. Manston was
written to, to the effect that he was the successful competitor.

'Did you see how unmistakably her temper was getting the better of
her, that minute you were in the room?' said Nyttleton to Tayling,
when their client had left the house. Nyttleton was a man who
surveyed everybody's character in a sunless and shadowless northern
light. A culpable slyness, which marked him as a boy, had been
moulded by Time, the Improver, into honourable circumspection.

We frequently find that the quality which, conjoined with the
simplicity of the child, is vice, is virtue when it pervades the
knowledge of the man.

'She was as near as damn-it to boiling over when I added up her
man,' continued Nyttleton. 'His handsome face is his qualification
in her eyes. They have met before; I saw that.'

'He didn't seem conscious of it,' said the junior.

'He didn't. That was rather puzzling to me. But still, if ever a
woman's face spoke out plainly that she was in love with a man, hers
did that she was with him. Poor old maid, she's almost old enough
to be his mother. If that Manston's a schemer he'll marry her, as
sure as I am Nyttleton. Let's hope he's honest, however.'

'I don't think she's in love with him,' said Tayling. He had seen
but little of the pair, and yet he could not reconcile what he had
noticed in Miss Aldclyffe's behaviour with the idea that it was the
bearing of a woman towards her lover.

'Well, your experience of the fiery phenomenon is more recent than
mine,' rejoined Nyttleton carelessly. 'And you may remember the
nature of it best.'



VIII. THE EVENTS OF EIGHTEEN DAYS

1. FROM THE THIRD TO THE NINETEENTH OF SEPTEMBER

Miss Aldclyffe's tenderness towards Cytherea, between the hours of
her irascibility, increased till it became no less than doting
fondness. Like Nature in the tropics, with her hurricanes and the
subsequent luxuriant vegetation effacing their ravages, Miss
Aldclyffe compensated for her outbursts by excess of generosity
afterwards. She seemed to be completely won out of herself by close
contact with a young woman whose modesty was absolutely unimpaired,
and whose artlessness was as perfect as was compatible with the
complexity necessary to produce the due charm of womanhood.
Cytherea, on her part, perceived with honest satisfaction that her
influence for good over Miss Aldclyffe was considerable. Ideas and
habits peculiar to the younger, which the elder lady had originally
imitated as a mere whim, she grew in course of time to take a
positive delight in. Among others were evening and morning prayers,
dreaming over out-door scenes, learning a verse from some poem
whilst dressing.

Yet try to force her sympathies as much as she would, Cytherea could
feel no more than thankful for this, even if she always felt as much
as thankful. The mysterious cloud hanging over the past life of her
companion, of which the uncertain light already thrown upon it only
seemed to render still darker the unpenetrated remainder, nourished
in her a feeling which was scarcely too slight to be called dread.
She would have infinitely preferred to be treated distantly, as the
mere dependent, by such a changeable nature--like a fountain, always
herself, yet always another. That a crime of any deep dye had ever
been perpetrated or participated in by her namesake, she would not
believe; but the reckless adventuring of the lady's youth seemed
connected with deeds of darkness rather than of light.

Sometimes Miss Aldclyffe appeared to be on the point of making some
absorbing confidence, but reflection invariably restrained her.
Cytherea hoped that such a confidence would come with time, and that
she might thus be a means of soothing a mind which had obviously
known extreme suffering.

But Miss Aldclyffe's reticence concerning her past was not imitated
by Cytherea. Though she never disclosed the one fact of her
knowledge that the love-suit between Miss Aldclyffe and her father
terminated abnormally, the maiden's natural ingenuousness on
subjects not set down for special guard had enabled Miss Aldclyffe
to worm from her, fragment by fragment, every detail of her father's
history. Cytherea saw how deeply Miss Aldclyffe sympathized--and it
compensated her, to some extent, for the hasty resentments of other
times.

Thus uncertainly she lived on. It was perceived by the servants of
the House that some secret bond of connection existed between Miss
Aldclyffe and her companion. But they were woman and woman, not
woman and man, the facts were ethereal and refined, and so they
could not be worked up into a taking story. Whether, as old critics
disputed, a supernatural machinery be necessary to an epic or no, an
ungodly machinery is decidedly necessary to a scandal.

Another letter had come to her from Edward--very short, but full of
entreaty, asking why she would not write just one line--just one
line of cold friendship at least? She then allowed herself to
think, little by little, whether she had not perhaps been too harsh
with him; and at last wondered if he were really much to blame for
being engaged to another woman. 'Ah, Brain, there is one in me
stronger than you!' she said. The young maid now continually pulled
out his letter, read it and re-read it, almost crying with pity the
while, to think what wretched suspense he must be enduring at her
silence, till her heart chid her for her cruelty. She felt that she
must send him a line--one little line--just a wee line to keep him
alive, poor thing; sighing like Donna Clara--


     'Ah, were he now before me,
        In spite of injured pride,
      I fear my eyes would pardon
        Before my tongue could chide.'


2. SEPTEMBER THE TWENTIETH. THREE TO FOUR P.M.

It was the third week in September, about five weeks after
Cytherea's arrival, when Miss Aldclyffe requested her one day to go
through the village of Carriford and assist herself in collecting
the subscriptions made by some of the inhabitants of the parish to a
religious society she patronized. Miss Aldclyffe formed one of what
was called a Ladies' Association, each member of which collected
tributary streams of shillings from her inferiors, to add to her own
pound at the end.

Miss Aldclyffe took particular interest in Cytherea's appearance
that afternoon, and the object of her attention was, indeed,
gratifying to look at. The sight of the lithe girl, set off by an
airy dress, coquettish jacket, flexible hat, a ray of starlight in
each eye and a war of lilies and roses in each cheek, was a palpable
pleasure to the mistress of the mansion, yet a pleasure which
appeared to partake less of the nature of affectionate satisfaction
than of mental gratification.

Eight names were printed in the report as belonging to Miss
Aldclyffe's list, with the amount of subscription-money attached to
each.

'I will collect the first four, whilst you do the same with the last
four,' said Miss Aldclyffe.

The names of two tradespeople stood first in Cytherea's share: then
came a Miss Hinton: last of all in the printed list was Mr.
Springrove the elder. Underneath his name was pencilled, in Miss
Aldclyffe's handwriting, 'Mr. Manston.'

Manston had arrived on the estate, in the capacity of steward, three
or four days previously, and occupied the old manor-house, which had
been altered and repaired for his reception.

'Call on Mr. Manston,' said the lady impressively, looking at the
name written under Cytherea's portion of the list.

'But he does not subscribe yet?'

'I know it; but call and leave him a report. Don't forget it.'

'Say you would be pleased if he would subscribe?'

'Yes--say I should be pleased if he would,' repeated Miss Aldclyffe,
smiling. 'Good-bye. Don't hurry in your walk. If you can't get
easily through your task to-day put off some of it till to-morrow.'

Each then started on her rounds: Cytherea going in the first place
to the old manor-house. Mr. Manston was not indoors, which was a
relief to her. She called then on the two gentleman-farmers' wives,
who soon transacted their business with her, frigidly indifferent to
her personality. A person who socially is nothing is thought less
of by people who are not much than by those who are a great deal.

She then turned towards Peakhill Cottage, the residence of Miss
Hinton, who lived there happily enough, with an elderly servant and
a house-dog as companions. Her father, and last remaining parent,
had retired thither four years before this time, after having filled
the post of editor to the Casterbridge Chronicle for eighteen or
twenty years. There he died soon after, and though comparatively a
poor man, he left his daughter sufficiently well provided for as a
modest fundholder and claimant of sundry small sums in dividends to
maintain herself as mistress at Peakhill.

At Cytherea's knock an inner door was heard to open and close, and
footsteps crossed the passage hesitatingly. The next minute
Cytherea stood face to face with the lady herself.

Adelaide Hinton was about nine-and-twenty years of age. Her hair
was plentiful, like Cytherea's own; her teeth equalled Cytherea's in
regularity and whiteness. But she was much paler, and had features
too transparent to be in place among household surroundings. Her
mouth expressed love less forcibly than Cytherea's, and, as a
natural result of her greater maturity, her tread was less elastic,
and she was more self-possessed.

She had been a girl of that kind which mothers praise as not
forward, by way of contrast, when disparaging those warmer ones with
whom loving is an end and not a means. Men of forty, too, said of
her, 'a good sensible wife for any man, if she cares to marry,' the
caring to marry being thrown in as the vaguest hypothesis, because
she was so practical. Yet it would be singular if, in such cases,
the important subject of marriage should be excluded from
manipulation by hands that are ready for practical performance in
every domestic concern besides.

Cytherea was an acquisition, and the greeting was hearty.

'Good afternoon! O yes--Miss Graye, from Miss Aldclyffe's. I have
seen you at church, and I am so glad you have called! Come in. I
wonder if I have change enough to pay my subscription.' She spoke
girlishly.

Adelaide, when in the company of a younger woman, always levelled
herself down to that younger woman's age from a sense of justice to
herself--as if, though not her own age at common law, it was in
equity.

'It doesn't matter. I'll come again.'

'Yes, do at any time; not only on this errand. But you must step in
for a minute. Do.'

'I have been wanting to come for several weeks.'

'That's right. Now you must see my house--lonely, isn't it, for a
single person? People said it was odd for a young woman like me to
keep on a house; but what did I care? If you knew the pleasure of
locking up your own door, with the sensation that you reigned
supreme inside it, you would say it was worth the risk of being
called odd. Mr. Springrove attends to my gardening, the dog attends
to robbers, and whenever there is a snake or toad to kill, Jane does
it.'

'How nice! It is better than living in a town.'

'Far better. A town makes a cynic of me.'

The remark recalled, somewhat startlingly, to Cytherea's mind, that
Edward had used those very words to herself one evening at Budmouth.

Miss Hinton opened an interior door and led her visitor into a small
drawing-room commanding a view of the country for miles.

The missionary business was soon settled; but the chat continued.

'How lonely it must be here at night!' said Cytherea. 'Aren't you
afraid?'

'At first I was, slightly. But I got used to the solitude. And you
know a sort of commonsense will creep even into timidity. I say to
myself sometimes at night, "If I were anybody but a harmless woman,
not worth the trouble of a worm's ghost to appear to me, I should
think that every sound I hear was a spirit." But you must see all
over my house.'

Cytherea was highly interested in seeing.

'I say you _must_ do this, and you _must_ do that, as if you were
a child,' remarked Adelaide. 'A privileged friend of mine tells me
this use of the imperative comes of being so constantly in nobody's
society but my own.'

'Ah, yes. I suppose she is right.'

Cytherea called the friend 'she' by a rule of ladylike practice; for
a woman's 'friend' is delicately assumed by another friend to be of
their own sex in the absence of knowledge to the contrary; just as
cats are called she's until they prove themselves he's.

Miss Hinton laughed mysteriously.

'I get a humorous reproof for it now and then, I assure you,' she
continued.

'"Humorous reproof:" that's not from a woman: who can reprove
humorously but a man?' was the groove of Cytherea's thought at the
remark. 'Your brother reproves you, I expect,' said that innocent
young lady.

'No,' said Miss Hinton, with a candid air. ''Tis only a
professional man I am acquainted with.' She looked out of the
window.

Women are persistently imitative. No sooner did a thought flash
through Cytherea's mind that the man was a lover than she became a
Miss Aldclyffe in a mild form.

'I imagine he's a lover,' she said.

Miss Hinton smiled a smile of experience in that line.

Few women, if taxed with having an admirer, are so free from vanity
as to deny the impeachment, even if it is utterly untrue. When it
does happen to be true, they look pityingly away from the person who
is so benighted as to have got no further than suspecting it.

'There now--Miss Hinton; you are engaged to be married!' said
Cytherea accusingly.

Adelaide nodded her head practically. 'Well, yes, I am,' she said.

The word 'engaged' had no sooner passed Cytherea's lips than the
sound of it--the mere sound of her own lips--carried her mind to the
time and circumstances under which Miss Aldclyffe had used it
towards herself. A sickening thought followed--based but on a mere
surmise; yet its presence took every other idea away from Cytherea's
mind. Miss Hinton had used Edward's words about towns; she
mentioned Mr. Springrove as attending to her garden. It could not
be that Edward was the man! that Miss Aldclyffe had planned to
reveal her rival thus!

'Are you going to be married soon?' she inquired, with a steadiness
the result of a sort of fascination, but apparently of indifference.

'Not very soon--still, soon.'

'Ah-ha! In less than three months?' said Cytherea.

'Two.'

Now that the subject was well in hand, Adelaide wanted no more
prompting. 'You won't tell anybody if I show you something?' she
said, with eager mystery.

'O no, nobody. But does he live in this parish?'

'No.'

Nothing proved yet.

'What's his name?' said Cytherea flatly. Her breath and heart had
begun their old tricks, and came and went hotly. Miss Hinton could
not see her face.

'What do you think?' said Miss Hinton.

'George?' said Cytherea, with deceitful agony.

'No,' said Adelaide. 'But now, you shall see him first; come here;'
and she led the way upstairs into her bedroom. There, standing on
the dressing table in a little frame, was the unconscious portrait
of Edward Springrove.

'There he is,' Miss Hinton said, and a silence ensued.

'Are you very fond of him?' continued the miserable Cytherea at
length.

'Yes, of course I am,' her companion replied, but in the tone of one
who 'lived in Abraham's bosom all the year,' and was therefore
untouched by solemn thought at the fact. 'He's my cousin--a native
of this village. We were engaged before my father's death left me
so lonely. I was only twenty, and a much greater belle than I am
now. We know each other thoroughly, as you may imagine. I give him
a little sermonizing now and then.'

'Why?'

'O, it's only in fun. He's very naughty sometimes--not really, you
know--but he will look at any pretty face when he sees it.'

Storing up this statement of his susceptibility as another item to
be miserable upon when she had time, 'How do you know that?'
Cytherea asked, with a swelling heart.

'Well, you know how things do come to women's ears. He used to live
at Budmouth as an assistant-architect, and I found out that a young
giddy thing of a girl who lives there somewhere took his fancy for a
day or two. But I don't feel jealous at all--our engagement is so
matter-of-fact that neither of us can be jealous. And it was a mere
flirtation--she was too silly for him. He's fond of rowing, and
kindly gave her an airing for an evening or two. I'll warrant they
talked the most unmitigated rubbish under the sun--all shallowness
and pastime, just as everything is at watering places--neither of
them caring a bit for the other--she giggling like a goose all the
time--'

Concentrated essence of woman pervaded the room rather than air.
'She _didn't_! and it _wasn't_ shallowness!' Cytherea burst out,
with brimming eyes. ''Twas deep deceit on one side, and entire
confidence on the other--yes, it was!' The pent-up emotion had
swollen and swollen inside the young thing till the dam could no
longer embay it. The instant the words were out she would have
given worlds to have been able to recall them.

'Do you know her--or him?' said Miss Hinton, starting with suspicion
at the warmth shown.

The two rivals had now lost their personality quite. There was the
same keen brightness of eye, the same movement of the mouth, the
same mind in both, as they looked doubtingly and excitedly at each
other. As is invariably the case with women when a man they care
for is the subject of an excitement among them, the situation
abstracted the differences which distinguished them as individuals,
and left only the properties common to them as atoms of a sex.

Cytherea caught at the chance afforded her of not betraying herself.
'Yes, I know her,' she said.

'Well,' said Miss Hinton, 'I am really vexed if my speaking so
lightly of any friend of yours has hurt your feelings, but--'

'O, never mind,' Cytherea returned; 'it doesn't matter, Miss Hinton.
I think I must leave you now. I have to call at other places. Yes
--I must go.'

Miss Hinton, in a perplexed state of mind, showed her visitor
politely downstairs to the door. Here Cytherea bade her a hurried
adieu, and flitted down the garden into the lane.

She persevered in her duties with a wayward pleasure in giving
herself misery, as was her wont. Mr. Springrove's name was next on
the list, and she turned towards his dwelling, the Three Tranters
Inn.

3. FOUR TO FIVE P.M.

The cottages along Carriford village street were not so close but
that on one side or other of the road was always a hedge of hawthorn
or privet, over or through which could be seen gardens or orchards
rich with produce. It was about the middle of the early
apple-harvest, and the laden trees were shaken at intervals by the
gatherers; the soft pattering of the falling crop upon the grassy
ground being diversified by the loud rattle of vagrant ones upon a
rail, hencoop, basket, or lean-to roof, or upon the rounded and
stooping backs of the collectors--mostly children, who would have
cried bitterly at receiving such a smart blow from any other
quarter, but smilingly assumed it to be but fun in apples.

The Three Tranters Inn, a many-gabled, mediaeval building,
constructed almost entirely of timber, plaster, and thatch, stood
close to the line of the roadside, almost opposite the churchyard,
and was connected with a row of cottages on the left by thatched
outbuildings. It was an uncommonly characteristic and handsome
specimen of the genuine roadside inn of bygone times; and standing
on one of the great highways in this part of England, had in its
time been the scene of as much of what is now looked upon as the
romantic and genial experience of stage-coach travelling as any
halting-place in the country. The railway had absorbed the whole
stream of traffic which formerly flowed through the village and
along by the ancient door of the inn, reducing the empty-handed
landlord, who used only to farm a few fields at the back of the
house, to the necessity of eking out his attenuated income by
increasing the extent of his agricultural business if he would still
maintain his social standing. Next to the general stillness
pervading the spot, the long line of outbuildings adjoining the
house was the most striking and saddening witness to the passed-away
fortunes of the Three Tranters Inn. It was the bulk of the original
stabling, and where once the hoofs of two-score horses had daily
rattled over the stony yard, to and from the stalls within, thick
grass now grew, whilst the line of roofs--once so straight--over the
decayed stalls, had sunk into vast hollows till they seemed like the
cheeks of toothless age.

On a green plot at the other end of the building grew two or three
large, wide-spreading elm-trees, from which the sign was suspended
--representing the three men called tranters (irregular carriers),
standing side by side, and exactly alike to a hair's-breadth, the
grain of the wood and joints of the boards being visible through the
thin paint depicting their forms, which were still further
disfigured by red stains running downwards from the rusty nails
above.

Under the trees now stood a cider-mill and press, and upon the spot
sheltered by the boughs were gathered Mr. Springrove himself, his
men, the parish clerk, two or three other men, grinders and
supernumeraries, a woman with an infant in her arms, a flock of
pigeons, and some little boys with straws in their mouths,
endeavouring, whenever the men's backs were turned, to get a sip of
the sweet juice issuing from the vat.

Edward Springrove the elder, the landlord, now more particularly a
farmer, and for two months in the year a cider-maker, was an
employer of labour of the old school, who worked himself among his
men. He was now engaged in packing the pomace into horsehair bags
with a rammer, and Gad Weedy, his man, was occupied in shovelling up
more from a tub at his side. The shovel shone like silver from the
action of the juice, and ever and anon, in its motion to and fro,
caught the rays of the declining sun and reflected them in bristling
stars of light.

Mr. Springrove had been too young a man when the pristine days of
the Three Tranters had departed for ever to have much of the host
left in him now. He was a poet with a rough skin: one whose
sturdiness was more the result of external circumstances than of
intrinsic nature. Too kindly constituted to be very provident, he
was yet not imprudent. He had a quiet humorousness of disposition,
not out of keeping with a frequent melancholy, the general
expression of his countenance being one of abstraction. Like Walt
Whitman he felt as his years increased--

     'I foresee too much; it means more than I thought.'

On the present occasion he wore gaiters and a leathern apron, and
worked with his shirt-sleeves rolled up beyond his elbows,
disclosing solid and fleshy rather than muscular arms. They were
stained by the cider, and two or three brown apple-pips from the
pomace he was handling were to be seen sticking on them here and
there.

The other prominent figure was that of Richard Crickett, the parish
clerk, a kind of Bowdlerized rake, who ate only as much as a woman,
and had the rheumatism in his left hand. The remainder of the
group, brown-faced peasants, wore smock-frocks embroidered on the
shoulders with hearts and diamonds, and were girt round their middle
with a strap, another being worn round the right wrist.

'And have you seen the steward, Mr. Springrove?' said the clerk.

'Just a glimpse of him; but 'twas just enough to show me that he's
not here for long.'

'Why mid that be?'

'He'll never stand the vagaries of the female figure holden the
reins--not he.'

'She d' pay en well,' said a grinder; 'and money's money.'

'Ah--'tis: very much so,' the clerk replied.

'Yes, yes, naibour Crickett,' said Springrove, 'but she'll vlee
in a passion--all the fat will be in the fire--and there's an end
o't. . . . Yes, she is a one,' continued the farmer, resting,
raising his eyes, and reading the features of a distant apple.

'She is,' said Gad, resting too (it is wonderful how prompt a
journeyman is in following his master's initiative to rest) and
reflectively regarding the ground in front of him.

'True: a one is she,' the clerk chimed in, shaking his head
ominously.

'She has such a temper,' said the farmer, 'and is so wilful too.
You may as well try to stop a footpath as stop her when she has
taken anything into her head. I'd as soon grind little green crabs
all day as live wi' her.'

''Tis a temper she hev, 'tis,' the clerk replied, 'though I be a
servant of the Church that say it. But she isn't goen to flee in a
passion this time.'

The audience waited for the continuation of the speech, as if they
knew from experience the exact distance off it lay in the future.

The clerk swallowed nothing as if it were a great deal, and then
went on, 'There's some'at between 'em: mark my words, naibours
--there's some'at between 'em.'

'D'ye mean it?'

'I d' know it. He came last Saturday, didn't he?'

''A did, truly,' said Gad Weedy, at the same time taking an apple
from the hopper of the mill, eating a piece, and flinging back the
remainder to be ground up for cider.

'He went to church a-Sunday,' said the clerk again.

''A did.'

'And she kept her eye upon en all the service, her face flickeren
between red and white, but never stoppen at either.'

Mr. Springrove nodded, and went to the press.

'Well,' said the clerk, 'you don't call her the kind o' woman to
make mistakes in just trotten through the weekly service o' God?
Why, as a rule she's as right as I be myself.'

Mr. Springrove nodded again, and gave a twist to the screw of the
press, followed in the movement by Gad at the other side; the two
grinders expressing by looks of the greatest concern that, if Miss
Aldclyffe were as right at church as the clerk, she must be right
indeed.

'Yes, as right in the service o' God as I be myself,' repeated the
clerk. 'But last Sunday, when we were in the tenth commandment,
says she, "Incline our hearts to keep this law," says she, when
'twas "Laws in our hearts, we beseech Thee," all the church through.
Her eye was upon _him_--she was quite lost--"Hearts to keep this
law," says she; she was no more than a mere shadder at that tenth
time--a mere shadder. You mi't ha' mouthed across to her "Laws in
our hearts we beseech Thee," fifty times over--she'd never ha'
noticed ye. She's in love wi' the man, that's what she is.'

'Then she's a bigger stunpoll than I took her for,' said Mr.
Springrove. 'Why, she's old enough to be his mother.'

'The row'll be between her and that young Curlywig, you'll see. She
won't run the risk of that pretty face be-en near.'

'Clerk Crickett, I d' fancy you d' know everything about everybody,'
said Gad.

'Well so's,' said the clerk modestly. 'I do know a little. It
comes to me.'

'And I d' know where from.'

'Ah.'

'That wife o' thine. She's an entertainen woman, not to speak
disrespectful.'

'She is: and a winnen one. Look at the husbands she've had--God
bless her!'

'I wonder you could stand third in that list, Clerk Crickett,' said
Mr. Springrove.

'Well, 't has been a power o' marvel to myself oftentimes. Yes,
matrimony do begin wi' "Dearly beloved," and ends wi' "Amazement,"
as the prayer-book says. But what could I do, naibour Springrove?
'Twas ordained to be. Well do I call to mind what your poor lady
said to me when I had just married. "Ah, Mr. Crickett," says she,
"your wife will soon settle you as she did her other two: here's a
glass o' rum, for I shan't see your poor face this time next year."
I swallered the rum, called again next year, and said, "Mrs.
Springrove, you gave me a glass o' rum last year because I was going
to die--here I be alive still, you see." "Well said, clerk! Here's
two glasses for you now, then," says she. "Thank you, mem," I
said, and swallered the rum. Well, dang my old sides, next year I
thought I'd call again and get three. And call I did. But she
wouldn't give me a drop o' the commonest. "No, clerk," says she,
"you be too tough for a woman's pity." . . . Ah, poor soul, 'twas
true enough! Here be I, that was expected to die, alive and hard as
a nail, you see, and there's she moulderen in her grave.'

'I used to think 'twas your wife's fate not to have a liven husband
when I zid 'em die off so,' said Gad.

'Fate? Bless thy simplicity, so 'twas her fate; but she struggled
to have one, and would, and did. Fate's nothen beside a woman's
schemen!'

'I suppose, then, that Fate is a He, like us, and the Lord, and the
rest o' 'em up above there,' said Gad, lifting his eyes to the sky.

'Hullo! Here's the young woman comen that we were a-talken about
by-now,' said a grinder, suddenly interrupting. 'She's comen up
here, as I be alive!'

The two grinders stood and regarded Cytherea as if she had been a
ship tacking into a harbour, nearly stopping the mill in their new
interest.

'Stylish accoutrements about the head and shoulders, to my thinken,'
said the clerk. 'Sheenen curls, and plenty o' em.'

'If there's one kind of pride more excusable than another in a young
woman, 'tis being proud of her hair,' said Mr. Springrove.

'Dear man!--the pride there is only a small piece o' the whole. I
warrant now, though she can show such a figure, she ha'n't a stick
o' furniture to call her own.'

'Come, Clerk Crickett, let the maid be a maid while she is a maid,'
said Farmer Springrove chivalrously.

'O,' replied the servant of the Church; 'I've nothen to say against
it--O no:

     '"The chimney-sweeper's daughter Sue
         As I have heard declare, O,
       Although she's neither sock nor shoe
         Will curl and deck her hair, O."'

Cytherea was rather disconcerted at finding that the gradual
cessation of the chopping of the mill was on her account, and still
more when she saw all the cider-makers' eyes fixed upon her except
Mr. Springrove's, whose natural delicacy restrained him. She neared
the plot of grass, but instead of advancing further, hesitated on
its border.

Mr. Springrove perceived her embarrassment, which was relieved when
she saw his old-established figure coming across to her, wiping his
hands in his apron.

'I know your errand, missie,' he said, 'and am glad to see you, and
attend to it. I'll step indoors.'

'If you are busy I am in no hurry for a minute or two,' said
Cytherea.

'Then if so be you really wouldn't mind, we'll wring down this last
filling to let it drain all night?'

'Not at all. I like to see you.'

'We are only just grinding down the early pickthongs and griffins,'
continued the farmer, in a half-apologetic tone for detaining by his
cider-making any well-dressed woman. 'They rot as black as a
chimney-crook if we keep 'em till the regulars turn in.' As he
spoke he went back to the press, Cytherea keeping at his elbow.
'I'm later than I should have been by rights,' he continued, taking
up a lever for propelling the screw, and beckoning to the men to
come forward. 'The truth is, my son Edward had promised to come
to-day, and I made preparations; but instead of him comes a letter:
"London, September the eighteenth, Dear Father," says he, and went
on to tell me he couldn't. It threw me out a bit.'

'Of course,' said Cytherea.

'He's got a place 'a b'lieve?' said the clerk, drawing near.

'No, poor mortal fellow, no. He tried for this one here, you know,
but couldn't manage to get it. I don't know the rights o' the
matter, but willy-nilly they wouldn't have him for steward. Now
mates, form in line.'

Springrove, the clerk, the grinders, and Gad, all ranged themselves
behind the lever of the screw, and walked round like soldiers
wheeling.

'The man that the old quean hev got is a man you can hardly get upon
your tongue to gainsay, by the look o' en,' rejoined Clerk Crickett.

'One o' them people that can contrive to be thought no worse o' for
stealen a horse than another man for looken over hedge at en,' said
a grinder.

'Well, he's all there as steward, and is quite the gentleman--no
doubt about that.'

'So would my Ted ha' been, for the matter o' that,' the farmer said.

'That's true: 'a would, sir.'

'I said, I'll give Ted a good education if it do cost me my eyes,
and I would have done it.'

'Ay, that you would so,' said the chorus of assistants solemnly.

'But he took to books and drawing naturally, and cost very little;
and as a wind-up the womenfolk hatched up a match between him and
his cousin.'

'When's the wedden to be, Mr. Springrove?'

'Uncertain--but soon, I suppose. Edward, you see, can do anything
pretty nearly, and yet can't get a straightforward living. I wish
sometimes I had kept him here, and let professions go. But he was
such a one for the pencil.'

He dropped the lever in the hedge, and turned to his visitor.

'Now then, missie, if you'll come indoors, please.'

Gad Weedy looked with a placid criticism at Cytherea as she withdrew
with the farmer.

'I could tell by the tongue o' her that she didn't take her degrees
in our county,' he said in an undertone.



'The railways have left you lonely here,' she observed, when they
were indoors.

Save the withered old flies, which were quite tame from the
solitude, not a being was in the house. Nobody seemed to have
entered it since the last passenger had been called out to mount the
last stage-coach that had run by.

'Yes, the Inn and I seem almost a pair of fossils,' the farmer
replied, looking at the room and then at himself.

'O, Mr. Springrove,' said Cytherea, suddenly recollecting herself;
'I am much obliged to you for recommending me to Miss Aldclyffe.'
She began to warm towards the old man; there was in him a gentleness
of disposition which reminded her of her own father.

'Recommending? Not at all, miss. Ted--that's my son--Ted said a
fellow-draughtsman of his had a sister who wanted to be doing
something in the world, and I mentioned it to the housekeeper,
that's all. Ay, I miss my son very much.'

She kept her back to the window that he might not see her rising
colour.

'Yes,' he continued, 'sometimes I can't help feeling uneasy about
him. You know, he seems not made for a town life exactly: he gets
very queer over it sometimes, I think. Perhaps he'll be better when
he's married to Adelaide.'

A half-impatient feeling arose in her, like that which possesses a
sick person when he hears a recently-struck hour struck again by a
slow clock. She had lived further on.

'Everything depends upon whether he loves her,' she said
tremulously.

'He used to--he doesn't show it so much now; but that's because he's
older. You see, it was several years ago they first walked together
as young man and young woman. She's altered too from what she was
when he first courted her.'

'How, sir?'

'O, she's more sensible by half. When he used to write to her she'd
creep up the lane and look back over her shoulder, and slide out the
letter, and read a word and stand in thought looking at the hills
and seeing none. Then the cuckoo would cry--away the letter would
slip, and she'd start wi' fright at the mere bird, and have a red
skin before the quickest man among ye could say, "Blood rush up."'

He came forward with the money and dropped it into her hand. His
thoughts were still with Edward, and he absently took her little
fingers in his as he said, earnestly and ingenuously--

''Tis so seldom I get a gentlewoman to speak to that I can't help
speaking to you, Miss Graye, on my fears for Edward; I sometimes am
afraid that he'll never get on--that he'll die poor and despised
under the worst mental conditions, a keen sense of having been
passed in the race by men whose brains are nothing to his own, all
through his seeing too far into things--being discontented with
make-shifts--thinking o' perfection in things, and then sickened
that there's no such thing as perfection. I shan't be sorry to see
him marry, since it may settle him down and do him good. . . . Ay,
we'll hope for the best.'

He let go her hand and accompanied her to the door saying, 'If you
should care to walk this way and talk to an old man once now and
then, it will be a great delight to him, Miss Graye. Good-evening
to ye. . . . Ah look! a thunderstorm is brewing--be quick home. Or
shall I step up with you?'

'No, thank you, Mr. Springrove. Good evening,' she said in a low
voice, and hurried away. One thought still possessed her; Edward
had trifled with her love.

4. FIVE TO SIX P.M.

She followed the road into a bower of trees, overhanging it so
densely that the pass appeared like a rabbit's burrow, and presently
reached a side entrance to the park. The clouds rose more rapidly
than the farmer had anticipated: the sheep moved in a trail, and
complained incoherently. Livid grey shades, like those of the
modern French painters, made a mystery of the remote and dark parts
of the vista, and seemed to insist upon a suspension of breath.
Before she was half-way across the park the thunder rumbled
distinctly.

The direction in which she had to go would take her close by the old
manor-house. The air was perfectly still, and between each low
rumble of the thunder behind she could hear the roar of the
waterfall before her, and the creak of the engine among the bushes
hard by it. Hurrying on, with a growing dread of the gloom and of
the approaching storm, she drew near the Old House, now rising
before her against the dark foliage and sky in tones of strange
whiteness.

On the flight of steps, which descended from a terrace in front to
the level of the park, stood a man. He appeared, partly from the
relief the position gave to his figure, and partly from fact, to be
of towering height. He was dark in outline, and was looking at the
sky, with his hands behind him.

It was necessary for Cytherea to pass directly across the line of
his front. She felt so reluctant to do this, that she was about to
turn under the trees out of the path and enter it again at a point
beyond the Old House; but he had seen her, and she came on
mechanically, unconsciously averting her face a little, and dropping
her glance to the ground.

Her eyes unswervingly lingered along the path until they fell upon
another path branching in a right line from the path she was
pursuing. It came from the steps of the Old House. 'I am exactly
opposite him now,' she thought, 'and his eyes are going through me.'

A clear masculine voice said, at the same instant--

'Are you afraid?'

She, interpreting his question by her feelings at the moment,
assumed himself to be the object of fear, if any. 'I don't think I
am,' she stammered.

He seemed to know that she thought in that sense.

'Of the thunder, I mean,' he said; 'not of myself.'

She must turn to him now. 'I think it is going to rain,' she
remarked for the sake of saying something.

He could not conceal his surprise and admiration of her face and
bearing. He said courteously, 'It may possibly not rain before you
reach the House, if you are going there?'

'Yes, I am,'

'May I walk up with you? It is lonely under the trees.'

'No.' Fearing his courtesy arose from a belief that he was
addressing a woman of higher station than was hers, she added, 'I am
Miss Aldclyffe's companion. I don't mind the loneliness.'

'O, Miss Aldclyffe's companion. Then will you be kind enough to
take a subscription to her? She sent to me this afternoon to ask me
to become a subscriber to her Society, and I was out. Of course
I'll subscribe if she wishes it. I take a great interest in the
Society.'

'Miss Aldclyffe will be glad to hear that, I know.'

'Yes; let me see--what Society did she say it was? I am afraid I
haven't enough money in my pocket, and yet it would be a
satisfaction to her to have practical proof of my willingness. I'll
get it, and be out in one minute.'

He entered the house and was at her side again within the time he
had named. 'This is it,' he said pleasantly.

She held up her hand. The soft tips of his fingers brushed the palm
of her glove as he placed the money within it. She wondered why his
fingers should have touched her.

'I think after all,' he continued, 'that the rain is upon us, and
will drench you before you reach the House. Yes: see there.'

He pointed to a round wet spot as large as a nasturtium leaf, which
had suddenly appeared upon the white surface of the step.

'You had better come into the porch. It is not nearly night yet.
The clouds make it seem later than it really is.'

Heavy drops of rain, followed immediately by a forked flash of
lightning and sharp rattling thunder compelled her, willingly or no,
to accept his invitation. She ascended the steps, stood beside him
just within the porch, and for the first time obtained a series of
short views of his person, as they waited there in silence.

He was an extremely handsome man, well-formed, and well-dressed, of
an age which seemed to be two or three years less than thirty. The
most striking point in his appearance was the wonderful, almost
preternatural, clearness of his complexion. There was not a blemish
or speck of any kind to mar the smoothness of its surface or the
beauty of its hue. Next, his forehead was square and broad, his
brows straight and firm, his eyes penetrating and clear. By
collecting the round of expressions they gave forth, a person who
theorized on such matters would have imbibed the notion that their
owner was of a nature to kick against the pricks; the last man in
the world to put up with a position because it seemed to be his
destiny to do so; one who took upon himself to resist fate with the
vindictive determination of a Theomachist. Eyes and forehead both
would have expressed keenness of intellect too severely to be
pleasing, had their force not been counteracted by the lines and
tone of the lips. These were full and luscious to a surprising
degree, possessing a woman-like softness of curve, and a ruby
redness so intense, as to testify strongly to much susceptibility of
heart where feminine beauty was concerned--a susceptibility that
might require all the ballast of brain with which he had previously
been credited to confine within reasonable channels.

His manner was rather elegant than good: his speech well-finished
and unconstrained.

The pause in their discourse, which had been caused by the peal of
thunder was unbroken by either for a minute or two, during which the
ears of both seemed to be absently following the low roar of the
waterfall as it became gradually rivalled by the increasing rush of
rain upon the trees and herbage of the grove. After her short looks
at him, Cytherea had turned her head towards the avenue for a while,
and now, glancing back again for an instant, she discovered that his
eyes were engaged in a steady, though delicate, regard of her face
and form.

At this moment, by reason of the narrowness of the porch, their
dresses touched, and remained in contact.

His clothes are something exterior to every man; but to a woman her
dress is part of her body. Its motions are all present to her
intelligence if not to her eyes; no man knows how his coat-tails
swing. By the slightest hyperbole it may be said that her dress has
sensation. Crease but the very Ultima Thule of fringe or flounce,
and it hurts her as much as pinching her. Delicate antennae, or
feelers, bristle on every outlying frill. Go to the uppermost: she
is there; tread on the lowest: the fair creature is there almost
before you.

Thus the touch of clothes, which was nothing to Manston, sent a
thrill through Cytherea, seeing, moreover, that he was of the nature
of a mysterious stranger. She looked out again at the storm, but
still felt him. At last to escape the sensation she moved away,
though by so doing it was necessary to advance a little into the
rain.

'Look, the rain is coming into the porch upon you,' he said. 'Step
inside the door.'

Cytherea hesitated.

'Perfectly safe, I assure you,' he added, laughing, and holding the
door open. 'You shall see what a state of disorganization I am in
--boxes on boxes, furniture, straw, crockery, in every form of
transposition. An old woman is in the back quarters somewhere,
beginning to put things to rights. . . . You know the inside of the
house, I dare say?'

'I have never been in.'

'O well, come along. Here, you see, they have made a door through,
here, they have put a partition dividing the old hall into two, one
part is now my parlour; there they have put a plaster ceiling,
hiding the old chestnut-carved roof because it was too high and
would have been chilly for me; you see, being the original hall, it
was open right up to the top, and here the lord of the manor and his
retainers used to meet and be merry by the light from the monstrous
fire which shone out from that monstrous fire-place, now narrowed to
a mere nothing for my grate, though you can see the old outline
still. I almost wish I could have had it in its original state.'

'With more romance and less comfort.'

'Yes, exactly. Well, perhaps the wish is not deep-seated. You will
see how the things are tumbled in anyhow, packing-cases and all.
The only piece of ornamental furniture yet unpacked is this one.'

'An organ?'

'Yes, an organ. I made it myself, except the pipes. I opened the
case this afternoon to commence soothing myself at once. It is not
a very large one, but quite big enough for a private house. You
play, I dare say?'

'The piano. I am not at all used to an organ.'

'You would soon acquire the touch for an organ, though it would
spoil your touch for the piano. Not that that matters a great deal.
A piano isn't much as an instrument.'

'It is the fashion to say so now. I think it is quite good enough.'

'That isn't altogether a right sentiment about things being good
enough.'

'No--no. What I mean is, that the men who despise pianos do it as a
rule from their teeth, merely for fashion's sake, because cleverer
men have said it before them--not from the experience of their
ears.'

Now Cytherea all at once broke into a blush at the consciousness of
a great snub she had been guilty of in her eagerness to explain
herself. He charitably expressed by a look that he did not in the
least mind her blunder, if it were one; and this attitude forced him
into a position of mental superiority which vexed her.

'I play for my private amusement only,' he said. 'I have never
learned scientifically. All I know is what I taught myself.'

The thunder, lightning, and rain had now increased to a terrific
force. The clouds, from which darts, forks, zigzags, and balls of
fire continually sprang, did not appear to be more than a hundred
yards above their heads, and every now and then a flash and a peal
made gaps in the steward's descriptions. He went towards the organ,
in the midst of a volley which seemed to shake the aged house from
foundations to chimney.

'You are not going to play now, are you?' said Cytherea uneasily.

'O yes. Why not now?' he said. 'You can't go home, and therefore
we may as well be amused, if you don't mind sitting on this box.
The few chairs I have unpacked are in the other room.'

Without waiting to see whether she sat down or not, he turned to the
organ and began extemporizing a harmony which meandered through
every variety of expression of which the instrument was capable.
Presently he ceased and began searching for some music-book.

'What a splendid flash!' he said, as the lightning again shone in
through the mullioned window, which, of a proportion to suit the
whole extent of the original hall, was much too large for the
present room. The thunder pealed again. Cytherea, in spite of
herself, was frightened, not only at the weather, but at the general
unearthly weirdness which seemed to surround her there.

'I wish I--the lightning wasn't so bright. Do you think it will
last long?' she said timidly.

'It can't last much longer,' he murmured, without turning, running
his fingers again over the keys. 'But this is nothing,' he
continued, suddenly stopping and regarding her. 'It seems brighter
because of the deep shadow under those trees yonder. Don't mind it;
now look at me--look in my face--now.'

He had faced the window, looking fixedly at the sky with his dark
strong eyes. She seemed compelled to do as she was bidden, and
looked in the too-delicately beautiful face.

The flash came; but he did not turn or blink, keeping his eyes fixed
as firmly as before. 'There,' he said, turning to her, 'that's the
way to look at lightning.'

'O, it might have blinded you!' she exclaimed.

'Nonsense--not lightning of this sort--I shouldn't have stared at it
if there had been danger. It is only sheet-lightning now. Now,
will you have another piece? Something from an oratorio this time?'

'No, thank you--I don't want to hear it whilst it thunders so.' But
he had begun without heeding her answer, and she stood motionless
again, marvelling at the wonderful indifference to all external
circumstance which was now evinced by his complete absorption in the
music before him.

'Why do you play such saddening chords?' she said, when he next
paused.

'H'm--because I like them, I suppose,' said he lightly. 'Don't you
like sad impressions sometimes?'

'Yes, sometimes, perhaps.'

'When you are full of trouble.'

'Yes.'

'Well, why shouldn't I when I am full of trouble?'

'Are you troubled?'

'I am troubled.' He said this thoughtfully and abruptly--so
abruptly that she did not push the dialogue further.

He now played more powerfully. Cytherea had never heard music in
the completeness of full orchestral power, and the tones of the
organ, which reverberated with considerable effect in the
comparatively small space of the room, heightened by the elemental
strife of light and sound outside, moved her to a degree out of
proportion to the actual power of the mere notes, practised as was
the hand that produced them. The varying strains--now loud, now
soft; simple, complicated, weird, touching, grand, boisterous,
subdued; each phase distinct, yet modulating into the next with a
graceful and easy flow--shook and bent her to themselves, as a
gushing brook shakes and bends a shadow cast across its surface.
The power of the music did not show itself so much by attracting her
attention to the subject of the piece, as by taking up and
developing as its libretto the poem of her own life and soul,
shifting her deeds and intentions from the hands of her judgment and
holding them in its own.

She was swayed into emotional opinions concerning the strange man
before her; new impulses of thought came with new harmonies, and
entered into her with a gnawing thrill. A dreadful flash of
lightning then, and the thunder close upon it. She found herself
involuntarily shrinking up beside him, and looking with parted lips
at his face.

He turned his eyes and saw her emotion, which greatly increased the
ideal element in her expressive face. She was in the state in which
woman's instinct to conceal has lost its power over her impulse to
tell; and he saw it. Bending his handsome face over her till his
lips almost touched her ear, he murmured, without breaking the
harmonies--

'Do you very much like this piece?'

'Very much indeed,' she said.

'I could see you were affected by it. I will copy it for you.'

'Thank you much.'

'I will bring it to the House to you to-morrow. Who shall I ask
for?'

'O, not for me. Don't bring it,' she said hastily. 'I shouldn't
like you to.'

'Let me see--to-morrow evening at seven or a few minutes past I
shall be passing the waterfall on my way home. I could conveniently
give it you there, and I should like you to have it.'

He modulated into the Pastoral Symphony, still looking in her eyes.

'Very well,' she said, to get rid of the look.

The storm had by this time considerably decreased in violence, and
in seven or ten minutes the sky partially cleared, the clouds around
the western horizon becoming lighted up with the rays of the sinking
sun.

Cytherea drew a long breath of relief, and prepared to go away. She
was full of a distressing sense that her detention in the old
manor-house, and the acquaintanceship it had set on foot, was not a
thing she wished. It was such a foolish thing to have been excited
and dragged into frankness by the wiles of a stranger.

'Allow me to come with you,' he said, accompanying her to the door,
and again showing by his behaviour how much he was impressed with
her. His influence over her had vanished with the musical chords,
and she turned her back upon him. 'May I come?' he repeated.

'No, no. The distance is not a quarter of a mile--it is really
not necessary, thank you,' she said quietly. And wishing him
good-evening, without meeting his eyes, she went down the steps,
leaving him standing at the door.

'O, how is it that man has so fascinated me?' was all she could
think. Her own self, as she had sat spell-bound before him, was all
she could see. Her gait was constrained, from the knowledge that
his eyes were upon her until she had passed the hollow by the
waterfall, and by ascending the rise had become hidden from his view
by the boughs of the overhanging trees.

5. SIX TO SEVEN P.M.

The wet shining road threw the western glare into her eyes with an
invidious lustre which rendered the restlessness of her mood more
wearying. Her thoughts flew from idea to idea without asking for
the slightest link of connection between one and another. One
moment she was full of the wild music and stirring scene with
Manston---the next, Edward's image rose before her like a shadowy
ghost. Then Manston's black eyes seemed piercing her again, and the
reckless voluptuous mouth appeared bending to the curves of his
special words. What could be those troubles to which he had
alluded? Perhaps Miss Aldclyffe was at the bottom of them. Sad at
heart she paced on: her life was bewildering her.

On coming into Miss Aldclyffe's presence Cytherea told her of the
incident, not without a fear that she would burst into one of her
ungovernable fits of temper at learning Cytherea's slight departure
from the programme. But, strangely to Cytherea, Miss Aldclyffe
looked delighted. The usual cross-examination followed.

'And so you were with him all that time?' said the lady, with
assumed severity.

'Yes, I was.'

'I did not tell you to call at the Old House twice.'

'I didn't call, as I have said. He made me come into the porch.'

'What remarks did he make, do you say?'

'That the lightning was not so bad as I thought.'

'A very important remark, that. Did he--' she turned her glance
full upon the girl, and eyeing her searchingly, said--

'Did he say anything about _me_?'

'Nothing,' said Cytherea, returning her gaze calmly, 'except that I
was to give you the subscription.'

'You are quite sure?'

'Quite.'

'I believe you. Did he say anything striking or strange about
himself?'

'Only one thing--that he was troubled,'

'Troubled!'

After saying the word, Miss Aldclyffe relapsed into silence. Such
behaviour as this had ended, on most previous occasions, by her
making a confession, and Cytherea expected one now. But for once
she was mistaken, nothing more was said.

When she had returned to her room she sat down and penned a farewell
letter to Edward Springrove, as little able as any other excitable
and brimming young woman of nineteen to feel that the wisest and
only dignified course at that juncture was to do nothing at all.
She told him that, to her painful surprise, she had learnt that his
engagement to another woman was a matter of notoriety. She insisted
that all honour bade him marry his early love--a woman far better
than her unworthy self, who only deserved to be forgotten, and
begged him to remember that he was not to see her face again. She
upbraided him for levity and cruelty in meeting her so frequently at
Budmouth, and above all in stealing the kiss from her lips on the
last evening of the water excursions. 'I never, never can forget
it!' she said, and then felt a sensation of having done her duty,
ostensibly persuading herself that her reproaches and commands were
of such a force that no man to whom they were uttered could ever
approach her more.

Yet it was all unconsciously said in words which betrayed a
lingering tenderness of love at every unguarded turn. Like Beatrice
accusing Dante from the chariot, try as she might to play the
superior being who contemned such mere eye-sensuousness, she
betrayed at every point a pretty woman's jealousy of a rival, and
covertly gave her old lover hints for excusing himself at each fresh
indictment.

This done, Cytherea, still in a practical mood, upbraided herself
with weakness in allowing a stranger like Mr. Manston to influence
her as he had done that evening. What right on earth had he to
suggest so suddenly that she might meet him at the waterfall to
receive his music? She would have given much to be able to
annihilate the ascendency he had obtained over her during that
extraordinary interval of melodious sound. Not being able to endure
the notion of his living a minute longer in the belief he was then
holding, she took her pen and wrote to him also:--


                      'KNAPWATER HOUSE
                         September 20th.

  'I find I cannot meet you at seven o'clock by the waterfall as I
  promised. The emotion I felt made me forgetful of realities.

                      'C. GRAYE.'



A great statesman thinks several times, and acts; a young lady acts,
and thinks several times. When, a few minutes later, she saw the
postman carry off the bag containing one of the letters, and a
messenger with the other, she, for the first time, asked herself the
question whether she had acted very wisely in writing to either of
the two men who had so influenced her.



IX. THE EVENTS OF TEN WEEKS

1. FROM SEPTEMBER THE TWENTY-FIRST TO THE MIDDLE OF NOVEMBER

The foremost figure within Cytherea's horizon, exclusive of the
inmates of Knapwater House, was now the steward, Mr. Manston. It
was impossible that they should live within a quarter of a mile of
each other, be engaged in the same service, and attend the same
church, without meeting at some spot or another, twice or thrice a
week. On Sundays, in her pew, when by chance she turned her head,
Cytherea found his eyes waiting desirously for a glimpse of hers,
and, at first more strangely, the eyes of Miss Aldclyffe furtively
resting on him. On coming out of church he frequently walked beside
Cytherea till she reached the gate at which residents in the House
turned into the shrubbery. By degrees a conjecture grew to a
certainty. She knew that he loved her.

But a strange fact was connected with the development of his love.
He was palpably making the strongest efforts to subdue, or at least
to hide, the weakness, and as it sometimes seemed, rather from his
own conscience than from surrounding eyes. Hence she found that not
one of his encounters with her was anything more than the result of
pure accident. He made no advances whatever: without avoiding her,
he never sought her: the words he had whispered at their first
interview now proved themselves to be quite as much the result of
unguarded impulse as was her answer. Something held him back, bound
his impulse down, but she saw that it was neither pride of his
person, nor fear that she would refuse him--a course she
unhesitatingly resolved to take should he think fit to declare
himself. She was interested in him and his marvellous beauty, as
she might have been in some fascinating panther or leopard--for some
undefinable reason she shrank from him, even whilst she admired.
The keynote of her nature, a warm 'precipitance of soul,' as
Coleridge happily writes it, which Manston had so directly pounced
upon at their very first interview, gave her now a tremulous sense
of being in some way in his power.

The state of mind was, on the whole, a dangerous one for a young and
inexperienced woman; and perhaps the circumstance which, more than
any other, led her to cherish Edward's image now, was that he had
taken no notice of the receipt of her letter, stating that she
discarded him. It was plain then, she said, that he did not care
deeply for her, and she thereupon could not quite leave off caring
deeply for him:--

                  'Ingenium mulierum,
              Nolunt ubi velis, ubi nolis cupiunt ultro.'

The month of October passed, and November began its course. The
inhabitants of the village of Carriford grew weary of supposing that
Miss Aldclyffe was going to marry her steward. New whispers arose
and became very distinct (though they did not reach Miss Aldclyffe's
ears) to the effect that the steward was deeply in love with
Cytherea Graye. Indeed, the fact became so obvious that there was
nothing left to say about it except that their marriage would be an
excellent one for both;--for her in point of comfort--and for him in
point of love.

As circles in a pond grow wider and wider, the next fact, which at
first had been patent only to Cytherea herself, in due time spread
to her neighbours, and they, too, wondered that he made no overt
advances. By the middle of November, a theory made up of a
combination of the other two was received with general favour: its
substance being that a guilty intrigue had been commenced between
Manston and Miss Aldclyffe, some years before, when he was a very
young man, and she still in the enjoyment of some womanly beauty,
but now that her seniority began to grow emphatic she was becoming
distasteful to him. His fear of the effect of the lady's jealousy
would, they said, thus lead him to conceal from her his new
attachment to Cytherea. Almost the only woman who did not believe
this was Cytherea herself, on unmistakable grounds, which were
hidden from all besides. It was not only in public, but even more
markedly in secluded places, on occasions when gallantry would have
been safe from all discovery, that this guarded course of action was
pursued, all the strength of a consuming passion burning in his eyes
the while.

2. NOVEMBER THE EIGHTEENTH

It was on a Friday in this month of November that Owen Graye paid a
visit to his sister.

His zealous integrity still retained for him the situation at
Budmouth, and in order that there should be as little interruption
as possible to his duties there, he had decided not to come to
Knapwater till late in the afternoon, and to return to Budmouth by
the first train the next morning, Miss Aldclyffe having made a point
of frequently offering him lodging for an unlimited period, to the
great pleasure of Cytherea.

He reached the house about four o'clock, and ringing the bell, asked
of the page who answered it for Miss Graye.

When Graye spoke the name of his sister, Manston, who was just
coming out from an interview with Miss Aldclyffe, passed him in the
vestibule and heard the question. The steward's face grew hot, and
he secretly clenched his hands. He half crossed the court, then
turned his head and saw that the lad still stood at the door, though
Owen had been shown into the house. Manston went back to him.

'Who was that man?' he said.

'I don't know, sir.'

'Has he ever been here before?'

'Yes, sir.'

'How many times?'

'Three.'

'You are sure you don't know him?'

'I think he is Miss Graye's brother, sir.'

'Then, why the devil didn't you say so before!' Manston exclaimed,
and again went on his way.

'Of course, that was not the man of my dreams--of course, it
couldn't be!' he said to himself. 'That I should be such a fool
--such an utter fool. Good God! to allow a girl to influence me
like this, day after day, till I am jealous of her very brother. A
lady's dependent, a waif, a helpless thing entirely at the mercy of
the world; yes, curse it; that is just why it is; that fact of her
being so helpless against the blows of circumstances which renders
her so deliciously sweet!'

He paused opposite his house. Should he get his horse saddled? No.

He went down the drive and out of the park, having started to
proceed to an outlying spot on the estate concerning some draining,
and to call at the potter's yard to make an arrangement for the
supply of pipes. But a remark which Miss Aldclyffe had dropped in
relation to Cytherea was what still occupied his mind, and had been
the immediate cause of his excitement at the sight of her brother.
Miss Aldclyffe had meaningly remarked during their intercourse, that
Cytherea was wildly in love with Edward Springrove, in spite of his
engagement to his cousin Adelaide.

'How I am harassed!' he said aloud, after deep thought for
half-an-hour, while still continuing his walk with the greatest
vehemence. 'How I am harassed by these emotions of mine!' He calmed
himself by an effort. 'Well, duty after all it shall be, as nearly
as I can effect it. "Honesty is the best policy;"' with which
vigorously uttered resolve he once more attempted to turn his
attention to the prosy object of his journey.

The evening had closed in to a dark and dreary night when the
steward came from the potter's door to proceed homewards again. The
gloom did not tend to raise his spirits, and in the total lack of
objects to attract his eye, he soon fell to introspection as before.
It was along the margin of turnip fields that his path lay, and the
large leaves of the crop struck flatly against his feet at every
step, pouring upon them the rolling drops of moisture gathered upon
their broad surfaces; but the annoyance was unheeded. Next reaching
a fir plantation, he mounted the stile and followed the path into
the midst of the darkness produced by the overhanging trees.

After walking under the dense shade of the inky boughs for a few
minutes, he fancied he had mistaken the path, which as yet was
scarcely familiar to him. This was proved directly afterwards by
his coming at right angles upon some obstruction, which careful
feeling with outstretched hands soon told him to be a rail fence.
However, as the wood was not large, he experienced no alarm about
finding the path again, and with some sense of pleasure halted
awhile against the rails, to listen to the intensely melancholy yet
musical wail of the fir-tops, and as the wind passed on, the prompt
moan of an adjacent plantation in reply. He could just dimly
discern the airy summits of the two or three trees nearest him
waving restlessly backwards and forwards, and stretching out their
boughs like hairy arms into the dull sky. The scene, from its
striking and emphatic loneliness, began to grow congenial to his
mood; all of human kind seemed at the antipodes.

A sudden rattle on his right hand caused him to start from his
reverie, and turn in that direction. There, before him, he saw rise
up from among the trees a fountain of sparks and smoke, then a red
glare of light coming forward towards him; then a flashing panorama
of illuminated oblong pictures; then the old darkness, more
impressive than ever.

The surprise, which had owed its origin to his imperfect
acquaintance with the topographical features of that end of the
estate, had been but momentary; the disturbance, a well-known one to
dwellers by a railway, being caused by the 6.50 down-train passing
along a shallow cutting in the midst of the wood immediately below
where he stood, the driver having the fire-door of the engine open
at the minute of going by. The train had, when passing him, already
considerably slackened speed, and now a whistle was heard,
announcing that Carriford Road Station was not far in its van.

But contrary to the natural order of things, the discovery that it
was only a commonplace train had not caused Manston to stir from his
position of facing the railway.

If the 6.50 down-train had been a flash of forked lightning
transfixing him to the earth, he could scarcely have remained in a
more trance-like state. He still leant against the railings, his
right hand still continued pressing on his walking-stick, his weight
on one foot, his other heel raised, his eyes wide open towards the
blackness of the cutting. The only movement in him was a slight
dropping of the lower jaw, separating his previously closed lips a
little way, as when a strange conviction rushes home suddenly upon a
man. A new surprise, not nearly so trivial as the first, had taken
possession of him.

It was on this account. At one of the illuminated windows of a
second-class carriage in the series gone by, he had seen a pale
face, reclining upon one hand, the light from the lamp falling full
upon it. The face was a woman's.

At last Manston moved; gave a whispering kind of whistle, adjusted
his hat, and walked on again, cross-questioning himself in every
direction as to how a piece of knowledge he had carefully concealed
had found its way to another person's intelligence. 'How can my
address have become known?' he said at length, audibly. 'Well, it
is a blessing I have been circumspect and honourable, in relation to
that--yes, I will say it, for once, even if the words choke me, that
darling of mine, Cytherea, never to be my own, never. I suppose all
will come out now. All!' The great sadness of his utterance proved
that no mean force had been exercised upon himself to sustain the
circumspection he had just claimed.

He wheeled to the left, pursued the ditch beside the railway fence,
and presently emerged from the wood, stepping into a road which
crossed the railway by a bridge.

As he neared home, the anxiety lately written in his face, merged by
degrees into a grimly humorous smile, which hung long upon his lips,
and he quoted aloud a line from the book of Jeremiah--

     'A woman shall compass a man.'

3. NOVEMBER THE NINETEENTH. DAYBREAK

Before it was light the next morning, two little naked feet pattered
along the passage in Knapwater House, from which Owen Graye's
bedroom opened, and a tap was given upon his door.

'Owen, Owen, are you awake?' said Cytherea in a whisper through the
keyhole. 'You must get up directly, or you'll miss the train.'

When he descended to his sister's little room, he found her there
already waiting with a cup of cocoa and a grilled rasher on the
table for him. A hasty meal was despatched in the intervals of
putting on his overcoat and finding his hat, and they then went
softly through the long deserted passages, the kitchen-maid who had
prepared their breakfast walking before them with a lamp held high
above her head, which cast long wheeling shadows down corridors
intersecting the one they followed, their remoter ends being lost in
darkness. The door was unbolted and they stepped out.

Owen had preferred walking to the station to accepting the
pony-carriage which Miss Aldclyffe had placed at his disposal, having
a morbid horror of giving trouble to people richer than himself, and
especially to their men-servants, who looked down upon him as a
hybrid monster in social position. Cytherea proposed to walk a
little way with him.

'I want to talk to you as long as I can,' she said tenderly.

Brother and sister then emerged by the heavy door into the drive.
The feeling and aspect of the hour were precisely similar to those
under which the steward had left the house the evening previous,
excepting that apparently unearthly reversal of natural sequence,
which is caused by the world getting lighter instead of darker.
'The tearful glimmer of the languid dawn' was just sufficient to
reveal to them the melancholy red leaves, lying thickly in the
channels by the roadside, ever and anon loudly tapped on by heavy
drops of water, which the boughs above had collected from the foggy
air.

They passed the Old House, engaged in a deep conversation, and had
proceeded about twenty yards by a cross route, in the direction of
the turnpike road, when the form of a woman emerged from the porch
of the building.

She was wrapped in a grey waterproof cloak, the hood of which was
drawn over her head and closely round her face--so closely that her
eyes were the sole features uncovered.

With this one exception of her appearance there, the most perfect
stillness and silence pervaded the steward's residence from basement
to chimney. Not a shutter was open; not a twine of smoke came
forth.

Underneath the ivy-covered gateway she stood still and listened for
two, or possibly three minutes, till she became conscious of others
in the park. Seeing the pair she stepped back, with the apparent
intention of letting them pass out of sight, and evidently wishing
to avoid observation. But looking at her watch, and returning it
rapidly to her pocket, as if surprised at the lateness of the hour,
she hurried out again, and across the park by a still more oblique
line than that traced by Owen and his sister.

These in the meantime had got into the road, and were walking along
it as the woman came up on the other side of the boundary hedge,
looking for a gate or stile, by which she, too, might get off the
grass upon the hard ground.

Their conversation, of which every word was clear and distinct, in
the still air of the dawn, to the distance of a quarter of a mile,
reached her ears, and withdrew her attention from all other matters
and sights whatsoever. Thus arrested she stood for an instant as
precisely in the attitude of Imogen by the cave of Belarius, as if
she had studied the position from the play. When they had advanced
a few steps, she followed them in some doubt, still screened by the
hedge.

'Do you believe in such odd coincidences?' said Cytherea.

'How do you mean, believe in them? They occur sometimes.'

'Yes, one will occur often enough--that is, two disconnected events
will fall strangely together by chance, and people scarcely notice
the fact beyond saying, "Oddly enough it happened that so and so
were the same," and so on. But when three such events coincide
without any apparent reason for the coincidence, it seems as if
there must be invisible means at work. You see, three things
falling together in that manner are ten times as singular as two
cases of coincidence which are distinct.'

'Well, of course: what a mathematical head you have, Cytherea! But
I don't see so much to marvel at in our case. That the man who kept
the public-house in which Miss Aldclyffe fainted, and who found out
her name and position, lives in this neighbourhood, is accounted for
by the fact that she got him the berth to stop his tongue. That you
came here was simply owing to Springrove.'

'Ah, but look at this. Miss Aldclyffe is the woman our father first
loved, and I have come to Miss Aldclyffe's; you can't get over
that.'

From these premises, she proceeded to argue like an elderly divine
on the designs of Providence which were apparent in such
conjunctures, and went into a variety of details connected with Miss
Aldclyffe's history.

'Had I better tell Miss Aldclyffe that I know all this?' she
inquired at last.

'What's the use?' he said. 'Your possessing the knowledge does no
harm; you are at any rate comfortable here, and a confession to Miss
Aldclyffe might only irritate her. No, hold your tongue, Cytherea.'

'I fancy I should have been tempted to tell her too,' Cytherea went
on, 'had I not found out that there exists a very odd, almost
imperceptible, and yet real connection of some kind between her and
Mr. Manston, which is more than that of a mutual interest in the
estate.'

'She is in love with him!' exclaimed Owen; 'fancy that!'

'Ah--that's what everybody says who has been keen enough to notice
anything. I said so at first. And yet now I cannot persuade myself
that she is in love with him at all.'

'Why can't you?'

'She doesn't act as if she were. She isn't--you will know I don't
say it from any vanity, Owen--she isn't the least jealous of me.'

'Perhaps she is in some way in his power.'

'No--she is not. He was openly advertised for, and chosen from
forty or fifty who answered the advertisement, without knowing whose
it was. And since he has been here, she has certainly done nothing
to compromise herself in any way. Besides, why should she have
brought an enemy here at all?'

'Then she must have fallen in love with him. You know as well as I
do, Cyth, that with women there's nothing between the two poles of
emotion towards an interesting male acquaintance. 'Tis either love
or aversion.'

They walked for a few minutes in silence, when Cytherea's eyes
accidentally fell upon her brother's feet.

'Owen,' she said, 'do you know that there is something unusual in
your manner of walking?'

'What is it like?' he asked.

'I can't quite say, except that you don't walk so regularly as you
used to.'

The woman behind the hedge, who had still continued to dog their
footsteps, made an impatient movement at this change in their
conversation, and looked at her watch again. Yet she seemed
reluctant to give over listening to them.

'Yes,' Owen returned with assumed carelessness, 'I do know it. I
think the cause of it is that mysterious pain which comes just above
my ankle sometimes. You remember the first time I had it? That day
we went by steam-packet to Lulstead Cove, when it hindered me from
coming back to you, and compelled me to sleep with the gateman we
have been talking about.'

'But is it anything serious, dear Owen?' Cytherea exclaimed, with
some alarm.

'O, nothing at all. It is sure to go off again. I never find a
sign of it when I sit in the office.'

Again their unperceived companion made a gesture of vexation, and
looked at her watch as if time were precious. But the dialogue
still flowed on upon this new subject, and showed no sign of
returning to its old channel.

Gathering up her skirt decisively she renounced all further hope,
and hurried along the ditch till she had dropped into a valley, and
came to a gate which was beyond the view of those coming behind.
This she softly opened, and came out upon the road, following it in
the direction of the railway station.

Presently she heard Owen Graye's footsteps in her rear, his
quickened pace implying that he had parted from his sister. The
woman thereupon increased her rapid walk to a run, and in a few
minutes safely distanced her fellow-traveller.

The railway at Carriford Road consisted only of a single line of
rails; and the short local down-train by which Owen was going to
Budmouth was shunted on to a siding whilst the first up-train
passed. Graye entered the waiting-room, and the door being open he
listlessly observed the movements of a woman wearing a long grey
cloak, and closely hooded, who had asked for a ticket for London.

He followed her with his eyes on to the platform, saw her waiting
there and afterwards stepping into the train: his recollection of
her ceasing with the perception.

4. EIGHT TO TEN O'CLOCK A.M.

Mrs. Crickett, twice a widow, and now the parish clerk's wife, a
fine-framed, scandal-loving woman, with a peculiar corner to her eye
by which, without turning her head, she could see what people were
doing almost behind her, lived in a cottage standing nearer to the
old manor-house than any other in the village of Carriford, and she
had on that account been temporarily engaged by the steward, as a
respectable kind of charwoman and general servant, until a settled
arrangement could be made with some person as permanent domestic.

Every morning, therefore, Mrs. Crickett, immediately she had lighted
the fire in her own cottage, and prepared the breakfast for herself
and husband, paced her way to the Old House to do the same for Mr.
Manston. Then she went home to breakfast; and when the steward had
eaten his, and had gone out on his rounds, she returned again to
clear away, make his bed, and put the house in order for the day.

On the morning of Owen Graye's departure, she went through the
operations of her first visit as usual--proceeded home to breakfast,
and went back again, to perform those of the second.

Entering Manston's empty bedroom, with her hands on her hips, she
indifferently cast her eyes upon the bed, previously to dismantling
it.

Whilst she looked, she thought in an inattentive manner, 'What a
remarkably quiet sleeper Mr. Manston must be!' The upper
bed-clothes were flung back, certainly, but the bed was scarcely
disarranged. 'Anybody would almost fancy,' she thought, 'that he
had made it himself after rising.'

But these evanescent thoughts vanished as they had come, and Mrs.
Crickett set to work; she dragged off the counterpane, blankets and
sheets, and stooped to lift the pillows. Thus stooping, something
arrested her attention; she looked closely--more closely--very
closely. 'Well, to be sure!' was all she could say. The clerk's
wife stood as if the air had suddenly set to amber, and held her
fixed like a fly in it.

The object of her wonder was a trailing brown hair, very little less
than a yard long, which proved it clearly to be a hair from some
woman's head. She drew it off the pillow, and took it to the
window; there holding it out she looked fixedly at it, and became
utterly lost in meditation: her gaze, which had at first actively
settled on the hair, involuntarily dropped past its object by
degrees and was lost on the floor, as the inner vision obscured the
outer one.

She at length moistened her lips, returned her eyes to the hair,
wound it round her fingers, put it in some paper, and secreted the
whole in her pocket. Mrs. Crickett's thoughts were with her work no
more that morning.

She searched the house from roof-tree to cellar, for some other
trace of feminine existence or appurtenance; but none was to be
found.

She went out into the yard, coal-hole, stable, hay-loft,
green-house, fowl-house, and piggery, and still there was no sign.
Coming in again, she saw a bonnet, eagerly pounced upon it; and
found it to be her own.

Hastily completing her arrangements in the other rooms, she entered
the village again, and called at once on the postmistress, Elizabeth
Leat, an intimate friend of hers, and a female who sported several
unique diseases and afflictions.

Mrs. Crickett unfolded the paper, took out the hair, and waved it on
high before the perplexed eyes of Elizabeth, which immediately
mooned and wandered after it like a cat's.

'What is it?' said Mrs. Leat, contracting her eyelids, and
stretching out towards the invisible object a narrow bony hand that
would have been an unmitigated delight to the pencil of Carlo
Crivelli.

'You shall hear,' said Mrs. Crickett, complacently gathering up the
treasure into her own fat hand; and the secret was then solemnly
imparted, together with the accident of its discovery.

A shaving-glass was taken down from a nail, laid on its back in the
middle of a table by the window, and the hair spread carefully out
upon it. The pair then bent over the table from opposite sides,
their elbows on the edge, their hands supporting their heads, their
foreheads nearly touching, and their eyes upon the hair.

'He ha' been mad a'ter my lady Cytherea,' said Mrs. Crickett, 'and
'tis my very belief the hair is--'

'No 'tidn'. Hers idn' so dark as that,' said Elizabeth.

'Elizabeth, you know that as the faithful wife of a servant of the
Church, I should be glad to think as you do about the girl. Mind I
don't wish to say anything against Miss Graye, but this I do say,
that I believe her to be a nameless thing, and she's no right to
stick a moral clock in her face, and deceive the country in such a
way. If she wasn't of a bad stock at the outset she was bad in the
planten, and if she wasn't bad in the planten, she was bad in the
growen, and if not in the growen, she's made bad by what she's gone
through since.'

'But I have another reason for knowing it idn' hers,' said Mrs.
Leat.

'Ah! I know whose it is then--Miss Aldclyffe's, upon my song!'

''Tis the colour of hers, but I don't believe it to be hers either.'

'Don't you believe what they d' say about her and him?'

'I say nothen about that; but you don't know what I know about his
letters.'

'What about 'em?'

'He d' post all his letters here except those for one person, and
they he d' take to Budmouth. My son is in Budmouth Post Office, as
you know, and as he d' sit at desk he can see over the blind of the
window all the people who d' post letters. Mr. Manston d'
unvariably go there wi' letters for that person; my boy d' know 'em
by sight well enough now.'

'Is it a she?'

''Tis a she.'

'What's her name?'

'The little stunpoll of a fellow couldn't call to mind more than
that 'tis Miss Somebody, of London. However, that's the woman who
ha' been here, depend upon't--a wicked one--some poor street-wench
escaped from Sodom, I warrant ye.'

'Only to find herself in Gomorrah, seemingly.'

'That may be.'

'No, no, Mrs. Leat, this is clear to me. 'Tis no miss who came here
to see our steward last night--whenever she came or wherever she
vanished. Do you think he would ha' let a miss get here how she
could, go away how she would, without breakfast or help of any
kind?'

Elizabeth shook her head--Mrs. Crickett looked at her solemnly.

'I say I know she had no help of any kind; I know it was so, for the
grate was quite cold when I touched it this morning with these
fingers, and he was still in bed. No, he wouldn't take the trouble
to write letters to a girl and then treat her so off-hand as that.
There's a tie between 'em stronger than feelen. She's his wife.'

'He married! The Lord so 's, what shall we hear next? Do he look
married now? His are not the abashed eyes and lips of a married
man.'

'Perhaps she's a tame one--but she's his wife still.'

'No, no: he's not a married man.'

'Yes, yes, he is. I've had three, and I ought to know.'

'Well, well,' said Mrs. Leat, giving way. 'Whatever may be the
truth on't I trust Providence will settle it all for the best, as He
always do.'

'Ay, ay, Elizabeth,' rejoined Mrs. Crickett with a satirical sigh,
as she turned on her foot to go home, 'good people like you may say
so, but I have always found Providence a different sort of feller.'

5. NOVEMBER THE TWENTIETH

It was Miss Aldclyffe's custom, a custom originated by her father,
and nourished by her own exclusiveness, to unlock the post-bag
herself every morning, instead of allowing the duty to devolve on
the butler, as was the case in most of the neighbouring county
families. The bag was brought upstairs each morning to her
dressing-room, where she took out the contents, mostly in the
presence of her maid and Cytherea, who had the entree of the chamber
at all hours, and attended there in the morning at a kind of
reception on a small scale, which was held by Miss Aldclyffe of her
namesake only.

Here she read her letters before the glass, whilst undergoing the
operation of being brushed and dressed.

'What woman can this be, I wonder?' she said on the morning
succeeding that of the last section. '"London, N.!" It is the
first time in my life I ever had a letter from that outlandish
place, the North side of London.'

Cytherea had just come into her presence to learn if there was
anything for herself; and on being thus addressed, walked up to Miss
Aldclyffe's corner of the room to look at the curiosity which had
raised such an exclamation. But the lady, having opened the
envelope and read a few lines, put it quickly in her pocket, before
Cytherea could reach her side.

'O, 'tis nothing,' she said. She proceeded to make general remarks
in a noticeably forced tone of sang-froid, from which she soon
lapsed into silence. Not another word was said about the letter:
she seemed very anxious to get her dressing done, and the room
cleared. Thereupon Cytherea went away to the other window, and a
few minutes later left the room to follow her own pursuits.

It was late when Miss Aldclyffe descended to the breakfast-table and
then she seemed there to no purpose; tea, coffee, eggs, cutlets, and
all their accessories, were left absolutely untasted. The next that
was seen of her was when walking up and down the south terrace, and
round the flower-beds; her face was pale, and her tread was fitful,
and she crumpled a letter in her hand.

Dinner-time came round as usual; she did not speak ten words, or
indeed seem conscious of the meal; for all that Miss Aldclyffe did
in the way of eating, dinner might have been taken out as intact as
it was taken in.

In her own private apartment Miss Aldclyffe again pulled out the
letter of the morning. One passage in it ran thus:--


'Of course, being his wife, I could publish the fact, and compel him
to acknowledge me at any moment, notwithstanding his threats, and
reasonings that it will be better to wait. I have waited, and
waited again, and the time for such acknowledgment seems no nearer
than at first. To show you how patiently I have waited I can tell
you that not till a fortnight ago, when by stress of circumstances I
had been driven to new lodgings, have I ever assumed my married
name, solely on account of its having been his request all along
that I should not do it. This writing to you, madam, is my first
disobedience, and I am justified in it. A woman who is driven to
visit her husband like a thief in the night and then sent away like
a street dog--left to get up, unbolt, unbar, and find her way out of
the house as she best may--is justified in doing anything.

'But should I demand of him a restitution of rights, there would be
involved a publicity which I could not endure, and a noisy scandal
flinging my name the length and breadth of the country.

'What I still prefer to any such violent means is that you reason
with him privately, and compel him to bring me home to your parish
in a decent and careful manner, in the way that would be adopted by
any respectable man, whose wife had been living away from him for
some time, by reason, say, of peculiar family circumstances which
had caused disunion, but not enmity, and who at length was enabled
to reinstate her in his house.

'You will, I know, oblige me in this, especially as knowledge of a
peculiar transaction of your own, which took place some years ago,
has lately come to me in a singular way. I will not at present
trouble you by describing how. It is enough, that I alone, of all
people living, know _all the sides of the story_, those from whom I
collected it having each only a partial knowledge which confuses
them and points to nothing. One person knows of your early
engagement and its sudden termination; another, of the reason of
those strange meetings at inns and coffee-houses; another, of what
was sufficient to cause all this, and so on. I know what fits one
and all the circumstances like a key, and shows them to be the
natural outcrop of a rational (though rather rash) line of conduct
for a young lady. You will at once perceive how it was that some at
least of these things were revealed to me.

'This knowledge then, common to, and secretly treasured by us both,
is the ground upon which I beg for your friendship and help, with a
feeling that you will be too generous to refuse it to me.

'I may add that, as yet, my husband knows nothing of this, neither
need he if you remember my request.'


'A threat--a flat stinging threat! as delicately wrapped up in words
as the woman could do it; a threat from a miserable unknown creature
to an Aldclyffe, and not the least proud member of the family
either! A threat on his account--O, O! shall it be?'

Presently this humour of defiance vanished, and the members of her
body became supple again, her proceedings proving that it was
absolutely necessary to give way, Aldclyffe as she was. She wrote a
short answer to Mrs. Manston, saying civilly that Mr. Manston's
possession of such a near relation was a fact quite new to herself,
and that she would see what could be done in such an unfortunate
affair.

6. NOVEMBER THE TWENTY-FIRST

Manston received a message the next day requesting his attendance at
the House punctually at eight o'clock the ensuing evening. Miss
Aldclyffe was brave and imperious, but with the purpose she had in
view she could not look him in the face whilst daylight shone upon
her.

The steward was shown into the library. On entering it, he was
immediately struck with the unusual gloom which pervaded the
apartment. The fire was dead and dull, one lamp, and that a
comparatively small one, was burning at the extreme end, leaving the
main proportion of the lofty and sombre room in an artificial
twilight, scarcely powerful enough to render visible the titles of
the folio and quarto volumes which were jammed into the lower tiers
of the bookshelves.

After keeping him waiting for more than twenty minutes (Miss
Aldclyffe knew that excellent recipe for taking the stiffness out of
human flesh, and for extracting all pre-arrangement from human
speech) she entered the room.

Manston sought her eye directly. The hue of her features was not
discernible, but the calm glance she flung at him, from which all
attempt at returning his scrutiny was absent, awoke him to the
perception that probably his secret was by some means or other known
to her; how it had become known he could not tell.

She drew forth the letter, unfolded it, and held it up to him,
letting it hang by one corner from between her finger and thumb, so
that the light from the lamp, though remote, fell directly upon its
surface.

'You know whose writing this is?' she said.

He saw the strokes plainly, instantly resolving to burn his ships
and hazard all on an advance.

'My wife's,' he said calmly.

His quiet answer threw her off her balance. She had no more
expected an answer than does a preacher when he exclaims from the
pulpit, 'Do you feel your sin?' She had clearly expected a sudden
alarm.

'And why all this concealment?' she said again, her voice rising, as
she vainly endeavoured to control her feelings, whatever they were.

'It doesn't follow that, because a man is married, he must tell
every stranger of it, madam,' he answered, just as calmly as before.

'Stranger! well, perhaps not; but, Mr. Manston, why did you choose
to conceal it, I ask again? I have a perfect right to ask this
question, as you will perceive, if you consider the terms of my
advertisement.'

'I will tell you. There were two simple reasons. The first was
this practical one; you advertised for an unmarried man, if you
remember?'

'Of course I remember.'

'Well, an incident suggested to me that I should try for the
situation. I was married; but, knowing that in getting an office
where there is a restriction of this kind, leaving one's wife behind
is always accepted as a fulfilment of the condition, I left her
behind for awhile. The other reason is, that these terms of yours
afforded me a plausible excuse for escaping (for a short time) the
company of a woman I had been mistaken in marrying.'

'Mistaken! what was she?' the lady inquired.

'A third-rate actress, whom I met with during my stay in Liverpool
last summer, where I had gone to fulfil a short engagement with an
architect.'

'Where did she come from?'

'She is an American by birth, and I grew to dislike her when we had
been married a week.'

'She was ugly, I imagine?'

'She is not an ugly woman by any means.'

'Up to the ordinary standard?'

'Quite up to the ordinary standard--indeed, handsome. After a while
we quarrelled and separated.'

'You did not ill-use her, of course?' said Miss Aldclyffe, with a
little sarcasm.

'I did not.'

'But at any rate, you got thoroughly tired of her.'

Manston looked as if he began to think her questions out of place;
however, he said quietly, 'I did get tired of her. I never told her
so, but we separated; I to come here, bringing her with me as far as
London and leaving her there in perfectly comfortable quarters; and
though your advertisement expressed a single man, I have always
intended to tell you the whole truth; and this was when I was going
to tell it, when your satisfaction with my careful management of
your affairs should have proved the risk to be a safe one to run.'

She bowed.

'Then I saw that you were good enough to be interested in my welfare
to a greater extent than I could have anticipated or hoped, judging
you by the frigidity of other employers, and this caused me to
hesitate. I was vexed at the complication of affairs. So matters
stood till three nights ago; I was then walking home from the
pottery, and came up to the railway. The down-train came along
close to me, and there, sitting at a carriage window, I saw my wife:
she had found out my address, and had thereupon determined to follow
me here. I had not been home many minutes before she came in, next
morning early she left again--'

'Because you treated her so cavalierly?'

'And as I suppose, wrote to you directly. That's the whole story of
her, madam.' Whatever were Manston's real feelings towards the lady
who had received his explanation in these supercilious tones, they
remained locked within him as within a casket of steel.

'Did your friends know of your marriage, Mr. Manston?' she continued.

'Nobody at all; we kept it a secret for various reasons.'

'It is true then that, as your wife tells me in this letter, she has
not passed as Mrs. Manston till within these last few days?'

'It is quite true; I was in receipt of a very small and uncertain
income when we married; and so she continued playing at the theatre
as before our marriage, and in her maiden name.'

'Has she any friends?'

'I have never heard that she has any in England. She came over here
on some theatrical speculation, as one of a company who were going
to do much, but who never did anything; and here she has remained.'

A pause ensued, which was terminated by Miss Aldclyffe.

'I understand,' she said. 'Now, though I have no direct right to
concern myself with your private affairs (beyond those which arise
from your misleading me and getting the office you hold)--'

'As to that, madam,' he interrupted, rather hotly, 'as to coming
here, I am vexed as much as you. Somebody, a member of the
Institute of Architects--who, I could never tell--sent to my old
address in London your advertisement cut from the paper; it was
forwarded to me; I wanted to get away from Liverpool, and it seemed
as if this was put in my way on purpose, by some old friend or
other. I answered the advertisement certainly, but I was not
particularly anxious to come here, nor am I anxious to stay.'

Miss Aldclyffe descended from haughty superiority to womanly
persuasion with a haste which was almost ludicrous. Indeed, the
Quos ego of the whole lecture had been less the genuine menace of
the imperious ruler of Knapwater than an artificial utterance to
hide a failing heart.

'Now, now, Mr. Manston, you wrong me; don't suppose I wish to be
overbearing, or anything of the kind; and you will allow me to say
this much, at any rate, that I have become interested in your wife,
as well as in yourself.'

'Certainly, madam,' he said, slowly, like a man feeling his way in
the dark. Manston was utterly at fault now. His previous
experience of the effect of his form and features upon womankind en
masse, had taught him to flatter himself that he could account by
the same law of natural selection for the extraordinary interest
Miss Aldclyffe had hitherto taken in him, as an unmarried man; an
interest he did not at all object to, seeing that it kept him near
Cytherea, and enabled him, a man of no wealth, to rule on the estate
as if he were its lawful owner. Like Curius at his Sabine farm, he
had counted it his glory not to possess gold himself, but to have
power over her who did. But at this hint of the lady's wish to take
his wife under her wing also, he was perplexed: could she have any
sinister motive in doing so? But he did not allow himself to be
troubled with these doubts, which only concerned his wife's
happiness.

'She tells me,' continued Miss Aldclyffe, 'how utterly alone in the
world she stands, and that is an additional reason why I should
sympathize with her. Instead, then, of requesting the favour of
your retirement from the post, and dismissing your interests
altogether, I will retain you as my steward still, on condition that
you bring home your wife, and live with her respectably, in short,
as if you loved her; you understand. I _wish_ you to stay here if you
grant that everything shall flow smoothly between yourself and her.'

The breast and shoulders of the steward rose, as if an expression of
defiance was about to be poured forth; before it took form, he
controlled himself and said, in his natural voice--

'My part of the performance shall be carried out, madam.'

'And her anxiety to obtain a standing in the world ensures that hers
will,' replied Miss Aldclyffe. 'That will be satisfactory, then.'

After a few additional remarks, she gently signified that she wished
to put an end to the interview. The steward took the hint and
retired.

He felt vexed and mortified; yet in walking homeward he was
convinced that telling the whole truth as he had done, with the
single exception of his love for Cytherea (which he tried to hide
even from himself), had never served him in better stead than it had
done that night.

Manston went to his desk and thought of Cytherea's beauty with the
bitterest, wildest regret. After the lapse of a few minutes he
calmed himself by a stoical effort, and wrote the subjoined letter
to his wife:--


                                        'KNAPWATER,
                                         November 21, 1864.

'DEAR EUNICE,--I hope you reached London safely after your flighty
visit to me.

'As I promised, I have thought over our conversation that night, and
your wish that your coming here should be no longer delayed. After
all, it was perfectly natural that you should have spoken unkindly
as you did, ignorant as you were of the circumstances which bound
me.

'So I have made arrangements to fetch you home at once. It is
hardly worth while for you to attempt to bring with you any luggage
you may have gathered about you (beyond mere clothing). Dispose of
superfluous things at a broker's; your bringing them would only make
a talk in this parish, and lead people to believe we had long been
keeping house separately.

'Will next Monday suit you for coming? You have nothing to do that
can occupy you for more than a day or two, as far as I can see, and
the remainder of this week will afford ample time. I can be in
London the night before, and we will come down together by the
mid-day train--Your very affectionate husband,

                                       'AENEAS MANSTON.

'Now, of course, I shall no longer write to you as Mrs. Rondley.'


The address on the envelope was--

MRS. MANSTON,
   41 CHARLES SQUARE,
     HOXTON,
        LONDON, N.

He took the letter to the house, and it being too late for the
country post, sent one of the stablemen with it to Casterbridge,
instead of troubling to go to Budmouth with it himself as
heretofore. He had no longer any necessity to keep his condition a
secret.

7. FROM THE TWENTY-SECOND TO THE TWENTY-SEVENTH OF NOVEMBER

But the next morning Manston found that he had been forgetful of
another matter, in naming the following Monday to his wife for the
journey.

The fact was this. A letter had just come, reminding him that he
had left the whole of the succeeding week open for an important
business engagement with a neighbouring land-agent, at that
gentleman's residence thirteen miles off. The particular day he had
suggested to his wife, had, in the interim, been appropriated by his
correspondent. The meeting could not now be put off.

So he wrote again to his wife, stating that business, which could
not be postponed, called him away from home on Monday, and would
entirely prevent him coming all the way to fetch her on Sunday night
as he had intended, but that he would meet her at the Carriford Road
Station with a conveyance when she arrived there in the evening.

The next day came his wife's answer to his first letter, in which
she said that she would be ready to be fetched at the time named.
Having already written his second letter, which was by that time in
her hands, he made no further reply.

The week passed away. The steward had, in the meantime, let it
become generally known in the village that he was a married man, and
by a little judicious management, sound family reasons for his past
secrecy upon the subject, which were floated as adjuncts to the
story, were placidly received; they seemed so natural and
justifiable to the unsophisticated minds of nine-tenths of his
neighbours, that curiosity in the matter, beyond a strong curiosity
to see the lady's face, was well-nigh extinguished.



X. THE EVENTS OF A DAY AND NIGHT

1. NOVEMBER THE TWENTY-EIGHTH. UNTIL TEN P.M.

Monday came, the day named for Mrs. Manston's journey from London to
her husband's house; a day of singular and great events, influencing
the present and future of nearly all the personages whose actions in
a complex drama form the subject of this record.

The proceedings of the steward demand the first notice. Whilst
taking his breakfast on this particular morning, the clock pointing
to eight, the horse-and-gig that was to take him to Chettlewood
waiting ready at the door, Manston hurriedly cast his eyes down the
column of Bradshaw which showed the details and duration of the
selected train's journey.

The inspection was carelessly made, the leaf being kept open by the
aid of one hand, whilst the other still held his cup of coffee; much
more carelessly than would have been the case had the expected
new-comer been Cytherea Graye, instead of his lawful wife.

He did not perceive, branching from the column down which his finger
ran, a small twist, called a shunting-line, inserted at a particular
place, to imply that at that point the train was divided into two.
By this oversight he understood that the arrival of his wife at
Carriford Road Station would not be till late in the evening: by
the second half of the train, containing the third-class passengers,
and passing two hours and three-quarters later than the previous
one, by which the lady, as a second-class passenger, would really be
brought.

He then considered that there would be plenty of time for him to
return from his day's engagement to meet this train. He finished
his breakfast, gave proper and precise directions to his servant on
the preparations that were to be made for the lady's reception,
jumped into his gig, and drove off to Lord Claydonfield's, at
Chettlewood.

He went along by the front of Knapwater House. He could not help
turning to look at what he knew to be the window of Cytherea's room.
Whilst he looked, a hopeless expression of passionate love and
sensuous anguish came upon his face and lingered there for a few
seconds; then, as on previous occasions, it was resolutely
repressed, and he trotted along the smooth white road, again
endeavouring to banish all thought of the young girl whose beauty
and grace had so enslaved him.

Thus it was that when, in the evening of the same day, Mrs. Manston
reached Carriford Road Station, her husband was still at
Chettlewood, ignorant of her arrival, and on looking up and down the
platform, dreary with autumn gloom and wind, she could see no sign
that any preparation whatever had been made for her reception and
conduct home.

The train went on. She waited, fidgeted with the handle of her
umbrella, walked about, strained her eyes into the gloom of the
chilly night, listened for wheels, tapped with her foot, and showed
all the usual signs of annoyance and irritation: she was the more
irritated in that this seemed a second and culminating instance of
her husband's neglect--the first having been shown in his not
fetching her.

Reflecting awhile upon the course it would be best to take, in order
to secure a passage to Knapwater, she decided to leave all her
luggage, except a dressing-bag, in the cloak-room, and walk to her
husband's house, as she had done on her first visit. She asked one
of the porters if he could find a lad to go with her and carry her
bag: he offered to do it himself.

The porter was a good-tempered, shallow-minded, ignorant man. Mrs.
Manston, being apparently in very gloomy spirits, would probably
have preferred walking beside him without saying a word: but her
companion would not allow silence to continue between them for a
longer period than two or three minutes together.

He had volunteered several remarks upon her arrival, chiefly to the
effect that it was very unfortunate Mr. Manston had not come to the
station for her, when she suddenly asked him concerning the
inhabitants of the parish.

He told her categorically the names of the chief--first the chief
possessors of property; then of brains; then of good looks. As
first among the latter he mentioned Miss Cytherea Graye.

After getting him to describe her appearance as completely as lay in
his power, she wormed out of him the statement that everybody had
been saying--before Mrs. Manston's existence was heard of--how well
the handsome Mr. Manston and the beautiful Miss Graye were suited
for each other as man and wife, and that Miss Aldclyffe was the only
one in the parish who took no interest in bringing about the match.

'He rather liked her you think?'

The porter began to think he had been too explicit, and hastened to
correct the error.

'O no, he don't care a bit about her, ma'am,' he said solemnly.

'Not more than he does about me?'

'Not a bit.'

'Then that must be little indeed,' Mrs. Manston murmured. She stood
still, as if reflecting upon the painful neglect her words had
recalled to her mind; then, with a sudden impulse, turned round, and
walked petulantly a few steps back again in the direction of the
station.

The porter stood still and looked surprised.

'I'll go back again; yes, indeed, I'll go back again!' she said
plaintively. Then she paused and looked anxiously up and down the
deserted road.

'No, I mustn't go back now,' she continued, in a tone of
resignation. Seeing that the porter was watching her, she turned
about and came on as before, giving vent to a slight laugh.

It was a laugh full of character; the low forced laugh which seeks
to hide the painful perception of a humiliating position under the
mask of indifference.

Altogether her conduct had shown her to be what in fact she was, a
weak, though a calculating woman, one clever to conceive, weak to
execute: one whose best-laid schemes were for ever liable to be
frustrated by the ineradicable blight of vacillation at the critical
hour of action.

'O, if I had only known that all this was going to happen!' she
murmured again, as they paced along upon the rustling leaves.

'What did you say, ma'am?' said the porter.

'O, nothing particular; we are getting near the old manor-house by
this time, I imagine?'

'Very near now, ma'am.'

They soon reached Manston's residence, round which the wind blew
mournfully and chill.

Passing under the detached gateway, they entered the porch. The
porter stepped forward, knocked heavily and waited.

Nobody came.

Mrs. Manston then advanced to the door and gave a different series
of rappings--less forcible, but more sustained.

There was not a movement of any kind inside, not a ray of light
visible; nothing but the echo of her own knocks through the
passages, and the dry scratching of the withered leaves blown about
her feet upon the floor of the porch.

The steward, of course, was not at home. Mrs. Crickett, not
expecting that anybody would arrive till the time of the later
train, had set the place in order, laid the supper-table, and then
locked the door, to go into the village and converse with her
friends.

'Is there an inn in the village?' said Mrs. Manston, after the
fourth and loudest rapping upon the iron-studded old door had
resulted only in the fourth and loudest echo from the passages
inside.

'Yes, ma'am.'

'Who keeps it?'

'Farmer Springrove.'

'I will go there to-night,' she said decisively. 'It is too cold,
and altogether too bad, for a woman to wait in the open road on
anybody's account, gentle or simple.'

They went down the park and through the gate, into the village of
Carriford. By the time they reached the Three Tranters, it was
verging upon ten o'clock. There, on the spot where two months
earlier in the season the sunny and lively group of villagers making
cider under the trees had greeted Cytherea's eyes, was nothing now
intelligible but a vast cloak of darkness, from which came the low
sough of the elms, and the occasional creak of the swinging sign.

They went to the door, Mrs. Manston shivering; but less from the
cold, than from the dreariness of her emotions. Neglect is the
coldest of winter winds.

It so happened that Edward Springrove was expected to arrive from
London either on that evening or the next, and at the sound of
voices his father came to the door fully expecting to see him. A
picture of disappointment seldom witnessed in a man's face was
visible in old Mr. Springrove's, when he saw that the comer was a
stranger.

Mrs. Manston asked for a room, and one that had been prepared for
Edward was immediately named as being ready for her, another being
adaptable for Edward, should he come in.

Without taking any refreshment, or entering any room downstairs, or
even lifting her veil, she walked straight along the passage and up
to her apartment, the chambermaid preceding her.

'If Mr. Manston comes to-night,' she said, sitting on the bed as she
had come in, and addressing the woman, 'tell him I cannot see him.'

'Yes, ma'am.'

The woman left the room, and Mrs. Manston locked the door. Before
the servant had gone down more than two or three stairs, Mrs.
Manston unfastened the door again, and held it ajar.

'Bring me some brandy,' she said.

The chambermaid went down to the bar and brought up the spirit in a
tumbler. When she came into the room, Mrs. Manston had not removed
a single article of apparel, and was walking up and down, as if
still quite undecided upon the course it was best to adopt.

Outside the door, when it was closed upon her, the maid paused to
listen for an instant. She heard Mrs. Manston talking to herself.

'This is welcome home!' she said.

2. FROM TEN TO HALF-PAST ELEVEN P.M.

A strange concurrence of phenomena now confronts us.

During the autumn in which the past scenes were enacted, Mr.
Springrove had ploughed, harrowed, and cleaned a narrow and shaded
piece of ground, lying at the back of his house, which for many
years had been looked upon as irreclaimable waste.

The couch-grass extracted from the soil had been left to wither in
the sun; afterwards it was raked together, lighted in the customary
way, and now lay smouldering in a large heap in the middle of the
plot.

It had been kindled three days previous to Mrs. Manston's arrival,
and one or two villagers, of a more cautious and less sanguine
temperament than Springrove, had suggested that the fire was almost
too near the back of the house for its continuance to be unattended
with risk; for though no danger could be apprehended whilst the air
remained moderately still, a brisk breeze blowing towards the house
might possibly carry a spark across.

'Ay, that's true enough,' said Springrove. 'I must look round
before going to bed and see that everything's safe; but to tell the
truth I am anxious to get the rubbish burnt up before the rain comes
to wash it into ground again. As to carrying the couch into the
back field to burn, and bringing it back again, why, 'tis more than
the ashes would be worth.'

'Well, that's very true,' said the neighbours, and passed on.

Two or three times during the first evening after the heap was lit,
he went to the back door to take a survey. Before bolting and
barring up for the night, he made a final and more careful
examination. The slowly-smoking pile showed not the slightest signs
of activity. Springrove's perfectly sound conclusion was, that as
long as the heap was not stirred, and the wind continued in the
quarter it blew from then, the couch would not flame, and that there
could be no shadow of danger to anything, even a combustible
substance, though it were no more than a yard off.

The next morning the burning couch was discovered in precisely the
same state as when he had gone to bed the preceding night. The heap
smoked in the same manner the whole of that day: at bed-time the
farmer looked towards it, but less carefully than on the first
night.

The morning and the whole of the third day still saw the heap in its
old smouldering condition; indeed, the smoke was less, and there
seemed a probability that it might have to be re-kindled on the
morrow.

After admitting Mrs. Manston to his house in the evening, and
hearing her retire, Mr. Springrove returned to the front door to
listen for a sound of his son, and inquired concerning him of the
railway-porter, who sat for a while in the kitchen. The porter had
not noticed young Mr. Springrove get out of the train, at which
intelligence the old man concluded that he would probably not see
his son till the next day, as Edward had hitherto made a point of
coming by the train which had brought Mrs. Manston.

Half-an-hour later the porter left the inn, Springrove at the same
time going to the door to listen again an instant, then he walked
round and in at the back of the house.

The farmer glanced at the heap casually and indifferently in
passing; two nights of safety seemed to ensure the third; and he was
about to bolt and bar as usual, when the idea struck him that there
was just a possibility of his son's return by the latest train,
unlikely as it was that he would be so delayed. The old man
thereupon left the door unfastened, looked to his usual matters
indoors, and went to bed, it being then half-past ten o'clock.

Farmers and horticulturists well know that it is in the nature of a
heap of couch-grass, when kindled in calm weather, to smoulder for
many days, and even weeks, until the whole mass is reduced to a
powdery charcoal ash, displaying the while scarcely a sign of
combustion beyond the volcano-like smoke from its summit; but the
continuance of this quiet process is throughout its length at the
mercy of one particular whim of Nature: that is, a sudden breeze,
by which the heap is liable to be fanned into a flame so brisk as to
consume the whole in an hour or two.

Had the farmer narrowly watched the pile when he went to close the
door, he would have seen, besides the familiar twine of smoke from
its summit, a quivering of the air around the mass, showing that a
considerable heat had arisen inside.

As the railway-porter turned the corner of the row of houses
adjoining the Three Tranters, a brisk new wind greeted his face, and
spread past him into the village. He walked along the high-road
till he came to a gate, about three hundred yards from the inn.
Over the gate could be discerned the situation of the building he
had just quitted. He carelessly turned his head in passing, and saw
behind him a clear red glow indicating the position of the
couch-heap: a glow without a flame, increasing and diminishing in
brightness as the breeze quickened or fell, like the coal of a newly
lighted cigar. If those cottages had been his, he thought, he
should not care to have a fire so near them as that--and the wind
rising. But the cottages not being his, he went on his way to the
station, where he was about to resume duty for the night. The road
was now quite deserted: till four o'clock the next morning, when
the carters would go by to the stables there was little probability
of any human being passing the Three Tranters Inn.

By eleven, everybody in the house was asleep. It truly seemed as if
the treacherous element knew there had arisen a grand opportunity
for devastation.

At a quarter past eleven a slight stealthy crackle made itself heard
amid the increasing moans of the night wind; the heap glowed
brighter still, and burst into a flame; the flame sank, another
breeze entered it, sustained it, and it grew to be first continuous
and weak, then continuous and strong.

At twenty minutes past eleven a blast of wind carried an airy bit of
ignited fern several yards forward, in a direction parallel to the
houses and inn, and there deposited it on the ground.

Five minutes later another puff of wind carried a similar piece to a
distance of five-and-twenty yards, where it also was dropped softly
on the ground.

Still the wind did not blow in the direction of the houses, and even
now to a casual observer they would have appeared safe. But Nature
does few things directly. A minute later yet, an ignited fragment
fell upon the straw covering of a long thatched heap or 'grave' of
mangel-wurzel, lying in a direction at right angles to the house,
and down toward the hedge. There the fragment faded to darkness.

A short time subsequent to this, after many intermediate deposits
and seemingly baffled attempts, another fragment fell on the
mangel-wurzel grave, and continued to glow; the glow was increased by
the wind; the straw caught fire and burst into flame. It was inevitable
that the flame should run along the ridge of the thatch towards a
piggery at the end. Yet had the piggery been tiled, the
time-honoured hostel would even now at this last moment have been safe;
but it was constructed as piggeries are mostly constructed, of wood
and thatch. The hurdles and straw roof of the frail erection became
ignited in their turn, and abutting as the shed did on the back of
the inn, flamed up to the eaves of the main roof in less than thirty
seconds.

3. HALF-PAST ELEVEN TO TWELVE P.M.

A hazardous length of time elapsed before the inmates of the Three
Tranters knew of their danger. When at length the discovery was
made, the rush was a rush for bare life.

A man's voice calling, then screams, then loud stamping and shouts
were heard.

Mr. Springrove ran out first. Two minutes later appeared the ostler
and chambermaid, who were man and wife. The inn, as has been
stated, was a quaint old building, and as inflammable as a bee-hive;
it overhung the base at the level of the first floor, and again
overhung at the eaves, which were finished with heavy oak
barge-boards; every atom in its substance, every feature in its
construction, favoured the fire.

The forked flames, lurid and smoky, became nearly lost to view,
bursting forth again with a bound and loud crackle, increased
tenfold in power and brightness. The crackling grew sharper. Long
quivering shadows began to be flung from the stately trees at the
end of the house; the square outline of the church tower, on the
other side of the way, which had hitherto been a dark mass against a
sky comparatively light, now began to appear as a light object
against a sky of darkness; and even the narrow surface of the
flag-staff at the top could be seen in its dark surrounding, brought
out from its obscurity by the rays from the dancing light.

Shouts and other noises increased in loudness and frequency. The
lapse of ten minutes brought most of the inhabitants of that end of
the village into the street, followed in a short time by the rector,
Mr. Raunham.

Casting a hasty glance up and down, he beckoned to one or two of the
men, and vanished again. In a short time wheels were heard, and Mr.
Raunham and the men reappeared, with the garden engine, the only one
in the village, except that at Knapwater House. After some little
trouble the hose was connected with a tank in the old stable-yard,
and the puny instrument began to play.

Several seemed paralyzed at first, and stood transfixed, their rigid
faces looking like red-hot iron in the glaring light. In the
confusion a woman cried, 'Ring the bells backwards!' and three or
four of the old and superstitious entered the belfry and jangled
them indescribably. Some were only half dressed, and, to add to the
horror, among them was Clerk Crickett, running up and down with a
face streaming with blood, ghastly and pitiful to see, his
excitement being so great that he had not the slightest conception
of how, when, or where he came by the wound.

The crowd was now busy at work, and tried to save a little of the
furniture of the inn. The only room they could enter was the
parlour, from which they managed to bring out the bureau, a few
chairs, some old silver candlesticks, and half-a-dozen light
articles; but these were all.

Fiery mats of thatch slid off the roof and fell into the road with a
deadened thud, whilst white flakes of straw and wood-ash were flying
in the wind like feathers. At the same time two of the cottages
adjoining, upon which a little water had been brought to play from
the rector's engine, were seen to be on fire. The attenuated spirt
of water was as nothing upon the heated and dry surface of the
thatched roof; the fire prevailed without a minute's hindrance, and
dived through to the rafters.

Suddenly arose a cry, 'Where's Mr. Springrove?'

He had vanished from the spot by the churchyard wall, where he had
been standing a few minutes earlier.

'I fancy he's gone inside,' said a voice.

'Madness and folly! what can he save?' said another. 'Good God,
find him! Help here!'

A wild rush was made at the door, which had fallen to, and in
defiance of the scorching flame that burst forth, three men forced
themselves through it. Immediately inside the threshold they found
the object of their search lying senseless on the floor of the
passage.

To bring him out and lay him on a bank was the work of an instant; a
basin of cold water was dashed in his face, and he began to recover
consciousness, but very slowly. He had been saved by a miracle. No
sooner were his preservers out of the building than the
window-frames lit up as if by magic with deep and waving fringes of
flames. Simultaneously, the joints of the boards forming the front
door started into view as glowing bars of fire: a star of red light
penetrated the centre, gradually increasing in size till the flames
rushed forth.

Then the staircase fell.

'Everybody is out safe,' said a voice.

'Yes, thank God!' said three or four others.

'O, we forgot that a stranger came! I think she is safe.'

'I hope she is,' said the weak voice of some one coming up from
behind. It was the chambermaid's.

Springrove at that moment aroused himself; he staggered to his feet,
and threw his hands up wildly.

'Everybody, no! no! The lady who came by train, Mrs. Manston! I
tried to fetch her out, but I fell.'

An exclamation of horror burst from the crowd; it was caused partly
by this disclosure of Springrove, more by the added perception which
followed his words.

An average interval of about three minutes had elapsed between one
intensely fierce gust of wind and the next, and now another poured
over them; the roof swayed, and a moment afterwards fell in with a
crash, pulling the gable after it, and thrusting outwards the front
wall of wood-work, which fell into the road with a rumbling echo; a
cloud of black dust, myriads of sparks, and a great outburst of
flame followed the uproar of the fall.

'Who is she? what is she?' burst from every lip again and again,
incoherently, and without leaving a sufficient pause for a reply,
had a reply been volunteered.

The autumn wind, tameless, and swift, and proud, still blew upon the
dying old house, which was constructed so entirely of combustible
materials that it burnt almost as fiercely as a corn-rick. The heat
in the road increased, and now for an instant at the height of the
conflagration all stood still, and gazed silently, awestruck and
helpless, in the presence of so irresistible an enemy. Then, with
minds full of the tragedy unfolded to them, they rushed forward
again with the obtuse directness of waves, to their labour of saving
goods from the houses adjoining, which it was evident were all
doomed to destruction.

The minutes passed by. The Three Tranters Inn sank into a mere heap
of red-hot charcoal: the fire pushed its way down the row as the
church clock opposite slowly struck the hour of midnight, and the
bewildered chimes, scarcely heard amid the crackling of the flames,
wandered through the wayward air of the Old Hundred-and-Thirteenth
Psalm.

4. NINE TO ELEVEN P.M.

Manston mounted his gig and set out from Chettlewood that evening in
no very enviable frame of mind. The thought of domestic life in
Knapwater Old House, with the now eclipsed wife of the past, was
more than disagreeable, was positively distasteful to him.

Yet he knew that the influential position, which, from whatever
fortunate cause, he held on Miss Aldclyffe's manor, would never
again fall to his lot on any other, and he tacitly assented to this
dilemma, hoping that some consolation or other would soon suggest
itself to him; married as he was, he was near Cytherea.

He occasionally looked at his watch as he drove along the lanes,
timing the pace of his horse by the hour, that he might reach
Carriford Road Station just soon enough to meet the last London
train.

He soon began to notice in the sky a slight yellow halo, near the
horizon. It rapidly increased; it changed colour, and grew redder;
then the glare visibly brightened and dimmed at intervals, showing
that its origin was affected by the strong wind prevailing.

Manston reined in his horse on the summit of a hill, and considered.

'It is a rick-yard on fire,' he thought; 'no house could produce
such a raging flame so suddenly.'

He trotted on again, attempting to particularize the local features
in the neighbourhood of the fire; but this it was too dark to do,
and the excessive winding of the roads misled him as to its
direction, not being an old inhabitant of the district, or a
countryman used to forming such judgments; whilst the brilliancy of
the light shortened its real remoteness to an apparent distance of
not more than half: it seemed so near that he again stopped his
horse, this time to listen; but he could hear no sound.

Entering now a narrow valley, the sides of which obscured the sky to
an angle of perhaps thirty or forty degrees above the mathematical
horizon, he was obliged to suspend his judgment till he was in
possession of further knowledge, having however assumed in the
interim, that the fire was somewhere between Carriford Road Station
and the village.

The self-same glare had just arrested the eyes of another man. He
was at that minute gliding along several miles to the east of the
steward's position, but nearing the same point as that to which
Manston tended. The younger Edward Springrove was returning from
London to his father's house by the identical train which the
steward was expecting to bring his wife, the truth being that
Edward's lateness was owing to the simplest of all causes, his
temporary want of money, which led him to make a slow journey for
the sake of travelling at third-class fare.

Springrove had received Cytherea's bitter and admonitory letter, and
he was clearly awakened to a perception of the false position in
which he had placed himself, by keeping silence at Budmouth on his
long engagement. An increasing reluctance to put an end to those
few days of ecstasy with Cytherea had overruled his conscience, and
tied his tongue till speaking was too late.

'Why did I do it? how could I dream of loving her?' he asked himself
as he walked by day, as he tossed on his bed by night: 'miserable
folly!'

An impressionable heart had for years--perhaps as many as six or
seven years--been distracting him, by unconsciously setting itself
to yearn for somebody wanting, he scarcely knew whom. Echoes of
himself, though rarely, he now and then found. Sometimes they were
men, sometimes women, his cousin Adelaide being one of these; for in
spite of a fashion which pervades the whole community at the present
day--the habit of exclaiming that woman is not undeveloped man, but
diverse, the fact remains that, after all, women are Mankind, and
that in many of the sentiments of life the difference of sex is but
a difference of degree.

But the indefinable helpmate to the remoter sides of himself still
continued invisible. He grew older, and concluded that the ideas,
or rather emotions, which possessed him on the subject, were
probably too unreal ever to be found embodied in the flesh of a
woman. Thereupon, he developed a plan of satisfying his dreams by
wandering away to the heroines of poetical imagination, and took no
further thought on the earthly realization of his formless desire,
in more homely matters satisfying himself with his cousin.

Cytherea appeared in the sky: his heart started up and spoke:

     'Tis She, and here
     Lo! I unclothe and clear
     My wishes' cloudy character.'

Some women kindle emotion so rapidly in a man's heart that the
judgment cannot keep pace with its rise, and finds, on comprehending
the situation, that faithfulness to the old love is already
treachery to the new. Such women are not necessarily the greatest
of their sex, but there are very few of them. Cytherea was one.

On receiving the letter from her he had taken to thinking over these
things, and had not answered it at all. But 'hungry generations'
soon tread down the muser in a city. At length he thought of the
strong necessity of living. After a dreary search, the negligence
of which was ultimately overcome by mere conscientiousness, he
obtained a situation as assistant to an architect in the
neighbourhood of Charing Cross: the duties would not begin till
after the lapse of a month.

He could not at first decide whither he should go to spend the
intervening time; but in the midst of his reasonings he found
himself on the road homeward, impelled by a secret and unowned hope
of getting a last glimpse of Cytherea there.

5. MIDNIGHT

It was a quarter to twelve when Manston drove into the station-yard.
The train was punctual, and the bell, announcing its arrival, rang
as he crossed the booking-office to go out upon the platform.

The porter who had accompanied Mrs. Manston to Carriford, and had
returned to the station on his night duty, recognized the steward as
he entered, and immediately came towards him.

'Mrs. Manston came by the nine o'clock train, sir,' he said.

The steward gave vent to an expression of vexation.

'Her luggage is here, sir,' the porter said.

'Put it up behind me in the gig if it is not too much,' said
Manston.

'Directly this train is in and gone, sir.'

The man vanished and crossed the line to meet the entering train.

'Where is that fire?' Manston said to the booking-clerk.

Before the clerk could speak, another man ran in and answered the
question without having heard it.

'Half Carriford is burnt down, or will be!' he exclaimed. 'You
can't see the flames from this station on account of the trees, but
step on the bridge--'tis tremendous!'

He also crossed the line to assist at the entry of the train, which
came in the next minute.

The steward stood in the office. One passenger alighted, gave up
his ticket, and crossed the room in front of Manston: a young man
with a black bag and umbrella in his hand. He passed out of the
door, down the steps, and struck out into the darkness.

'Who was that young man?' said Manston, when the porter had
returned. The young man, by a kind of magnetism, had drawn the
steward's thoughts after him.

'He's an architect.'

'My own old profession. I could have sworn it by the cut of him,'
Manston murmured. 'What's his name?' he said again.

'Springrove--Farmer Springrove's son, Edward.'

'Farmer Springrove's son, Edward,' the steward repeated to himself,
and considered a matter to which the words had painfully recalled
his mind.

The matter was Miss Aldclyffe's mention of the young man as
Cytherea's lover, which, indeed, had scarcely ever been absent from
his thoughts.

'But for the existence of my wife that man might have been my
rival,' he pondered, following the porter, who had now come back to
him, into the luggage-room. And whilst the man was carrying out and
putting in one box, which was sufficiently portable for the gig,
Manston still thought, as his eyes watched the process--

'But for my wife, Springrove might have been my rival.'

He examined the lamps of his gig, carefully laid out the reins,
mounted the seat and drove along the turnpike-road towards Knapwater
Park.

The exact locality of the fire was plain to him as he neared home.
He soon could hear the shout of men, the flapping of the flames, the
crackling of burning wood, and could smell the smoke from the
conflagration.

Of a sudden, a few yards ahead, within the compass of the rays from
the right-hand lamp, burst forward the figure of a man. Having been
walking in darkness the newcomer raised his hands to his eyes, on
approaching nearer, to screen them from the glare of the reflector.

Manston saw that he was one of the villagers: a small farmer
originally, who had drunk himself down to a day-labourer and reputed
poacher.

'Hoy!' cried Manston, aloud, that the man might step aside out of
the way.

'Is that Mr. Manston?' said the man.

'Yes.'

'Somebody ha' come to Carriford: and the rest of it may concern
you, sir.'

'Well, well.'

'Did you expect Mrs. Manston to-night, sir?'

'Yes, unfortunately she's come, I know, and asleep long before this
time, I suppose.'

The labourer leant his elbow upon the shaft of the gig and turned
his face, pale and sweating from his late work at the fire, up to
Manston's.

'Yes, she did come,' he said. . . . 'I beg pardon, sir, but I
should be glad of--of--'

'What?'

'Glad of a trifle for bringen ye the news.'

'Not a farthing! I didn't want your news, I knew she was come.'

'Won't you give me a shillen, sir?'

'Certainly not.'

'Then will you lend me a shillen, sir? I be tired out, and don't
know what to do. If I don't pay you back some day I'll be d--d.'

'The devil is so cheated that perdition isn't worth a penny as a
security.'

'Oh!'

'Let me go on,' said Manston.

'Thy wife is _dead_; that's the rest o' the news,' said the
labourer slowly. He waited for a reply; none came.

'She went to the Three Tranters, because she couldn't get into thy
house, the burnen roof fell in upon her before she could be called
up, and she's a cinder, as thou'lt be some day.'

'That will do, let me drive on,' said the steward calmly.

Expectation of a concussion may be so intense that its failure
strikes the brain with more force than its fulfilment. The labourer
sank back into the ditch. Such a Cushi could not realize the
possibility of such an unmoved David as this.

Manston drove hastily to the turning of the road, tied his horse,
and ran on foot to the site of the fire.

The stagnation caused by the awful accident had been passed through,
and all hands were helping to remove from the remaining cottage what
furniture they could lay hold of; the thatch of the roofs being
already on fire. The Knapwater fire-engine had arrived on the spot,
but it was small, and ineffectual. A group was collected round the
rector, who in a coat which had become bespattered, scorched, and
torn in his exertions, was directing on one hand the proceedings
relative to the removal of goods into the church, and with the other
was pointing out the spot on which it was most desirable that the
puny engines at their disposal should be made to play. Every tongue
was instantly silent at the sight of Manston's pale and clear
countenance, which contrasted strangely with the grimy and streaming
faces of the toiling villagers.

'Was she burnt?' he said in a firm though husky voice, and stepping
into the illuminated area. The rector came to him, and took him
aside. 'Is she burnt?' repeated Manston.

'She is dead: but thank God, she was spared the horrid agony of
burning,' the rector said solemnly; 'the roof and gable fell in upon
her, and crushed her. Instant death must have followed.'

'Why was she here?' said Manston.

'From what we can hurriedly collect, it seems that she found the
door of your house locked, and concluded that you had retired, the
fact being that your servant, Mrs. Crickett, had gone out to supper.
She then came back to the inn and went to bed.'

'Where's the landlord?' said Manston.

Mr. Springrove came up, walking feebly, and wrapped in a cloak, and
corroborated the evidence given by the rector.

'Did she look ill, or annoyed, when she came?' said the steward.

'I can't say. I didn't see; but I think--'

'What do you think?'

'She was much put out about something.'

'My not meeting her, naturally,' murmured the other, lost in
reverie. He turned his back on Springrove and the rector, and
retired from the shining light.

Everything had been done that could be done with the limited means
at their disposal. The whole row of houses was destroyed, and each
presented itself as one stage of a series, progressing from smoking
ruins at the end where the inn had stood, to a partly flaming mass
--glowing as none but wood embers will glow--at the other.

A feature in the decline of town fires was noticeably absent here
--steam. There was present what is not observable in towns
--incandescence.

The heat, and the smarting effect upon their eyes of the strong
smoke from the burning oak and deal, had at last driven the
villagers back from the road in front of the houses, and they now
stood in groups in the churchyard, the surface of which, raised by
the interments of generations, stood four or five feet above the
level of the road, and almost even with the top of the low wall
dividing one from the other. The headstones stood forth whitely
against the dark grass and yews, their brightness being repeated on
the white smock-frocks of some of the labourers, and in a mellower,
ruddier form on their faces and hands, on those of the grinning
gargoyles, and on other salient stonework of the weather-beaten
church in the background.

The rector had decided that, under the distressing circumstances of
the case, there would be no sacrilege in placing in the church, for
the night, the pieces of furniture and utensils which had been saved
from the several houses. There was no other place of safety for
them, and they accordingly were gathered there.

6. HALF-PAST TWELVE TO ONE A.M.

Manston, when he retired to meditate, had walked round the
churchyard, and now entered the opened door of the building.

He mechanically pursued his way round the piers into his own seat in
the north aisle. The lower atmosphere of this spot was shaded by
its own wall from the shine which streamed in over the window-sills
on the same side. The only light burning inside the church was a
small tallow candle, standing in the font, in the opposite aisle of
the building to that in which Manston had sat down, and near where
the furniture was piled. The candle's mild rays were overpowered by
the ruddier light from the ruins, making the weak flame to appear
like the moon by day.

Sitting there he saw Farmer Springrove enter the door, followed by
his son Edward, still carrying his travelling-bag in his hand. They
were speaking of the sad death of Mrs. Manston, but the subject was
relinquished for that of the houses burnt.

This row of houses, running from the inn eastward, had been built
under the following circumstances:--

Fifty years before this date, the spot upon which the cottages
afterwards stood was a blank strip, along the side of the village
street, difficult to cultivate, on account of the outcrop thereon of
a large bed of flints called locally a 'lanch' or 'lanchet.'

The Aldclyffe then in possession of the estate conceived the idea
that a row of cottages would be an improvement to the spot, and
accordingly granted leases of portions to several respectable
inhabitants. Each lessee was to be subject to the payment of a
merely nominal rent for the whole term of lives, on condition that
he built his own cottage, and delivered it up intact at the end of
the term.

Those who had built had, one by one, relinquished their indentures,
either by sale or barter, to Farmer Springrove's father. New lives
were added in some cases, by payment of a sum to the lord of the
manor, etc., and all the leases were now held by the farmer himself,
as one of the chief provisions for his old age.

The steward had become interested in the following conversation:--

'Try not to be so depressed, father; they are all insured.'

The words came from Edward in an anxious tone.

'You mistake, Edward; they are not insured,' returned the old man
gloomily.

'Not?' the son asked.

'Not one!' said the farmer.

'In the Helmet Fire Office, surely?'

'They were insured there every one. Six months ago the office,
which had been raising the premiums on thatched premises higher for
some years, gave up insuring them altogether, as two or three other
fire-offices had done previously, on account, they said, of the
uncertainty and greatness of the risk of thatch undetached. Ever
since then I have been continually intending to go to another
office, but have never gone. Who expects a fire?'

'Do you remember the terms of the leases?' said Edward, still more
uneasily.

'No, not particularly,' said his father absently.

'Where are they?'

'In the bureau there; that's why I tried to save it first, among
other things.'

'Well, we must see to that at once.'

'What do you want?'

'The key.'

They went into the south aisle, took the candle from the font, and
then proceeded to open the bureau, which had been placed in a corner
under the gallery. Both leant over upon the flap; Edward holding
the candle, whilst his father took the pieces of parchment from one
of the drawers, and spread the first out before him.

'You read it, Ted. I can't see without my glasses. This one will
be sufficient. The terms of all are the same.'

Edward took the parchment, and read quickly and indistinctly for
some time; then aloud and slowly as follows:--


'And the said John Springrove for himself his heirs executors and
administrators doth covenant and agree with the said Gerald
Fellcourt Aldclyffe his heirs and assigns that he the said John
Springrove his heirs and assigns during the said term shall pay unto
the said Gerald Fellcourt Aldclyffe his heirs and assigns the clear
yearly rent of ten shillings and sixpence . . . . at the several
times hereinbefore appointed for the payment thereof respectively.
And also shall and at all times during the said term well and
sufficiently repair and keep the said Cottage or Dwelling-house and
all other the premises and all houses or buildings erected or to be
erected thereupon in good and proper repair in every respect without
exception and the said premises in such good repair upon the
determination of this demise shall yield up unto the said Gerald
Fellcourt Aldclyffe his heirs and assigns.'


They closed the bureau and turned towards the door of the church
without speaking.

Manston also had come forward out of the gloom. Notwithstanding the
farmer's own troubles, an instinctive respect and generous sense of
sympathy with the steward for his awful loss caused the old man to
step aside, that Manston might pass out without speaking to them if
he chose to do so.

'Who is he?' whispered Edward to his father, as Manston approached.

'Mr. Manston, the steward.'

Manston came near, and passed down the aisle on the side of the
younger man. Their faces came almost close together: one large
flame, which still lingered upon the ruins outside, threw long
dancing shadows of each across the nave till they bent upwards
against the aisle wall, and also illuminated their eyes, as each met
those of the other. Edward had learnt, by a letter from home, of
the steward's passion for Cytherea, and his mysterious repression of
it, afterwards explained by his marriage. That marriage was now
nought. Edward realized the man's newly acquired freedom, and felt
an instinctive enmity towards him--he would hardly own to himself
why. The steward, too, knew Cytherea's attachment to Edward, and
looked keenly and inscrutably at him.

7. ONE TO TWO A.M.

Manston went homeward alone, his heart full of strange emotions.
Entering the house, and dismissing the woman to her own home, he at
once proceeded upstairs to his bedroom.

Reasoning worldliness, especially when allied with sensuousness,
cannot repress on some extreme occasions the human instinct to pour
out the soul to some Being or Personality, who in frigid moments is
dismissed with the title of Chance, or at most Law. Manston was
selfishly and inhumanly, but honestly and unutterably, thankful for
the recent catastrophe. Beside his bed, for that first time during
a period of nearly twenty years, he fell down upon his knees in a
passionate outburst of feeling.

Many minutes passed before he arose. He walked to the window, and
then seemed to remember for the first time that some action on his
part was necessary in connection with the sad circumstance of the
night.

Leaving the house at once, he went to the scene of the fire,
arriving there in time to hear the rector making an arrangement with
a certain number of men to watch the spot till morning. The ashes
were still red-hot and flaming. Manston found that nothing could be
done towards searching them at that hour of the night. He turned
homeward again, in the company of the rector, who had considerately
persuaded him to retire from the scene for a while, and promised
that as soon as a man could live amid the embers of the Three
Tranters Inn, they should be carefully searched for the remains of
his unfortunate wife.

Manston then went indoors, to wait for morning.



XI. THE EVENTS OF FIVE DAYS

1. NOVEMBER THE TWENTY-NINTH

The search began at dawn, but a quarter past nine o'clock came
without bringing any result. Manston ate a little breakfast, and
crossed the hollow of the park which intervened between the old and
modern manor-houses, to ask for an interview with Miss Aldclyffe.

He met her midway. She was about to pay him a visit of condolence,
and to place every man on the estate at his disposal, that the
search for any relic of his dead and destroyed wife might not be
delayed an instant.

He accompanied her back to the house. At first they conversed as if
the death of the poor woman was an event which the husband must of
necessity deeply lament; and when all under this head that social
form seemed to require had been uttered, they spoke of the material
damage done, and of the steps which had better be taken to remedy
it.

It was not till both were shut inside her private room that she
spoke to him in her blunt and cynical manner. A certain newness of
bearing in him, peculiar to the present morning, had hitherto
forbidden her this tone: the demeanour of the subject of her
favouritism had altered, she could not tell in what way. He was
entirely a changed man.

'Are you really sorry for your poor wife, Mr. Manston?' she said.

'Well, I am,' he answered shortly.

'But only as for any human being who has met with a violent death?'

He confessed it--'For she was not a good woman,' he added.

'I should be sorry to say such a thing now the poor creature is
dead,' Miss Aldclyffe returned reproachfully.

'Why?' he asked. 'Why should I praise her if she doesn't deserve
it? I say exactly what I have often admired Sterne for saying in
one of his letters--that neither reason nor Scripture asks us to
speak nothing but good of the dead. And now, madam,' he continued,
after a short interval of thought, 'I may, perhaps, hope that you
will assist me, or rather not thwart me, in endeavouring to win the
love of a young lady living about you, one in whom I am much
interested already.'

'Cytherea!'

'Yes, Cytherea.'

'You have been loving Cytherea all the while?'

'Yes.'

Surprise was a preface to much agitation in her, which caused her to
rise from her seat, and pace to the side of the room. The steward
quietly looked on and added, 'I have been loving and still love
her.'

She came close up to him, wistfully contemplating his face, one hand
moving indecisively at her side.

'And your secret marriage was, then, the true and only reason for
that backwardness regarding the courtship of Cytherea, which, they
tell me, has been the talk of the village; not your indifference to
her attractions.' Her voice had a tone of conviction in it, as well
as of inquiry; but none of jealousy.

'Yes,' he said; 'and not a dishonourable one. What held me back was
just that one thing--a sense of morality that perhaps, madam, you
did not give me credit for.' The latter words were spoken with a
mien and tone of pride.

Miss Aldclyffe preserved silence.

'And now,' he went on, 'I may as well say a word in vindication of
my conduct lately, at the risk, too, of offending you. My actual
motive in submitting to your order that I should send for my late
wife, and live with her, was not the mercenary policy of wishing to
retain an office which brings me greater comforts than any I have
enjoyed before, but this unquenchable passion for Cytherea. Though
I saw the weakness, folly, and even wickedness of it continually, it
still forced me to try to continue near her, even as the husband of
another woman.'

He waited for her to speak: she did not.

'There's a great obstacle to my making any way in winning Miss
Graye's love,' he went on.

'Yes, Edward Springrove,' she said quietly. 'I know it, I did once
want to see them married; they have had a slight quarrel, and it
will soon be made up again, unless--' she spoke as if she had only
half attended to Manston's last statement.

'He is already engaged to be married to somebody else,' said the
steward.

'Pooh!' said she, 'you mean to his cousin at Peakhill; that's
nothing to help us; he's now come home to break it off.'

'He must not break it off,' said Manston, firmly and calmly.

His tone attracted her, startled her. Recovering herself, she said
haughtily, 'Well, that's your affair, not mine. Though my wish has
been to see her _your_ wife, I can't do anything dishonourable to
bring about such a result.'

'But it must be _made_ your affair,' he said in a hard, steady voice,
looking into her eyes, as if he saw there the whole panorama of her
past.

One of the most difficult things to portray by written words is that
peculiar mixture of moods expressed in a woman's countenance when,
after having been sedulously engaged in establishing another's
position, she suddenly suspects him of undermining her own. It was
thus that Miss Aldclyffe looked at the steward.

'You--know--something--of me?' she faltered.

'I know all,' he said.

'Then curse that wife of yours! She wrote and said she wouldn't
tell you!' she burst out. 'Couldn't she keep her word for a day?'
She reflected and then said, but no more as to a stranger, 'I will
not yield. I have committed no crime. I yielded to her threats in
a moment of weakness, though I felt inclined to defy her at the
time: it was chiefly because I was mystified as to how she got to
know of it. Pooh! I will put up with threats no more. O, can _you_
threaten me?' she added softly, as if she had for the moment
forgotten to whom she had been speaking.

'My love must be made your affair,' he repeated, without taking his
eyes from her.

An agony, which was not the agony of being discovered in a secret,
obstructed her utterance for a time. 'How can you turn upon me so
when I schemed to get you here--schemed that you might win her till
I found you were married. O, how can you! O! . . . O!' She wept;
and the weeping of such a nature was as harrowing as the weeping of
a man.

'Your getting me here was bad policy as to your secret--the most
absurd thing in the world,' he said, not heeding her distress. 'I
knew all, except the identity of the individual, long ago. Directly
I found that my coming here was a contrived thing, and not a matter
of chance, it fixed my attention upon you at once. All that was
required was the mere spark of life, to make of a bundle of
perceptions an organic whole.'

'Policy, how can you talk of policy? Think, do think! And how can
you threaten me when you know--you know--that I would befriend you
readily without a threat!'

'Yes, yes, I think you would,' he said more kindly; 'but your
indifference for so many, many years has made me doubt it.'

'No, not indifference--'twas enforced silence. My father lived.'

He took her hand, and held it gently.

              *     *     *     *     *

'Now listen,' he said, more quietly and humanly, when she had become
calmer: 'Springrove must marry the woman he's engaged to. You may
make him, but only in one way.'

'Well: but don't speak sternly, AEneas!'

'Do you know that his father has not been particularly thriving for
the last two or three years?'

'I have heard something of it, once or twice, though his rents have
been promptly paid, haven't they?'

'O yes; and do you know the terms of the leases of the houses which
are burnt?' he said, explaining to her that by those terms she might
compel him even to rebuild every house. 'The case is the clearest
case of fire by negligence that I have ever known, in addition to
that,' he continued.

'I don't want them rebuilt; you know it was intended by my father,
directly they fell in, to clear the site for a new entrance to the
park?'

'Yes, but that doesn't affect the position, which is that Farmer
Springrove is in your power to an extent which is very serious for
him.'

'I won't do it--'tis a conspiracy.'

'Won't you for me?' he said eagerly.

Miss Aldclyffe changed colour.

'I don't threaten now, I implore,' he said.

'Because you might threaten if you chose,' she mournfully answered.
'But why be so--when your marriage with her was my own pet idea long
before it was yours? What must I do?'

'Scarcely anything: simply this. When I have seen old Mr.
Springrove, which I shall do in a day or two, and told him that he
will be expected to rebuild the houses, do you see the young man.
See him yourself, in order that the proposals made may not appear to
be anything more than an impulse of your own. You or he will bring
up the subject of the houses. To rebuild them would be a matter of
at least six hundred pounds, and he will almost surely say that we
are hard in insisting upon the extreme letter of the leases. Then
tell him that scarcely can you yourself think of compelling an old
tenant like his father to any such painful extreme--there shall be
no compulsion to build, simply a surrender of the leases. Then
speak feelingly of his cousin, as a woman whom you respect and love,
and whose secret you have learnt to be that she is heart-sick with
hope deferred. Beg him to marry her, his betrothed and your friend,
as some return for your consideration towards his father. Don't
suggest too early a day for their marriage, or he will suspect you
of some motive beyond womanly sympathy. Coax him to make a promise
to her that she shall be his wife at the end of a twelvemonth, and
get him, on assenting to this, to write to Cytherea, entirely
renouncing her.'

'She has already asked him to do that.'

'So much the better--and telling her, too, that he is about to
fulfil his long-standing promise to marry his cousin. If you think
it worth while, you may say Cytherea was not indisposed to think of
me before she knew I was married. I have at home a note she wrote
me the first evening I saw her, which looks rather warm, and which I
could show you. Trust me, he will give her up. When he is married
to Adelaide Hinton, Cytherea will be induced to marry me--perhaps
before; a woman's pride is soon wounded.'

'And hadn't I better write to Mr. Nyttleton, and inquire more
particularly what's the law upon the houses?'

'O no, there's no hurry for that. We know well enough how the case
stands--quite well enough to talk in general terms about it. And I
want the pressure to be put upon young Springrove before he goes
away from home again.'

She looked at him furtively, long, and sadly, as after speaking he
became lost in thought, his eyes listlessly tracing the pattern of
the carpet. 'Yes, yes, she will be mine,' he whispered, careless of
Cytherea Aldclyffe's presence. At last he raised his eyes
inquiringly.

'I will do my best, AEneas,' she answered.

Talibus incusat. Manston then left the house, and again went
towards the blackened ruins, where men were still raking and
probing.

2. FROM NOVEMBER THE TWENTY-NINTH TO DECEMBER THE SECOND

The smouldering remnants of the Three Tranters Inn seemed to promise
that, even when the searchers should light upon the remains of the
unfortunate Mrs. Manston, very little would be discoverable.

Consisting so largely of the charcoal and ashes of hard dry oak and
chestnut, intermingled with thatch, the interior of the heap was one
glowing mass of embers, which, on being stirred about, emitted
sparks and flame long after it was dead and black on the outside.
It was persistently hoped, however, that some traces of the body
would survive the effect of the hot coals, and after a search
pursued uninterruptedly for thirty hours, under the direction of
Manston himself, enough was found to set at rest any doubts of her
fate.

The melancholy gleanings consisted of her watch, bunch of keys, a
few coins, and two charred and blackened bones.

Two days later the official inquiry into the cause of her death was
held at the Rising Sun Inn, before Mr. Floy, the coroner, and a jury
of the chief inhabitants of the district. The little tavern--the
only remaining one in the village--was crowded to excess by the
neighbouring peasantry as well as their richer employers: all who
could by any possibility obtain an hour's release from their duties
being present as listeners.

The jury viewed the sad and infinitesimal remains, which were folded
in a white cambric cloth, and laid in the middle of a well-finished
coffin lined with white silk (by Manston's order), which stood in an
adjoining room, the bulk of the coffin being completely filled in
with carefully arranged flowers and evergreens--also the steward's
own doing.

Abraham Brown, of Hoxton, London--an old white-headed man, without
the ruddiness which makes white hairs so pleasing--was sworn, and
deposed that he kept a lodging-house at an address he named. On a
Saturday evening less than a month before the fire, a lady came to
him, with very little luggage, and took the front room on the second
floor. He did not inquire where she came from, as she paid a week
in advance, but she gave her name as Mrs. Manston, referring him, if
he wished for any guarantee of her respectability, to Mr. Manston,
Knapwater Park. Here she lived for three weeks, rarely going out.
She slept away from her lodgings one night during the time. At the
end of that time, on the twenty-eighth of November, she left his
house in a four-wheeled cab, about twelve o'clock in the day,
telling the driver to take her to the Waterloo Station. She paid
all her lodging expenses, and not having given notice the full week
previous to her going away, offered to pay for the next, but he only
took half. She wore a thick black veil, and grey waterproof cloak,
when she left him, and her luggage was two boxes, one of plain deal,
with black japanned clamps, the other sewn up in canvas.

Joseph Chinney, porter at the Carriford Road Station, deposed that
he saw Mrs. Manston, dressed as the last witness had described, get
out of a second-class carriage on the night of the twenty-eighth.
She stood beside him whilst her luggage was taken from the van. The
luggage, consisting of the clamped deal box and another covered with
canvas, was placed in the cloak-room. She seemed at a loss at
finding nobody there to meet her. She asked him for some person to
accompany her, and carry her bag to Mr. Manston's house, Knapwater
Park. He was just off duty at that time, and offered to go himself.
The witness here repeated the conversation he had had with Mrs.
Manston during their walk, and testified to having left her at the
door of the Three Tranters Inn, Mr. Manston's house being closed.

Next, Farmer Springrove was called. A murmur of surprise and
commiseration passed round the crowded room when he stepped forward.

The events of the few preceding days had so worked upon his
nervously thoughtful nature that the blue orbits of his eyes, and
the mere spot of scarlet to which the ruddiness of his cheeks had
contracted, seemed the result of a heavy sickness. A perfect
silence pervaded the assembly when he spoke.

His statement was that he received Mrs. Manston at the threshold,
and asked her to enter the parlour. She would not do so, and stood
in the passage whilst the maid went upstairs to see that the room
was in order. The maid came down to the middle landing of the
staircase, when Mrs. Manston followed her up to the room. He did
not speak ten words with her altogether.

Afterwards, whilst he was standing at the door listening for his son
Edward's return, he saw her light extinguished, having first caught
sight of her shadow moving about the room.

THE CORONER: 'Did her shadow appear to be that of a woman
undressing?'

SPRINGROVE: 'I cannot say, as I didn't take particular notice. It
moved backwards and forwards; she might have been undressing or
merely pacing up and down the room.'

Mrs. Fitler, the ostler's wife and chambermaid, said that she
preceded Mrs. Manston into the room, put down the candle, and went
out. Mrs. Manston scarcely spoke to her, except to ask her to bring
a little brandy. Witness went and fetched it from the bar, brought
it up, and put it on the dressing-table.

THE CORONER: 'Had Mrs. Manston begun to undress, when you came
back?'

'No, sir; she was sitting on the bed, with everything on, as when
she came in.'

'Did she begin to undress before you left?'

'Not exactly before I had left; but when I had closed the door, and
was on the landing I heard her boot drop on the floor, as it does
sometimes when pulled off?'

'Had her face appeared worn and sleepy?'

'I cannot say as her bonnet and veil were still on when I left, for
she seemed rather shy and ashamed to be seen at the Three Tranters
at all.'

'And did you hear or see any more of her?'

'No more, sir.'

Mrs. Crickett, temporary servant to Mr. Manston, said that in
accordance with Mr. Manston's orders, everything had been made
comfortable in the house for Mrs. Manston's expected return on
Monday night. Mr. Manston told her that himself and Mrs. Manston
would be home late, not till between eleven and twelve o'clock, and
that supper was to be ready. Not expecting Mrs. Manston so early,
she had gone out on a very important errand to Mrs. Leat the
postmistress.

Mr. Manston deposed that in looking down the columns of Bradshaw he
had mistaken the time of the train's arrival, and hence was not at
the station when she came. The broken watch produced was his
wife's--he knew it by a scratch on the inner plate, and by other
signs. The bunch of keys belonged to her: two of them fitted the
locks of her two boxes.

Mr. Flooks, agent to Lord Claydonfield at Chettlewood, said that Mr.
Manston had pleaded as his excuse for leaving him rather early in
the evening after their day's business had been settled, that he was
going to meet his wife at Carriford Road Station, where she was
coming by the last train that night.

The surgeon said that the remains were those of a human being. The
small fragment seemed a portion of one of the lumbar vertebrae--the
other the head of the os femoris--but they were both so far gone
that it was impossible to say definitely whether they belonged to
the body of a male or female. There was no moral doubt that they
were a woman's. He did not believe that death resulted from burning
by fire. He thought she was crushed by the fall of the west gable,
which being of wood, as well as the floor, burnt after it had
fallen, and consumed the body with it.

Two or three additional witnesses gave unimportant testimony.

The coroner summed up, and the jury without hesitation found that
the deceased Mrs. Manston came by her death accidentally through the
burning of the Three Tranters Inn.

3. DECEMBER THE SECOND. AFTERNOON

When Mr. Springrove came from the door of the Rising Sun at the end
of the inquiry, Manston walked by his side as far as the stile to
the park, a distance of about a stone's-throw.

'Ah, Mr. Springrove, this is a sad affair for everybody concerned.'

'Everybody,' said the old farmer, with deep sadness, ''tis quite a
misery to me. I hardly know how I shall live through each day as it
breaks. I think of the words, "In the morning thou shalt say, Would
God it were even! and at even thou shalt say, Would God it were
morning! for the fear of thine heart wherewith thou shalt fear, and
for the sight of thine eyes which thou shalt see."' His voice
became broken.

'Ah--true. I read Deuteronomy myself,' said Manston.

'But my loss is as nothing to yours,' the farmer continued.

'Nothing; but I can commiserate you. I should be worse than
unfeeling if I didn't, although my own affliction is of so sad and
solemn a kind. Indeed my own loss makes me more keenly alive to
yours, different in nature as it is.'

'What sum do you think would be required of me to put the houses in
place again?'

'I have roughly thought six or seven hundred pounds.'

'If the letter of the law is to be acted up to,' said the old man,
with more agitation in his voice.

'Yes, exactly.'

'Do you know enough of Miss Aldclyffe's mind to give me an idea of
how she means to treat me?'

'Well, I am afraid I must tell you that though I know very little of
her mind as a rule, in this matter I believe she will be rather
peremptory; she might share to the extent of a sixth or an eighth
perhaps, in consideration of her getting new lamps for old, but I
should hardly think more.'

The steward stepped upon the stile, and Mr. Springrove went along
the road with a bowed head and heavy footsteps towards his niece's
cottage, in which, rather against the wish of Edward, they had
temporarily taken refuge.

The additional weight of this knowledge soon made itself
perceptible. Though indoors with Edward or Adelaide nearly the
whole of the afternoon, nothing more than monosyllabic replies could
be drawn from him. Edward continually discovered him looking
fixedly at the wall or floor, quite unconscious of another's
presence. At supper he ate just as usual, but quite mechanically,
and with the same abstraction.

4. DECEMBER THE THIRD

The next morning he was in no better spirits. Afternoon came: his
son was alarmed, and managed to draw from him an account of the
conversation with the steward.

'Nonsense; he knows nothing about it,' said Edward vehemently.
'I'll see Miss Aldclyffe myself. Now promise me, father, that
you'll not believe till I come back, and tell you to believe it,
that Miss Aldclyffe will do any such unjust thing.'

Edward started at once for Knapwater House. He strode rapidly along
the high-road, till he reached a wicket where a footpath allowed of
a short cut to the mansion. Here he leant down upon the bars for a
few minutes, meditating as to the best manner of opening his speech,
and surveying the scene before him in that absent mood which takes
cognizance of little things without being conscious of them at the
time, though they appear in the eye afterwards as vivid impressions.
It was a yellow, lustrous, late autumn day, one of those days of the
quarter when morning and evening seem to meet together without the
intervention of a noon. The clear yellow sunlight had tempted forth
Miss Aldclyffe herself, who was at this same time taking a walk in
the direction of the village. As Springrove lingered he heard
behind the plantation a woman's dress brushing along amid the
prickly husks and leaves which had fallen into the path from the
boughs of the chestnut trees. In another minute she stood in front
of him.

He answered her casual greeting respectfully, and was about to
request a few minutes' conversation with her, when she directly
addressed him on the subject of the fire. 'It is a sad misfortune
for your father' she said, 'and I hear that he has lately let his
insurances expire?'

'He has, madam, and you are probably aware that either by the
general terms of his holding, or the same coupled with the origin of
the fire, the disaster may involve the necessity of his rebuilding
the whole row of houses, or else of becoming a debtor to the estate,
to the extent of some hundreds of pounds?'

She assented. 'I have been thinking of it,' she went on, and then
repeated in substance the words put into her mouth by the steward.
Some disturbance of thought might have been fancied as taking place
in Springrove's mind during her statement, but before she had
reached the end, his eyes were clear, and directed upon her.

'I don't accept your conditions of release,' he said.

'They are not conditions exactly.'

'Well, whatever they are not, they are very uncalled-for remarks.'

'Not at all--the houses have been burnt by your family's
negligence.'

'I don't refer to the houses--you have of course the best of all
rights to speak of that matter; but you, a stranger to me
comparatively, have no right at all to volunteer opinions and wishes
upon a very delicate subject, which concerns no living beings but
Miss Graye, Miss Hinton, and myself.'

Miss Aldclyffe, like a good many others in her position, had plainly
not realized that a son of her tenant and inferior could have become
an educated man, who had learnt to feel his individuality, to view
society from a Bohemian standpoint, far outside the farming grade in
Carriford parish, and that hence he had all a developed man's
unorthodox opinion about the subordination of classes. And fully
conscious of the labyrinth into which he had wandered between his
wish to behave honourably in the dilemma of his engagement to his
cousin Adelaide and the intensity of his love for Cytherea,
Springrove was additionally sensitive to any allusion to the case.
He had spoken to Miss Aldclyffe with considerable warmth.

And Miss Aldclyffe was not a woman likely to be far behind any
second person in warming to a mood of defiance. It seemed as if she
were prepared to put up with a cold refusal, but that her
haughtiness resented a criticism of her conduct ending in a rebuke.
By this, Manston's discreditable object, which had been made hers by
compulsion only, was now adopted by choice. She flung herself into
the work.

A fiery man in such a case would have relinquished persuasion and
tried palpable force. A fiery woman added unscrupulousness and
evolved daring strategy; and in her obstinacy, and to sustain
herself as mistress, she descended to an action the meanness of
which haunted her conscience to her dying hour.

'I don't quite see, Mr. Springrove,' she said, 'that I am altogether
what you are pleased to call a stranger. I have known your family,
at any rate, for a good many years, and I know Miss Graye
particularly well, and her state of mind with regard to this
matter.'

Perplexed love makes us credulous and curious as old women. Edward
was willing, he owned it to himself, to get at Cytherea's state of
mind, even through so dangerous a medium.

'A letter I received from her' he said, with assumed coldness,
'tells me clearly enough what Miss Graye's mind is.'

'You think she still loves you? O yes, of course you do--all men
are like that.'

'I have reason to.' He could feign no further than the first
speech.

'I should be interested in knowing what reason?' she said, with
sarcastic archness.

Edward felt he was allowing her to do, in fractional parts, what he
rebelled against when regarding it as a whole; but the fact that his
antagonist had the presence of a queen, and features only in the
early evening of their beauty, was not without its influence upon a
keenly conscious man. Her bearing had charmed him into toleration,
as Mary Stuart's charmed the indignant Puritan visitors. He again
answered her honestly.

'The best of reasons--the tone of her letter.'

'Pooh, Mr. Springrove!'

'Not at all, Miss Aldclyffe! Miss Graye desired that we should be
strangers to each other for the simple practical reason that
intimacy could only make wretched complications worse, not from lack
of love--love is only suppressed.'

'Don't you know yet, that in thus putting aside a man, a woman's
pity for the pain she inflicts gives her a kindness of tone which is
often mistaken for suppressed love?' said Miss Aldclyffe, with soft
insidiousness.

This was a translation of the ambiguity of Cytherea's tone which he
had certainly never thought of; and he was too ingenuous not to own
it.

'I had never thought of it,' he said.

'And don't believe it?'

'Not unless there was some other evidence to support the view.'

She paused a minute and then began hesitatingly--

'My intention was--what I did not dream of owning to you--my
intention was to try to induce you to fulfil your promise to Miss
Hinton not solely on her account and yours (though partly). I love
Cytherea Graye with all my soul, and I want to see her happy even
more than I do you. I did not mean to drag her name into the affair
at all, but I am driven to say that she wrote that letter of
dismissal to you--for it was a most pronounced dismissal--not on
account of your engagement. She is old enough to know that
engagements can be broken as easily as they can be made. She wrote
it because she loved another man; very suddenly, and not with any
idea or hope of marrying him, but none the less deeply.'

'Who?'

'Mr. Manston.'

'Good--! I can't listen to you for an instant, madam; why, she
hadn't seen him!'

'She had; he came here the day before she wrote to you; and I could
prove to you, if it were worth while, that on that day she went
voluntarily to his house, though not artfully or blamably; stayed
for two hours playing and singing; that no sooner did she leave him
than she went straight home, and wrote the letter saying she should
not see you again, entirely because she had seen him and fallen
desperately in love with him--a perfectly natural thing for a young
girl to do, considering that he's the handsomest man in the county.
Why else should she not have written to you before?'

'Because I was such a--because she did not know of the connection
between me and my cousin until then.'

'I must think she did.'

'On what ground?'

'On the strong ground of my having told her so, distinctly, the very
first day she came to live with me.'

'Well, what do you seek to impress upon me after all? This--that
the day Miss Graye wrote to me, saying it was better that we should
part, coincided with the day she had seen a certain man--'

'A remarkably handsome and talented man.'

'Yes, I admit that.'

'And that it coincided with the hour just subsequent to her seeing
him.'

'Yes, just when she had seen him.'

'And been to his house alone with him.'

'It is nothing.'

'And stayed there playing and singing with him.'

'Admit that, too,' he said; 'an accident might have caused it.'

'And at the same instant that she wrote your dismissal she wrote a
letter referring to a secret appointment with him.'

'Never, by God, madam! never!'

'What do you say, sir?'

'Never.'

She sneered.

'There's no accounting for beliefs, and the whole history is a
very trivial matter; but I am resolved to prove that a lady's word
is truthful, though upon a matter which concerns neither you nor
herself. You shall learn that she _did_ write him a letter
concerning an assignation--that is, if Mr. Manston still has it,
and will be considerate enough to lend it me.'

'But besides,' continued Edward, 'a married man to do what would
cause a young girl to write a note of the kind you mention!'

She flushed a little.

'That I don't know anything about,' she stammered. 'But Cytherea
didn't, of course, dream any more than I did, or others in the
parish, that he was married.'

'Of course she didn't.'

'And I have reason to believe that he told her of the fact directly
afterwards, that she might not compromise herself, or allow him to.
It is notorious that he struggled honestly and hard against her
attractions, and succeeded in hiding his feelings, if not in
quenching them.'

'We'll hope that he did.'

'But circumstances are changed now.'

'Very greatly changed,' he murmured abstractedly.

'You must remember,' she added more suasively, 'that Miss Graye has
a perfect right to do what she likes with her own--her heart, that
is to say.'

Her descent from irritation was caused by perceiving that Edward's
faith was really disturbed by her strong assertions, and it
gratified her.

Edward's thoughts flew to his father, and the object of his
interview with her. Tongue-fencing was utterly distasteful to him.

'I will not trouble you by remaining longer, madam,' he remarked,
gloomily; 'our conversation has ended sadly for me.'

'Don't think so,' she said, 'and don't be mistaken. I am older than
you are, many years older, and I know many things.'



Full of miserable doubt, and bitterly regretting that he had raised
his father's expectations by anticipations impossible of fulfilment,
Edward slowly went his way into the village, and approached his
cousin's house. The farmer was at the door looking eagerly for him.
He had been waiting there for more than half-an-hour. His eye
kindled quickly.

'Well, Ted, what does she say?' he asked, in the intensely sanguine
tones which fall sadly upon a listener's ear, because, antecedently,
they raise pictures of inevitable disappointment for the speaker, in
some direction or another.

'Nothing for us to be alarmed at,' said Edward, with a forced
cheerfulness.

'But must we rebuild?'

'It seems we must, father.'

The old man's eyes swept the horizon, then he turned to go in,
without making another observation. All light seemed extinguished
in him again. When Edward went in he found his father with the
bureau open, unfolding the leases with a shaking hand, folding them
up again without reading them, then putting them in their niche only
to remove them again.

Adelaide was in the room. She said thoughtfully to Edward, as she
watched the farmer--

'I hope it won't kill poor uncle, Edward. What should we do if
anything were to happen to him? He is the only near relative you
and I have in the world.' It was perfectly true, and somehow Edward
felt more bound up with her after that remark.

She continued: 'And he was only saying so hopefully the day before
the fire, that he wouldn't for the world let any one else give me
away to you when we are married.'

For the first time a conscientious doubt arose in Edward's mind as
to the justice of the course he was pursuing in resolving to refuse
the alternative offered by Miss Aldclyffe. Could it be selfishness
as well as independence? How much he had thought of his own heart,
how little he had thought of his father's peace of mind!

The old man did not speak again till supper-time, when he began
asking his son an endless number of hypothetical questions on what
might induce Miss Aldclyffe to listen to kinder terms; speaking of
her now not as an unfair woman, but as a Lachesis or Fate whose
course it behoved nobody to condemn. In his earnestness he once
turned his eyes on Edward's face: their expression was woful: the
pupils were dilated and strange in aspect.

'If she will only agree to that!' he reiterated for the hundredth
time, increasing the sadness of his listeners.

An aristocratic knocking came to the door, and Jane entered with a
letter, addressed--

                'MR. EDWARD SPRINGROVE, Junior.'

'Charles from Knapwater House brought it,' she said.

'Miss Aldclyffe's writing,' said Mr. Springrove, before Edward had
recognized it himself. 'Now 'tis all right; she's going to make an
offer; she doesn't want the houses there, not she; they are going to
make that the way into the park.'

Edward opened the seal and glanced at the inside. He said, with a
supreme effort of self-command--

'It is only directed by Miss Aldclyffe, and refers to nothing
connected with the fire. I wonder at her taking the trouble to send
it to-night.'

His father looked absently at him and turned away again. Shortly
afterwards they retired for the night. Alone in his bedroom Edward
opened and read what he had not dared to refer to in their presence.

The envelope contained another envelope in Cytherea's handwriting,
addressed to '---- Manston, Esq., Old Manor House.' Inside this was
the note she had written to the steward after her detention in his
house by the thunderstorm--


                     'KNAPWATER HOUSE,
                          September 20th.

'I find I cannot meet you at seven o'clock by the waterfall as I
promised. The emotion I felt made me forgetful of realities.
                                             'C. GRAYE.'


Miss Aldclyffe had not written a line, and, by the unvarying rule
observable when words are not an absolute necessity, her silence
seemed ten times as convincing as any expression of opinion could
have been.

He then, step by step, recalled all the conversation on the subject
of Cytherea's feelings that had passed between himself and Miss
Aldclyffe in the afternoon, and by a confusion of thought, natural
enough under the trying experience, concluded that because the lady
was truthful in her portraiture of effects, she must necessarily be
right in her assumption of causes. That is, he was convinced that
Cytherea--the hitherto-believed faithful Cytherea--had, at any rate,
looked with something more than indifference upon the extremely
handsome face and form of Manston.

Did he blame her, as guilty of the impropriety of allowing herself
to love the newcomer in the face of his not being free to return her
love? No; never for a moment did he doubt that all had occurred in
her old, innocent, impulsive way; that her heart was gone before she
knew it--before she knew anything, beyond his existence, of the man
to whom it had flown. Perhaps the very note enclosed to him was the
result of first reflection. Manston he would unhesitatingly have
called a scoundrel, but for one strikingly redeeming fact. It had
been patent to the whole parish, and had come to Edward's own
knowledge by that indirect channel, that Manston, as a married man,
conscientiously avoided Cytherea after those first few days of his
arrival during which her irresistibly beautiful and fatal glances
had rested upon him--his upon her.

Taking from his coat a creased and pocket-worn envelope containing
Cytherea's letter to himself, Springrove opened it and read it
through. He was upbraided therein, and he was dismissed. It bore
the date of the letter sent to Manston, and by containing within it
the phrase, 'All the day long I have been thinking,' afforded
justifiable ground for assuming that it was written subsequently to
the other (and in Edward's sight far sweeter one) to the steward.

But though he accused her of fickleness, he would not doubt the
genuineness, in its kind, of her partiality for him at Budmouth. It
was a short and shallow feeling--not perfect love:

          'Love is not love
   Which alters when it alteration finds.'

But it was not flirtation; a feeling had been born in her and had
died. It would be well for his peace of mind if his love for her
could flit away so softly, and leave so few traces behind.

Miss Aldclyffe had shown herself desperately concerned in the whole
matter by the alacrity with which she had obtained the letter from
Manston, and her labours to induce himself to marry his cousin.
Taken in connection with her apparent interest in, if not love for,
Cytherea, her eagerness, too, could only be accounted for on the
ground that Cytherea indeed loved the steward.

5. DECEMBER THE FOURTH

Edward passed the night he scarcely knew how, tossing feverishly
from side to side, the blood throbbing in his temples, and singing
in his ears.

Before the day began to break he dressed himself. On going out upon
the landing he found his father's bedroom door already open. Edward
concluded that the old man had risen softly, as was his wont, and
gone out into the fields to start the labourers. But neither of the
outer doors was unfastened. He entered the front room, and found it
empty. Then animated by a new idea, he went round to the little
back parlour, in which the few wrecks saved from the fire were
deposited, and looked in at the door. Here, near the window, the
shutters of which had been opened half way, he saw his father
leaning on the bureau, his elbows resting on the flap, his body
nearly doubled, his hands clasping his forehead. Beside him were
ghostly-looking square folds of parchment--the leases of the houses
destroyed.

His father looked up when Edward entered, and wearily spoke to the
young man as his face came into the faint light.

'Edward, why did you get up so early?'

'I was uneasy, and could not sleep.'

The farmer turned again to the leases on the bureau, and seemed to
become lost in reflection. In a minute or two, without lifting his
eyes, he said--

'This is more than we can bear, Ted--more than we can bear! Ted,
this will kill me. Not the loss only--the sense of my neglect about
the insurance and everything. Borrow I never will. 'Tis all misery
now. God help us--all misery now!'

Edward did not answer, continuing to look fixedly at the dreary
daylight outside.

'Ted,' the farmer went on, 'this upset of be-en burnt out o' home
makes me very nervous and doubtful about everything. There's this
troubles me besides--our liven here with your cousin, and fillen up
her house. It must be very awkward for her. But she says she
doesn't mind. Have you said anything to her lately about when you
are going to marry her?'

'Nothing at all lately.'

'Well, perhaps you may as well, now we are so mixed in together.
You know, no time has ever been mentioned to her at all, first or
last, and I think it right that now, since she has waited so
patiently and so long--you are almost called upon to say you are
ready. It would simplify matters very much, if you were to walk up
to church wi' her one of these mornings, get the thing done, and go
on liven here as we are. If you don't I must get a house all the
sooner. It would lighten my mind, too, about the two little
freeholds over the hill--not a morsel a-piece, divided as they were
between her mother and me, but a tidy bit tied together again. Just
think about it, will ye, Ted?'

He stopped from exhaustion produced by the intense concentration of
his mind upon the weary subject, and looked anxiously at his son.

'Yes, I will,' said Edward.

'But I am going to see her of the Great House this morning,' the
farmer went on, his thoughts reverting to the old subject. 'I must
know the rights of the matter, the when and the where. I don't like
seeing her, but I'd rather talk to her than the steward. I wonder
what she'll say to me.'

The younger man knew exactly what she would say. If his father
asked her what he was to do, and when, she would simply refer him to
Manston: her character was not that of a woman who shrank from a
proposition she had once laid down. If his father were to say to
her that his son had at last resolved to marry his cousin within the
year, and had given her a promise to that effect, she would say,
'Mr. Springrove, the houses are burnt: we'll let them go: trouble
no more about them.'

His mind was already made up. He said calmly, 'Father, when you are
talking to Miss Aldclyffe, mention to her that I have asked Adelaide
if she is willing to marry me next Christmas. She is interested in
my union with Adelaide, and the news will be welcome to her.'

'And yet she can be iron with reference to me and her property,' the
farmer murmured. 'Very well, Ted, I'll tell her.'

6. DECEMBER THE FIFTH

Of the many contradictory particulars constituting a woman's heart,
two had shown their vigorous contrast in Cytherea's bosom just at
this time.

It was a dark morning, the morning after old Mr. Springrove's visit
to Miss Aldclyffe, which had terminated as Edward had intended.
Having risen an hour earlier than was usual with her, Cytherea sat
at the window of an elegant little sitting-room on the ground floor,
which had been appropriated to her by the kindness or whim of Miss
Aldclyffe, that she might not be driven into that lady's presence
against her will. She leant with her face on her hand, looking out
into the gloomy grey air. A yellow glimmer from the flapping flame
of the newly-lit fire fluttered on one side of her face and neck
like a butterfly about to settle there, contrasting warmly with the
other side of the same fair face, which received from the window the
faint cold morning light, so weak that her shadow from the fire had
a distinct outline on the window-shutter in spite of it. There the
shadow danced like a demon, blue and grim.

The contradiction alluded to was that in spite of the decisive mood
which two months earlier in the year had caused her to write a
peremptory and final letter to Edward, she was now hoping for some
answer other than the only possible one a man who, as she held, did
not love her wildly, could send to such a communication. For a
lover who did love wildly, she had left one little loophole in her
otherwise straightforward epistle. Why she expected the letter on
some morning of this particular week was, that hearing of his return
to Carriford, she fondly assumed that he meant to ask for an
interview before he left. Hence it was, too, that for the last few
days, she had not been able to keep in bed later than the time of
the postman's arrival.

The clock pointed to half-past seven. She saw the postman emerge
from beneath the bare boughs of the park trees, come through the
wicket, dive through the shrubbery, reappear on the lawn, stalk
across it without reference to paths--as country postmen do--and
come to the porch. She heard him fling the bag down on the seat,
and turn away towards the village, without hindering himself for a
single pace.

Then the butler opened the door, took up the bag, brought it in, and
carried it up the staircase to place it on the slab by Miss
Aldclyffe's dressing-room door. The whole proceeding had been
depicted by sounds.

She had a presentiment that her letter was in the bag at last. She
thought then in diminishing pulsations of confidence, 'He asks to
see me! Perhaps he asks to see me: I hope he asks to see me.'

A quarter to eight: Miss Aldclyffe's bell--rather earlier than
usual. 'She must have heard the post-bag brought,' said the maiden,
as, tired of the chilly prospect outside, she turned to the fire,
and drew imaginative pictures of her future therein.

A tap came to the door, and the lady's-maid entered.

'Miss Aldclyffe is awake,' she said; 'and she asked if you were
moving yet, miss.'

'I'll run up to her,' said Cytherea, and flitted off with the
utterance of the words. 'Very fortunate this,' she thought; 'I
shall see what is in the bag this morning all the sooner.'

She took it up from the side table, went into Miss Aldclyffe's
bedroom, pulled up the blinds, and looked round upon the lady in
bed, calculating the minutes that must elapse before she looked at
her letters.

'Well, darling, how are you? I am glad you have come in to see me,'
said Miss Aldclyffe. 'You can unlock the bag this morning, child,
if you like,' she continued, yawning factitiously.

'Strange!' Cytherea thought; 'it seems as if she knew there was
likely to be a letter for me.'

From her bed Miss Aldclyffe watched the girl's face as she
tremblingly opened the post-bag and found there an envelope
addressed to her in Edward's handwriting; one he had written the day
before, after the decision he had come to on an impartial, and on
that account torturing, survey of his own, his father's, his cousin
Adelaide's, and what he believed to be Cytherea's, position.

The haughty mistress's soul sickened remorsefully within her when
she saw suddenly appear upon the speaking countenance of the young
lady before her a wan desolate look of agony.

The master-sentences of Edward's letter were these: 'You speak
truly. That we never meet again is the wisest and only proper
course. That I regret the past as much as you do yourself, it is
hardly necessary for me to say.'



XII. THE EVENTS OF TEN MONTHS

1. DECEMBER TO APRIL

Week after week, month after month, the time had flown by.
Christmas had passed; dreary winter with dark evenings had given
place to more dreary winter with light evenings. Thaws had ended in
rain, rain in wind, wind in dust. Showery days had come--the period
of pink dawns and white sunsets; with the third week in April the
cuckoo had appeared, with the fourth, the nightingale.

Edward Springrove was in London, attending to the duties of his new
office, and it had become known throughout the neighbourhood of
Carriford that the engagement between himself and Miss Adelaide
Hinton would terminate in marriage at the end of the year.

The only occasion on which her lover of the idle delicious days at
Budmouth watering-place had been seen by Cytherea after the time of
the decisive correspondence, was once in church, when he sat in
front of her, and beside Miss Hinton.

The rencounter was quite an accident. Springrove had come there in
the full belief that Cytherea was away from home with Miss
Aldclyffe; and he continued ignorant of her presence throughout the
service.

It is at such moments as these, when a sensitive nature writhes
under the conception that its most cherished emotions have been
treated with contumely, that the sphere-descended Maid, Music,
friend of Pleasure at other times, becomes a positive enemy
--racking, bewildering, unrelenting. The congregation sang the
first Psalm and came to the verse--

     'Like some fair tree which, fed by streams,
       With timely fruit doth bend,
     He still shall flourish, and success
       All his designs attend.'

Cytherea's lips did not move, nor did any sound escape her; but
could she help singing the words in the depths of her being,
although the man to whom she applied them sat at her rival's side?

Perhaps the moral compensation for all a woman's petty cleverness
under thriving conditions is the real nobility that lies in her
extreme foolishness at these other times; her sheer inability to be
simply just, her exercise of an illogical power entirely denied to
men in general--the power not only of kissing, but of delighting to
kiss the rod by a punctilious observance of the self-immolating
doctrines in the Sermon on the Mount.

As for Edward--a little like other men of his temperament, to whom,
it is somewhat humiliating to think, the aberrancy of a given love
is in itself a recommendation--his sentiment, as he looked over his
cousin's book, was of a lower rank, Horatian rather than Psalmodic--

     'O, what hast thou of her, of her
     Whose every look did love inspire;
     Whose every breathing fanned my fire,
     And stole me from myself away!'

Then, without letting him see her, Cytherea slipt out of church
early, and went home, the tones of the organ still lingering in her
ears as she tried bravely to kill a jealous thought that would
nevertheless live: 'My nature is one capable of more, far more,
intense feeling than hers! She can't appreciate all the sides of
him--she never will! He is more tangible to me even now, as a
thought, than his presence itself is to her!' She was less noble
then.

But she continually repressed her misery and bitterness of heart
till the effort to do so showed signs of lessening. At length she
even tried to hope that her lost lover and her rival would love one
another very dearly.

The scene and the sentiment dropped into the past. Meanwhile,
Manston continued visibly before her. He, though quiet and subdued
in his bearing for a long time after the calamity of November, had
not simulated a grief that he did not feel. At first his loss
seemed so to absorb him--though as a startling change rather than as
a heavy sorrow--that he paid Cytherea no attention whatever. His
conduct was uniformly kind and respectful, but little more. Then,
as the date of the catastrophe grew remoter, he began to wear a
different aspect towards her. He always contrived to obliterate by
his manner all recollection on her side that she was comparatively
more dependent than himself--making much of her womanhood, nothing
of her situation. Prompt to aid her whenever occasion offered, and
full of delightful petits soins at all times, he was not officious.
In this way he irresistibly won for himself a position as her
friend, and the more easily in that he allowed not the faintest
symptom of the old love to be apparent.

Matters stood thus in the middle of the spring when the next move on
his behalf was made by Miss Aldclyffe.

2. THE THIRD OF MAY

She led Cytherea to a summer-house called the Fane, built in the
private grounds about the mansion in the form of a Grecian temple;
it overlooked the lake, the island on it, the trees, and their
undisturbed reflection in the smooth still water. Here the old and
young maid halted; here they stood, side by side, mentally imbibing
the scene.

The month was May--the time, morning. Cuckoos, thrushes,
blackbirds, and sparrows gave forth a perfect confusion of song and
twitter. The road was spotted white with the fallen leaves of
apple-blossoms, and the sparkling grey dew still lingered on the
grass and flowers. Two swans floated into view in front of the
women, and then crossed the water towards them.

'They seem to come to us without any will of their own--quite
involuntarily--don't they?' said Cytherea, looking at the birds'
graceful advance.

'Yes, but if you look narrowly you can see their hips just beneath
the water, working with the greatest energy.'

'I'd rather not see that, it spoils the idea of proud indifference
to direction which we associate with a swan.'

'It does; we'll have "involuntarily." Ah, now this reminds me of
something.'

'Of what?'

'Of a human being who involuntarily comes towards yourself.'

Cytherea looked into Miss Aldclyffe's face; her eyes grew round as
circles, and lines of wonderment came visibly upon her countenance.
She had not once regarded Manston as a lover since his wife's sudden
appearance and subsequent death. The death of a wife, and such a
death, was an overwhelming matter in her ideas of things.

'Is it a man or woman?' she said, quite innocently.

'Mr. Manston,' said Miss Aldclyffe quietly.

'Mr. Manston attracted by me _now_?' said Cytherea, standing at gaze.

'Didn't you know it?'

'Certainly I did not. Why, his poor wife has only been dead six
months.'

'Of course he knows that. But loving is not done by months, or
method, or rule, or nobody would ever have invented such a phrase as
"falling in love." He does not want his love to be observed just
yet, on the very account you mention; but conceal it as he may from
himself and us, it exists definitely--and very intensely, I assure
you.'

'I suppose then, that if he can't help it, it is no harm of him,'
said Cytherea naively, and beginning to ponder.

'Of course it isn't--you know that well enough. She was a great
burden and trouble to him. This may become a great good to you
both.'

A rush of feeling at remembering that the same woman, before
Manston's arrival, had just as frankly advocated Edward's claims,
checked Cytherea's utterance for awhile.

'There, don't look at me like that, for Heaven's sake!' said Miss
Aldclyffe. 'You could almost kill a person by the force of reproach
you can put into those eyes of yours, I verily believe.'

Edward once in the young lady's thoughts, there was no getting rid
of him. She wanted to be alone.

'Do you want me here?' she said.

'Now there, there; you want to be off, and have a good cry,' said
Miss Aldclyffe, taking her hand. 'But you mustn't, my dear.
There's nothing in the past for you to regret. Compare Mr.
Manston's honourable conduct towards his wife and yourself, with
Springrove towards his betrothed and yourself, and then see which
appears the more worthy of your thoughts.'

3. FROM THE FOURTH OF MAY TO THE TWENTY-FIRST OF JUNE

The next stage in Manston's advances towards her hand was a clearly
defined courtship. She was sadly perplexed, and some contrivance
was necessary on his part in order to meet with her. But it is next
to impossible for an appreciative woman to have a positive
repugnance towards an unusually handsome and gifted man, even though
she may not be inclined to love him. Hence Cytherea was not so
alarmed at the sight of him as to render a meeting and conversation
with her more than a matter of difficulty.

Coming and going from church was his grand opportunity. Manston was
very religious now. It is commonly said that no man was ever
converted by argument, but there is a single one which will make any
Laodicean in England, let him be once love-sick, wear prayer-books
and become a zealous Episcopalian--the argument that his sweetheart
can be seen from his pew.

Manston introduced into his method a system of bewitching flattery,
everywhere pervasive, yet, too, so transitory and intangible, that,
as in the case of the poet Wordsworth and the Wandering Voice,
though she felt it present, she could never find it. As a foil to
heighten its effect, he occasionally spoke philosophically of the
evanescence of female beauty--the worthlessness of mere appearance.
'Handsome is that handsome does' he considered a proverb which
should be written on the looking-glass of every woman in the land.
'Your form, your motions, your heart have won me,' he said, in a
tone of playful sadness. 'They are beautiful. But I see these
things, and it comes into my mind that they are doomed, they are
gliding to nothing as I look. Poor eyes, poor mouth, poor face,
poor maiden! "Where will her glories be in twenty years?" I say.
"Where will all of her be in a hundred?" Then I think it is cruel
that you should bloom a day, and fade for ever and ever. It seems
hard and sad that you will die as ordinarily as I, and be buried; be
food for roots and worms, be forgotten and come to earth, and grow
up a mere blade of churchyard-grass and an ivy leaf. Then, Miss
Graye, when I see you are a Lovely Nothing, I pity you, and the love
I feel then is better and sounder, larger and more lasting than that
I felt at the beginning.' Again an ardent flash of his handsome
eyes.

It was by this route that he ventured on an indirect declaration and
offer of his hand.

She implied in the same indirect manner that she did not love him
enough to accept it.

An actual refusal was more than he had expected. Cursing himself
for what he called his egregious folly in making himself the slave
of a mere lady's attendant, and for having given the parish, should
they know of her refusal, a chance of sneering at him--certainly a
ground for thinking less of his standing than before--he went home
to the Old House, and walked indecisively up and down his back-yard.
Turning aside, he leant his arms upon the edge of the rain-water-butt
standing in the corner, and looked into it. The reflection
from the smooth stagnant surface tinged his face with the greenish
shades of Correggio's nudes. Staves of sunlight slanted down
through the still pool, lighting it up with wonderful distinctness.
Hundreds of thousands of minute living creatures sported and tumbled
in its depth with every contortion that gaiety could suggest;
perfectly happy, though consisting only of a head, or a tail, or at
most a head and a tail, and all doomed to die within the twenty-four
hours.

'Damn my position! Why shouldn't I be happy through my little day
too? Let the parish sneer at my repulses, let it. I'll get her, if
I move heaven and earth to do it!'

Indeed, the inexperienced Cytherea had, towards Edward in the first
place, and Manston afterwards, unconsciously adopted bearings that
would have been the very tactics of a professional fisher of men who
wished to have them each successively dangling at her heels. For if
any rule at all can be laid down in a matter which, for men
collectively, is notoriously beyond regulation, it is that to snub a
petted man, and to pet a snubbed man, is the way to win in suits of
both kinds. Manston with Springrove's encouragement would have
become indifferent. Edward with Manston's repulses would have
sheered off at the outset, as he did afterwards. Her supreme
indifference added fuel to Manston's ardour--it completely disarmed
his pride. The invulnerable Nobody seemed greater to him than a
susceptible Princess.

4. FROM THE TWENTY-FIRST OF JUNE TO THE END OF JULY

Cytherea had in the meantime received the following letter from her
brother. It was the first definite notification of the enlargement
of that cloud no bigger than a man's hand which had for nearly a
twelvemonth hung before them in the distance, and which was soon to
give a colour to their whole sky from horizon to horizon.


                                               'BUDMOUTH REGIS,

Saturday.

'DARLING SIS,--I have delayed telling you for a long time of a
little matter which, though not one to be seriously alarmed about,
is sufficiently vexing, and it would be unfair in me to keep it from
you any longer. It is that for some time past I have again been
distressed by that lameness which I first distinctly felt when we
went to Lulstead Cove, and again when I left Knapwater that morning
early. It is an unusual pain in my left leg, between the knee and
the ankle. I had just found fresh symptoms of it when you were here
for that half-hour about a month ago--when you said in fun that I
began to move like an old man. I had a good mind to tell you then,
but fancying it would go off in a few days, I thought it was not
worth while. Since that time it has increased, but I am still able
to work in the office, sitting on the stool. My great fear is that
Mr. G. will have some out-door measuring work for me to do soon, and
that I shall be obliged to decline it. However, we will hope for
the best. How it came, what was its origin, or what it tends to, I
cannot think. You shall hear again in a day or two, if it is no
better. . .--Your loving brother, OWEN.'


This she answered, begging to know the worst, which she could bear,
but suspense and anxiety never. In two days came another letter
from him, of which the subjoined paragraph is a portion:--


'I had quite decided to let you know the worst, and to assure you
that it was the worst, before you wrote to ask it. And again I give
you my word that I will conceal nothing--so that there will be no
excuse whatever for your wearing yourself out with fears that I am
worse than I say. This morning then, for the first time, I have
been obliged to stay away from the office. Don't be frightened at
this, dear Cytherea. Rest is all that is wanted, and by nursing
myself now for a week, I may avoid an illness of six months.'


After a visit from her he wrote again:--


'Dr. Chestman has seen me. He said that the ailment was some sort
of rheumatism, and I am now undergoing proper treatment for its
cure. My leg and foot have been placed in hot bran, liniments have
been applied, and also severe friction with a pad. He says I shall
be as right as ever in a very short time. Directly I am I shall run
up by the train to see you. Don't trouble to come to me if Miss
Aldclyffe grumbles again about your being away, for I am going on
capitally. . . . You shall hear again at the end of the week.'


At the time mentioned came the following:--


'I am sorry to tell you, because I know it will be so disheartening
after my last letter, that I am not so well as I was then, and that
there has been a sort of hitch in the proceedings. After I had been
treated for rheumatism a few days longer (in which treatment they
pricked the place with a long needle several times,) I saw that Dr.
Chestman was in doubt about something, and I requested that he would
call in a brother professional man to see me as well. They
consulted together and then told me that rheumatism was not the
disease after all, but erysipelas. They then began treating it
differently, as became a different matter. Blisters, flour, and
starch, seem to be the order of the day now--medicine, of course,
besides.

'Mr. Gradfield has been in to inquire about me. He says he has been
obliged to get a designer in my place, which grieves me very much,
though, of course, it could not be avoided.'


A month passed away; throughout this period, Cytherea visited him as
often as the limited time at her command would allow, and wore as
cheerful a countenance as the womanly determination to do nothing
which might depress him could enable her to wear. Another letter
from him then told her these additional facts:--


'The doctors find they are again on the wrong tack. They cannot
make out what the disease is. O Cytherea! how I wish they knew!
This suspense is wearing me out. Could not Miss Aldclyffe spare you
for a day? Do come to me. We will talk about the best course then.
I am sorry to complain, but I am worn out.'


Cytherea went to Miss Aldclyffe, and told her of the melancholy turn
her brother's illness had taken. Miss Aldclyffe at once said that
Cytherea might go, and offered to do anything to assist her which
lay in her power. Cytherea's eyes beamed gratitude as she turned to
leave the room, and hasten to the station.

'O, Cytherea,' said Miss Aldclyffe, calling her back; 'just one
word. Has Mr. Manston spoken to you lately?'

'Yes,' said Cytherea, blushing timorously.

'He proposed?'

'Yes.'

'And you refused him?'

'Yes.'

'Tut, tut! Now listen to my advice,' said Miss Aldclyffe
emphatically, 'and accept him before he changes his mind. The
chance which he offers you of settling in life is one that may
possibly, probably, not occur again. His position is good and
secure, and the life of his wife would be a happy one. You may not
be sure that you love him madly; but suppose you are not sure? My
father used to say to me as a child when he was teaching me whist,
"When in doubt win the trick!" That advice is ten times as valuable
to a woman on the subject of matrimony. In refusing a man there is
always the risk that you may never get another offer.'

'Why didn't you win the trick when you were a girl?' said Cytherea.

'Come, my lady Pert; I'm not the text,' said Miss Aldclyffe, her
face glowing like fire.

Cytherea laughed stealthily.

'I was about to say,' resumed Miss Aldclyffe severely, 'that here is
Mr. Manston waiting with the tenderest solicitude for you, and you
overlooking it, as if it were altogether beneath you. Think how you
might benefit your sick brother if you were Mrs. Manston. You will
please me _very much_ by giving him some encouragement. You
understand me, Cythie dear?'

Cytherea was silent.

'And,' said Miss Aldclyffe, still more emphatically, 'on your
promising that you will accept him some time this year, I will take
especial care of your brother. You are listening, Cytherea?'

'Yes,' she whispered, leaving the room.

She went to Budmouth, passed the day with her brother, and returned
to Knapwater wretched and full of foreboding. Owen had looked
startlingly thin and pale--thinner and paler than ever she had seen
him before. The brother and sister had that day decided that
notwithstanding the drain upon their slender resources, another
surgeon should see him. Time was everything.

Owen told her the result in his next letter:--


'The three practitioners between them have at last hit the nail on
the head, I hope. They probed the place, and discovered that the
secret lay in the bone. I underwent an operation for its removal
three days ago (after taking chloroform). . . Thank God it is over.
Though I am so weak, my spirits are rather better. I wonder when I
shall be at work again? I asked the surgeons how long it would be
first. I said a month? They shook their heads. A year? I said.
Not so long, they said. Six months? I inquired. They would not, or
could not, tell me. But never mind.

'Run down, when you have half a day to spare, for the hours drag on
so drearily. O Cytherea, you can't think how drearily!'


She went. Immediately on her departure Miss Aldclyffe sent a note
to the Old House, to Manston. On the maiden's return, tired and
sick at heart as usual, she found Manston at the station awaiting
her. He asked politely if he might accompany her to Knapwater. She
tacitly acquiesced. During their walk he inquired the particulars
of her brother's illness, and with an irresistible desire to pour
out her trouble to some one, she told him of the length of time
which must elapse before he could be strong again, and of the lack
of comfort in lodgings.

Manston was silent awhile. Then he said impetuously: 'Miss Graye,
I will not mince matters--I love you--you know it. Stratagem they
say is fair in love, and I am compelled to adopt it now. Forgive
me, for I cannot help it. Consent to be my wife at any time that
may suit you--any remote day you may name will satisfy me--and you
shall find him well provided for.'

For the first time in her life she truly dreaded the handsome man at
her side who pleaded thus selfishly, and shrank from the hot
voluptuous nature of his passion for her, which, disguise it as he
might under a quiet and polished exterior, at times radiated forth
with a scorching white heat. She perceived how animal was the love
which bargained.

'I do not love you, Mr. Manston,' she replied coldly.

5. FROM THE FIRST TO THE TWENTY-SEVENTH OF AUGUST

The long sunny days of the later summer-time brought only the same
dreary accounts from Budmouth, and saw Cytherea paying the same sad
visits.

She grew perceptibly weaker, in body and mind. Manston still
persisted in his suit, but with more of his former indirectness, now
that he saw how unexpectedly well she stood an open attack. His was
the system of Dares at the Sicilian games--

     'He, like a captain who beleaguers round
      Some strong-built castle on a rising ground,
      Views all the approaches with observing eyes,
      This and that other part again he tries,
      And more on industry than force relies.'

Miss Aldclyffe made it appear more clearly than ever that aid to
Owen from herself depended entirely upon Cytherea's acceptance of
her steward. Hemmed in and distressed, Cytherea's answers to his
importunities grew less uniform; they were firm, or wavering, as
Owen's malady fluctuated. Had a register of her pitiful
oscillations been kept, it would have rivalled in pathos the diary
wherein De Quincey tabulates his combat with Opium--perhaps as
noticeable an instance as any in which a thrilling dramatic power
has been given to mere numerals. Thus she wearily and monotonously
lived through the month, listening on Sundays to the well-known
round of chapters narrating the history of Elijah and Elisha in
famine and drought; on week-days to buzzing flies in hot sunny
rooms. 'So like, so very like, was day to day.' Extreme lassitude
seemed all that the world could show her.

Her state was in this wise, when one afternoon, having been with her
brother, she met the surgeon, and begged him to tell the actual
truth concerning Owen's condition.

The reply was that he feared that the first operation had not been
thorough; that although the wound had healed, another attempt might
still be necessary, unless nature were left to effect her own cure.
But the time such a self-healing proceeding would occupy might be
ruinous.

'How long would it be?' she said.

'It is impossible to say. A year or two, more or less.'

'And suppose he submitted to another artificial extraction?'

'Then he might be well in four or six months.'

Now the remainder of his and her possessions, together with a sum he
had borrowed, would not provide him with necessary comforts for half
that time. To combat the misfortune, there were two courses open
--her becoming betrothed to Manston, or the sending Owen to the
County Hospital.

Thus terrified, driven into a corner, panting and fluttering about
for some loophole of escape, yet still shrinking from the idea of
being Manston's wife, the poor little bird endeavoured to find out
from Miss Aldclyffe whether it was likely Owen would be well treated
in the hospital.

'County Hospital!' said Miss Aldclyffe; 'why, it is only another
name for slaughter-house--in surgical cases at any rate. Certainly
if anything about your body is snapt in two they do join you
together in a fashion, but 'tis so askew and ugly, that you may as
well be apart again.' Then she terrified the inquiring and anxious
maiden by relating horrid stories of how the legs and arms of poor
people were cut off at a moment's notice, especially in cases where
the restorative treatment was likely to be long and tedious.

'You know how willing I am to help you, Cytherea,' she added
reproachfully. 'You know it. Why are you so obstinate then? Why
do you selfishly bar the clear, honourable, and only sisterly path
which leads out of this difficulty? I cannot, on my conscience,
countenance you; no, I cannot.'

Manston once more repeated his offer; and once more she refused, but
this time weakly, and with signs of an internal struggle. Manston's
eye sparkled; he saw for the hundredth time in his life, that
perseverance, if only systematic, was irresistible by womankind.

6. THE TWENTY-SEVENTH OF AUGUST

On going to Budmouth three days later, she found to her surprise
that the steward had been there, had introduced himself, and had
seen her brother. A few delicacies had been brought him also by the
same hand. Owen spoke in warm terms of Manston and his free and
unceremonious call, as he could not have refrained from doing of any
person, of any kind, whose presence had served to help away the
tedious hours of a long day, and who had, moreover, shown that sort
of consideration for him which the accompanying basket implied
--antecedent consideration, so telling upon all invalids--and which
he so seldom experienced except from the hands of his sister.

How should he perceive, amid this tithe-paying of mint, and anise,
and cummin, the weightier matters which were left undone?

Again the steward met her at Carriford Road Station on her return
journey. Instead of being frigid as at the former meeting at the
same place, she was embarrassed by a strife of thought, and murmured
brokenly her thanks for what he had done. The same request that he
might see her home was made.

He had perceived his error in making his kindness to Owen a
conditional kindness, and had hastened to efface all recollection of
it. 'Though I let my offer on her brother's--my friend's--behalf,
seem dependent on my lady's graciousness to me,' he whispered
wooingly in the course of their walk, 'I could not conscientiously
adhere to my statement; it was said with all the impulsive
selfishness of love. Whether you choose to have me, or whether you
don't, I love you too devotedly to be anything but kind to your
brother. . . . Miss Graye, Cytherea, I will do anything,' he
continued earnestly, 'to give you pleasure--indeed I will.'

She saw on the one hand her poor and much-loved Owen recovering from
his illness and troubles by the disinterested kindness of the man
beside her, on the other she drew him dying, wholly by reason of her
self-enforced poverty. To marry this man was obviously the course
of common sense, to refuse him was impolitic temerity. There was
reason in this. But there was more behind than a hundred reasons--a
woman's gratitude and her impulse to be kind.

The wavering of her mind was visible in her tell-tale face. He
noticed it, and caught at the opportunity.

They were standing by the ruinous foundations of an old mill in the
midst of a meadow. Between grey and half-overgrown stonework--the
only signs of masonry remaining--the water gurgled down from the old
millpond to a lower level, under the cloak of rank broad leaves--the
sensuous natures of the vegetable world. On the right hand the sun,
resting on the horizon-line, streamed across the ground from below
copper-coloured and lilac clouds, stretched out in flats beneath a
sky of pale soft green. All dark objects on the earth that lay
towards the sun were overspread by a purple haze, against which a
swarm of wailing gnats shone forth luminously, rising upward and
floating away like sparks of fire.

The stillness oppressed and reduced her to mere passivity. The only
wish the humidity of the place left in her was to stand motionless.
The helpless flatness of the landscape gave her, as it gives all
such temperaments, a sense of bare equality with, and no superiority
to, a single entity under the sky.

He came so close that their clothes touched. 'Will you try to love
me? Do try to love me!' he said, in a whisper, taking her hand. He
had never taken it before. She could feel his hand trembling
exceedingly as it held hers in its clasp.

Considering his kindness to her brother, his love for herself, and
Edward's fickleness, ought she to forbid him to do this? How truly
pitiful it was to feel his hand tremble so--all for her! Should she
withdraw her hand? She would think whether she would. Thinking, and
hesitating, she looked as far as the autumnal haze on the marshy
ground would allow her to see distinctly. There was the fragment of
a hedge--all that remained of a 'wet old garden'--standing in the
middle of the mead, without a definite beginning or ending,
purposeless and valueless. It was overgrown, and choked with
mandrakes, and she could almost fancy she heard their shrieks. . .
Should she withdraw her hand? No, she could not withdraw it now; it
was too late, the act would not imply refusal. She felt as one in a
boat without oars, drifting with closed eyes down a river--she knew
not whither.

He gave her hand a gentle pressure, and relinquished it.

Then it seemed as if he were coming to the point again. No, he was
not going to urge his suit that evening. Another respite.

7. THE EARLY PART OF SEPTEMBER

Saturday came, and she went on some trivial errand to the village
post-office. It was a little grey cottage with a luxuriant jasmine
encircling the doorway, and before going in Cytherea paused to
admire this pleasing feature of the exterior. Hearing a step on the
gravel behind the corner of the house, she resigned the jasmine and
entered. Nobody was in the room. She could hear Mrs. Leat, the
widow who acted as postmistress, walking about over her head.
Cytherea was going to the foot of the stairs to call Mrs. Leat, but
before she had accomplished her object, another form stood at the
half-open door. Manston came in.

'Both on the same errand,' he said gracefully.

'I will call her,' said Cytherea, moving in haste to the foot of the
stairs.

'One moment.' He glided to her side. 'Don't call her for a moment,'
he repeated.

But she had said, 'Mrs. Leat!'

He seized Cytherea's hand, kissed it tenderly, and carefully
replaced it by her side.

She had that morning determined to check his further advances, until
she had thoroughly considered her position. The remonstrance was
now on her tongue, but as accident would have it, before the word
could be spoken Mrs. Leat was stepping from the last stair to the
floor, and no remonstrance came.

With the subtlety which characterized him in all his dealings with
her, he quickly concluded his own errand, bade her a good-bye, in
the tones of which love was so garnished with pure politeness that
it only showed its presence to herself, and left the house--putting
it out of her power to refuse him her companionship homeward, or to
object to his late action of kissing her hand.

The Friday of the next week brought another letter from her brother.
In this he informed her that, in absolute grief lest he should
distress her unnecessarily, he had some time earlier borrowed a few
pounds. A week ago, he said, his creditor became importunate, but
that on the day on which he wrote, the creditor had told him there
was no hurry for a settlement, that 'his _sister's suitor_ had
guaranteed the sum.' 'Is he Mr. Manston? tell me, Cytherea,' said
Owen.

He also mentioned that a wheeled chair had been anonymously hired
for his especial use, though as yet he was hardly far enough
advanced towards convalescence to avail himself of the luxury. 'Is
this Mr. Manston's doing?' he inquired.

She could dally with her perplexity, evade it, trust to time for
guidance, no longer. The matter had come to a crisis: she must
once and for all choose between the dictates of her understanding
and those of her heart. She longed, till her soul seemed nigh to
bursting, for her lost mother's return to earth, but for one minute,
that she might have tender counsel to guide her through this, her
great difficulty.

As for her heart, she half fancied that it was not Edward's to quite
the extent that it once had been; she thought him cruel in
conducting himself towards her as he did at Budmouth, cruel
afterwards in making so light of her. She knew he had stifled his
love for her--was utterly lost to her. But for all that she could
not help indulging in a woman's pleasure of recreating defunct
agonies, and lacerating herself with them now and then.

'If I were rich,' she thought, 'I would give way to the luxury of
being morbidly faithful to him for ever without his knowledge.'

But she considered; in the first place she was a homeless dependent;
and what did practical wisdom tell her to do under such desperate
circumstances? To provide herself with some place of refuge from
poverty, and with means to aid her brother Owen. This was to be Mr.
Manston's wife.

She did not love him.

But what was love without a home? Misery. What was a home without
love? Alas, not much; but still a kind of home.

'Yes,' she thought, 'I am urged by my common sense to marry Mr.
Manston.'

Did anything nobler in her say so too?

With the death (to her) of Edward her heart's occupation was gone.
Was it necessary or even right for her to tend it and take care of
it as she used to in the old time, when it was still a capable
minister?

By a slight sacrifice here she could give happiness to at least two
hearts whose emotional activities were still unwounded. She would
do good to two men whose lives were far more important than hers.

'Yes,' she said again, 'even Christianity urges me to marry Mr.
Manston.'

Directly Cytherea had persuaded herself that a kind of heroic
self-abnegation had to do with the matter, she became much more
content in the consideration of it. A wilful indifference to the
future was what really prevailed in her, ill and worn out, as she
was, by the perpetual harassments of her sad fortune, and she
regarded this indifference, as gushing natures will do under such
circumstances, as genuine resignation and devotedness.

Manston met her again the following day: indeed, there was no
escaping him now. At the end of a short conversation between them,
which took place in the hollow of the park by the waterfall,
obscured on the outer side by the low hanging branches of the limes,
she tacitly assented to his assumption of a privilege greater than
any that had preceded it. He stooped and kissed her brow.

Before going to bed she wrote to Owen explaining the whole matter.
It was too late in the evening for the postman's visit, and she
placed the letter on the mantelpiece to send it the next day.

The morning (Sunday) brought a hurried postscript to Owen's letter
of the day before:--


                                              'September 9, 1865.

'DEAR CYTHEREA--I have received a frank and friendly letter from Mr.
Manston explaining the position in which he stands now, and also
that in which he hopes to stand towards you. Can't you love him?
Why not? Try, for he is a good, and not only that, but a cultured
man. Think of the weary and laborious future that awaits you if you
continue for life in your present position, and do you see any way
of escape from it except by marriage? I don't. Don't go against
your heart, Cytherea, but be wise.--Ever affectionately yours,
OWEN.'


She thought that probably he had replied to Mr. Manston in the same
favouring mood. She had a conviction that that day would settle her
doom. Yet

     'So true a fool is love,'

that even now she nourished a half-hope that something would happen
at the last moment to thwart her deliberately-formed intentions, and
favour the old emotion she was using all her strength to thrust
down.

8. THE TENTH OF SEPTEMBER

The Sunday was the thirteenth after Trinity, and the afternoon
service at Carriford was nearly over. The people were singing the
Evening Hymn.

Manston was at church as usual in his accustomed place two seats
forward from the large square pew occupied by Miss Aldclyffe and
Cytherea.

The ordinary sadness of an autumnal evening-service seemed, in
Cytherea's eyes, to be doubled on this particular occasion. She
looked at all the people as they stood and sang, waving backwards
and forwards like a forest of pines swayed by a gentle breeze; then
at the village children singing too, their heads inclined to one
side, their eyes listlessly tracing some crack in the old walls, or
following the movement of a distant bough or bird with features
petrified almost to painfulness. Then she looked at Manston; he was
already regarding her with some purpose in his glance.

'It is coming this evening,' she said in her mind. A minute later,
at the end of the hymn, when the congregation began to move out,
Manston came down the aisle. He was opposite the end of her seat as
she stepped from it, the remainder of their progress to the door
being in contact with each other. Miss Aldclyffe had lingered
behind.

'Don't let's hurry,' he said, when Cytherea was about to enter the
private path to the House as usual. 'Would you mind turning down
this way for a minute till Miss Aldclyffe has passed?'

She could not very well refuse now. They turned into a secluded
path on their left, leading round through a thicket of laurels to
the other gate of the church-yard, walking very slowly. By the time
the further gate was reached, the church was closed. They met the
sexton with the keys in his hand.

'We are going inside for a minute,' said Manston to him, taking the
keys unceremoniously. 'I will bring them to you when we return.'

The sexton nodded his assent, and Cytherea and Manston walked into
the porch, and up the nave.

They did not speak a word during their progress, or in any way
interfere with the stillness and silence that prevailed everywhere
around them. Everything in the place was the embodiment of decay:
the fading red glare from the setting sun, which came in at the west
window, emphasizing the end of the day and all its cheerful doings,
the mildewed walls, the uneven paving-stones, the wormy pews, the
sense of recent occupation, and the dank air of death which had
gathered with the evening, would have made grave a lighter mood than
Cytherea's was then.

'What sensations does the place impress you with?' she said at last,
very sadly.

'I feel imperatively called upon to be honest, from very despair of
achieving anything by stratagem in a world where the materials are
such as these.' He, too, spoke in a depressed voice, purposely or
otherwise.

'I feel as if I were almost ashamed to be seen walking such a
world,' she murmured; 'that's the effect it has upon me; but it does
not induce me to be honest particularly.'

He took her hand in both his, and looked down upon the lids of her
eyes.

'I pity you sometimes,' he said more emphatically.

'I am pitiable, perhaps; so are many people. Why do you pity me?'

'I think that you make yourself needlessly sad.'

'Not needlessly.'

'Yes, needlessly. Why should you be separated from your brother so
much, when you might have him to stay with you till he is well?'

'That can't be,' she said, turning away.

He went on, 'I think the real and only good thing that can be done
for him is to get him away from Budmouth awhile; and I have been
wondering whether it could not be managed for him to come to my
house to live for a few weeks. Only a quarter of a mile from you.
How pleasant it would be!'

'It would.'

He moved himself round immediately to the front of her, and held her
hand more firmly, as he continued, 'Cytherea, why do you say "It
would," so entirely in the tone of abstract supposition? I want him
there: I want him to be my brother, too. Then make him so, and be
my wife! I cannot live without you. O Cytherea, my darling, my
love, come and be my wife!'

His face bent closer and closer to hers, and the last words sank to
a whisper as weak as the emotion inspiring it was strong.

She said firmly and distinctly, 'Yes, I will.'

'Next month?' he said on the instant, before taking breath.

'No; not next month.'

'The next?'

'No.'

'December? Christmas Day, say?'

'I don't mind.'

'O, you darling!' He was about to imprint a kiss upon her pale,
cold mouth, but she hastily covered it with her hand.

'Don't kiss me--at least where we are now!' she whispered
imploringly.

'Why?'

'We are too near God.'

He gave a sudden start, and his face flushed. She had spoken so
emphatically that the words 'Near God' echoed back again through the
hollow building from the far end of the chancel.

'What a thing to say!' he exclaimed; 'surely a pure kiss is not
inappropriate to the place!'

'No,' she replied, with a swelling heart; 'I don't know why I burst
out so--I can't tell what has come over me! Will you forgive me?'

'How shall I say "Yes" without judging you? How shall I say "No"
without losing the pleasure of saying "Yes?"' He was himself again.

'I don't know,' she absently murmured.

'I'll say "Yes,"' he answered daintily. 'It is sweeter to fancy we
are forgiven, than to think we have not sinned; and you shall have
the sweetness without the need.'

She did not reply, and they moved away. The church was nearly dark
now, and melancholy in the extreme. She stood beside him while he
locked the door, then took the arm he gave her, and wound her way
out of the churchyard with him. Then they walked to the house
together, but the great matter having been set at rest, she
persisted in talking only on indifferent subjects.

'Christmas Day, then,' he said, as they were parting at the end of
the shrubbery.

'I meant Old Christmas Day,' she said evasively.

'H'm, people do not usually attach that meaning to the words.'

'No; but I should like it best if it could not be till then?' It
seemed to be still her instinct to delay the marriage to the utmost.

'Very well, love,' he said gently. ''Tis a fortnight longer still;
but never mind. Old Christmas Day.'

9. THE ELEVENTH OF SEPTEMBER

'There. It will be on a Friday!'

She sat upon a little footstool gazing intently into the fire. It
was the afternoon of the day following that of the steward's
successful solicitation of her hand.

'I wonder if it would be proper in me to run across the park and
tell him it is a Friday?' she said to herself, rising to her feet,
looking at her hat lying near, and then out of the window towards
the Old House. Proper or not, she felt that she must at all hazards
remove the disagreeable, though, as she herself owned, unfounded
impression the coincidence had occasioned. She left the house
directly, and went to search for him.

Manston was in the timber-yard, looking at the sawyers as they
worked. Cytherea came up to him hesitatingly. Till within a
distance of a few yards she had hurried forward with alacrity--now
that the practical expression of his face became visible she wished
almost she had never sought him on such an errand; in his
business-mood he was perhaps very stern.

'It will be on a Friday,' she said confusedly, and without any
preface.

'Come this way!' said Manston, in the tone he used for workmen, not
being able to alter at an instant's notice. He gave her his arm and
led her back into the avenue, by which time he was lover again. 'On
a Friday, will it, dearest? You do not mind Fridays, surely?
That's nonsense.'

'Not seriously mind them, exactly--but if it could be any other
day?'

'Well, let us say Old Christmas Eve, then. Shall it be Old
Christmas Eve?'

'Yes, Old Christmas Eve.'

'Your word is solemn, and irrevocable now?'

'Certainly, I have solemnly pledged my word; I should not have
promised to marry you if I had not meant it. Don't think I should.'
She spoke the words with a dignified impressiveness.

'You must not be vexed at my remark, dearest. Can you think the
worse of an ardent man, Cytherea, for showing some anxiety in love?'

'No, no.' She could not say more. She was always ill at ease when
he spoke of himself as a piece of human nature in that analytical
way, and wanted to be out of his presence. The time of day, and the
proximity of the house, afforded her a means of escape. 'I must be
with Miss Aldclyffe now--will you excuse my hasty coming and going?'
she said prettily. Before he had replied she had parted from him.

'Cytherea, was it Mr. Manston I saw you scudding away from in the
avenue just now?' said Miss Aldclyffe, when Cytherea joined her.

'Yes.'

'"Yes." Come, why don't you say more than that? I hate those
taciturn "Yesses" of yours. I tell you everything, and yet you are
as close as wax with me.'

'I parted from him because I wanted to come in.'

'What a novel and important announcement! Well, is the day fixed?'

'Yes.'

Miss Aldclyffe's face kindled into intense interest at once. 'Is it
indeed? When is it to be?'

'On Old Christmas Eve.'

'Old Christmas Eve.' Miss Aldclyffe drew Cytherea round to her
front, and took a hand in each of her own. 'And then you will be a
bride!' she said slowly, looking with critical thoughtfulness upon
the maiden's delicately rounded cheeks.

The normal area of the colour upon each of them decreased
perceptibly after that slow and emphatic utterance by the elder
lady.

Miss Aldclyffe continued impressively, 'You did not say "Old
Christmas Eve" as a fiancee should have said the words: and you
don't receive my remark with the warm excitement that foreshadows a
bright future. . . . How many weeks are there to the time?'

'I have not reckoned them.'

'Not? Fancy a girl not counting the weeks! I find I must take the
lead in this matter--you are so childish, or frightened, or stupid,
or something, about it. Bring me my diary, and we will count them at
once.'

Cytherea silently fetched the book.

Miss Aldclyffe opened the diary at the page containing the almanac,
and counted sixteen weeks, which brought her to the thirty-first of
December--a Sunday. Cytherea stood by, looking on as if she had no
appetite for the scene.

'Sixteen to the thirty-first. Then let me see, Monday will be the
first of January, Tuesday the second, Wednesday third, Thursday
fourth, Friday fifth--you have chosen a Friday, as I declare!'

'A Thursday, surely?' said Cytherea.

'No: Old Christmas Day comes on a Saturday.'

The perturbed little brain had reckoned wrong. 'Well, it must be a
Friday,' she murmured in a reverie.

'No: have it altered, of course,' said Miss Aldclyffe cheerfully.
'There's nothing bad in Friday, but such a creature as you will be
thinking about its being unlucky--in fact, I wouldn't choose a
Friday myself to be married on, since all the other days are equally
available.'

'I shall not have it altered,' said Cytherea firmly; 'it has been
altered once already: I shall let it be.'



XIII. THE EVENTS OF ONE DAY

1. THE FIFTH OF JANUARY. BEFORE DAWN

We pass over the intervening weeks. The time of the story is thus
advanced more than a quarter of a year.

On the midnight preceding the morning which would make her the wife
of a man whose presence fascinated her into involuntariness of
bearing, and whom in absence she almost dreaded, Cytherea lay in her
little bed, vainly endeavouring to sleep.

She had been looking back amid the years of her short though varied
past, and thinking of the threshold upon which she stood. Days and
months had dimmed the form of Edward Springrove like the gauzes of a
vanishing stage-scene, but his dying voice could still be heard
faintly behind. That a soft small chord in her still vibrated true
to his memory, she would not admit: that she did not approach
Manston with feelings which could by any stretch of words be called
hymeneal, she calmly owned.

'Why do I marry him?' she said to herself. 'Because Owen, dear Owen
my brother, wishes me to marry him. Because Mr. Manston is, and has
been, uniformly kind to Owen, and to me. "Act in obedience to the
dictates of common-sense," Owen said, "and dread the sharp sting of
poverty. How many thousands of women like you marry every year for
the same reason, to secure a home, and mere ordinary, material
comforts, which after all go far to make life endurable, even if not
supremely happy."

''Tis right, I suppose, for him to say that. O, if people only knew
what a timidity and melancholy upon the subject of her future grows
up in the heart of a friendless woman who is blown about like a reed
shaken with the wind, as I am, they would not call this resignation
of one's self by the name of scheming to get a husband. Scheme to
marry? I'd rather scheme to die! I know I am not pleasing my
heart; I know that if I only were concerned, I should like risking a
single future. But why should I please my useless self overmuch,
when by doing otherwise I please those who are more valuable than
I?'

In the midst of desultory reflections like these, which alternated
with surmises as to the inexplicable connection that appeared to
exist between her intended husband and Miss Aldclyffe, she heard
dull noises outside the walls of the house, which she could not
quite fancy to be caused by the wind. She seemed doomed to such
disturbances at critical periods of her existence. 'It is strange,'
she pondered, 'that this my last night in Knapwater House should be
disturbed precisely as my first was, no occurrence of the kind
having intervened.'

As the minutes glided by the noise increased, sounding as if some
one were beating the wall below her window with a bunch of switches.
She would gladly have left her room and gone to stay with one of the
maids, but they were without doubt all asleep.

The only person in the house likely to be awake, or who would have
brains enough to comprehend her nervousness, was Miss Aldclyffe, but
Cytherea never cared to go to Miss Aldclyffe's room, though she was
always welcome there, and was often almost compelled to go against
her will.

The oft-repeated noise of switches grew heavier upon the wall, and
was now intermingled with creaks, and a rattling like the rattling
of dice. The wind blew stronger; there came first a snapping, then
a crash, and some portion of the mystery was revealed. It was the
breaking off and fall of a branch from one of the large trees
outside. The smacking against the wall, and the intermediate
rattling, ceased from that time.

Well, it was the tree which had caused the noises. The unexplained
matter was that neither of the trees ever touched the walls of the
house during the highest wind, and that trees could not rattle like
a man playing castanets or shaking dice.

She thought, 'Is it the intention of Fate that something connected
with these noises shall influence my future as in the last case of
the kind?'

During the dilemma she fell into a troubled sleep, and dreamt that
she was being whipped with dry bones suspended on strings, which
rattled at every blow like those of a malefactor on a gibbet; that
she shifted and shrank and avoided every blow, and they fell then
upon the wall to which she was tied. She could not see the face of
the executioner for his mask, but his form was like Manston's.

'Thank Heaven!' she said, when she awoke and saw a faint light
struggling through her blind. 'Now what were those noises?' To
settle that question seemed more to her than the event of the day.

She pulled the blind aside and looked out. All was plain. The
evening previous had closed in with a grey drizzle, borne upon a
piercing air from the north, and now its effects were visible. The
hoary drizzle still continued; but the trees and shrubs were laden
with icicles to an extent such as she had never before witnessed. A
shoot of the diameter of a pin's head was iced as thick as her
finger; all the boughs in the park were bent almost to the earth
with the immense weight of the glistening incumbrance; the walks
were like a looking-glass. Many boughs had snapped beneath their
burden, and lay in heaps upon the icy grass. Opposite her eye, on
the nearest tree, was a fresh yellow scar, showing where the branch
that had terrified her had been splintered from the trunk.

'I never could have believed it possible,' she thought, surveying
the bowed-down branches, 'that trees would bend so far out of their
true positions without breaking.' By watching a twig she could see
a drop collect upon it from the hoary fog, sink to the lowest point,
and there become coagulated as the others had done.

'Or that I could so exactly have imitated them,' she continued. 'On
this morning I am to be married--unless this is a scheme of the
great Mother to hinder a union of which she does not approve. Is it
possible for my wedding to take place in the face of such weather as
this?'

2. MORNING

Her brother Owen was staying with Manston at the Old House.
Contrary to the opinion of the doctors, the wound had healed after
the first surgical operation, and his leg was gradually acquiring
strength, though he could only as yet get about on crutches, or
ride, or be dragged in a chair.

Miss Aldclyffe had arranged that Cytherea should be married from
Knapwater House, and not from her brother's lodgings at Budmouth,
which was Cytherea's first idea. Owen, too, seemed to prefer the
plan. The capricious old maid had latterly taken to the
contemplation of the wedding with even greater warmth than had at
first inspired her, and appeared determined to do everything in her
power, consistent with her dignity, to render the adjuncts of the
ceremony pleasing and complete.

But the weather seemed in flat contradiction of the whole
proceeding. At eight o'clock the coachman crept up to the House
almost upon his hands and knees, entered the kitchen, and stood with
his back to the fire, panting from his exertions in pedestrianism.

The kitchen was by far the pleasantest apartment in Knapwater House
on such a morning as this. The vast fire was the centre of the
whole system, like a sun, and threw its warm rays upon the figures
of the domestics, wheeling about it in true planetary style. A
nervously-feeble imitation of its flicker was continually attempted
by a family of polished metallic utensils standing in rows and
groups against the walls opposite, the whole collection of shines
nearly annihilating the weak daylight from outside. A step further
in, and the nostrils were greeted by the scent of green herbs just
gathered, and the eye by the plump form of the cook, wholesome,
white-aproned, and floury--looking as edible as the food she
manipulated--her movements being supported and assisted by her
satellites, the kitchen and scullery maids. Minute recurrent sounds
prevailed--the click of the smoke-jack, the flap of the flames, and
the light touches of the women's slippers upon the stone floor.

The coachman hemmed, spread his feet more firmly upon the
hearthstone, and looked hard at a small plate in the extreme corner
of the dresser.

'No wedden this mornen--that's my opinion. In fact, there can't
be,' he said abruptly, as if the words were the mere torso of a
many-membered thought that had existed complete in his head.

The kitchen-maid was toasting a slice of bread at the end of a very
long toasting-fork, which she held at arm's length towards the
unapproachable fire, travestying the Flanconnade in fencing.

'Bad out of doors, isn't it?' she said, with a look of commiseration
for things in general.

'Bad? Not even a liven soul, gentle or simple, can stand on level
ground. As to getten up hill to the church, 'tis perfect lunacy.
And I speak of foot-passengers. As to horses and carriage, 'tis
murder to think of 'em. I am going to send straight as a line into
the breakfast-room, and say 'tis a closer. . . . Hullo--here's
Clerk Crickett and John Day a-comen! Now just look at 'em and
picture a wedden if you can.'

All eyes were turned to the window, from which the clerk and
gardener were seen crossing the court, bowed and stooping like Bel
and Nebo.

'You'll have to go if it breaks all the horses' legs in the county,'
said the cook, turning from the spectacle, knocking open the
oven-door with the tongs, glancing critically in, and slamming it
together with a clang.

'O, O; why shall I?' asked the coachman, including in his auditory
by a glance the clerk and gardener who had just entered.

'Because Mr. Manston is in the business. Did you ever know him to
give up for weather of any kind, or for any other mortal thing in
heaven or earth?'

'----Mornen so's--such as it is!' interrupted Mr. Crickett
cheerily, coming forward to the blaze and warming one hand without
looking at the fire. 'Mr. Manston gie up for anything in heaven or
earth, did you say? You might ha' cut it short by sayen "to Miss
Aldclyffe," and leaven out heaven and earth as trifles. But it
might be put off; putten off a thing isn't getten rid of a thing, if
that thing is a woman. O no, no!'

The coachman and gardener now naturally subsided into secondaries.
The cook went on rather sharply, as she dribbled milk into the exact
centre of a little crater of flour in a platter--

'It might be in this case; she's so indifferent.'

'Dang my old sides! and so it might be. I have a bit of news--I
thought there was something upon my tongue; but 'tis a secret; not a
word, mind, not a word. Why, Miss Hinton took a holiday yesterday.'

'Yes?' inquired the cook, looking up with perplexed curiosity.

'D'ye think that's all?'

'Don't be so three-cunning--if it is all, deliver you from the evil
of raising a woman's expectations wrongfully; I'll skimmer your pate
as sure as you cry Amen!'

'Well, it isn't all. When I got home last night my wife said, "Miss
Adelaide took a holiday this mornen," says she (my wife, that is);
"walked over to Nether Mynton, met the comen man, and got married!"
says she.'

'Got married! what, Lord-a-mercy, did Springrove come?'

'Springrove, no--no--Springrove's nothen to do wi' it--'twas Farmer
Bollens. They've been playing bo-peep for these two or three months
seemingly. Whilst Master Teddy Springrove has been daddlen, and
hawken, and spetten about having her, she's quietly left him all
forsook. Serve him right. I don't blame the little woman a bit.'

'Farmer Bollens is old enough to be her father!'

'Ay, quite; and rich enough to be ten fathers. They say he's so
rich that he has business in every bank, and measures his money in
half-pint cups.'

'Lord, I wish it was me, don't I wish 'twas me!' said the
scullery-maid.

'Yes, 'twas as neat a bit of stitching as ever I heard of,'
continued the clerk, with a fixed eye, as if he were watching the
process from a distance. 'Not a soul knew anything about it, and my
wife is the only one in our parish who knows it yet. Miss Hinton
came back from the wedden, went to Mr. Manston, puffed herself out
large, and said she was Mrs. Bollens, but that if he wished, she had
no objection to keep on the house till the regular time of giving
notice had expired, or till he could get another tenant.'

'Just like her independence,' said the cook.

'Well, independent or no, she's Mrs. Bollens now. Ah, I shall never
forget once when I went by Farmer Bollens's garden--years ago now
--years, when he was taking up ashleaf taties. A merry feller I was
at that time, a very merry feller--for 'twas before I took holy
orders, and it didn't prick my conscience as 'twould now. "Farmer,"
says I, "little taties seem to turn out small this year, don't em?"
"O no, Crickett," says he, "some be fair-sized." He's a dull man
--Farmer Bollens is--he always was. However, that's neither here nor
there; he's a-married to a sharp woman, and if I don't make a
mistake she'll bring him a pretty good family, gie her time.'

'Well, it don't matter; there's a Providence in it,' said the
scullery-maid. 'God A'mighty always sends bread as well as
children.'

'But 'tis the bread to one house and the children to another very
often. However, I think I can see my lady Hinton's reason for
chosen yesterday to sickness-or-health-it. Your young miss, and
that one, had crossed one another's path in regard to young Master
Springrove; and I expect that when Addy Hinton found Miss Graye
wasn't caren to have en, she thought she'd be beforehand with her
old enemy in marrying somebody else too. That's maids' logic all
over, and maids' malice likewise.'

Women who are bad enough to divide against themselves under a man's
partiality are good enough to instantly unite in a common cause
against his attack. 'I'll just tell you one thing then,' said the
cook, shaking out her words to the time of a whisk she was beating
eggs with. 'Whatever maids' logic is and maids' malice too, if
Cytherea Graye even now knows that young Springrove is free again,
she'll fling over the steward as soon as look at him.'

'No, no: not now,' the coachman broke in like a moderator.
'There's honour in that maid, if ever there was in one. No Miss
Hinton's tricks in her. She'll stick to Manston.'

'Pifh!'

'Don't let a word be said till the wedden is over, for Heaven's
sake,' the clerk continued. 'Miss Aldclyffe would fairly hang and
quarter me, if my news broke off that there wedden at a last minute
like this.'

'Then you had better get your wife to bolt you in the closet for an
hour or two, for you'll chatter it yourself to the whole boiling
parish if she don't! 'Tis a poor womanly feller!'

'You shouldn't ha' begun it, clerk. I knew how 'twould be,' said
the gardener soothingly, in a whisper to the clerk's mangled
remains.

The clerk turned and smiled at the fire, and warmed his other hand.

3. NOON

The weather gave way. In half-an-hour there began a rapid thaw. By
ten o'clock the roads, though still dangerous, were practicable to
the extent of the half-mile required by the people of Knapwater
Park. One mass of heavy leaden cloud spread over the whole sky; the
air began to feel damp and mild out of doors, though still cold and
frosty within.

They reached the church and passed up the nave, the deep-coloured
glass of the narrow windows rendering the gloom of the morning
almost night itself inside the building. Then the ceremony began.
The only warmth or spirit imported into it came from the bridegroom,
who retained a vigorous--even Spenserian--bridal-mood throughout the
morning.

Cytherea was as firm as he at this critical moment, but as cold as
the air surrounding her. The few persons forming the wedding-party
were constrained in movement and tone, and from the nave of the
church came occasional coughs, emitted by those who, in spite of the
weather, had assembled to see the termination of Cytherea's
existence as a single woman. Many poor people loved her. They
pitied her success, why, they could not tell, except that it was
because she seemed to stand more like a statue than Cytherea Graye.

Yet she was prettily and carefully dressed; a strange contradiction
in a man's idea of things--a saddening, perplexing contradiction.
Are there any points in which a difference of sex amounts to a
difference of nature? Then this is surely one. Not so much, as it
is commonly put, in regard to the amount of consideration given, but
in the conception of the thing considered. A man emasculated by
coxcombry may spend more time upon the arrangement of his clothes
than any woman, but even then there is no fetichism in his idea of
them--they are still only a covering he uses for a time. But here
was Cytherea, in the bottom of her heart almost indifferent to life,
yet possessing an instinct with which her heart had nothing to do,
the instinct to be particularly regardful of those sorry trifles,
her robe, her flowers, her veil, and her gloves.

The irrevocable words were soon spoken--the indelible writing soon
written--and they came out of the vestry. Candles had been
necessary here to enable them to sign their names, and on their
return to the church the light from the candles streamed from the
small open door, and across the chancel to a black chestnut screen
on the south side, dividing it from a small chapel or chantry,
erected for the soul's peace of some Aldclyffe of the past. Through
the open-work of this screen could now be seen illuminated, inside
the chantry, the reclining figures of cross-legged knights, damp and
green with age, and above them a huge classic monument, also
inscribed to the Aldclyffe family, heavily sculptured in cadaverous
marble.

Leaning here--almost hanging to the monument--was Edward Springrove,
or his spirit.

The weak daylight would never have revealed him, shaded as he was by
the screen; but the unexpected rays of candle-light in the front
showed him forth in startling relief to any and all of those whose
eyes wandered in that direction. The sight was a sad one--sad
beyond all description. His eyes were wild, their orbits leaden.
His face was of a sickly paleness, his hair dry and disordered, his
lips parted as if he could get no breath. His figure was
spectre-thin. His actions seemed beyond his own control.

Manston did not see him; Cytherea did. The healing effect upon her
heart of a year's silence--a year and a half's separation--was
undone in an instant. One of those strange revivals of passion by
mere sight--commoner in women than in men, and in oppressed women
commonest of all--had taken place in her--so transcendently, that
even to herself it seemed more like a new creation than a revival.

Marrying for a home--what a mockery it was!

It may be said that the means most potent for rekindling old love in
a maiden's heart are, to see her lover in laughter and good spirits
in her despite when the breach has been owing to a slight from
herself; when owing to a slight from him, to see him suffering for
his own fault. If he is happy in a clear conscience, she blames
him; if he is miserable because deeply to blame, she blames herself.
The latter was Cytherea's case now.

First, an agony of face told of the suppressed misery within her,
which presently could be suppressed no longer. When they were coming
out of the porch, there broke from her in a low plaintive scream the
words, 'He's dying--dying! O God, save us!' She began to sink
down, and would have fallen had not Manston caught her. The chief
bridesmaid applied her vinaigrette.

'What did she say?' inquired Manston.

Owen was the only one to whom the words were intelligible, and he
was far too deeply impressed, or rather alarmed, to reply. She did
not faint, and soon began to recover her self-command. Owen took
advantage of the hindrance to step back to where the apparition had
been seen. He was enraged with Springrove for what he considered an
unwarrantable intrusion.

But Edward was not in the chantry. As he had come, so he had gone,
nobody could tell how or whither.

4. AFTERNOON

It might almost have been believed that a transmutation had taken
place in Cytherea's idiosyncrasy, that her moral nature had fled.

The wedding-party returned to the house. As soon as he could find
an opportunity, Owen took his sister aside to speak privately with
her on what had happened. The expression of her face was hard,
wild, and unreal--an expression he had never seen there before, and
it disturbed him. He spoke to her severely and sadly.

'Cytherea,' he said, 'I know the cause of this emotion of yours.
But remember this, there was no excuse for it. You should have been
woman enough to control yourself. Remember whose wife you are, and
don't think anything more of a mean-spirited fellow like Springrove;
he had no business to come there as he did. You are altogether
wrong, Cytherea, and I am vexed with you more than I can say--very
vexed.'

'Say ashamed of me at once,' she bitterly answered.

'I am ashamed of you,' he retorted angrily; 'the mood has not left
you yet, then?'

'Owen,' she said, and paused. Her lip trembled; her eye told of
sensations too deep for tears. 'No, Owen, it has not left me; and I
will be honest. I own now to you, without any disguise of words,
what last night I did not own to myself, because I hardly knew of
it. I love Edward Springrove with all my strength, and heart, and
soul. You call me a wanton for it, don't you? I don't care; I have
gone beyond caring for anything!' She looked stonily into his face
and made the speech calmly.

'Well, poor Cytherea, don't talk like that!' he said, alarmed at her
manner.

'I thought that I did not love him at all,' she went on
hysterically. 'A year and a half had passed since we met. I could
go by the gate of his garden without thinking of him--look at his
seat in church and not care. But I saw him this morning--dying
because he loves me so--I know it is that! Can I help loving him
too? No, I cannot, and I will love him, and I don't care! We have
been separated somehow by some contrivance--I know we have. O, if I
could only die!'

He held her in his arms. 'Many a woman has gone to ruin herself,'
he said, 'and brought those who love her into disgrace, by acting
upon such impulses as possess you now. I have a reputation to lose
as well as you. It seems that do what I will by way of remedying
the stains which fell upon us, it is all doomed to be undone again.'
His voice grew husky as he made the reply.

The right and only effective chord had been touched. Since she had
seen Edward, she had thought only of herself and him. Owen--her
name--position--future--had been as if they did not exist.

'I won't give way and become a disgrace to _you_, at any rate,' she
said.

'Besides, your duty to society, and those about you, requires that
you should live with (at any rate) all the appearance of a good
wife, and try to love your husband.'

'Yes--my duty to society,' she murmured. 'But ah, Owen, it is
difficult to adjust our outer and inner life with perfect honesty to
all! Though it may be right to care more for the benefit of the
many than for the indulgence of your own single self, when you
consider that the many, and duty to them, only exist to you through
your own existence, what can be said? What do our own acquaintances
care about us? Not much. I think of mine. Mine will now (do they
learn all the wicked frailty of my heart in this affair) look at me,
smile sickly, and condemn me. And perhaps, far in time to come,
when I am dead and gone, some other's accent, or some other's song,
or thought, like an old one of mine, will carry them back to what I
used to say, and hurt their hearts a little that they blamed me so
soon. And they will pause just for an instant, and give a sigh to
me, and think, "Poor girl!" believing they do great justice to my
memory by this. But they will never, never realize that it was my
single opportunity of existence, as well as of doing my duty, which
they are regarding; they will not feel that what to them is but a
thought, easily held in those two words of pity, "Poor girl!" was a
whole life to me; as full of hours, minutes, and peculiar minutes,
of hopes and dreads, smiles, whisperings, tears, as theirs: that it
was my world, what is to them their world, and they in that life of
mine, however much I cared for them, only as the thought I seem to
them to be. Nobody can enter into another's nature truly, that's
what is so grievous.'

'Well, it cannot be helped,' said Owen.

'But we must not stay here,' she continued, starting up and going.
'We shall be missed. I'll do my best, Owen--I will, indeed.'

It had been decided that on account of the wretched state of the
roads, the newly-married pair should not drive to the station till
the latest hour in the afternoon at which they could get a train to
take them to Southampton (their destination that night) by a
reasonable time in the evening. They intended the next morning to
cross to Havre, and thence to Paris--a place Cytherea had never
visited--for their wedding tour.

The afternoon drew on. The packing was done. Cytherea was so
restless that she could stay still nowhere. Miss Aldclyffe, who,
though she took little part in the day's proceedings, was, as it
were, instinctively conscious of all their movements, put down her
charge's agitation for once as the natural result of the novel
event, and Manston himself was as indulgent as could be wished.

At length Cytherea wandered alone into the conservatory. When in
it, she thought she would run across to the hot-house in the outer
garden, having in her heart a whimsical desire that she should also
like to take a last look at the familiar flowers and luxuriant
leaves collected there. She pulled on a pair of overshoes, and
thither she went. Not a soul was in or around the place. The
gardener was making merry on Manston's and her account.

The happiness that a generous spirit derives from the belief that it
exists in others is often greater than the primary happiness itself.
The gardener thought 'How happy they are!' and the thought made him
happier than they.

Coming out of the forcing-house again, she was on the point of
returning indoors, when a feeling that these moments of solitude
would be her last of freedom induced her to prolong them a little,
and she stood still, unheeding the wintry aspect of the curly-leaved
plants, the straw-covered beds, and the bare fruit-trees around her.
The garden, no part of which was visible from the house, sloped down
to a narrow river at the foot, dividing it from the meadows without.

A man was lingering along the public path on the other side of the
river; she fancied she knew the form. Her resolutions, taken in the
presence of Owen, did not fail her now. She hoped and prayed that
it might not be one who had stolen her heart away, and still kept
it. Why should he have reappeared at all, when he had declared that
he went out of her sight for ever?

She hastily hid herself, in the lowest corner of the garden close to
the river. A large dead tree, thickly robed in ivy, had been
considerably depressed by its icy load of the morning, and hung low
over the stream, which here ran slow and deep. The tree screened
her from the eyes of any passer on the other side.

She waited timidly, and her timidity increased. She would not allow
herself to see him--she would hear him pass, and then look to see if
it had been Edward.

But, before she heard anything, she became aware of an object
reflected in the water from under the tree which hung over the river
in such a way that, though hiding the actual path, and objects upon
it, it permitted their reflected images to pass beneath its boughs.
The reflected form was that of the man she had seen further off, but
being inverted, she could not definitely characterize him.

He was looking at the upper windows of the House--at hers--was it
Edward, indeed? If so, he was probably thinking he would like to
say one parting word. He came closer, gazed into the stream, and
walked very slowly. She was almost certain that it was Edward. She
kept more safely hidden. Conscience told her that she ought not to
see him. But she suddenly asked herself a question: 'Can it be
possible that he sees my reflected image, as I see his? Of course
he does!'

He was looking at her in the water.

She could not help herself now. She stepped forward just as he
emerged from the other side of the tree and appeared erect before
her. It was Edward Springrove--till the inverted vision met his
eye, dreaming no more of seeing his Cytherea there than of seeing
the dead themselves.

'Cytherea!'

'Mr. Springrove,' she returned, in a low voice, across the stream.

He was the first to speak again.

'Since we have met, I want to tell you something, before we become
quite as strangers to each other.'

'No--not now--I did not mean to speak--it is not right, Edward.'
She spoke hurriedly and turned away from him, beating the air with
her hand.

'Not one common word of explanation?' he implored. 'Don't think I
am bad enough to try to lead you astray. Well, go--it is better.'

Their eyes met again. She was nearly choked. O, how she longed
--and dreaded--to hear his explanation!

'What is it?' she said desperately.

'It is that I did not come to the church this morning in order to
distress you: I did not, Cytherea. It was to try to speak to you
before you were--married.'

He stepped closer, and went on, 'You know what has taken place?
Surely you do?--my cousin is married, and I am free.'

'Married--and not to you?' Cytherea faltered, in a weak whisper.

'Yes, she was married yesterday! A rich man had appeared, and she
jilted me. She said she never would have jilted a stranger, but
that by jilting me, she only exercised the right everybody has of
snubbing their own relations. But that's nothing now. I came to
you to ask once more if. . . . But I was too late.'

'But, Edward, what's that, what's that!' she cried, in an agony of
reproach. 'Why did you leave me to return to her? Why did you
write me that cruel, cruel letter that nearly killed me!'

'Cytherea! Why, you had grown to love--like--Mr. Manston, and how
could you be anything to me--or care for me? Surely I acted
naturally?'

'O no--never! I loved you--only you--not him--always you!--till
lately. . . . I try to love him now.'

'But that can't be correct! Miss Aldclyffe told me that you wanted
to hear no more of me--proved it to me!' said Edward.

'Never! she couldn't.'

'She did, Cytherea. And she sent me a letter--a love-letter, you
wrote to Mr. Manston.'

'A love-letter I wrote?'

'Yes, a love-letter--you could not meet him just then, you said you
were sorry, but the emotion you had felt with him made you forgetful
of realities.'

The strife of thought in the unhappy girl who listened to this
distortion of her meaning could find no vent in words. And then
there followed the slow revelation in return, bringing with it all
the misery of an explanation which comes too late. The question
whether Miss Aldclyffe were schemer or dupe was almost passed over
by Cytherea, under the immediate oppressiveness of her despair in
the sense that her position was irretrievable.

Not so Springrove. He saw through all the cunning
half-misrepresentations--worse than downright lies--which had just
been sufficient to turn the scale both with him and with her; and
from the bottom of his soul he cursed the woman and man who had
brought all this agony upon him and his Love. But he could not add
more misery to the future of the poor child by revealing too much.
The whole scheme she should never know.

'I was indifferent to my own future,' Edward said, 'and was urged to
promise adherence to my engagement with my cousin Adelaide by Miss
Aldclyffe: now you are married I cannot tell you how, but it was on
account of my father. Being forbidden to think of you, what did I
care about anything? My new thought that you still loved me was
first raised by what my father said in the letter announcing my
cousin's marriage. He said that although you were to be married on
Old Christmas Day--that is to-morrow--he had noticed your appearance
with pity: he thought you loved me still. It was enough for me--I
came down by the earliest morning train, thinking I could see you
some time to-day, the day, as I thought, before your marriage,
hoping, but hardly daring to hope, that you might be induced to
marry me. I hurried from the station; when I reached the village I
saw idlers about the church, and the private gate leading to the
House open. I ran into the church by the small door and saw you
come out of the vestry; I was too late. I have now told you. I was
compelled to tell you. O, my lost darling, now I shall live
content--or die content!'

'I am to blame, Edward, I am,' she said mournfully; 'I was taught to
dread pauperism; my nights were made sleepless; there was
continually reiterated in my ears till I believed it--

     '"The world and its ways have a certain worth,
       And to press a point where these oppose
       Were a simple policy."

'But I will say nothing about who influenced--who persuaded. The act
is mine, after all. Edward, I married to escape dependence for my
bread upon the whim of Miss Aldclyffe, or others like her. It was
clearly represented to me that dependence is bearable if we have
another place which we can call home; but to be a dependent and to
have no other spot for the heart to anchor upon--O, it is mournful
and harassing! . . . But that without which all persuasion would
have been as air, was added by my miserable conviction that you were
false; that did it, that turned me! You were to be considered as
nobody to me, and Mr. Manston was invariably kind. Well, the deed
is done--I must abide by it. I shall never let him know that I do
not love him--never. If things had only remained as they seemed to
be, if you had really forgotten me and married another woman, I
could have borne it better. I wish I did not know the truth as I
know it now! But our life, what is it? Let us be brave, Edward,
and live out our few remaining years with dignity. They will not be
long. O, I hope they will not be long! . . . Now, good-bye,
good-bye!'

'I wish I could be near and touch you once, just once,' said
Springrove, in a voice which he vainly endeavoured to keep firm and
clear.

They looked at the river, then into it; a shoal of minnows was
floating over the sandy bottom, like the black dashes on miniver;
though narrow, the stream was deep, and there was no bridge.

'Cytherea, reach out your hand that I may just touch it with mine.'

She stepped to the brink and stretched out her hand and fingers
towards his, but not into them. The river was too wide.

'Never mind,' said Cytherea, her voice broken by agitation, 'I must
be going. God bless and keep you, my Edward! God bless you!'

'I must touch you, I must press your hand,' he said.

They came near--nearer--nearer still--their fingers met. There was
a long firm clasp, so close and still that each hand could feel the
other's pulse throbbing beside its own.

'My Cytherea! my stolen pet lamb!'

She glanced a mute farewell from her large perturbed eyes, turned,
and ran up the garden without looking back. All was over between
them. The river flowed on as quietly and obtusely as ever, and the
minnows gathered again in their favourite spot as if they had never
been disturbed.

Nobody indoors guessed from her countenance and bearing that her
heart was near to breaking with the intensity of the misery which
gnawed there. At these times a woman does not faint, or weep, or
scream, as she will in the moment of sudden shocks. When lanced by
a mental agony of such refined and special torture that it is
indescribable by men's words, she moves among her acquaintances much
as before, and contrives so to cast her actions in the old moulds
that she is only considered to be rather duller than usual.

5. HALF-PAST TWO TO FIVE O'CLOCK P.M.

Owen accompanied the newly-married couple to the railway-station,
and in his anxiety to see the last of his sister, left the brougham
and stood upon his crutches whilst the train was starting.

When the husband and wife were about to enter the railway-carriage
they saw one of the porters looking frequently and furtively at
them. He was pale, and apparently very ill.

'Look at that poor sick man,' said Cytherea compassionately, 'surely
he ought not to be here.'

'He's been very queer to-day, madam, very queer,' another porter
answered. 'He do hardly hear when he's spoken to, and d' seem
giddy, or as if something was on his mind. He's been like it for
this month past, but nothing so bad as he is to-day.'

'Poor thing.'

She could not resist an innate desire to do some just thing on this
most deceitful and wretched day of her life. Going up to him she
gave him money, and told him to send to the old manor-house for wine
or whatever he wanted.

The train moved off as the trembling man was murmuring his
incoherent thanks. Owen waved his hand; Cytherea smiled back to him
as if it were unknown to her that she wept all the while.

Owen was driven back to the Old House. But he could not rest in the
lonely place. His conscience began to reproach him for having
forced on the marriage of his sister with a little too much
peremptoriness. Taking up his crutches he went out of doors and
wandered about the muddy roads with no object in view save that of
getting rid of time.

The clouds which had hung so low and densely during the day cleared
from the west just now as the sun was setting, calling forth a
weakly twitter from a few small birds. Owen crawled down the path
to the waterfall, and lingered thereabout till the solitude of the
place oppressed him, when he turned back and into the road to the
village. He was sad; he said to himself--

'If there is ever any meaning in those heavy feelings which are
called presentiments--and I don't believe there is--there will be in
mine to-day. . . . Poor little Cytherea!'

At that moment the last low rays of the sun touched the head and
shoulders of a man who was approaching, and showed him up to Owen's
view. It was old Mr. Springrove. They had grown familiar with
each other by reason of Owen's visits to Knapwater during the past
year. The farmer inquired how Owen's foot was progressing, and was
glad to see him so nimble again.

'How is your son?' said Owen mechanically.

'He is at home, sitting by the fire,' said the farmer, in a sad
voice. 'This morning he slipped indoors from God knows where, and
there he sits and mopes, and thinks, and thinks, and presses his
head so hard, that I can't help feeling for him.'

'Is he married?' said Owen. Cytherea had feared to tell him of the
interview in the garden.

'No. I can't quite understand how the matter rests. . . . Ah!
Edward, too, who started with such promise; that he should now have
become such a careless fellow--not a month in one place. There, Mr.
Graye, I know what it is mainly owing to. If it hadn't been for
that heart affair, he might have done--but the less said about him
the better. I don't know what we should have done if Miss Aldclyffe
had insisted upon the conditions of the leases. Your brother-in-law,
the steward, had a hand in making it light for us, I know, and
I heartily thank him for it.' He ceased speaking, and looked round
at the sky.

'Have you heard o' what's happened?' he said suddenly; 'I was just
coming out to learn about it.'

'I haven't heard of anything.'

'It is something very serious, though I don't know what. All I know
is what I heard a man call out bynow--that it very much concerns
somebody who lives in the parish.'

It seems singular enough, even to minds who have no dim beliefs in
adumbration and presentiment, that at that moment not the shadow of
a thought crossed Owen's mind that the somebody whom the matter
concerned might be himself, or any belonging to him. The event
about to transpire was as portentous to the woman whose welfare was
more dear to him than his own, as any, short of death itself, could
possibly be; and ever afterwards, when he considered the effect of
the knowledge the next half-hour conveyed to his brain, even his
practical good sense could not refrain from wonder that he should
have walked toward the village after hearing those words of the
farmer, in so leisurely and unconcerned a way. 'How unutterably
mean must my intelligence have appeared to the eye of a foreseeing
God,' he frequently said in after-time. 'Columbus on the eve of his
discovery of a world was not so contemptibly unaware.'

After a few additional words of common-place the farmer left him,
and, as has been said, Owen proceeded slowly and indifferently
towards the village.

The labouring men had just left work, and passed the park gate,
which opened into the street as Owen came down towards it. They
went along in a drift, earnestly talking, and were finally about to
turn in at their respective doorways. But upon seeing him they
looked significantly at one another, and paused. He came into the
road, on that side of the village-green which was opposite the row
of cottages, and turned round to the right. When Owen turned, all
eyes turned; one or two men went hurriedly indoors, and afterwards
appeared at the doorstep with their wives, who also contemplated
him, talking as they looked. They seemed uncertain how to act in
some matter.

'If they want me, surely they will call me,' he thought, wondering
more and more. He could no longer doubt that he was connected with
the subject of their discourse.

The first who approached him was a boy.

'What has occurred?' said Owen.

'O, a man ha' got crazy-religious, and sent for the pa'son.'

'Is that all?'

'Yes, sir. He wished he was dead, he said, and he's almost out of
his mind wi' wishen it so much. That was before Mr. Raunham came.'

'Who is he?' said Owen.

'Joseph Chinney, one of the railway-porters; he used to be
night-porter.'

'Ah--the man who was ill this afternoon; by the way, he was told to
come to the Old House for something, but he hasn't been. But has
anything else happened--anything that concerns the wedding to-day?'

'No, sir.'

Concluding that the connection which had seemed to be traced between
himself and the event must in some way have arisen from Cytherea's
friendliness towards the man, Owen turned about and went homewards
in a much quieter frame of mind--yet scarcely satisfied with the
solution. The route he had chosen led through the dairy-yard, and
he opened the gate.

Five minutes before this point of time, Edward Springrove was
looking over one of his father's fields at an outlying hamlet of
three or four cottages some mile and a half distant. A
turnpike-gate was close by the gate of the field.

The carrier to Casterbridge came up as Edward stepped into the road,
and jumped down from the van to pay toll. He recognized Springrove.
'This is a pretty set-to in your place, sir,' he said. 'You don't
know about it, I suppose?'

'What?' said Springrove.

The carrier paid his dues, came up to Edward, and spoke ten words in
a confidential whisper: then sprang upon the shafts of his vehicle,
gave a clinching nod of significance to Springrove, and rattled
away.

Edward turned pale with the intelligence. His first thought was,
'Bring her home!'

The next--did Owen Graye know what had been discovered? He probably
did by that time, but no risks of probability must be run by a woman
he loved dearer than all the world besides. He would at any rate
make perfectly sure that her brother was in possession of the
knowledge, by telling it him with his own lips.

Off he ran in the direction of the old manor-house.

The path was across arable land, and was ploughed up with the rest
of the field every autumn, after which it was trodden out afresh.
The thaw had so loosened the soft earth, that lumps of stiff mud
were lifted by his feet at every leap he took, and flung against him
by his rapid motion, as it were doggedly impeding him, and
increasing tenfold the customary effort of running,

But he ran on--uphill, and downhill, the same pace alike--like the
shadow of a cloud. His nearest direction, too, like Owen's, was
through the dairy-barton, and as Owen entered it he saw the figure
of Edward rapidly descending the opposite hill, at a distance of two
or three hundred yards. Owen advanced amid the cows.

The dairyman, who had hitherto been talking loudly on some absorbing
subject to the maids and men milking around him, turned his face
towards the head of the cow when Owen passed, and ceased speaking.

Owen approached him and said--

'A singular thing has happened, I hear. The man is not insane, I
suppose?'

'Not he--he's sensible enough,' said the dairyman, and paused. He
was a man noisy with his associates--stolid and taciturn with
strangers.

'Is it true that he is Chinney, the railway-porter?'

'That's the man, sir.' The maids and men sitting under the cows
were all attentively listening to this discourse, milking
irregularly, and softly directing the jets against the sides of the
pail.

Owen could contain himself no longer, much as his mind dreaded
anything of the nature of ridicule. 'The people all seem to look at
me, as if something seriously concerned me; is it this stupid
matter, or what is it?'

'Surely, sir, you know better than anybody else if such a strange
thing concerns you.'

'What strange thing?'

'Don't you know! His confessing to Parson Raunham.'

'What did he confess? Tell me.'

'If you really ha'n't heard, 'tis this. He was as usual on duty at
the station on the night of the fire last year, otherwise he
wouldn't ha' known it.'

'Known what? For God's sake tell, man!'

But at this instant the two opposite gates of the dairy-yard, one on
the east, the other on the west side, slammed almost simultaneously.

The rector from one, Springrove from the other, came striding across
the barton.

Edward was nearest, and spoke first. He said in a low voice: 'Your
sister is not legally married! His first wife is still living! How
it comes out I don't know!'

'O, here you are at last, Mr. Graye, thank Heaven!' said the rector
breathlessly. 'I have been to the Old House, and then to Miss
Aldclyffe's looking for you--something very extraordinary.' He
beckoned to Owen, afterwards included Springrove in his glance, and
the three stepped aside together.

'A porter at the station. He was a curious nervous man. He had
been in a strange state all day, but he wouldn't go home. Your
sister was kind to him, it seems, this afternoon. When she and her
husband had gone, he went on with his work, shifting luggage-vans.
Well, he got in the way, as if he were quite lost to what was going
on, and they sent him home at last. Then he wished to see me. I
went directly. There was something on his mind, he said, and told
it. About the time when the fire of last November twelvemonth was
got under, whilst he was by himself in the porter's room, almost
asleep, somebody came to the station and tried to open the door. He
went out and found the person to be the lady he had accompanied to
Carriford earlier in the evening, Mrs. Manston. She asked, when
would be another train to London? The first the next morning, he
told her, was at a quarter-past six o'clock from Budmouth, but that
it was express, and didn't stop at Carriford Road--it didn't stop
till it got to Anglebury. "How far is it to Anglebury?" she said.
He told her, and she thanked him, and went away up the line. In a
short time she ran back and took out her purse. "Don't on any
account say a word in the village or anywhere that I have been here,
or a single breath about me--I'm ashamed ever to have come." He
promised; she took out two sovereigns. "Swear it on the Testament
in the waiting-room," she said, "and I'll pay you these." He got
the book, took an oath upon it, received the money, and she left
him. He was off duty at half-past five. He has kept silence all
through the intervening time till now, but lately the knowledge he
possessed weighed heavily upon his conscience and weak mind. Yet
the nearer came the wedding-day, the more he feared to tell. The
actual marriage filled him with remorse. He says your sister's
kindness afterwards was like a knife going through his heart. He
thought he had ruined her.'

'But whatever can be done? Why didn't he speak sooner?' cried Owen.

'He actually called at my house twice yesterday,' the rector
continued, 'resolved, it seems, to unburden his mind. I was out
both times--he left no message, and, they say, he looked relieved
that his object was defeated. Then he says he resolved to come to
you at the Old House last night--started, reached the door, and
dreaded to knock--and then went home again.'

'Here will be a tale for the newsmongers of the county,' said Owen
bitterly. 'The idea of his not opening his mouth sooner--the
criminality of the thing!'

'Ah, that's the inconsistency of a weak nature. But now that it is
put to us in this way, how much more probable it seems that she
should have escaped than have been burnt--'

'You will, of course, go straight to Mr. Manston, and ask him what
it all means?' Edward interrupted.

'Of course I shall! Manston has no right to carry off my sister
unless he's her husband,' said Owen. 'I shall go and separate
them.'

'Certainly you will,' said the rector.

'Where's the man?'

'In his cottage.'

''Tis no use going to him, either. I must go off at once and
overtake them--lay the case before Manston, and ask him for
additional and certain proofs of his first wife's death. An
up-train passes soon, I think.'

'Where have they gone?' said Edward.

'To Paris--as far as Southampton this afternoon, to proceed
to-morrow morning.'

'Where in Southampton?'

'I really don't know--some hotel. I only have their Paris address.
But I shall find them by making a few inquiries.'

The rector had in the meantime been taking out his pocket-book, and
now opened it at the first page, whereon it was his custom every
month to gum a small railway time-table--cut from the local
newspaper.

'The afternoon express is just gone,' he said, holding open the
page, 'and the next train to Southampton passes at ten minutes to
six o'clock. Now it wants--let me see--five-and-forty minutes to
that time. Mr. Graye, my advice is that you come with me to the
porter's cottage, where I will shortly write out the substance of
what he has said, and get him to sign it. You will then have far
better grounds for interfering between Mr. and Mrs. Manston than if
you went to them with a mere hearsay story.'

The suggestion seemed a good one. 'Yes, there will be time before
the train starts,' said Owen.

Edward had been musing restlessly.

'Let me go to Southampton in your place, on account of your
lameness?' he said suddenly to Graye.

'I am much obliged to you, but I think I can scarcely accept the
offer,' returned Owen coldly. 'Mr. Manston is an honourable man,
and I had much better see him myself.'

'There is no doubt,' said Mr. Raunham, 'that the death of his wife
was fully believed in by himself.'

'None whatever,' said Owen; 'and the news must be broken to him, and
the question of other proofs asked, in a friendly way. It would not
do for Mr. Springrove to appear in the case at all.' He still spoke
rather coldly; the recollection of the attachment between his sister
and Edward was not a pleasant one to him.

'You will never find them,' said Edward. 'You have never been to
Southampton, and I know every house there.'

'That makes little difference,' said the rector; 'he will have a
cab. Certainly Mr. Graye is the proper man to go on the errand.'

'Stay; I'll telegraph to ask them to meet me when I arrive at the
terminus,' said Owen; 'that is, if their train has not already
arrived.'

Mr. Raunham pulled out his pocket-book again. 'The two-thirty train
reached Southampton a quarter of an hour ago,' he said.

It was too late to catch them at the station. Nevertheless, the
rector suggested that it would be worth while to direct a message to
'all the respectable hotels in Southampton,' on the chance of its
finding them, and thus saving a deal of personal labour to Owen in
searching about the place.

'I'll go and telegraph, whilst you return to the man,' said Edward
--an offer which was accepted. Graye and the rector then turned off
in the direction of the porter's cottage.

Edward, to despatch the message at once, hurriedly followed the road
towards the station, still restlessly thinking. All Owen's
proceedings were based on the assumption, natural under the
circumstances, of Manston's good faith, and that he would readily
acquiesce in any arrangement which should clear up the mystery.
'But,' thought Edward, 'suppose--and Heaven forgive me, I cannot
help supposing it--that Manston is not that honourable man, what
will a young and inexperienced fellow like Owen do? Will he not be
hoodwinked by some specious story or another, framed to last till
Manston gets tired of poor Cytherea? And then the disclosure of the
truth will ruin and blacken both their futures irremediably.'

However, he proceeded to execute his commission. This he put in the
form of a simple request from Owen to Manston, that Manston would
come to the Southampton platform, and wait for Owen's arrival, as he
valued his reputation. The message was directed as the rector had
suggested, Edward guaranteeing to the clerk who sent it off that
every expense connected with the search would be paid.

No sooner had the telegram been despatched than his heart sank
within him at the want of foresight shown in sending it. Had
Manston, all the time, a knowledge that his first wife lived, the
telegram would be a forewarning which might enable him to defeat
Owen still more signally.

Whilst the machine was still giving off its multitudinous series of
raps, Edward heard a powerful rush under the shed outside, followed
by a long sonorous creak. It was a train of some sort, stealing
softly into the station, and it was an up-train. There was the ring
of a bell. It was certainly a passenger train.

Yet the booking-office window was closed.

'Ho, ho, John, seventeen minutes after time and only three stations
up the line. The incline again?' The voice was the stationmaster's,
and the reply seemed to come from the guard.

'Yes, the other side of the cutting. The thaw has made it all in a
perfect cloud of fog, and the rails are as slippery as glass. We
had to bring them through the cutting at twice.'

'Anybody else for the four-forty-five express?' the voice continued.
The few passengers, having crossed over to the other side long
before this time, had taken their places at once.

A conviction suddenly broke in upon Edward's mind; then a wish
overwhelmed him. The conviction--as startling as it was sudden--was
that Manston was a villain, who at some earlier time had discovered
that his wife lived, and had bribed her to keep out of sight, that
he might possess Cytherea. The wish was--to proceed at once by this
very train that was starting, find Manston before he would expect
from the words of the telegram (if he got it) that anybody from
Carriford could be with him--charge him boldly with the crime, and
trust to his consequent confusion (if he were guilty) for a solution
of the extraordinary riddle, and the release of Cytherea!

The ticket-office had been locked up at the expiration of the time
at which the train was due. Rushing out as the guard blew his
whistle, Edward opened the door of a carriage and leapt in. The
train moved along, and he was soon out of sight.

Springrove had long since passed that peculiar line which lies
across the course of falling in love--if, indeed, it may not be
called the initial itself of the complete passion--a longing to
cherish; when the woman is shifted in a man's mind from the region
of mere admiration to the region of warm fellowship. At this
assumption of her nature, she changes to him in tone, hue, and
expression. All about the loved one that said 'She' before, says
'We' now. Eyes that were to be subdued become eyes to be feared
for: a brain that was to be probed by cynicism becomes a brain that
is to be tenderly assisted; feet that were to be tested in the dance
become feet that are not to be distressed; the once-criticized
accent, manner, and dress, become the clients of a special pleader.

6. FIVE TO EIGHT O'CLOCK P.M.

Now that he was fairly on the track, and had begun to cool down,
Edward remembered that he had nothing to show--no legal authority
whatever to question Manston or interfere between him and Cytherea
as husband and wife. He now saw the wisdom of the rector in
obtaining a signed confession from the porter. The document would
not be a death-bed confession--perhaps not worth anything legally
--but it would be held by Owen; and he alone, as Cytherea's natural
guardian, could separate them on the mere ground of an unproved
probability, or what might perhaps be called the hallucination of an
idiot. Edward himself, however, was as firmly convinced as the
rector had been of the truth of the man's story, and paced backward
and forward the solitary compartment as the train wound through the
dark heathery plains, the mazy woods, and moaning coppices, as
resolved as ever to pounce on Manston, and charge him with the crime
during the critical interval between the reception of the telegram
and the hour at which Owen's train would arrive--trusting to
circumstances for what he should say and do afterwards, but making
up his mind to be a ready second to Owen in any emergency that might
arise.

At thirty-three minutes past seven he stood on the platform of the
station at Southampton--a clear hour before the train containing
Owen could possibly arrive.

Making a few inquiries here, but too impatient to pursue his
investigation carefully and inductively, he went into the town.

At the expiration of another half-hour he had visited seven
hotels and inns, large and small, asking the same questions at
each, and always receiving the same reply--nobody of that name,
or answering to that description, had been there. A boy from the
telegraph-office had called, asking for the same persons, if they
recollected rightly.

He reflected awhile, struck again by a painful thought that they
might possibly have decided to cross the Channel by the night-boat.
Then he hastened off to another quarter of the town to pursue his
inquiries among hotels of the more old-fashioned and quiet class.
His stained and weary appearance obtained for him but a modicum of
civility, wherever he went, which made his task yet more difficult.
He called at three several houses in this neighbourhood, with the
same result as before. He entered the door of the fourth house
whilst the clock of the nearest church was striking eight.

'Have a tall gentleman named Manston, and a young wife arrived here
this evening?' he asked again, in words which had grown odd to his
ears from very familiarity.

'A new-married couple, did you say?'

'They are, though I didn't say so.'

'They have taken a sitting-room and bedroom, number thirteen.'

'Are they indoors?'

'I don't know. Eliza!'

'Yes, m'm.'

'See if number thirteen is in--that gentleman and his wife.'

'Yes, m'm.'

'Has any telegram come for them?' said Edward, when the maid had
gone on her errand.

'No--nothing that I know of.'

'Somebody did come and ask if a Mr. and Mrs. Masters, or some such
name, were here this evening,' said another voice from the back of
the bar-parlour.

'And did they get the message?'

'Of course they did not--they were not here--they didn't come till
half-an-hour after that. The man who made inquiries left no
message. I told them when they came that they, or a name something
like theirs, had been asked for, but they didn't seem to understand
why it should be, and so the matter dropped.'

The chambermaid came back. 'The gentleman is not in, but the lady
is. Who shall I say?'

'Nobody,' said Edward. For it now became necessary to reflect upon
his method of proceeding. His object in finding their whereabouts
--apart from the wish to assist Owen--had been to see Manston, ask
him flatly for an explanation, and confirm the request of the message
in the presence of Cytherea--so as to prevent the possibility of the
steward's palming off a story upon Cytherea, or eluding her brother
when he came. But here were two important modifications of the
expected condition of affairs. The telegram had not been received,
and Cytherea was in the house alone.

He hesitated as to the propriety of intruding upon her in Manston's
absence. Besides, the women at the bottom of the stairs would see
him--his intrusion would seem odd--and Manston might return at any
moment. He certainly might call, and wait for Manston with the
accusation upon his tongue, as he had intended. But it was a
doubtful course. That idea had been based upon the assumption that
Cytherea was not married. If the first wife were really dead after
all--and he felt sick at the thought--Cytherea as the steward's wife
might in after-years--perhaps, at once--be subjected to indignity
and cruelty on account of an old lover's interference now.

Yes, perhaps the announcement would come most properly and safely
for her from her brother Owen, the time of whose arrival had almost
expired.

But, on turning round, he saw that the staircase and passage were
quite deserted. He and his errand had as completely died from the
minds of the attendants as if they had never been. There was
absolutely nothing between him and Cytherea's presence. Reason was
powerless now; he must see her--right or wrong, fair or unfair to
Manston--offensive to her brother or no. His lips must be the first
to tell the alarming story to her. Who loved her as he! He went
back lightly through the hall, up the stairs, two at a time, and
followed the corridor till he came to the door numbered thirteen.

He knocked softly: nobody answered.

There was no time to lose if he would speak to Cytherea before
Manston came. He turned the handle of the door and looked in. The
lamp on the table burned low, and showed writing materials open
beside it; the chief light came from the fire, the direct rays of
which were obscured by a sweet familiar outline of head and
shoulders--still as precious to him as ever.

7. A QUARTER-PAST EIGHT O'CLOCK P.M.

There is an attitude--approximatively called pensive--in which the
soul of a human being, and especially of a woman, dominates
outwardly and expresses its presence so strongly, that the
intangible essence seems more apparent than the body itself. This
was Cytherea's expression now. What old days and sunny eves at
Budmouth Bay was she picturing? Her reverie had caused her not to
notice his knock.

'Cytherea!' he said softly.

She let drop her hand, and turned her head, evidently thinking that
her visitor could be no other than Manston, yet puzzled at the
voice.

There was no preface on Springrove's tongue; he forgot his position
--hers--that he had come to ask quietly if Manston had other proofs
of being a widower--everything--and jumped to a conclusion.

'You are not his wife, Cytherea--come away, he has a wife living!'
he cried in an agitated whisper. 'Owen will be here directly.'

She started up, recognized the tidings first, the bearer of them
afterwards. 'Not his wife? O, what is it--what--who is living?'
She awoke by degrees. 'What must I do? Edward, it is you! Why did
you come? Where is Owen?'

'What has Manston shown you in proof of the death of his other wife?
Tell me quick.'

'Nothing--we have never spoken of the subject. Where is my brother
Owen? I want him, I want him!'

'He is coming by-and-by. Come to the station to meet him--do,'
implored Springrove. 'If Mr. Manston comes, he will keep you from
me: I am nobody,' he added bitterly, feeling the reproach her words
had faintly shadowed forth.

'Mr. Manston is only gone out to post a letter he has just written,'
she said, and without being distinctly cognizant of the action, she
wildly looked for her bonnet and cloak, and began putting them on,
but in the act of fastening them uttered a spasmodic cry.

'No, I'll not go out with you,' she said, flinging the articles down
again. Running to the door she flitted along the passage, and
downstairs.

'Give me a private room--quite private,' she said breathlessly to
some one below.

'Number twelve is a single room, madam, and unoccupied,' said some
tongue in astonishment.

Without waiting for any person to show her into it, Cytherea hurried
upstairs again, brushed through the corridor, entered the room
specified, and closed the door. Edward heard her sob out--

'Nobody but Owen shall speak to me--nobody!'

'He will be here directly,' said Springrove, close against the
panel, and then went towards the stairs. He had seen her; it was
enough.

He descended, stepped into the street, and hastened to meet Owen at
the railway-station.

As for the poor maiden who had received the news, she knew not what
to think. She listened till the echo of Edward's footsteps had died
away, then bowed her face upon the bed. Her sudden impulse had been
to escape from sight. Her weariness after the unwonted strain,
mental and bodily, which had been put upon her by the scenes she had
passed through during the long day, rendered her much more timid and
shaken by her position than she would naturally have been. She
thought and thought of that single fact which had been told her
--that the first Mrs. Manston was still living--till her brain seemed
ready to burst its confinement with excess of throbbing. It was
only natural that she should, by degrees, be unable to separate the
discovery, which was matter of fact, from the suspicion of treachery
on her husband's part, which was only matter of inference. And thus
there arose in her a personal fear of him.

'Suppose he should come in now and seize me!' This at first mere
frenzied supposition grew by degrees to a definite horror of his
presence, and especially of his intense gaze. Thus she raised
herself to a heat of excitement, which was none the less real for
being vented in no cry of any kind. No; she could not meet
Manston's eye alone, she would only see him in her brother's
company.

Almost delirious with this idea, she ran and locked the door to
prevent all possibility of her intentions being nullified, or a look
or word being flung at her by anybody whilst she knew not what she
was.

8. HALF-PAST EIGHT O'CLOCK P.M.

Then Cytherea felt her way amid the darkness of the room till she
came to the head of the bed, where she searched for the bell-rope
and gave it a pull. Her summons was speedily answered by the
landlady herself, whose curiosity to know the meaning of these
strange proceedings knew no bounds. The landlady attempted to turn
the handle of the door. Cytherea kept the door locked. 'Please
tell Mr. Manston when he comes that I am ill,' she said from the
inside, 'and that I cannot see him.'

'Certainly I will, madam,' said the landlady. 'Won't you have a
fire?'

'No, thank you.'

'Nor a light?'

'I don't want one, thank you.'

'Nor anything?'

'Nothing.'

The landlady withdrew, thinking her visitor half insane.

Manston came in about five minutes later, and went at once up to the
sitting-room, fully expecting to find his wife there. He looked
round, rang, and was told the words Cytherea had said, that she was
too ill to be seen.

'She is in number twelve room,' added the maid.

Manston was alarmed, and knocked at the door. 'Cytherea!'

'I am unwell, I cannot see you,' she said.

'Are you seriously ill, dearest? Surely not.'

'No, not seriously.'

'Let me come in; I will get a doctor.'

'No, he can't see me either.'

'She won't open the door, sir, not to nobody at all!' said the
chambermaid, with wonder-waiting eyes.

'Hold your tongue, and be off!' said Manston with a snap.

The maid vanished.

'Come, Cytherea, this is foolish--indeed it is--not opening the
door. . . . I cannot comprehend what can be the matter with you.
Nor can a doctor either, unless he sees you.'

Her voice had trembled more and more at each answer she gave, but
nothing could induce her to come out and confront him. Hating
scenes, Manston went back to the sitting-room, greatly irritated and
perplexed.

And there Cytherea from the adjoining room could hear him pacing up
and down. She thought, 'Suppose he insists upon seeing me--he
probably may--and will burst open the door!' This notion increased,
and she sank into a corner in a half-somnolent state, but with ears
alive to the slightest sound. Reason could not overthrow the
delirious fancy that outside her door stood Manston and all the
people in the hotel, waiting to laugh her to scorn.

9. HALF-PAST EIGHT TO ELEVEN P.M.

In the meantime, Springrove was pacing up and down the arrival
platform of the railway-station. Half-past eight o'clock--the time
at which Owen's train was due--had come, and passed, but no train
appeared.

'When will the eight-thirty train be in?' he asked of a man who was
sweeping the mud from the steps.

'She is not expected yet this hour.'

'How is that?'

'Christmas-time, you see, 'tis always so. People are running about
to see their friends. The trains have been like it ever since
Christmas Eve, and will be for another week yet.'

Edward again went on walking and waiting under the draughty roof.
He found it utterly impossible to leave the spot. His mind was so
intent upon the importance of meeting with Owen, and informing him
of Cytherea's whereabouts, that he could not but fancy Owen might
leave the station unobserved if he turned his back, and become lost
to him in the streets of the town.

The hour expired. Ten o'clock struck. 'When will the train be in?'
said Edward to the telegraph clerk.

'In five-and-thirty minutes. She's now at L----. They have extra
passengers, and the rails are bad to-day.'

At last, at a quarter to eleven, the train came in.

The first to alight from it was Owen, looking pale and cold. He
casually glanced round upon the nearly deserted platform, and was
hurrying to the outlet, when his eyes fell upon Edward. At sight of
his friend he was quite bewildered, and could not speak.

'Here I am, Mr. Graye,' said Edward cheerfully. 'I have seen
Cytherea, and she has been waiting for you these two or three
hours.'

Owen took Edward's hand, pressed it, and looked at him in silence.
Such was the concentration of his mind, that not till many minutes
after did he think of inquiring how Springrove had contrived to be
there before him.

10. ELEVEN O'CLOCK P.M.

On their arrival at the door of the hotel, it was arranged between
Springrove and Graye that the latter only should enter, Edward
waiting outside. Owen had remembered continually what his friend
had frequently overlooked, that there was yet a possibility of his
sister being Manston's wife, and the recollection taught him to
avoid any rashness in his proceedings which might lead to bitterness
hereafter.

Entering the room, he found Manston sitting in the chair which had
been occupied by Cytherea on Edward's visit, three hours earlier.
Before Owen had spoken, Manston arose, and stepping past him closed
the door. His face appeared harassed--much more troubled than the
slight circumstance which had as yet come to his knowledge seemed to
account for.

Manston could form no reason for Owen's presence, but intuitively
linked it with Cytherea's seclusion. 'Altogether this is most
unseemly,' he said, 'whatever it may mean.'

'Don't think there is meant anything unfriendly by my coming here,'
said Owen earnestly; 'but listen to this, and think if I could do
otherwise than come.'

He took from his pocket the confession of Chinney the porter, as
hastily written out by the vicar, and read it aloud. The aspects of
Manston's face whilst he listened to the opening words were strange,
dark, and mysterious enough to have justified suspicions that no
deceit could be too complicated for the possessor of such impulses,
had there not overridden them all, as the reading went on, a new and
irrepressible expression--one unmistakably honest. It was that of
unqualified amazement in the steward's mind at the news he heard.
Owen looked up and saw it. The sight only confirmed him in the
belief he had held throughout, in antagonism to Edward's suspicions.

There could no longer be a shadow of doubt that if the first Mrs.
Manston lived, her husband was ignorant of the fact. What he could
have feared by his ghastly look at first, and now have ceased to
fear, it was quite futile to conjecture.

'Now I do not for a moment doubt your complete ignorance of the
whole matter; you cannot suppose for an instant that I do,' said
Owen when he had finished reading. 'But is it not best for both
that Cytherea should come back with me till the matter is cleared
up? In fact, under the circumstances, no other course is left open
to me than to request it.'

Whatever Manston's original feelings had been, all in him now gave
way to irritation, and irritation to rage. He paced up and down the
room till he had mastered it; then said in ordinary tones--

'Certainly, I know no more than you and others know--it was a
gratuitous unpleasantness in you to say you did not doubt me. Why
should you, or anybody, have doubted me?'

'Well, where is my sister?' said Owen.

'Locked in the next room.'

His own answer reminded Manston that Cytherea must, by some
inscrutable means, have had an inkling of the event.

Owen had gone to the door of Cytherea's room.

'Cytherea, darling--'tis Owen,' he said, outside the door. A
rustling of clothes, soft footsteps, and a voice saying from the
inside, 'Is it really you, Owen,--is it really?'

'It is.'

'O, will you take care of me?'

'Always.'

She unlocked the door, and retreated again. Manston came forward
from the other room with a candle in his hand, as Owen pushed open
the door.

Her frightened eyes were unnaturally large, and shone like stars in
the darkness of the background, as the light fell upon them. She
leapt up to Owen in one bound, her small taper fingers extended like
the leaves of a lupine. Then she clasped her cold and trembling
hands round his neck and shivered.

The sight of her again kindled all Manston's passions into activity.
'She shall not go with you,' he said firmly, and stepping a pace or
two closer, 'unless you prove that she is not my wife; and you can't
do it!'

'This is proof,' said Owen, holding up the paper.

'No proof at all,' said Manston hotly. ''Tis not a death-bed
confession, and those are the only things of the kind held as good
evidence.'

'Send for a lawyer,' Owen returned, 'and let him tell us the proper
course to adopt.'

'Never mind the law--let me go with Owen!' cried Cytherea, still
holding on to him. 'You will let me go with him, won't you, sir?'
she said, turning appealingly to Manston.

'We'll have it all right and square,' said Manston, with more
quietness. 'I have no objection to your brother sending for a
lawyer, if he wants to.'

It was getting on for twelve o'clock, but the proprietor of the
hotel had not yet gone to bed on account of the mystery on the first
floor, which was an occurrence unusual in the quiet family lodging.
Owen looked over the banisters, and saw him standing in the hall.
It struck Graye that the wisest course would be to take the landlord
to a certain extent into their confidence, appeal to his honour as a
gentleman, and so on, in order to acquire the information he wanted,
and also to prevent the episode of the evening from becoming a
public piece of news. He called the landlord up to where they
stood, and told him the main facts of the story.

The landlord was fortunately a quiet, prejudiced man, and a
meditative smoker.

'I know the very man you want to see--the very man,' he said,
looking at the general features of the candle-flame. 'Sharp as a
needle, and not over-rich. Timms will put you all straight in no
time--trust Timms for that.'

'He's in bed by this time for certain,' said Owen.

'Never mind that--Timms knows me, I know him. He'll oblige me as a
personal favour. Wait here a bit. Perhaps, too, he's up at some
party or another--he's a nice, jovial fellow, sharp as a needle,
too; mind you, sharp as a needle, too.'

He went downstairs, put on his overcoat, and left the house, the
three persons most concerned entering the room, and standing
motionless, awkward, and silent in the midst of it. Cytherea
pictured to herself the long weary minutes she would have to stand
there, whilst a sleepy man could be prepared for consultation, till
the constraint between them seemed unendurable to her--she could
never last out the time. Owen was annoyed that Manston had not
quietly arranged with him at once; Manston at Owen's homeliness of
idea in proposing to send for an attorney, as if he would be a
touchstone of infallible proof.

Reflection was cut short by the approach of footsteps, and in a few
moments the proprietor of the hotel entered, introducing his friend.
'Mr. Timms has not been in bed,' he said; 'he had just returned from
dining with a few friends, so there's no trouble given. To save
time I explained the matter as we came along.'

It occurred to Owen and Manston both that they might get a misty
exposition of the law from Mr. Timms at that moment of concluding
dinner with a few friends.

'As far as I can see,' said the lawyer, yawning, and turning his
vision inward by main force, 'it is quite a matter for private
arrangement between the parties, whoever the parties are--at least
at present. I speak more as a father than as a lawyer, it is true,
but, let the young lady stay with her father, or guardian, safe out
of shame's way, until the mystery is sifted, whatever the mystery
is. Should the evidence prove to be false, or trumped up by anybody
to get her away from you, her husband, you may sue them for the
damages accruing from the delay.'

'Yes, yes,' said Manston, who had completely recovered his
self-possession and common-sense; 'let it all be settled by herself.'
Turning to Cytherea he whispered so softly that Owen did not hear
the words--

'Do you wish to go back with your brother, dearest, and leave me
here miserable, and lonely, or will you stay with me, your own
husband.'

'I'll go back with Owen.'

'Very well.' He relinquished his coaxing tone, and went on sternly:
'And remember this, Cytherea, I am as innocent of deception in this
thing as you are yourself. Do you believe me?'

'I do,' she said.

'I had no shadow of suspicion that my first wife lived. I don't
think she does even now. Do you believe me?'

'I believe you,' she said.

'And now, good-evening,' he continued, opening the door and politely
intimating to the three men standing by that there was no further
necessity for their remaining in his room. 'In three days I shall
claim her.'

The lawyer and the hotel-keeper retired first. Owen, gathering up
as much of his sister's clothing as lay about the room, took her
upon his arm, and followed them. Edward, to whom she owed
everything, who had been left standing in the street like a dog
without a home, was utterly forgotten. Owen paid the landlord and
the lawyer for the trouble he had occasioned them, looked to the
packing, and went to the door.

A fly, which somewhat unaccountably was seen lingering in front of
the house, was called up, and Cytherea's luggage put upon it.

'Do you know of any hotel near the station that is open for night
arrivals?' Owen inquired of the driver.

'A place has been bespoke for you, sir, at the White Unicorn--and
the gentleman wished me to give you this.'

'Bespoken by Springrove, who ordered the fly, of course,' said Owen
to himself. By the light of the street-lamp he read these lines,
hurriedly traced in pencil:--

'I have gone home by the mail-train. It is better for all parties
that I should be out of the way. Tell Cytherea that I apologize for
having caused her such unnecessary pain, as it seems I did--but it
cannot be helped now.  E.S.'

Owen handed his sister into the vehicle, and told the flyman to
drive on.

'Poor Springrove--I think we have served him rather badly,' he said
to Cytherea, repeating the words of the note to her.

A thrill of pleasure passed through her bosom as she listened to
them. They were the genuine reproach of a lover to his mistress;
the trifling coldness of her answer to him would have been noticed
by no man who was only a friend. But, in entertaining that sweet
thought, she had forgotten herself, and her position for the
instant.

Was she still Manston's wife--that was the terrible supposition, and
her future seemed still a possible misery to her. For, on account
of the late jarring accident, a life with Manston which would
otherwise have been only a sadness, must become a burden of
unutterable sorrow.

Then she thought of the misrepresentation and scandal that would
ensue if she were no wife. One cause for thankfulness accompanied
the reflection; Edward knew the truth.

They soon reached the quiet old inn, which had been selected for
them by the forethought of the man who loved her well. Here they
installed themselves for the night, arranging to go to Budmouth by
the first train the next day.

At this hour Edward Springrove was fast approaching his native
county on the wheels of the night-mail.



XIV. THE EVENTS OF FIVE WEEKS

1. FROM THE SIXTH TO THE THIRTEENTH OF JANUARY

Manston had evidently resolved to do nothing in a hurry.

This much was plain, that his earnest desire and intention was to
raise in Cytherea's bosom no feelings of permanent aversion to him.
The instant after the first burst of disappointment had escaped him
in the hotel at Southampton, he had seen how far better it would be
to lose her presence for a week than her respect for ever.

'She shall be mine; I will claim the young thing yet,' he insisted.
And then he seemed to reason over methods for compassing that
object, which, to all those who were in any degree acquainted with
the recent event, appeared the least likely of possible
contingencies.

He returned to Knapwater late the next day, and was preparing to
call on Miss Aldclyffe, when the conclusion forced itself upon him
that nothing would be gained by such a step. No; every action of
his should be done openly--even religiously. At least, he called on
the rector, and stated this to be his resolve.

'Certainly,' said Mr. Raunham, 'it is best to proceed candidly and
fairly, or undue suspicion may fall on you. You should, in my
opinion, take active steps at once.'

'I will do the utmost that lies in my power to clear up the mystery,
and silence the hubbub of gossip that has been set going about me.
But what can I do? They say that the man who comes first in the
chain of inquiry is not to be found--I mean the porter.'

'I am sorry to say that he is not. When I returned from the station
last night, after seeing Owen Graye off, I went again to the cottage
where he has been lodging, to get more intelligence, as I thought.
He was not there. He had gone out at dusk, saying he would be back
soon. But he has not come back yet.'

'I rather doubt if we shall see him again.'

'Had I known of this, I would have done what in my flurry I did not
think of doing--set a watch upon him. But why not advertise for
your missing wife as a preliminary, consulting your solicitor in the
meantime?'

'Advertise. I'll think about it,' said Manston, lingering on the
word as he pronounced it. 'Yes, that seems a right thing--quite a
right thing.'

He went home and remained moodily indoors all the next day and the
next--for nearly a week, in short. Then, one evening at dusk, he
went out with an uncertain air as to the direction of his walk,
which resulted, however, in leading him again to the rectory.

He saw Mr. Raunham. 'Have you done anything yet?' the rector
inquired.

'No--I have not,' said Manston absently. 'But I am going to set
about it.' He hesitated, as if ashamed of some weakness he was
about to betray. 'My object in calling was to ask if you had heard
any tidings from Budmouth of my--Cytherea. You used to speak of her
as one you were interested in.'

There was, at any rate, real sadness in Manston's tone now, and the
rector paused to weigh his words ere he replied.

'I have not heard directly from her,' he said gently. 'But her
brother has communicated with some people in the parish--'

'The Springroves, I suppose,' said Manston gloomily.

'Yes; and they tell me that she is very ill, and I am sorry to say,
likely to be for some days.'

'Surely, surely, I must go and see her!' Manston cried.

'I would advise you not to go,' said Raunham. 'But do this instead
--be as quick as you can in making a movement towards ascertaining
the truth as regards the existence of your wife. You see, Mr.
Manston, an out-step place like this is not like a city, and there
is nobody to busy himself for the good of the community; whilst poor
Cytherea and her brother are socially too dependent to be able to
make much stir in the matter, which is a greater reason still why
you should be disinterestedly prompt.'

The steward murmured an assent. Still there was the same
indecision!--not the indecision of weakness--the indecision of
conscious perplexity.

On Manston's return from this interview at the rectory, he passed
the door of the Rising Sun Inn. Finding he had no light for his
cigar, and it being three-quarters of a mile to his residence in the
park, he entered the tavern to get one. Nobody was in the outer
portion of the front room where Manston stood, but a space round the
fire was screened off from the remainder, and inside the high oak
settle, forming a part of the screen, he heard voices conversing.
The speakers had not noticed his footsteps, and continued their
discourse.

One of the two he recognized as a well-known night-poacher, the man
who had met him with tidings of his wife's death on the evening of
the conflagration. The other seemed to be a stranger following the
same mode of life. The conversation was carried on in the emphatic
and confidential tone of men who are slightly intoxicated, its
subject being an unaccountable experience that one of them had had
on the night of the fire.

What the steward heard was enough, and more than enough, to lead him
to forget or to renounce his motive in entering. The effect upon
him was strange and strong. His first object seemed to be to escape
from the house again without being seen or heard.

Having accomplished this, he went in at the park gate, and strode
off under the trees to the Old House. There sitting down by the
fire, and burying himself in reflection, he allowed the minutes to
pass by unheeded. First the candle burnt down in its socket and
stunk: he did not notice it. Then the fire went out: he did not
see it. His feet grew cold; still he thought on.

It may be remarked that a lady, a year and a quarter before this
time, had, under the same conditions--an unrestricted mental
absorption--shown nearly the same peculiarities as this man evinced
now. The lady was Miss Aldclyffe.

It was half-past twelve when Manston moved, as if he had come to a
determination.

The first thing he did the next morning was to call at Knapwater
House; where he found that Miss Aldclyffe was not well enough to see
him. She had been ailing from slight internal haemorrhage ever
since the confession of the porter Chinney. Apparently not much
aggrieved at the denial, he shortly afterwards went to the
railway-station and took his departure for London, leaving a letter
for Miss Aldclyffe, stating the reason of his journey thither--to
recover traces of his missing wife.

During the remainder of the week paragraphs appeared in the local
and other newspapers, drawing attention to the facts of this
singular case. The writers, with scarcely an exception, dwelt
forcibly upon a feature which had at first escaped the observation
of the villagers, including Mr. Raunham--that if the announcement of
the man Chinney were true, it seemed extremely probable that Mrs.
Manston left her watch and keys behind on purpose to blind people as
to her escape; and that therefore she would not now let herself be
discovered, unless a strong pressure were put upon her. The writers
added that the police were on the track of the porter, who very
possibly had absconded in the fear that his reticence was criminal,
and that Mr. Manston, the husband, was, with praiseworthy energy,
making every effort to clear the whole matter up.

2. FROM THE EIGHTEENTH TO THE END OF JANUARY

Five days from the time of his departure, Manston returned from
London and Liverpool, looking very fatigued and thoughtful. He
explained to the rector and other of his acquaintance that all the
inquiries he had made at his wife's old lodgings and his own had
been totally barren of results.

But he seemed inclined to push the affair to a clear conclusion now
that he had commenced. After the lapse of another day or two he
proceeded to fulfil his promise to the rector, and advertised for
the missing woman in three of the London papers. The advertisement
was a carefully considered and even attractive effusion, calculated
to win the heart, or at least the understanding, of any woman who
had a spark of her own nature left in her.

There was no answer.

Three days later he repeated the experiment; with the same result as
before.

'I cannot try any further,' said Manston speciously to the rector,
his sole auditor throughout the proceedings. 'Mr. Raunham, I'll
tell you the truth plainly: I don't love her; I do love Cytherea,
and the whole of this business of searching for the other woman goes
altogether against me. I hope to God I shall never see her again.'

'But you will do your duty at least?' said Mr. Raunham.

'I have done it,' said Manston. 'If ever a man on the face of this
earth has done his duty towards an absent wife, I have towards her
--living or dead--at least,' he added, correcting himself, 'since I
have lived at Knapwater. I neglected her before that time--I own
that, as I have owned it before.'

'I should, if I were you, adopt other means to get tidings of her if
advertising fails, in spite of my feelings,' said the rector
emphatically. 'But at any rate, try advertising once more. There's
a satisfaction in having made any attempt three several times.'

When Manston had left the study, the rector stood looking at the
fire for a considerable length of time, lost in profound reflection.
He went to his private diary, and after many pauses, which he varied
only by dipping his pen, letting it dry, wiping it on his sleeve,
and then dipping it again, he took the following note of events:--


'January 25.--Mr. Manston has just seen me for the third time on the
subject of his lost wife. There have been these peculiarities
attending the three interviews:--

'The first. My visitor, whilst expressing by words his great
anxiety to do everything for her recovery, showed plainly by his
bearing that he was convinced he should never see her again.

'The second. He had left off feigning anxiety to do rightly by his
first wife, and honestly asked after Cytherea's welfare.

'The third (and most remarkable). He seemed to have lost all
consistency. Whilst expressing his love for Cytherea (which
certainly is strong) and evincing the usual indifference to the
first Mrs. Manston's fate, he was unable to conceal the intensity of
his eagerness for me to advise him to _advertise again_ for her.'


A week after the second, the third advertisement was inserted. A
paragraph was attached, which stated that this would be the last
time the announcement would appear.

3. THE FIRST OF FEBRUARY

At this, the eleventh hour, the postman brought a letter for
Manston, directed in a woman's hand.

A bachelor friend of the steward's, Mr. Dickson by name, who was
somewhat of a chatterer--plenus rimarum--and who boasted of an
endless string of acquaintances, had come over from Casterbridge the
preceding day by invitation--an invitation which had been a pleasant
surprise to Dickson himself, insomuch that Manston, as a rule, voted
him a bore almost to his face. He had stayed over the night, and
was sitting at breakfast with his host when the important missive
arrived.

Manston did not attempt to conceal the subject of the letter, or the
name of the writer. First glancing the pages through, he read aloud
as follows:--


'"MY HUSBAND,--I implore your forgiveness.

'"During the last thirteen months I have repeated to myself a
hundred times that you should never discover what I voluntarily tell
you now, namely, that I am alive and in perfect health.

'"I have seen all your advertisements. Nothing but your persistence
has won me round. Surely, I thought, he _must_ love me still. Why
else should he try to win back a woman who, faithful unto death as
she will be, can, in a social sense, aid him towards acquiring
nothing?--rather the reverse, indeed.

'"You yourself state my own mind--that the only grounds upon which
we can meet and live together, with a reasonable hope of happiness,
must be a mutual consent to bury in oblivion all past differences.
I heartily and willingly forget everything--and forgive everything.
You will do the same, as your actions show.

'"There will be plenty of opportunity for me to explain the few
facts relating to my escape on the night of the fire. I will only
give the heads in this hurried note. I was grieved at your not
coming to fetch me, more grieved at your absence from the station,
most of all by your absence from home. On my journey to the inn I
writhed under a passionate sense of wrong done me. When I had been
shown to my room I waited and hoped for you till the landlord had
gone upstairs to bed. I still found that you did not come, and then
I finally made up my mind to leave. I had half undressed, but I put
on my things again, forgetting my watch (and I suppose dropping my
keys, though I am not sure where) in my hurry, and slipped out of
the house. The--"'


'Well, that's a rum story,' said Mr. Dickson, interrupting.

'What's a rum story?' said Manston hastily, and flushing in the
face.

'Forgetting her watch and dropping her keys in her hurry.'

'I don't see anything particularly wonderful in it. Any woman might
do such a thing.'

'Any woman might if escaping from fire or shipwreck, or any such
immediate danger. But it seems incomprehensible to me that any
woman in her senses, who quietly decides to leave a house, should be
so forgetful.'

'All that is required to reconcile your seeming with her facts is to
assume that she was not in her senses, for that's what she did
plainly, or how could the things have been found there? Besides,
she's truthful enough.' He spoke eagerly and peremptorily.

'Yes, yes, I know that. I merely meant that it seemed rather odd.'

'O yes.' Manston read on:--


'"--and slipped out of the house. The rubbish-heap was burning up
brightly, but the thought that the house was in danger did not
strike me; I did not consider that it might be thatched.

'"I idled in the lane behind the wood till the last down-train had
come in, not being in a mood to face strangers. Whilst I was there
the fire broke out, and this perplexed me still more. However, I
was still determined not to stay in the place. I went to the
railway-station, which was now quiet, and inquired of the solitary
man on duty there concerning the trains. It was not till I had left
the man that I saw the effect the fire might have on my history. I
considered also, though not in any detailed manner, that the event,
by attracting the attention of the village to my former abode, might
set people on my track should they doubt my death, and a sudden
dread of having to go back again to Knapwater--a place which had
seemed inimical to me from first to last--prompted me to run back
and bribe the porter to secrecy. I then walked on to Anglebury,
lingering about the outskirts of the town till the morning train
came in, when I proceeded by it to London, and then took these
lodgings, where I have been supporting myself ever since by
needlework, endeavouring to save enough money to pay my passage home
to America, but making melancholy progress in my attempt. However,
all that is changed--can I be otherwise than happy at it? Of course
not. I am happy. Tell me what I am to do, and believe me still to
be your faithful wife,  EUNICE.

'"My name here is (as before)

     '"MRS. RONDLEY, and my address,
          79 ADDINGTON STREET,
               LAMBETH.'"


The name and address were written on a separate slip of paper.

'So it's to be all right at last then,' said Manston's friend. 'But
after all there's another woman in the case. You don't seem very
sorry for the little thing who is put to such distress by this turn
of affairs? I wonder you can let her go so coolly.' The speaker
was looking out between the mullions of the window--noticing that
some of the lights were glazed in lozenges, some in squares--as he
said the words, otherwise he would have seen the passionate
expression of agonized hopelessness that flitted across the
steward's countenance when the remark was made. He did not see it,
and Manston answered after a short interval. The way in which he
spoke of the young girl who had believed herself his wife, whom, a
few short days ago, he had openly idolized, and whom, in his secret
heart, he idolized still, as far as such a form of love was
compatible with his nature, showed that from policy or otherwise, he
meant to act up to the requirements of the position into which fate
appeared determined to drive him.

'That's neither here nor there,' he said; 'it is a point of honour
to do as I am doing, and there's an end of it.'

'Yes. Only I thought you used not to care overmuch about your first
bargain.'

'I certainly did not at one time. One is apt to feel rather weary
of wives when they are so devilish civil under all aspects, as she
used to be. But anything for a change--Abigail is lost, but Michal
is recovered. You would hardly believe it, but she seems in fancy
to be quite another bride--in fact, almost as if she had really
risen from the dead, instead of having only done so virtually.'

'You let the young pink one know that the other has come or is
coming?'

'Cui bono?' The steward meditated critically, showing a portion of
his intensely wide and regular teeth within the ruby lips.

'I cannot say anything to her that will do any good,' he resumed.
'It would be awkward--either seeing or communicating with her again.
The best plan to adopt will be to let matters take their course
--she'll find it all out soon enough.'

Manston found himself alone a few minutes later. He buried his face
in his hands, and murmured, 'O my lost one! O my Cytherea! That it
should come to this is hard for me! 'Tis now all darkness--"a land
of darkness as darkness itself; and of the shadow of death without
any order, and where the light is as darkness."'

Yes, the artificial bearing which this extraordinary man had adopted
before strangers ever since he had overheard the conversation at the
inn, left him now, and he mourned for Cytherea aloud.

4. THE TWELFTH OF FEBRUARY

Knapwater Park is the picture--at eleven o'clock on a muddy, quiet,
hazy, but bright morning--a morning without any blue sky, and
without any shadows, the earth being enlivened and lit up rather by
the spirit of an invisible sun than by its bodily presence.

The local Hunt had met for the day's sport on the open space of
ground immediately in front of the steward's residence--called in
the list of appointments, 'Old House, Knapwater'--the meet being
here once every season, for the pleasure of Miss Aldclyffe and her
friends.

Leaning out from one of the first-floor windows, and surveying with
the keenest interest the lively picture of pink and black coats,
rich-coloured horses, and sparkling bits and spurs, was the returned
and long-lost woman, Mrs. Manston.

The eyes of those forming the brilliant group were occasionally
turned towards her, showing plainly that her adventures were the
subject of conversation equally with or more than the chances of the
coming day. She did not flush beneath their scrutiny; on the
contrary, she seemed rather to enjoy it, her eyes being kindled with
a light of contented exultation, subdued to square with the
circumstances of her matronly position.

She was, at the distance from which they surveyed her, an attractive
woman--comely as the tents of Kedar. But to a close observer it was
palpable enough that God did not do all the picture. Appearing at
least seven years older than Cytherea, she was probably her senior
by double the number, the artificial means employed to heighten the
natural good appearance of her face being very cleverly applied.
Her form was full and round, its voluptuous maturity standing out in
strong contrast to the memory of Cytherea's lissom girlishness.

It seems to be an almost universal rule that a woman who once has
courted, or who eventually will court, the society of men on terms
dangerous to her honour cannot refrain from flinging the meaning
glance whenever the moment arrives in which the glance is strongly
asked for, even if her life and whole future depended upon that
moment's abstinence.

Had a cautious, uxorious husband seen in his wife's countenance what
might now have been seen in this dark-eyed woman's as she caught a
stray glance of flirtation from one or other of the red-coated
gallants outside, he would have passed many days in an agony of
restless jealousy and doubt. But Manston was not such a husband,
and he was, moreover, calmly attending to his business at the other
end of the manor.

The steward had fetched home his wife in the most matter-of-fact way
a few days earlier, walking round the village with her the very next
morning--at once putting an end, by this simple solution, to all the
riddling inquiries and surmises that were rank in the village and
its neighbourhood. Some men said that this woman was as far
inferior to Cytherea as earth to heaven; others, older and sager,
thought Manston better off with such a wife than he would have been
with one of Cytherea's youthful impulses, and inexperience in
household management. All felt their curiosity dying out of them.
It was the same in Carriford as in other parts of the world
--immediately circumstantial evidence became exchanged for direct,
the loungers in court yawned, gave a final survey, and turned away
to a subject which would afford more scope for speculation.



XV. THE EVENTS OF THREE WEEKS

1. FROM THE TWELFTH OF FEBRUARY TO THE SECOND OF MARCH

Owen Graye's recovery from the illness that had incapacitated him
for so long a time was, professionally, the dawn of a brighter
prospect for him in every direction, though the change was at first
very gradual, and his movements and efforts were little more than
mechanical. With the lengthening of the days, and the revival of
building operations for the forthcoming season, he saw himself, for
the first time, on a road which, pursued with care, would probably
lead to a comfortable income at some future day. But he was still
very low down the hill as yet.

The first undertaking entrusted to him in the new year began about a
month after his return from Southampton. Mr. Gradfield had come
back to him in the wake of his restored health, and offered him the
superintendence, as clerk of works, of a church which was to be
nearly rebuilt at the village of Tolchurch, fifteen or sixteen miles
from Budmouth, and about half that distance from Carriford.

'I am now being paid at the rate of a hundred and fifty pounds a
year,' he said to his sister in a burst of thankfulness, 'and you
shall never, Cytherea, be at any tyrannous lady's beck and call
again as long as I live. Never pine or think about what has
happened, dear; it's no disgrace to you. Cheer up; you'll be
somebody's happy wife yet.'

He did not say Edward Springrove's, for, greatly to his
disappointment, a report had reached his ears that the friend to
whom Cytherea owed so much had been about to pack up his things and
sail for Australia. However, this was before the uncertainty
concerning Mrs. Manston's existence had been dispersed by her
return, a phenomenon that altered the cloudy relationship in which
Cytherea had lately been standing towards her old lover, to one of
distinctness; which result would have been delightful but for
circumstances about to be mentioned.

Cytherea was still pale from her recent illness, and still greatly
dejected. Until the news of Mrs. Manston's return had reached them,
she had kept herself closely shut up during the day-time, never
venturing forth except at night. Sleeping and waking she had been
in perpetual dread lest she should still be claimed by a man whom,
only a few weeks earlier, she had regarded in the light of a future
husband with quiet assent, not unmixed with cheerfulness.

But the removal of the uneasiness in this direction--by Mrs.
Manston's arrival, and her own consequent freedom--had been the
imposition of pain in another. Utterly fictitious details of the
finding of Cytherea and Manston had been invented and circulated,
unavoidably reaching her ears in the course of time. Thus the
freedom brought no happiness, and it seemed well-nigh impossible
that she could ever again show herself the sparkling creature she
once had been--

     'Apt to entice a deity.'

On this account, and for the first time in his life, Owen made a
point of concealing from her the real state of his feelings with
regard to the unhappy transaction. He writhed in secret under the
humiliation to which they had been subjected, till the resentment it
gave rise to, and for which there was no vent, was sometimes beyond
endurance; it induced a mood that did serious damage to the material
and plodding perseverance necessary if he would secure permanently
the comforts of a home for them.

They gave up their lodgings at Budmouth, and went to Tolchurch as
soon as the work commenced.

Here they were domiciled in one half of an old farmhouse, standing
not far from the ivy-covered church tower (which was all that was to
remain of the original structure). The long steep roof of this
picturesque dwelling sloped nearly down to the ground, the old tiles
that covered it being overgrown with rich olive-hued moss. New red
tiles in twos and threes had been used for patching the holes
wrought by decay, lighting up the whole harmonious surface with dots
of brilliant scarlet.

The chief internal features of this snug abode were a wide
fireplace, enormous cupboards, a brown settle, and several sketches
on the wood mantel, done in outline with the point of a hot poker
--the subjects mainly consisting of old men walking painfully erect,
with a curly-tailed dog behind.

After a week or two of residence in Tolchurch, and rambles amid the
quaint scenery circumscribing it, a tranquillity began to spread
itself through the mind of the maiden, which Graye hoped would be a
preface to her complete restoration. She felt ready and willing to
live the whole remainder of her days in the retirement of their
present quarters: she began to sing about the house in low
tremulous snatches--

     '"--I said, if there's peace to be found in the world,
       A heart that is humble may hope for it here."'

2. THE THIRD OF MARCH

Her convalescence had arrived at this point on a certain evening
towards the end of the winter, when Owen had come in from the
building hard by, and was changing his muddy boots for slippers,
previously to sitting down to toast and tea.

A prolonged though quiet knocking came to the door.

The only person who ever knocked at their door in that way was the
new vicar, the prime mover in the church-building. But he was that
evening dining with the Squire.

Cytherea was uneasy at the sound--she did not know why, unless it
was because her nerves were weakened by the sickness she had
undergone. Instead of opening the door she ran out of the room, and
upstairs.

'What nonsense, Cytherea!' said her brother, going to the door.

Edward Springrove stood in the grey light outside.

'Capital--not gone to Australia, and not going, of course!' cried
Owen. 'What's the use of going to such a place as that?--I never
believed that you would.'

'I am going back to London again to-morrow,' said Springrove, 'and I
called to say a word before going. Where is . . . ?'

'She has just run upstairs. Come in--never mind scraping your
shoes--we are regular cottagers now; stone floor, yawning
chimney-corner, and all, you see.'

'Mrs. Manston came,' said Edward awkwardly, when he had sat down in
the chimney-corner by preference.

'Yes.' At mention of one of his skeletons Owen lost his blitheness
at once, and fell into a reverie.

'The history of her escape is very simple.'

'Very.'

'You know I always had wondered, when my father was telling any of
the circumstances of the fire to me, how it could be that a woman
could sleep so soundly as to be unaware of her horrid position till
it was too late even to give shout or sound of any kind.'

'Well, I think that would have been possible, considering her long
wearisome journey. People have often been suffocated in their beds
before they awoke. But it was hardly likely a body would be
completely burnt to ashes as this was assumed to be, though nobody
seemed to see it at the time. And how positive the surgeon was too,
about those bits of bone! Why he should have been so, nobody can
tell. I cannot help saying that if it has ever been possible to
find pure stupidity incarnate, it was in that jury of Carriford.
There existed in the mass the stupidity of twelve and not the
penetration of one.'

'Is she quite well?' said Springrove.

'Who?--O, my sister, Cytherea. Thank you, nearly well, now. I'll
call her.'

'Wait one minute. I have a word to say to you.'

Owen sat down again.

'You know, without my saying it, that I love Cytherea as dearly as
ever. . . . I think she loves me too,--does she really?'

There was in Owen enough of that worldly policy on the subject of
matchmaking which naturally resides in the breasts of parents and
guardians, to give him a certain caution in replying, and, younger
as he was by five years than Edward, it had an odd effect.

'Well, she may possibly love you still,' he said, as if rather in
doubt as to the truth of his words.

Springrove's countenance instantly saddened; he had expected a
simple 'Yes,' at the very least. He continued in a tone of greater
depression--

'Supposing she does love me, would it be fair to you and to her if I
made her an offer of marriage, with these dreary conditions
attached--that we lived for a few years on the narrowest system,
till a great debt, which all honour and duty require me to pay off,
shall be paid? My father, by reason of the misfortune that befell
him, is under a great obligation to Miss Aldclyffe. He is getting
old, and losing his energies. I am attempting to work free of the
burden. This makes my prospects gloomy enough at present.

'But consider again,' he went on. 'Cytherea has been left in a
nameless and unsatisfactory, though innocent state, by this
unfortunate, and now void, marriage with Manston. A marriage with
me, though under the--materially--untoward conditions I have
mentioned, would make us happy; it would give her a locus standi.
If she wished to be out of the sound of her misfortunes we would go
to another part of England--emigrate--do anything.'

'I'll call Cytherea,' said Owen. 'It is a matter which she alone
can settle.' He did not speak warmly. His pride could not endure
the pity which Edward's visit and errand tacitly implied. Yet, in
the other affair, his heart went with Edward; he was on the same
beat for paying off old debts himself.

'Cythie, Mr. Springrove is here,' he said, at the foot of the
staircase.

His sister descended the creaking old steps with a faltering tread,
and stood in the firelight from the hearth. She extended her hand
to Springrove, welcoming him by a mere motion of the lip, her eyes
averted--a habit which had engendered itself in her since the
beginning of her illness and defamation. Owen opened the door and
went out--leaving the lovers alone. It was the first time they had
met since the memorable night at Southampton.

'I will get a light,' she said, with a little embarrassment.

'No--don't, please, Cytherea,' said Edward softly, 'Come and sit
down with me.'

'O yes. I ought to have asked _you_ to,' she returned timidly.
'Everybody sits in the chimney-corner in this parish. You sit on
that side. I'll sit here.'

Two recesses--one on the right, one on the left hand--were cut in
the inside of the fireplace, and here they sat down facing each
other, on benches fitted to the recesses, the fire glowing on the
hearth between their feet. Its ruddy light shone on the underslopes
of their faces, and spread out over the floor of the room with the
low horizontality of the setting sun, giving to every grain of sand
and tumour in the paving a long shadow towards the door.

Edward looked at his pale love through the thin azure twines of
smoke that went up like ringlets between them, and invested her, as
seen through its medium, with the shadowy appearance of a phantom.
Nothing is so potent for coaxing back the lost eyes of a woman as a
discreet silence in the man who has so lost them--and thus the
patient Edward coaxed hers. After lingering on the hearth for half
a minute, waiting in vain for another word from him, they were
lifted into his face.

He was ready primed to receive them. 'Cytherea, will you marry me?'
he said.

He could not wait in his original position till the answer came.
Stepping across the front of the fire to her own side of the chimney
corner, he reclined at her feet, and searched for her hand. She
continued in silence awhile.

'Edward, I can never be anybody's wife,' she then said sadly, and
with firmness.

'Think of it in every light,' he pleaded; 'the light of love, first.
Then, when you have done that, see how wise a step it would be. I
can only offer you poverty as yet, but I want--I do so long to
secure you from the intrusion of that unpleasant past, which will
often and always be thrust before you as long as you live the
shrinking solitary life you do now--a life which purity chooses, it
may be; but to the outside world it appears like the enforced
loneliness of neglect and scorn--and tongues are busy inventing a
reason for it which does not exist.'

'I know all about it,' she said hastily; 'and those are the grounds
of my refusal. You and Owen know the whole truth--the two I love
best on earth--and I am content. But the scandal will be
continually repeated, and I can never give any one the opportunity
of saying to you--that--your wife . . . .' She utterly broke down
and wept.

'Don't, my own darling!' he entreated. 'Don't, Cytherea!'

'Please to leave me--we will be friends, Edward--but don't press me
--my mind is made up--I cannot--I will not marry you or any man under
the present ambiguous circumstances--never will I--I have said it:
never!'

They were both silent. He listlessly regarded the illuminated
blackness overhead, where long flakes of soot floated from the sides
and bars of the chimney-throat like tattered banners in ancient
aisles; whilst through the square opening in the midst one or two
bright stars looked down upon them from the grey March sky. The
sight seemed to cheer him.

'At any rate you will love me?' he murmured to her.

'Yes--always--for ever and for ever!'

He kissed her once, twice, three times, and arose to his feet,
slowly withdrawing himself from her side towards the door. Cytherea
remained with her gaze fixed on the fire. Edward went out grieving,
but hope was not extinguished even now.

He smelt the fragrance of a cigar, and immediately afterwards saw a
small red star of fire against the darkness of the hedge. Graye was
pacing up and down the lane, smoking as he walked. Springrove told
him the result of the interview.

'You are a good fellow, Edward,' he said; 'but I think my sister is
right.'

'I wish you would believe Manston a villain, as I do,' said
Springrove.

'It would be absurd of me to say that I like him now--family feeling
prevents it, but I cannot in honesty say deliberately that he is a
bad man.'

Edward could keep the secret of Manston's coercion of Miss Aldclyffe
in the matter of the houses a secret no longer. He told Owen the
whole story.

'That's one thing,' he continued, 'but not all. What do you think
of this--I have discovered that he went to Budmouth post-office for
a letter the day before the first advertisement for his wife
appeared in the papers. One was there for him, and it was directed
in his wife's handwriting, as I can prove. This was not till after
the marriage with Cytherea, it is true, but if (as it seems to show)
the advertising was a farce, there is a strong presumption that the
rest of the piece was.'

Owen was too astounded to speak. He dropped his cigar, and fixed
his eyes upon his companion.

'Collusion!'

'Yes.'

'With his first wife?'

'Yes--with his wife. I am firmly persuaded of it.'

'What did you discover?'

'That he fetched from the post-office at Budmouth a letter from her
the day _before_ the first advertisement appeared.'

Graye was lost in a long consideration. 'Ah!' he said, 'it would be
difficult to prove anything of that sort now. The writing could not
be sworn to, and if he is guilty the letter is destroyed.'

'I have other suspicions--'

'Yes--as you said' interrupted Owen, who had not till now been able
to form the complicated set of ideas necessary for picturing the
position. 'Yes, there is this to be remembered--Cytherea had been
taken from him before that letter came--and his knowledge of his
wife's existence could not have originated till after the wedding.
I could have sworn he believed her dead then. His manner was
unmistakable.'

'Well, I have other suspicions,' repeated Edward; 'and if I only had
the right--if I were her husband or brother, he should be convicted
of bigamy yet.'

'The reproof was not needed,' said Owen, with a little bitterness.
'What can I do--a man with neither money nor friends--whilst Manston
has Miss Aldclyffe and all her fortune to back him up? God only
knows what lies between the mistress and her steward, but since this
has transpired--if it is true--I can believe the connection to be
even an unworthy one--a thing I certainly never so much as owned to
myself before.'

3. THE FIFTH OF MARCH

Edward's disclosure had the effect of directing Owen Graye's
thoughts into an entirely new and uncommon channel.

On the Monday after Springrove's visit, Owen had walked to the top
of a hill in the neighbourhood of Tolchurch--a wild hill that had no
name, beside a barren down where it never looked like summer. In
the intensity of his meditations on the ever-present subject, he sat
down on a weather-beaten boundary-stone gazing towards the distant
valleys--seeing only Manston's imagined form.

Had his defenceless sister been trifled with? that was the question
which affected him. Her refusal of Edward as a husband was, he
knew, dictated solely by a humiliated sense of inadequacy to him in
repute, and had not been formed till since the slanderous tale
accounting for her seclusion had been circulated. Was it not true,
as Edward had hinted, that he, her brother, was neglecting his duty
towards her in allowing Manston to thrive unquestioned, whilst she
was hiding her head for no fault at all?

Was it possible that Manston was sensuous villain enough to have
contemplated, at any moment before the marriage with Cytherea, the
return of his first wife, when he should have grown weary of his new
toy? Had he believed that, by a skilful manipulation of such
circumstances as chance would throw in his way, he could escape all
suspicion of having known that she lived? Only one fact within his
own direct knowledge afforded the least ground for such a
supposition. It was that, possessed by a woman only in the humble
and unprotected station of a lady's hired companion, his sister's
beauty might scarcely have been sufficient to induce a selfish man
like Manston to make her his wife, unless he had foreseen the
possibility of getting rid of her again.

'But for that stratagem of Manston's in relation to the
Springroves,' Owen thought, 'Cythie might now have been the happy
wife of Edward. True, that he influenced Miss Aldclyffe only rests
on Edward's suspicions, but the grounds are good--the probability is
strong.'

He went indoors and questioned Cytherea.

'On the night of the fire, who first said that Mrs. Manston was
burnt?' he asked.

'I don't know who started the report.'

'Was it Manston?'

'It was certainly not he. All doubt on the subject was removed
before he came to the spot--that I am certain of. Everybody knew
that she did not escape _after_ the house was on fire, and thus all
overlooked the fact that she might have left before--of course that
would have seemed such an improbable thing for anybody to do.'

'Yes, until the porter's story of her irritation and doubt as to her
course made it natural.'

'What settled the matter at the inquest,' said Cytherea, 'was Mr.
Manston's evidence that the watch was his wife's.'

'He was sure of that, wasn't he?'

'I believe he said he was certain of it.'

'It might have been hers--left behind in her perturbation, as they
say it was--impossible as that seems at first sight. Yes--on the
whole, he might have believed in her death.'

'I know by several proofs that then, and at least for some time
after, he had no other thought than that she was dead. I now think
that before the porter's confession he knew something about her
--though not that she lived.'

'Why do you?'

'From what he said to me on the evening of the wedding-day, when I
had fastened myself in the room at the hotel, after Edward's visit.
He must have suspected that I knew something, for he was irritated,
and in a passion of uneasy doubt. He said, "You don't suppose my
first wife is come to light again, madam, surely?" Directly he had
let the remark slip out, he seemed anxious to withdraw it.'

'That's odd,' said Owen.

'I thought it very odd.'

'Still we must remember he might only have hit upon the thought by
accident, in doubt as to your motive. Yes, the great point to
discover remains the same as ever--did he doubt his first impression
of her death _before_ he married you. I can't help thinking he did,
although he was so astounded at our news that night. Edward swears
he did.'

'It was perhaps only a short time before,' said Cytherea; 'when he
could hardly recede from having me.

'Seasoning justice with mercy as usual, Cytherea. 'Tis unfair to
yourself to talk like that. If I could only bring him to ruin as a
bigamist--supposing him to be one--I should die happy. That's what
we must find out by fair means or foul--was he a wilful bigamist?'

'It is no use trying, Owen. You would have to employ a solicitor,
and how can you do that?'

'I can't at all--I know that very well. But neither do I altogether
wish to at present--a lawyer must have a case--facts to go upon,
that means. Now they are scarce at present--as scarce as money is
with us, and till we have found more money there is no hurry for a
lawyer. Perhaps by the time we have the facts we shall have the
money. The only thing we lose in working alone in this way, is
time--not the issue: for the fruit that one mind matures in a
twelvemonth forms a more perfectly organized whole than that of
twelve minds in one month, especially if the interests of the single
one are vitally concerned, and those of the twelve are only hired.
But there is not only my mind available--you are a shrewd woman,
Cythie, and Edward is an earnest ally. Then, if we really get a
sure footing for a criminal prosecution, the Crown will take up the
case.'

'I don't much care to press on in the matter,' she murmured. 'What
good can it do us, Owen, after all?'

'Selfishly speaking, it will do this good--that all the facts of
your journey to Southampton will become known, and the scandal will
die. Besides, Manston will have to suffer--it's an act of justice
to you and to other women, and to Edward Springrove.'

He now thought it necessary to tell her of the real nature of the
Springroves' obligation to Miss Aldclyffe--and their nearly certain
knowledge that Manston was the prime mover in effecting their
embarrassment. Her face flushed as she listened.

'And now,' he said, 'our first undertaking is to find out where Mrs.
Manston lived during the separation; next, when the first
communications passed between them after the fire.'

'If we only had Miss Aldclyffe's countenance and assistance as I
used to have them,' Cytherea returned, 'how strong we should be! O,
what power is it that he exercises over her, swaying her just as he
wishes! She loves me now. Mrs. Morris in her letter said that Miss
Aldclyffe prayed for me--yes, she heard her praying for me, and
crying. Miss Aldclyffe did not mind an old friend like Mrs. Morris
knowing it, either. Yet in opposition to this, notice her dead
silence and inaction throughout this proceeding.'

'It is a mystery; but never mind that now,' said Owen impressively.
'About where Mrs. Manston has been living. We must get this part of
it first--learn the place of her stay in the early stage of their
separation, during the period of Manston's arrival here, and so on,
for that was where she was first communicated with on the subject of
coming to Knapwater, before the fire; and that address, too, was her
point of departure when she came to her husband by stealth in the
night--you know--the time I visited you in the evening and went home
early in the morning, and it was found that he had been visited too.
Ah! couldn't we inquire of Mrs. Leat, who keeps the post-office at
Carriford, if she remembers where the letters to Mrs. Manston were
directed?'

'He never posted his letters to her in the parish--it was remarked
at the time. I was thinking if something relating to her address
might not be found in the report of the inquest in the Casterbridge
Chronicle of the date. Some facts about the inquest were given in
the papers to a certainty.'

Her brother caught eagerly at the suggestion. 'Who has a file of
the Chronicles?' he said.

'Mr. Raunham used to file them,' said Cytherea. 'He was rather
friendly-disposed towards me, too.'

Owen could not, on any consideration, escape from his attendance at
the church-building till Saturday evening; and thus it became
necessary, unless they actually wasted time, that Cytherea herself
should assist. 'I act under your orders, Owen,' she said.



XVI. THE EVENTS OF ONE WEEK

1. MARCH THE SIXTH

The next morning the opening move of the game was made. Cytherea,
under cover of a thick veil, hired a conveyance and drove to within
a mile or so of Carriford. It was with a renewed sense of
depression that she saw again the objects which had become familiar
to her eye during her sojourn under Miss Aldclyffe's roof--the
outline of the hills, the meadow streams, the old park trees. She
hastened by a lonely path to the rectory-house, and asked if Mr.
Raunham was at home.

Now the rector, though a solitary bachelor, was as gallant and
courteous to womankind as an ancient Iberian; and, moreover, he was
Cytherea's friend in particular, to an extent far greater than she
had ever surmised. Rarely visiting his relative, Miss Aldclyffe,
except on parish matters, more rarely still being called upon by
Miss Aldclyffe, Cytherea had learnt very little of him whilst she
lived at Knapwater. The relationship was on the impecunious
paternal side, and for this branch of her family the lady of the
estate had never evinced much sympathy. In looking back upon our
line of descent it is an instinct with us to feel that all our
vitality was drawn from the richer party to any unequal marriage in
the chain.

Since the death of the old captain, the rector's bearing in
Knapwater House had been almost that of a stranger, a circumstance
which he himself was the last man in the world to regret. This
polite indifference was so frigid on both sides that the rector did
not concern himself to preach at her, which was a great deal in a
rector; and she did not take the trouble to think his sermons poor
stuff, which in a cynical woman was a great deal more.

Though barely fifty years of age, his hair was as white as snow,
contrasting strangely with the redness of his skin, which was as
fresh and healthy as a lad's. Cytherea's bright eyes, mutely and
demurely glancing up at him Sunday after Sunday, had been the means
of driving away many of the saturnine humours that creep into an
empty heart during the hours of a solitary life; in this case,
however, to supplant them, when she left his parish, by those others
of a more aching nature which accompany an over-full one. In short,
he had been on the verge of feeling towards her that passion to
which his dignified self-respect would not give its true name, even
in the privacy of his own thought.

He received her kindly; but she was not disposed to be frank with
him. He saw her wish to be reserved, and with genuine good taste
and good nature made no comment whatever upon her request to be
allowed to see the Chronicle for the year before the last. He
placed the papers before her on his study table, with a timidity as
great as her own, and then left her entirely to herself.

She turned them over till she came to the first heading connected
with the subject of her search--'Disastrous Fire and Loss of Life at
Carriford.'

The sight, and its calamitous bearing upon her own life, made her so
dizzy that she could, for a while, hardly decipher the letters.
Stifling recollection by an effort she nerved herself to her work,
and carefully read the column. The account reminded her of no other
fact than was remembered already.

She turned on to the following week's report of the inquest. After
a miserable perusal she could find no more pertaining to Mrs.
Manston's address than this:--

'ABRAHAM BROWN, of Hoxton, London, at whose house the deceased woman
had been living, deposed,' etc.

Nobody else from London had attended the inquest. She arose to
depart, first sending a message of thanks to Mr. Raunham, who was
out of doors gardening.

He stuck his spade into the ground, and accompanied her to the gate.

'Can I help you in anything, Cytherea?' he said, using her Christian
name by an intuition that unpleasant memories might be revived if he
called her Miss Graye after wishing her good-bye as Mrs. Manston at
the wedding. Cytherea saw the motive and appreciated it,
nevertheless replying evasively--

'I only guess and fear.'

He earnestly looked at her again.

'Promise me that if you want assistance, and you think I can give
it, you will come to me.'

'I will,' she said.

The gate closed between them.

'You don't want me to help you in anything now, Cytherea?' he
repeated.

If he had spoken what he felt, 'I want very much to help you,
Cytherea, and have been watching Manston on your account,' she would
gladly have accepted his offer. As it was, she was perplexed, and
raised her eyes to his, not so fearlessly as before her trouble, but
as modestly, and with still enough brightness in them to do fearful
execution as she said over the gate--

'No, thank you.'

She returned to Tolchurch weary with her day's work. Owen's
greeting was anxious--

'Well, Cytherea?'

She gave him the words from the report of the inquest, pencilled on
a slip of paper.

'Now to find out the name of the street and number,' Owen remarked.

'Owen,' she said, 'will you forgive me for what I am going to say?
I don't think I can--indeed I don't think I can--take any further
steps towards disentangling the mystery. I still think it a useless
task, and it does not seem any duty of mine to be revenged upon Mr.
Manston in any way.' She added more gravely, 'It is beneath my
dignity as a woman to labour for this; I have felt it so all day.'

'Very well,' he said, somewhat shortly; 'I shall work without you
then. There's dignity in justice.' He caught sight of her pale
tired face, and the dilated eye which always appeared in her with
weariness. 'Darling,' he continued warmly, and kissing her, 'you
shall not work so hard again--you are worn out quite. But you must
let me do as I like.'

2. MARCH THE TENTH

On Saturday evening Graye hurried off to Casterbridge, and called at
the house of the reporter to the Chronicle. The reporter was at
home, and came out to Graye in the passage. Owen explained who and
what he was, and asked the man if he would oblige him by turning to
his notes of the inquest at Carriford in the December of the year
preceding the last--just adding that a family entanglement, of which
the reporter probably knew something, made him anxious to ascertain
some additional details of the event, if any existed.

'Certainly,' said the other, without hesitation; 'though I am afraid
I haven't much beyond what we printed at the time. Let me see--my
old note-books are in my drawer at the office of the paper: if you
will come with me I can refer to them there.' His wife and family
were at tea inside the room, and with the timidity of decent poverty
everywhere he seemed glad to get a stranger out of his domestic
groove.

They crossed the street, entered the office, and went thence to an
inner room. Here, after a short search, was found the book
required. The precise address, not given in the condensed report
that was printed, but written down by the reporter, was as follows:--


     'ABRAHAM BROWN,
          LODGING-HOUSE KEEPER,
              41 CHARLES SQUARE,
                   HOXTON.'


Owen copied it, and gave the reporter a small fee. 'I want to keep
this inquiry private for the present,' he said hesitatingly. 'You
will perhaps understand why, and oblige me.'

The reporter promised. 'News is shop with me,' he said, 'and to
escape from handling it is my greatest social enjoyment.'

It was evening, and the outer room of the publishing-office was
lighted up with flaring jets of gas. After making the above remark,
the reporter came out from the inner apartment in Graye's company,
answering an expression of obligation from Owen with the words that
it was no trouble. At the moment of his speech, he closed behind
him the door between the two rooms, still holding his note-book in
his hand.

Before the counter of the front room stood a tall man, who was also
speaking, when they emerged. He said to the youth in attendance, 'I
will take my paper for this week now I am here, so that you needn't
post it to me.'

The stranger then slightly turned his head, saw Owen, and recognized
him. Owen passed out without recognizing the other as Manston.

Manston then looked at the reporter, who, after walking to the door
with Owen, had come back again to lock up his books. Manston did
not need to be told that the shabby marble-covered book which he
held in his hand, opening endways and interleaved with
blotting-paper, was an old reporting-book. He raised his eyes to the
reporter's face, whose experience had not so schooled his features
but that they betrayed a consciousness, to one half initiated as the
other was, that his late proceeding had been connected with events
in the life of the steward. Manston said no more, but, taking his
newspaper, followed Owen from the office, and disappeared in the
gloom of the street.

Edward Springrove was now in London again, and on this same evening,
before leaving Casterbridge, Owen wrote a careful letter to him,
stating therein all the facts that had come to his knowledge, and
begging him, as he valued Cytherea, to make cautious inquiries. A
tall man was standing under the lamp-post, about half-a-dozen yards
above the post-office, when he dropped the letter into the box.

That same night, too, for a reason connected with the rencounter
with Owen Graye, the steward entertained the idea of rushing off
suddenly to London by the mail-train, which left Casterbridge at ten
o'clock. But remembering that letters posted after the hour at
which Owen had obtained his information--whatever that was--could
not be delivered in London till Monday morning, he changed his mind
and went home to Knapwater. Making a confidential explanation to
his wife, arrangements were set on foot for his departure by the
mail on Sunday night.

3. MARCH THE ELEVENTH

Starting for church the next morning several minutes earlier than
was usual with him, the steward intentionally loitered along the
road from the village till old Mr. Springrove overtook him. Manston
spoke very civilly of the morning, and of the weather, asking how
the farmer's barometer stood, and when it was probable that the wind
might change. It was not in Mr. Springrove's nature--going to
church as he was, too--to return anything but a civil answer to such
civil questions, however his feelings might have been biassed by
late events. The conversation was continued on terms of greater
friendliness.

'You must be feeling settled again by this time, Mr. Springrove,
after the rough turn-out you had on that terrible night in
November.'

'Ay, but I don't know about feeling settled, either, Mr. Manston.
The old window in the chimney-corner of the old house I shall never
forget. No window in the chimney-corner where I am now, and I had
been used to it for more than fifty years. Ted says 'tis a great
loss to me, and he knows exactly what I feel.'

'Your son is again in a good situation, I believe?' said Manston,
imitating that inquisitiveness into the private affairs of the
natives which passes for high breeding in country villages.

'Yes, sir. I hope he'll keep it, or do something else and stick to
it.'

''Tis to be hoped he'll be steady now.'

'He's always been that, I assure 'ee,' said the old man tartly.

'Yes--yes--I mean intellectually steady. Intellectual wild oats
will thrive in a soil of the strictest morality.'

'Intellectual gingerbread! Ted's steady enough--that's all I know
about it.'

'Of course--of course. Has he respectable lodgings? My own
experience has shown me that that's a great thing to a young man
living alone in London.'

'Warwick Street, Charing Cross--that's where he is.'

'Well, to be sure--strange! A very dear friend of mine used to live
at number fifty-two in that very same street.'

'Edward lives at number forty-nine--how very near being the same
house!' said the old farmer, pleased in spite of himself.

'Very,' said Manston. 'Well, I suppose we had better step along a
little quicker, Mr. Springrove; the parson's bell has just begun.'

'Number forty-nine,' he murmured.

4. MARCH THE TWELFTH

Edward received Owen's letter in due time, but on account of his
daily engagements he could not attend to any request till the clock
had struck five in the afternoon. Rushing then from his office in
Westminster, he called a hansom and proceeded to Hoxton. A few
minutes later he knocked at the door of number forty-one, Charles
Square, the old lodging of Mrs. Manston.

A tall man who would have looked extremely handsome had he not been
clumsily and closely wrapped up in garments that were much too
elderly in style for his years, stood at the corner of the quiet
square at the same instant, having, too, alighted from a cab, that
had been driven along Old Street in Edward's rear. He smiled
confidently when Springrove knocked.

Nobody came to the door. Springrove knocked again.

This brought out two people--one at the door he had been knocking
upon, the other from the next on the right.

'Is Mr. Brown at home?' said Springrove.

'No, sir.'

'When will he be in?'

'Quite uncertain.'

'Can you tell me where I may find him?'

'No. O, here he is coming, sir. That's Mr. Brown.'

Edward looked down the pavement in the direction pointed out by the
woman, and saw a man approaching. He proceeded a few steps to meet
him.

Edward was impatient, and to a certain extent still a countryman,
who had not, after the manner of city men, subdued the natural
impulse to speak out the ruling thought without preface. He said in
a quiet tone to the stranger, 'One word with you--do you remember a
lady lodger of yours of the name of Mrs. Manston?'

Mr. Brown half closed his eyes at Springrove, somewhat as if he were
looking into a telescope at the wrong end.

'I have never let lodgings in my life,' he said, after his survey.

'Didn't you attend an inquest a year and a half ago, at Carriford?'

'Never knew there was such a place in the world, sir; and as to
lodgings, I have taken acres first and last during the last thirty
years, but I have never let an inch.'

'I suppose there is some mistake,' Edward murmured, and turned away.
He and Mr. Brown were now opposite the door next to the one he had
knocked at. The woman who was still standing there had heard the
inquiry and the result of it.

'I expect it is the other Mr. Brown, who used to live there, that
you want, sir,' she said. 'The Mr. Brown that was inquired for the
other day?'

'Very likely that is the man,' said Edward, his interest
reawakening.

'He couldn't make a do of lodging-letting here, and at last he went
to Cornwall, where he came from, and where his brother still lived,
who had often asked him to come home again. But there was little
luck in the change; for after London they say he couldn't stand the
rainy west winds they get there, and he died in the December
following. Will you step into the passage?'

'That's unfortunate,' said Edward, going in. 'But perhaps you
remember a Mrs. Manston living next door to you?'

'O yes,' said the landlady, closing the door. 'The lady who was
supposed to have met with such a horrible fate, and was alive all
the time. I saw her the other day.'

'Since the fire at Carriford?'

'Yes. Her husband came to ask if Mr. Brown was still living here
--just as you might. He seemed anxious about it; and then one
evening, a week or fortnight afterwards, when he came again to make
further inquiries, she was with him. But I did not speak to her
--she stood back, as if she were shy. I was interested, however,
for old Mr. Brown had told me all about her when he came back from
the inquest.'

'Did you know Mrs. Manston before she called the other day?'

'No. You see she was only Mr. Brown's lodger for two or three
weeks, and I didn't know she was living there till she was near upon
leaving again--we don't notice next-door people much here in London.
I much regretted I had not known her when I heard what had happened.
It led me and Mr. Brown to talk about her a great deal afterwards.
I little thought I should see her alive after all.'

'And when do you say they came here together?'

'I don't exactly remember the day--though I remember a very
beautiful dream I had that same night--ah, I shall never forget it!
Shoals of lodgers coming along the square with angels' wings and
bright golden sovereigns in their hands wanting apartments at West
End prices. They would not give any less; no, not if you--'

'Yes. Did Mrs. Manston leave anything, such as papers, when she
left these lodgings originally?' said Edward, though his heart sank
as he asked. He felt that he was outwitted. Manston and his wife
had been there before him, clearing the ground of all traces.

'I have always said "No" hitherto,' replied the woman, 'considering
I could say no more if put upon my oath, as I expected to be. But
speaking in a common everyday way now the occurrence is past, I
believe a few things of some kind (though I doubt if they were
papers) were left in a workbox she had, because she talked about it
to Mr. Brown, and was rather angry at what occurred--you see, she
had a temper by all account, and so I didn't like to remind the lady
of this workbox when she came the other day with her husband.'

'And about the workbox?'

'Well, from what was casually dropped, I think Mrs. Manston had a
few articles of furniture she didn't want, and when she was leaving
they were put in a sale just by. Amongst her things were two
workboxes very much alike. One of these she intended to sell, the
other she didn't, and Mr. Brown, who collected the things together,
took the wrong one to the sale.'

'What was in it?'

'O, nothing in particular, or of any value--some accounts, and her
usual sewing materials I think--nothing more. She didn't take much
trouble to get it back--she said the bills were worth nothing to her
or anybody else, but that she should have liked to keep the box
because her husband gave it her when they were first married, and if
he found she had parted with it, he would be vexed.'

'Did Mrs. Manston, when she called recently with her husband, allude
to this, or inquire for it, or did Mr. Manston?'

'No--and I rather wondered at it. But she seemed to have forgotten
it--indeed, she didn't make any inquiry at all, only standing behind
him, listening to his; and he probably had never been told anything
about it.'

'Whose sale were these articles of hers taken to?'

'Who was the auctioneer? Mr. Halway. His place is the third
turning from the end of that street you see there. Anybody will
tell you the shop--his name is written up.'

Edward went off to follow up his clue with a promptness which was
dictated more by a dogged will to do his utmost than by a hope of
doing much. When he was out of sight, the tall and cloaked man, who
had watched him, came up to the woman's door, with an appearance of
being in breathless haste.

'Has a gentleman been here inquiring about Mrs. Manston?'

'Yes; he's just gone.'

'Dear me! I want him.'

'He's gone to Mr. Halway's.'

'I think I can give him some information upon the subject. Does he
pay pretty liberally?'

'He gave me half-a-crown.'

'That scale will do. I'm a poor man, and will see what my little
contribution to his knowledge will fetch. But, by the way, perhaps
you told him all I know--where she lived before coming to live
here?'

'I didn't know where she lived before coming here. O no--I only
said what Mr. Brown had told me. He seemed a nice, gentle young
man, or I shouldn't have been so open as I was.'

'I shall now about catch him at Mr. Halway's,' said the man, and
went away as hastily as he had come.

Edward in the meantime had reached the auction-room. He found some
difficulty, on account of the inertness of those whose only
inducement to an action is a mere wish from another, in getting the
information he stood in need of, but it was at last accorded him.
The auctioneer's book gave the name of Mrs. Higgins, 3 Canley
Passage, as the purchaser of the lot which had included Mrs.
Manston's workbox.

Thither Edward went, followed by the man. Four bell pulls, one
above the other like waistcoat-buttons, appeared on the door-post.
Edward seized the first he came to.

'Who did you woant?' said a thin voice from somewhere.

Edward looked above and around him; nobody was visible.

'Who did you woant?' said the thin voice again.

He found now that the sound proceeded from below the grating
covering the basement window. He dropped his glance through the
bars, and saw a child's white face.

'Who did you woant?' said the voice the third time, with precisely
the same languid inflection.

'Mrs. Higgins,' said Edward.

'Third bell up,' said the face, and disappeared.

He pulled the third bell from the bottom, and was admitted by
another child, the daughter of the woman he was in search of. He
gave the little thing sixpence, and asked for her mamma. The child
led him upstairs.

Mrs. Higgins was the wife of a carpenter who from want of employment
one winter had decided to marry. Afterwards they both took to
drink, and sank into desperate circumstances. A few chairs and a
table were the chief articles of furniture in the third-floor back
room which they occupied. A roll of baby-linen lay on the floor;
beside it a pap-clogged spoon and an overturned tin pap-cup.
Against the wall a Dutch clock was fixed out of level, and ticked
wildly in longs and shorts, its entrails hanging down beneath its
white face and wiry hands, like the faeces of a Harpy ('foedissima
ventris proluvies, uncaeque manus, et pallida semper ora'). A baby
was crying against every chair-leg, the whole family of six or seven
being small enough to be covered by a washing-tub. Mrs. Higgins sat
helpless, clothed in a dress which had hooks and eyes in plenty, but
never one opposite the other, thereby rendering the dress almost
useless as a screen to the bosom. No workbox was visible anywhere.

It was a depressing picture of married life among the very poor of a
city. Only for one short hour in the whole twenty-four did husband
and wife taste genuine happiness. It was in the evening, when,
after the sale of some necessary article of furniture, they were
under the influence of a quartern of gin.

Of all the ingenious and cruel satires that from the beginning till
now have been stuck like knives into womankind, surely there is not
one so lacerating to them, and to us who love them, as the trite old
fact, that the most wretched of men can, in the twinkling of an eye,
find a wife ready to be more wretched still for the sake of his
company.

Edward hastened to despatch his errand.

Mrs. Higgins had lately pawned the workbox with other useless
articles of lumber, she said. Edward bought the duplicate of her,
and went downstairs to the pawnbroker's.

In the back division of a musty shop, amid the heterogeneous
collection of articles and odours invariably crowding such places,
he produced his ticket, and with a sense of satisfaction out of all
proportion to the probable worth of his acquisition, took the box
and carried it off under his arm. He attempted to lift the cover as
he walked, but found it locked.

It was dusk when Springrove reached his lodging. Entering his small
sitting-room, the front apartment on the ground floor, he struck a
light, and proceeded to learn if any scrap or mark within or upon
his purchase rendered it of moment to the business in hand.
Breaking open the cover with a small chisel, and lifting the tray,
he glanced eagerly beneath, and found--nothing.

He next discovered that a pocket or portfolio was formed on the
underside of the cover. This he unfastened, and slipping his hand
within, found that it really contained some substance. First he
pulled out about a dozen tangled silk and cotton threads. Under
them were a short household account, a dry moss-rosebud, and an old
pair of carte-de-visite photographs. One of these was a likeness of
Mrs. Manston--'Eunice' being written under it in ink--the other of
Manston himself.

He sat down dispirited. This was all the fruit of his task--not a
single letter, date, or address of any kind to help him--and was it
likely there would be?

However, thinking he would send the fragments, such as they were, to
Graye, in order to satisfy him that he had done his best so far, he
scribbled a line, and put all except the silk and cotton into an
envelope. Looking at his watch, he found it was then twenty minutes
to seven; by affixing an extra stamp he would be enabled to despatch
them by that evening's post. He hastily directed the packet, and
ran with it at once to the post-office at Charing Cross.

On his return he took up the workbox again to examine it more
leisurely. He then found there was also a small cavity in the tray
under the pincushion, which was movable by a bit of ribbon. Lifting
this he uncovered a flattened sprig of myrtle, and a small scrap of
crumpled paper. The paper contained a verse or two in a man's
handwriting. He recognized it as Manston's, having seen notes and
bills from him at his father's house. The stanza was of a
complimentary character, descriptive of the lady who was now
Manston's wife.


                        'EUNICE.

          'Whoso for hours or lengthy days
           Shall catch her aspect's changeful rays,
           Then turn away, can none recall
           Beyond a galaxy of all
               In hazy portraiture;
           Lit by the light of azure eyes
           Like summer days by summer skies:
           Her sweet transitions seem to be
           A kind of pictured melody,
               And not a set contour.
                                      'AE. M.'


To shake, pull, and ransack the box till he had almost destroyed it
was now his natural action. But it contained absolutely nothing
more.

'Disappointed again,' he said, flinging down the box, the bit of
paper, and the withered twig that had lain with it.

Yet valueless as the new acquisition was, on second thoughts he
considered that it would be worth while to make good the statement
in his late note to Graye--that he had sent everything the box
contained except the sewing-thread. Thereupon he enclosed the verse
and myrtle-twig in another envelope, with a remark that he had
overlooked them in his first search, and put it on the table for the
next day's post.

In his hurry and concentration upon the matter that occupied him,
Springrove, on entering his lodging and obtaining a light, had not
waited to pull down the blind or close the shutters. Consequently
all that he had done had been visible from the street. But as on an
average not one person a minute passed along the quiet pavement at
this time of the evening, the discovery of the omission did not much
concern his mind.

But the real state of the case was that a tall man had stood against
the opposite wall and watched the whole of his proceeding. When
Edward came out and went to the Charing Cross post-office, the man
followed him and saw him drop the letter into the box. The stranger
did not further trouble himself to follow Springrove back to his
lodging again.

Manston now knew that there had been photographs of some kind in his
wife's workbox, and though he had not been near enough to see them,
he guessed whose they were. The least reflection told him to whom
they had been sent.

He paused a minute under the portico of the post-office, looking at
the two or three omnibuses stopping and starting in front of him.
Then he rushed along the Strand, through Holywell Street, and on to
Old Boswell Court. Kicking aside the shoeblacks who began to
importune him as he passed under the colonnade, he turned up the
narrow passage to the publishing-office of the Post-Office
Directory. He begged to be allowed to see the Directory of the
south-west counties of England for a moment.

The shopman immediately handed down the volume from a shelf, and
Manston retired with it to the window-bench. He turned to the
county, and then to the parish of Tolchurch. At the end of the
historical and topographical description of the village he read:--

'Postmistress--Mrs. Hurston. Letters received at 6.3O A.M. by
foot-post from Anglebury.'

Returning his thanks, he handed back the book and quitted the
office, thence pursuing his way to an obscure coffee-house by the
Strand, where he now partook of a light dinner. But rest seemed
impossible with him. Some absorbing intention kept his body
continually on the move. He paid his bill, took his bag in his
hand, and went out to idle about the streets and over the river till
the time should have arrived at which the night-mail left the
Waterloo Station, by which train he intended to return homeward.

There exists, as it were, an outer chamber to the mind, in which,
when a man is occupied centrally with the most momentous question of
his life, casual and trifling thoughts are just allowed to wander
softly for an interval, before being banished altogether. Thus,
amid his concentration did Manston receive perceptions of the
individuals about him in the lively thoroughfare of the Strand; tall
men looking insignificant; little men looking great and profound;
lost women of miserable repute looking as happy as the days are
long; wives, happy by assumption, looking careworn and miserable.
Each and all were alike in this one respect, that they followed a
solitary trail like the inwoven threads which form a banner, and all
were equally unconscious of the significant whole they collectively
showed forth.

At ten o'clock he turned into Lancaster Place, crossed the river,
and entered the railway-station, where he took his seat in the down
mail-train, which bore him, and Edward Springrove's letter to Graye,
far away from London.



XVII. THE EVENTS OF ONE DAY

1. MARCH THE THIRTEENTH. THREE TO SIX O'CLOCK A.M.

They entered Anglebury Station in the dead, still time of early
morning, the clock over the booking-office pointing to twenty-five
minutes to three. Manston lingered on the platform and saw the
mail-bags brought out, noticing, as a pertinent pastime, the many
shabby blotches of wax from innumerable seals that had been set upon
their mouths. The guard took them into a fly, and was driven down
the road to the post-office.

It was a raw, damp, uncomfortable morning, though, as yet, little
rain was falling. Manston drank a mouthful from his flask and
walked at once away from the station, pursuing his way through the
gloom till he stood on the side of the town adjoining, at a distance
from the last house in the street of about two hundred yards.

The station road was also the turnpike-road into the country, the
first part of its course being across a heath. Having surveyed the
highway up and down to make sure of its bearing, Manston
methodically set himself to walk backwards and forwards a stone's
throw in each direction. Although the spring was temperate, the
time of day, and the condition of suspense in which the steward
found himself, caused a sensation of chilliness to pervade his frame
in spite of the overcoat he wore. The drizzling rain increased, and
drops from the trees at the wayside fell noisily upon the hard road
beneath them, which reflected from its glassy surface the faint halo
of light hanging over the lamps of the adjacent town.

Here he walked and lingered for two hours, without seeing or hearing
a living soul. Then he heard the market-house clock strike five,
and soon afterwards, quick hard footsteps smote upon the pavement of
the street leading towards him. They were those of the postman for
the Tolchurch beat. He reached the bottom of the street, gave his
bags a final hitch-up, stepped off the pavement, and struck out for
the country with a brisk shuffle.

Manston then turned his back upon the town, and walked slowly on.
In two minutes a flickering light shone upon his form, and the
postman overtook him.

The new-comer was a short, stooping individual of above
five-and-forty, laden on both sides with leather bags large and
small, and carrying a little lantern strapped to his breast, which
cast a tiny patch of light upon the road ahead.

'A tryen mornen for travellers!' the postman cried, in a cheerful
voice, without turning his head or slackening his trot.

'It is, indeed,' said Manston, stepping out abreast of him. 'You
have a long walk every day.'

'Yes--a long walk--for though the distance is only sixteen miles on
the straight--that is, eight to the furthest place and eight back,
what with the ins and outs to the gentlemen's houses, it makes
two-and-twenty for my legs. Two-and-twenty miles a day, how many a
year? I used to reckon it, but I never do now. I don't care to
think o' my wear and tear, now it do begin to tell upon me.'

Thus the conversation was begun, and the postman proceeded to
narrate the different strange events that marked his experience.
Manston grew very friendly.

'Postman, I don't know what your custom is,' he said, after a while;
'but between you and me, I always carry a drop of something warm in
my pocket when I am out on such a morning as this. Try it.' He
handed the bottle of brandy.

'If you'll excuse me, please. I haven't took no stimmilents these
five years.'

''Tis never too late to mend.'

'Against the regulations, I be afraid.'

'Who'll know it?'

'That's true--nobody will know it. Still, honesty's the best
policy.'

'Ah--it is certainly. But, thank God, I've been able to get on
without it yet. You'll surely drink with me?'

'Really, 'tis a'most too early for that sort o' thing--however, to
oblige a friend, I don't object to the faintest shadder of a drop.'
The postman drank, and Manston did the same to a very slight degree.
Five minutes later, when they came to a gate, the flask was pulled
out again.

'Well done!' said the postman, beginning to feel its effect; 'but
guide my soul, I be afraid 'twill hardly do!'

'Not unless 'tis well followed, like any other line you take up,'
said Manston. 'Besides, there's a way of liking a drop of liquor,
and of being good--even religious--at the same time.'

'Ay, for some thimble-and-button in-an-out fellers; but I could
never get into the knack o' it; not I.'

'Well, you needn't be troubled; it isn't necessary for the higher
class of mind to be religious--they have so much common-sense that
they can risk playing with fire.'

'That hits me exactly.'

'In fact, a man I know, who always had no other god but "Me;" and
devoutly loved his neighbour's wife, says now that believing is a
mistake.'

'Well, to be sure! However, believing in God is a mistake made by
very few people, after all.'

'A true remark.'

'Not one Christian in our parish would walk half a mile in a rain
like this to know whether the Scripture had concluded him under sin
or grace.'

'Nor in mine.'

'Ah, you may depend upon it they'll do away wi' Goddymity altogether
afore long, although we've had him over us so many years.'

'There's no knowing.'

'And I suppose the Queen 'ill be done away wi' then. A pretty
concern that'll be! Nobody's head to put on your letters; and then
your honest man who do pay his penny will never be known from your
scamp who don't. O, 'tis a nation!'

'Warm the cockles of your heart, however. Here's the bottle
waiting.'

'I'll oblige you, my friend.'

The drinking was repeated. The postman grew livelier as he went on,
and at length favoured the steward with a song, Manston himself
joining in the chorus.


          'He flung his mallet against the wall,
           Said, "The Lord make churches and chapels to fall,
           And there'll be work for tradesmen all!"
               When Joan's ale was new,
                               My boys,
               When Joan's ale was new.'


'You understand, friend,' the postman added, 'I was originally a
mason by trade: no offence to you if you be a parson?'

'None at all,' said Manston.

The rain now came down heavily, but they pursued their path with
alacrity, the produce of the several fields between which the lane
wound its way being indicated by the peculiar character of the sound
emitted by the falling drops. Sometimes a soaking hiss proclaimed
that they were passing by a pasture, then a patter would show that
the rain fell upon some large-leafed root crop, then a paddling
plash announced the naked arable, the low sound of the wind in their
ears rising and falling with each pace they took.

Besides the small private bags of the county families, which were
all locked, the postman bore the large general budget for the
remaining inhabitants along his beat. At each village or hamlet
they came to, the postman searched for the packet of letters
destined for that place, and thrust it into an ordinary letter-hole
cut in the door of the receiver's cottage--the village post-offices
being mostly kept by old women who had not yet risen, though lights
moving in other cottage windows showed that such people as carters,
woodmen, and stablemen had long been stirring.

The postman had by this time become markedly unsteady, but he still
continued to be too conscious of his duties to suffer the steward to
search the bag. Manston was perplexed, and at lonely points in the
road cast his eyes keenly upon the short bowed figure of the man
trotting through the mud by his side, as if he were half inclined to
run a very great risk indeed.

It frequently happened that the houses of farmers, clergymen, etc.,
lay a short distance up or down a lane or path branching from the
direct track of the postman's journey. To save time and distance,
at the point of junction of some of these paths with the main road,
the gate-post was hollowed out to form a letter-box, in which the
postman deposited his missives in the morning, looking in the box
again in the evening to collect those placed there for the return
post. Tolchurch Vicarage and Farmstead, lying back from the village
street, were served on this principle. This fact the steward now
learnt by conversing with the postman, and the discovery relieved
Manston greatly, making his intentions much clearer to himself than
they had been in the earlier stages of his journey.

They had reached the outskirts of the village. Manston insisted
upon the flask being emptied before they proceeded further. This
was done, and they approached the church, the vicarage, and the
farmhouse in which Owen and Cytherea were living.

The postman paused, fumbled in his bag, took out by the light of his
lantern some half-dozen letters, and tried to sort them. He could
not perform the task.

'We be crippled disciples a b'lieve,' he said, with a sigh and a
stagger.

'Not drunk, but market-merry,' said Manston cheerfully.

'Well done! If I baint so weak that I can't see the clouds--much
less letters. Guide my soul, if so be anybody should tell the
Queen's postmaster-general of me! The whole story will have to go
through Parliament House, and I shall be high-treasoned--as safe as
houses--and be fined, and who'll pay for a poor martel! O, 'tis a
world!'

'Trust in the Lord--he'll pay.'

'He pay a b'lieve! why should he when he didn't drink the drink? He
pay a b'lieve! D'ye think the man's a fool?'

'Well, well, I had no intention of hurting your feelings--but how
was I to know you were so sensitive?'

'True--you were not to know I was so sensitive. Here's a caddle wi'
these letters! Guide my soul, what will Billy do!'

Manston offered his services.

'They are to be divided,' the man said.

'How?' said Manston.

'These, for the village, to be carried on into it: any for the
vicarage or vicarage farm must be left in the box of the gate-post
just here. There's none for the vicarage-house this mornen, but I
saw when I started there was one for the clerk o' works at the new
church. This is it, isn't it?'

He held up a large envelope, directed in Edward Springrove's
handwriting:--

     'MR. O. GRAYE,
          CLERK OF WORKS,
               TOLCHURCH,
                    NEAR ANGLEBURY.'

The letter-box was scooped in an oak gate-post about a foot square.
There was no slit for inserting the letters, by reason of the
opportunity such a lonely spot would have afforded mischievous
peasant-boys of doing damage had such been the case; but at the side
was a small iron door, kept close by an iron reversible strap locked
across it. One side of this strap was painted black, the other
white, and white or black outwards implied respectively that there
were letters inside, or none.

The postman had taken the key from his pocket and was attempting to
insert it in the keyhole of the box. He touched one side, the
other, above, below, but never made a straight hit.

'Let me unlock it,' said Manston, taking the key from the postman.
He opened the box and reached out with his other hand for Owen's
letter.

'No, no. O no--no,' the postman said. 'As one of--Majesty's
servants--care--Majesty's mails--duty--put letters--own hands.' He
slowly and solemnly placed the letter in the small cavity.

'Now lock it,' he said, closing the door.

The steward placed the bar across, with the black side outwards,
signifying 'empty,' and turned the key.

'You've put the wrong side outwards!' said the postman. ''Tisn't
empty.'

'And dropped the key in the mud, so that I can't alter it,' said the
steward, letting something fall.

'What an awkward thing!'

'It is an awkward thing.'

They both went searching in the mud, which their own trampling had
reduced to the consistency of pap, the postman unstrapping his
little lantern from his breast, and thrusting it about, close to the
ground, the rain still drizzling down, and the dawn so tardy on
account of the heavy clouds that daylight seemed delayed
indefinitely. The rays of the lantern were rendered individually
visible upon the thick mist, and seemed almost tangible as they
passed off into it, after illuminating the faces and knees of the
two stooping figures dripping with wet; the postman's cape and
private bags, and the steward's valise, glistening as if they had
been varnished.

'It fell on the grass,' said the postman.

'No; it fell in the mud,' said Manston. They searched again.

'I'm afraid we shan't find it by this light,' said the steward at
length, washing his muddy fingers in the wet grass of the bank.

'I'm afraid we shan't,' said the other, standing up.

'I'll tell you what we had better do,' said Manston. 'I shall be
back this way in an hour or so, and since it was all my fault, I'll
look again, and shall be sure to find it in the daylight. And I'll
hide the key here for you.' He pointed to a spot behind the post.
'It will be too late to turn the index then, as the people will have
been here, so that the box had better stay as it is. The letter
will only be delayed a day, and that will not be noticed; if it is,
you can say you placed the iron the wrong way without knowing it,
and all will be well.'

This was agreed to by the postman as the best thing to be done under
the circumstances, and the pair went on. They had passed the
village and come to a crossroad, when the steward, telling his
companion that their paths now diverged, turned off to the left
towards Carriford.

No sooner was the postman out of sight and hearing than Manston
stalked back to the vicarage letter-box by keeping inside a fence,
and thus avoiding the village; arrived here, he took the key from
his pocket, where it had been concealed all the time, and abstracted
Owen's letter. This done, he turned towards home, by the help of
what he carried in his valise adjusting himself to his ordinary
appearance as he neared the quarter in which he was known.

An hour and half's sharp walking brought him to his own door in
Knapwater Park.

2. EIGHT O'CLOCK A.M.

Seated in his private office he wetted the flap of the stolen
letter, and waited patiently till the adhesive gum could be
loosened. He took out Edward's note, the accounts, the rosebud, and
the photographs, regarding them with the keenest interest and
anxiety.

The note, the accounts, the rosebud, and his own photograph, he
restored to their places again. The other photograph he took
between his finger and thumb, and held it towards the bars of the
grate. There he held it for half-a-minute or more, meditating.

'It is a great risk to run, even for such an end,' he muttered.

Suddenly, impregnated with a bright idea, he jumped up and left the
office for the front parlour. Taking up an album of portraits,
which lay on the table, he searched for three or four likenesses of
the lady who had so lately displaced Cytherea, which were
interspersed among the rest of the collection, and carefully
regarded them. They were taken in different attitudes and styles,
and he compared each singly with that he held in his hand. One of
them, the one most resembling that abstracted from the letter in
general tone, size, and attitude, he selected from the rest, and
returned with it to his office.

Pouring some water into a plate, he set the two portraits afloat
upon it, and sitting down tried to read.

At the end of a quarter of an hour, after several ineffectual
attempts, he found that each photograph would peel from the card on
which it was mounted. This done, he threw into the fire the
original likeness and the recent card, stuck upon the original card
the recent likeness from the album, dried it before the fire, and
placed it in the envelope with the other scraps.

The result he had obtained, then, was this: in the envelope were
now two photographs, both having the same photographer's name on the
back and consecutive numbers attached. At the bottom of the one
which showed his own likeness, his own name was written down; on the
other his wife's name was written; whilst the central feature, and
whole matter to which this latter card and writing referred, the
likeness of a lady mounted upon it, had been changed.

Mrs. Manston entered the room, and begged him to come to breakfast.
He followed her and they sat down. During the meal he told her what
he had done, with scrupulous regard to every detail, and showed her
the result.

'It is indeed a great risk to run,' she said, sipping her tea.

'But it would be a greater not to do it.'

'Yes.'

The envelope was again fastened up as before, and Manston put it in
his pocket and went out. Shortly afterwards he was seen, on
horseback, riding in a direction towards Tolchurch. Keeping to the
fields, as well as he could, for the greater part of the way, he
dropped into the road by the vicarage letter-box, and looking
carefully about, to ascertain that no person was near, he restored
the letter to its nook, placed the key in its hiding-place, as he
had promised the postman, and again rode homewards by a roundabout
way.

3. AFTERNOON

The letter was brought to Owen Graye, the same afternoon, by one of
the vicar's servants who had been to the box with a duplicate key,
as usual, to leave letters for the evening post. The man found that
the index had told falsely that morning for the first time within
his recollection; but no particular attention was paid to the
mistake, as it was considered. The contents of the envelope were
scrutinized by Owen and flung aside as useless.

The next morning brought Springrove's second letter, the existence
of which was unknown to Manston. The sight of Edward's handwriting
again raised the expectations of brother and sister, till Owen had
opened the envelope and pulled out the twig and verse.

'Nothing that's of the slightest use, after all,' he said to her;
'we are as far as ever from the merest shadow of legal proof that
would convict him of what I am morally certain he did, marry you,
suspecting, if not knowing, her to be alive all the time.'

'What has Edward sent?' said Cytherea.

'An old amatory verse in Manston's writing. Fancy,' he said
bitterly, 'this is the strain he addressed her in when they were
courting--as he did you, I suppose.'

He handed her the verse and she read--


                        'EUNICE.

          'Whoso for hours or lengthy days
           Shall catch her aspect's changeful rays,
           Then turn away, can none recall
           Beyond a galaxy of all
               In hazy portraiture;
           Lit by the light of azure eyes
           Like summer days by summer skies:
           Her sweet transitions seem to be
           A kind of pictured melody,
               And not a set contour.
                                      'AE. M.'


A strange expression had overspread Cytherea's countenance. It
rapidly increased to the most death-like anguish. She flung down
the paper, seized Owen's hand tremblingly, and covered her face.

'Cytherea! What is it, for Heaven's sake?'

'Owen--suppose--O, you don't know what I think.'

'What?'

'"_The light of azure eyes_,"' she repeated with ashy lips.

'Well, "the light of azure eyes"?' he said, astounded at her manner.

'Mrs. Morris said in her letter to me that her eyes are _black_!'

'H'm. Mrs. Morris must have made a mistake--nothing likelier.'

'She didn't.'

'They might be either in this photograph,' said Owen, looking at the
card bearing Mrs. Manston's name.

'Blue eyes would scarcely photograph so deep in tone as that,' said
Cytherea. 'No, they seem black here, certainly.'

'Well, then, Manston must have blundered in writing his verses.'

'But could he? Say a man in love may forget his own name, but not
that he forgets the colour of his mistress's eyes. Besides she
would have seen the mistake when she read them, and have had it
corrected.'

'That's true, she would,' mused Owen. 'Then, Cytherea, it comes to
this--you must have been misinformed by Mrs. Morris, since there is
no other alternative.'

'I suppose I must.'

Her looks belied her words.

'What makes you so strange--ill?' said Owen again.

'I can't believe Mrs. Morris wrong.'

'But look at this, Cytherea. If it is clear to us that the woman
had blue eyes two years ago, she _must_ have blue eyes now,
whatever Mrs. Morris or anybody else may fancy. Any one would
think that Manston could change the colour of a woman's eyes to
hear you.'

'Yes,' she said, and paused.

'You say yes, as if he could,' said Owen impatiently.

'By changing the woman herself,' she exclaimed. 'Owen, don't you
see the horrid--what I dread?--that the woman he lives with is not
Mrs. Manston--that she was burnt after all--and that I am _his
wife_!'

She tried to support a stoicism under the weight of this new
trouble, but no! The unexpected revulsion of ideas was so
overwhelming that she crept to him and leant against his breast.

Before reflecting any further upon the subject Graye led her
upstairs and got her to lie down. Then he went to the window and
stared out of it up the lane, vainly endeavouring to come to some
conclusion upon the fantastic enigma that confronted him.
Cytherea's new view seemed incredible, yet it had such a hold upon
her that it would be necessary to clear it away by positive proof
before contemplation of her fear should have preyed too deeply upon
her.

'Cytherea,' he said, 'this will not do. You must stay here alone
all the afternoon whilst I go to Carriford. I shall know all when I
return.'

'No, no, don't go!' she implored.

'Soon, then, not directly.' He saw her subtle reasoning--that it
was folly to be wise.

Reflection still convinced him that good would come of persevering
in his intention and dispelling his sister's idle fears. Anything
was better than this absurd doubt in her mind. But he resolved to
wait till Sunday, the first day on which he might reckon upon seeing
Mrs. Manston without suspicion. In the meantime he wrote to Edward
Springrove, requesting him to go again to Mrs. Manston's former
lodgings.



XVIII. THE EVENTS OF THREE DAYS

1. MARCH THE EIGHTEENTH

Sunday morning had come, and Owen was trudging over the six miles of
hill and dale that lay between Tolchurch and Carriford.

Edward Springrove's answer to the last letter, after expressing
his amazement at the strange contradiction between the verses and
Mrs. Morris's letter, had been to the effect that he had again
visited the neighbour of the dead Mr. Brown, and had received as
near a description of Mrs. Manston as it was possible to get at
second-hand, and by hearsay. She was a tall woman, wide at the
shoulders, and full-chested, and she had a straight and rather
large nose. The colour of her eyes the informant did not know,
for she had only seen the lady in the street as she went in or out.
This confusing remark was added. The woman had almost recognized Mrs.
Manston when she had called with her husband lately, but she had
kept her veil down. Her residence, before she came to Hoxton, was
quite unknown to this next-door neighbour, and Edward could get no
manner of clue to it from any other source.

Owen reached the church-door a few minutes before the bells began
chiming. Nobody was yet in the church, and he walked round the
aisles. From Cytherea's frequent description of how and where
herself and others used to sit, he knew where to look for Manston's
seat; and after two or three errors of examination he took up a
prayer-book in which was written 'Eunice Manston.' The book was
nearly new, and the date of the writing about a month earlier. One
point was at any rate established: that the woman living with
Manston was presented to the world as no other than his lawful wife.

The quiet villagers of Carriford required no pew-opener in their
place of worship: natives and in-dwellers had their own seats, and
strangers sat where they could. Graye took a seat in the nave, on
the north side, close behind a pillar dividing it from the north
aisle, which was completely allotted to Miss Aldclyffe, her farmers,
and her retainers, Manston's pew being in the midst of them. Owen's
position on the other side of the passage was a little in advance of
Manston's seat, and so situated that by leaning forward he could
look directly into the face of any person sitting there, though, if
he sat upright, he was wholly hidden from such a one by the
intervening pillar.

Aiming to keep his presence unknown to Manston if possible, Owen
sat, without once turning his head, during the entrance of the
congregation. A rustling of silk round by the north passage and
into Manston's seat, told him that some woman had entered there, and
as it seemed from the accompaniment of heavier footsteps, Manston
was with her.

Immediately upon rising up, he looked intently in that direction,
and saw a lady standing at the end of the seat nearest himself.
Portions of Manston's figure appeared on the other side of her. In
two glances Graye read thus many of her characteristics, and in the
following order:--

She was a tall woman.

She was broad at the shoulders.

She was full-bosomed.

She was easily recognizable from the photograph but nothing could be
discerned of the colour of her eyes.

With a preoccupied mind he withdrew into his nook, and heard the
service continued--only conscious of the fact that in opposition to
the suspicion which one odd circumstance had bred in his sister
concerning this woman, all ostensible and ordinary proofs and
probabilities tended to the opposite conclusion. There sat the
genuine original of the portrait--could he wish for more? Cytherea
wished for more. Eunice Manston's eyes were blue, and it was
necessary that this woman's eyes should be blue also.

Unskilled labour wastes in beating against the bars ten times the
energy exerted by the practised hand in the effective direction.
Owen felt this to be the case in his own and Edward's attempts to
follow up the clue afforded them. Think as he might, he could not
think of a crucial test in the matter absorbing him, which should
possess the indispensable attribute--a capability of being applied
privately; that in the event of its proving the lady to be the
rightful owner of the name she used, he might recede without obloquy
from an untenable position.

But to see Mrs. Manston's eyes from where he sat was impossible, and
he could do nothing in the shape of a direct examination at present.
Miss Aldclyffe had possibly recognized him, but Manston had not, and
feeling that it was indispensable to keep the purport of his visit a
secret from the steward, he thought it would be as well, too, to
keep his presence in the village a secret from him; at any rate,
till the day was over.

At the first opening of the doors, Graye left the church and
wandered away into the fields to ponder on another scheme. He could
not call on Farmer Springrove, as he had intended, until this matter
was set at rest. Two hours intervened between the morning and
afternoon services.

This time had nearly expired before Owen had struck out any method
of proceeding, or could decide to run the risk of calling at the Old
House and asking to see Mrs. Manston point-blank. But he had drawn
near the place, and was standing still in the public path, from
which a partial view of the front of the building could be obtained,
when the bells began chiming for afternoon service. Whilst Graye
paused, two persons came from the front door of the half-hidden
dwelling whom he presently saw to be Manston and his wife. Manston
was wearing his old garden-hat, and carried one of the monthly
magazines under his arm. Immediately they had passed the gateway he
branched off and went over the hill in a direction away from the
church, evidently intending to ramble along, and read as the humour
moved him. The lady meanwhile turned in the other direction, and
went into the church path.

Owen resolved to make something of this opportunity. He hurried
along towards the church, doubled round a sharp angle, and came back
upon the other path, by which Mrs. Manston must arrive.

In about three minutes she appeared in sight without a veil. He
discovered, as she drew nearer, a difficulty which had not struck
him at first--that it is not an easy matter to particularize the
colour of a stranger's eyes in a merely casual encounter on a path
out of doors. That Mrs. Manston must be brought close to him, and
not only so, but to look closely at him, if his purpose were to be
accomplished.

He shaped a plan. It might by chance be effectual; if otherwise, it
would not reveal his intention to her. When Mrs. Manston was within
speaking distance, he went up to her and said--

'Will you kindly tell me which turning will take me to Casterbridge?'

'The second on the right,' said Mrs. Manston.

Owen put on a blank look: he held his hand to his ear--conveying to
the lady the idea that he was deaf.

She came closer and said more distinctly--

'The second turning on the right.'

Owen flushed a little. He fancied he had beheld the revelation he
was in search of. But had his eyes deceived him?

Once more he used the ruse, still drawing nearer and intimating by a
glance that the trouble he gave her was very distressing to him.

'How very deaf!' she murmured. She exclaimed loudly--

'_The second turning to the right_.'

She had advanced her face to within a foot of his own, and in
speaking mouthed very emphatically, fixing her eyes intently upon
his. And now his first suspicion was indubitably confirmed. Her
eyes were as black as midnight.

All this feigning was most distasteful to Graye. The riddle having
been solved, he unconsciously assumed his natural look before she
had withdrawn her face. She found him to be peering at her as if he
would read her very soul--expressing with his eyes the notification
of which, apart from emotion, the eyes are more capable than any
other--inquiry.

Her face changed its expression--then its colour. The natural tint
of the lighter portions sank to an ashy gray; the pink of her cheeks
grew purpler. It was the precise result which would remain after
blood had left the face of one whose skin was dark, and artificially
coated with pearl-powder and carmine.

She turned her head and moved away, murmuring a hasty reply to
Owen's farewell remark of 'Good-day,' and with a kind of nervous
twitch lifting her hand and smoothing her hair, which was of a
light-brown colour.

'She wears false hair,' he thought, 'or has changed its colour
artificially. Her true hair matched her eyes.'

And now, in spite of what Mr. Brown's neighbours had said about
nearly recognizing Mrs. Manston on her recent visit--which might
have meant anything or nothing; in spite of the photograph, and in
spite of his previous incredulity; in consequence of the verse, of
her silence and backwardness at the visit to Hoxton with Manston,
and of her appearance and distress at the present moment, Graye had
a conviction that the woman was an impostor.

What could be Manston's reason for such an astounding trick he could
by no stretch of imagination divine.

He changed his direction as soon as the woman was out of sight, and
plodded along the lanes homeward to Tolchurch.

One new idea was suggested to him by his desire to allay Cytherea's
dread of being claimed, and by the difficulty of believing that the
first Mrs. Manston lost her life as supposed, notwithstanding the
inquest and verdict. Was it possible that the real Mrs. Manston,
who was known to be a Philadelphian by birth, had returned by the
train to London, as the porter had said, and then left the country
under an assumed name, to escape that worst kind of widowhood--the
misery of being wedded to a fickle, faithless, and truant husband?



In her complicated distress at the news brought by her brother,
Cytherea's thoughts at length reverted to her friend, the Rector of
Carriford. She told Owen of Mr. Raunham's warm-hearted behaviour
towards herself, and of his strongly expressed wish to aid her.

'He is not only a good, but a sensible man. We seem to want an old
head on our side.'

'And he is a magistrate,' said Owen in a tone of concurrence. He
thought, too, that no harm could come of confiding in the rector,
but there was a difficulty in bringing about the confidence. He
wished that his sister and himself might both be present at an
interview with Mr. Raunham, yet it would be unwise for them to call
on him together, in the sight of all the servants and parish of
Carriford.

There could be no objection to their writing him a letter.

No sooner was the thought born than it was carried out. They wrote
to him at once, asking him to have the goodness to give them some
advice they sadly needed, and begging that he would accept their
assurance that there was a real justification for the additional
request they made--that instead of their calling upon him, he would
any evening of the week come to their cottage at Tolchurch.

2. MARCH THE TWENTIETH. SIX TO NINE O'CLOCK P.M.

Two evenings later, to the total disarrangement of his dinner-hour,
Mr. Raunham appeared at Owen's door. His arrival was hailed with
genuine gratitude. The horse was tied to the palings, and the
rector ushered indoors and put into the easy-chair.

Then Graye told him the whole story, reminding him that their first
suspicions had been of a totally different nature, and that in
endeavouring to obtain proof of their truth they had stumbled upon
marks which had surprised them into these new uncertainties, thrice
as marvellous as the first, yet more prominent.

Cytherea's heart was so full of anxiety that it superinduced a
manner of confidence which was a death-blow to all formality. Mr.
Raunham took her hand pityingly.

'It is a serious charge,' he said, as a sort of original twig on
which his thoughts might precipitate themselves.

'Assuming for a moment that such a substitution was rendered an easy
matter by fortuitous events,' he continued, 'there is this
consideration to be placed beside it--what earthly motive can Mr.
Manston have had which would be sufficiently powerful to lead him to
run such a very great risk? The most abandoned roue could not, at
that particular crisis, have taken such a reckless step for the mere
pleasure of a new companion.'

Owen had seen that difficulty about the motive; Cytherea had not.

'Unfortunately for us,' the rector resumed, 'no more evidence is to
be obtained from the porter, Chinney. I suppose you know what
became of him? He got to Liverpool and embarked, intending to work
his way to America, but on the passage he fell overboard and was
drowned. But there is no doubt of the truth of his confession--in
fact, his conduct tends to prove it true--and no moral doubt of the
fact that the real Mrs. Manston left here to go back by that
morning's train. This being the case, then, why, if this woman is
not she, did she take no notice of the advertisement--I mean not
necessarily a friendly notice, but from the information it afforded
her have rendered it impossible that she should be personified
without her own connivance?'

'I think that argument is overthrown,' Graye said, 'by my earliest
assumption of her hatred of him, weariness of the chain which bound
her to him, and a resolve to begin the world anew. Let's suppose
she has married another man--somewhere abroad, say; she would be
silent for her own sake.'

'You've hit the only genuine possibility,' said Mr. Raunham, tapping
his finger upon his knee. 'That would decidedly dispose of the
second difficulty. But his motive would be as mysterious as ever.'

Cytherea's pictured dreads would not allow her mind to follow their
conversation. 'She's burnt,' she said. 'O yes; I fear--I fear she
is!'

'I don't think we can seriously believe that now, after what has
happened,' said the rector.

Still straining her thought towards the worst, 'Then, perhaps, the
first Mrs. Manston was not his wife,' she returned; 'and then I
should be his wife just the same, shouldn't I?'

'They were married safely enough,' said Owen. 'There is abundance
of circumstantial evidence to prove that.'

'Upon the whole,' said Mr. Raunham, 'I should advise your asking in
a straightforward way for legal proof from the steward that the
present woman is really his original wife--a thing which, to my
mind, you should have done at the outset.' He turned to Cytherea
kindly, and asked her what made her give up her husband so
unceremoniously.

She could not tell the rector of her aversion to Manston, and of her
unquenched love for Edward.

'Your terrified state no doubt,' he said, answering for her, in the
manner of those accustomed to the pulpit. 'But into such a solemn
compact as marriage, all-important considerations, both legally and
morally, enter; it was your duty to have seen everything clearly
proved. Doubtless Mr. Manston is prepared with proofs, but as it
concerns nobody but yourself that her identity should be publicly
established (and by your absenteeism you act as if you were
satisfied) he has not troubled to exhibit them. Nobody else has
taken the trouble to prove what does not affect them in the least
--that's the way of the world always. You, who should have required
all things to be made clear, ran away.'

'That was partly my doing,' said Owen.

The same explanation--her want of love for Manston--applied here
too, but she shunned the revelation.

'But never mind,' added the rector, 'it was all the greater credit
to your womanhood, perhaps. I say, then, get your brother to write
a line to Mr. Manston, saying you wish to be satisfied that all is
legally clear (in case you should want to marry again, for
instance), and I have no doubt that you will be. Or, if you would
rather, I'll write myself?'

'O no, sir, no,' pleaded Cytherea, beginning to blanch, and
breathing quickly. 'Please don't say anything. Let me live here
with Owen. I am so afraid it will turn out that I shall have to go
to Knapwater and be his wife, and I don't want to go. Do conceal
what we have told you. Let him continue his deception--it is much
the best for me.'

Mr. Raunham at length divined that her love for Manston, if it had
ever existed, had transmuted itself into a very different feeling
now.

'At any rate,' he said, as he took his leave and mounted his mare,
'I will see about it. Rest content, Miss Graye, and depend upon it
that I will not lead you into difficulty.'

'Conceal it,' she still pleaded.

'We'll see--but of course I must do my duty.'

'No--don't do your duty!' She looked up at him through the gloom,
illuminating her own face and eyes with the candle she held.

'I will consider, then,' said Mr. Raunham, sensibly moved. He
turned his horse's head, bade them a warm adieu, and left the door.

The rector of Carriford trotted homewards under the cold and clear
March sky, its countless stars fluttering like bright birds. He was
unconscious of the scene. Recovering from the effect of Cytherea's
voice and glance of entreaty, he laid the subject of the interview
clearly before himself.

The suspicions of Cytherea and Owen were honest, and had foundation
--that he must own. Was he--a clergyman, magistrate, and
conscientious man--justified in yielding to Cytherea's importunities
to keep silence, because she dreaded the possibility of a return to
Manston? Was she wise in her request? Holding her present belief,
and with no definite evidence either way, she could, for one thing,
never conscientiously marry any one else. Suppose that Cytherea
were Manston's wife--i.e., that the first wife was really burnt?
The adultery of Manston would be proved, and, Mr. Raunham thought,
cruelty sufficient to bring the case within the meaning of the
statute. Suppose the new woman was, as stated, Mr. Manston's
restored wife? Cytherea was perfectly safe as a single woman whose
marriage had been void. And if it turned out that, though this
woman was not Manston's wife, his wife was still living, as Owen had
suggested, in America or elsewhere, Cytherea was safe.

The first supposition opened up the worst contingency. Was she
really safe as Manston's wife? Doubtful. But, however that might
be, the gentle, defenceless girl, whom it seemed nobody's business
to help or defend, should be put in a track to proceed against this
man. She had but one life, and the superciliousness with which all
the world now regarded her should be compensated in some measure by
the man whose carelessness--to set him in the best light--had caused
it.

Mr. Raunham felt more and more positively that his duty must be
done. An inquiry must be made into the matter. Immediately on
reaching home, he sat down and wrote a plain and friendly letter to
Mr. Manston, and despatched it at once to him by hand. Then he
flung himself back in his chair, and went on with his meditation.
Was there anything in the suspicion? There could be nothing,
surely. Nothing is done by a clever man without a motive, and what
conceivable motive could Manston have for such abnormal conduct?
Corinthian that he might be, who had preyed on virginity like St.
George's dragon, he would never have been absurd enough to venture
on such a course for the possession alone of the woman--there was no
reason for it--she was inferior to Cytherea in every respect,
physical and mental.

On the other hand, it seemed rather odd, when he analyzed the
action, that a woman who deliberately hid herself from her husband
for more than a twelvemonth should be brought back by a mere
advertisement. In fact, the whole business had worked almost too
smoothly and effectually for unpremeditated sequence. It was too
much like the indiscriminate righting of everything at the end of an
old play. And there was that curious business of the keys and
watch. Her way of accounting for their being left behind by
forgetfulness had always seemed to him rather forced. The only
unforced explanation was that suggested by the newspaper writers
--that she left them behind on purpose to blind people as to her
escape, a motive which would have clashed with the possibility of
her being fished back by an advertisement, as the present woman had
been. Again, there were the two charred bones. He shuffled the
books and papers in his study, and walked about the room, restlessly
musing on the same subject. The parlour-maid entered.

'Can young Mr. Springrove from London see you to-night, sir?'

'Young Mr. Springrove?' said the rector, surprised.

'Yes, sir.'

'Yes, of course he can see me. Tell him to come in.'

Edward came so impatiently into the room, as to show that the few
short moments his announcement had occupied had been irksome to him.
He stood in the doorway with the same black bag in his hand, and the
same old gray cloak on his shoulders, that he had worn fifteen
months earlier when returning on the night of the fire. This
appearance of his conveyed a true impression; he had become a
stagnant man. But he was excited now.

'I have this moment come from London,' he said, as the door was
closed behind him.

The prophetic insight, which so strangely accompanies critical
experiences, prompted Mr. Raunham's reply.

'About the Grayes and Manston?'

'Yes. That woman is not Mrs. Manston.'

'Prove it.'

'I can prove that she is somebody else--that her name is Anne
Seaway.'

'And are their suspicions true indeed!'

'And I can do what's more to the purpose at present.'

'Suggest Manston's motive?'

'Only suggest it, remember. But my assumption fits so perfectly
with the facts that have been secretly unearthed and conveyed to me,
that I can hardly conceive of another.'

There was in Edward's bearing that entire unconsciousness of himself
which, natural to wild animals, only prevails in a sensitive man at
moments of extreme intentness. The rector saw that he had no
trivial story to communicate, whatever the story was.

'Sit down,' said Mr. Raunham. 'My mind has been on the stretch all
the evening to form the slightest guess at such an object, and all
to no purpose--entirely to no purpose. Have you said anything to
Owen Graye?'

'Nothing--nor to anybody. I could not trust to the effect a letter
might have upon yourself, either; the intricacy of the case brings
me to this interview.'

Whilst Springrove had been speaking the two had sat down together.
The conversation, hitherto distinct to every corner of the room, was
carried on now in tones so low as to be scarcely audible to the
interlocutors, and in phrases which hesitated to complete
themselves. Three-quarters of an hour passed. Then Edward arose,
came out of the rector's study and again flung his cloak around him.
Instead of going thence homeward, he went first to the Carriford
Road Station with a telegram, having despatched which he proceeded
to his father's house for the first time since his arrival in the
village.

3. FROM NINE TO TEN O'CLOCK P.M.

The next presentation is the interior of the Old House on the
evening of the preceding section. The steward was sitting by his
parlour fire, and had been reading the letter arrived from the
rectory. Opposite to him sat the woman known to the village and
neighbourhood as Mrs. Manston.

'Things are looking desperate with us,' he said gloomily. His gloom
was not that of the hypochondriac, but the legitimate gloom which
has its origin in a syllogism. As he uttered the words he handed
the letter to her.

'I almost expected some such news as this,' she replied, in a tone
of much greater indifference. 'I knew suspicion lurked in the eyes
of that young man who stared at me so in the church path: I could
have sworn it.'

Manston did not answer for some time. His face was worn and
haggard; latterly his head had not been carried so uprightly as of
old. 'If they prove you to be--who you are. . . . Yes, if they
do,' he murmured.

'They must not find that out,' she said, in a positive voice, and
looking at him. 'But supposing they do, the trick does not seem to
me to be so serious as to justify that wretched, miserable, horrible
look of yours. It makes my flesh creep; it is perfectly deathlike.'

He did not reply, and she continued, 'If they say and prove that
Eunice is indeed living--and dear, you know she is--she is sure to
come back.'

This remark seemed to awaken and irritate him to speech. Again, as
he had done a hundred times during their residence together, he
categorized the events connected with the fire at the Three
Tranters. He dwelt on every incident of that night's history, and
endeavoured, with an anxiety which was extraordinary in the apparent
circumstances, to prove that his wife must, by the very nature of
things, have perished in the flames. She arose from her seat,
crossed the hearthrug, and set herself to soothe him; then she
whispered that she was still as unbelieving as ever. 'Come,
supposing she escaped--just supposing she escaped--where is she?'
coaxed the lady.

'Why are you so curious continually?' said Manston.

'Because I am a woman and want to know. Now where is she?'

'In the Flying Isle of San Borandan.'

'Witty cruelty is the cruellest of any. Ah, well--if she is in
England, she will come back.'

'She is not in England.'

'But she will come back?'

'No, she won't. . . . Come, madam,' he said, arousing himself, 'I
shall not answer any more questions.'

'Ah--ah--ah--she is not dead,' the woman murmured again poutingly.

'She is, I tell you.'

'I don't think so, love.'

'She was burnt, I tell you!' he exclaimed.

'Now to please me, admit the bare possibility of her being alive
--just the possibility.'

'O yes--to please you I will admit that,' he said quickly. 'Yes, I
admit the possibility of her being alive, to please you.'

She looked at him in utter perplexity. The words could only have
been said in jest, and yet they seemed to savour of a tone the
furthest remove from jesting. There was his face plain to her eyes,
but no information of any kind was to be read there.

'It is only natural that I should be curious,' she murmured
pettishly, 'if I resemble her as much as you say I do.'

'You are handsomer,' he said, 'though you are about her own height
and size. But don't worry yourself. You must know that you are
body and soul united with me, though you are but my housekeeper.'

She bridled a little at the remark. 'Wife,' she said, 'most
certainly wife, since you cannot dismiss me without losing your
character and position, and incurring heavy penalties.'

'I own it--it was well said, though mistakenly--very mistakenly.'

'Don't riddle to me about mistakenly and such dark things. Now what
was your motive, dearest, in running the risk of having me here?'

'Your beauty,' he said.

'She thanks you much for the compliment, but will not take it.
Come, what was your motive?'

'Your wit.'

'No, no; not my wit. Wit would have made a wife of me by this time
instead of what I am.'

'Your virtue.'

'Or virtue either.'

'I tell you it was your beauty--really.'

'But I cannot help seeing and hearing, and if what people say is
true, I am not nearly so good-looking as Cytherea, and several years
older.'

The aspect of Manston's face at these words from her was so
confirmatory of her hint, that his forced reply of 'O no,' tended to
develop her chagrin.

'Mere liking or love for me,' she resumed, 'would not have sprung up
all of a sudden, as your pretended passion did. You had been to
London several times between the time of the fire and your marriage
with Cytherea--you had never visited me or thought of my existence
or cared that I was out of a situation and poor. But the week after
you married her and were separated from her, off you rush to make
love to me--not first to me either, for you went to several places--'

'No, not several places.'

'Yes, you told me so yourself--that you went first to the only
lodging in which your wife had been known as Mrs. Manston, and when
you found that the lodging-house-keeper had gone away and died, and
that nobody else in the street had any definite ideas as to your
wife's personal appearance, and came and proposed the arrangement we
carried out--that I should personate her. Your taking all this
trouble shows that something more serious than love had to do with
the matter.'

'Humbug--what trouble after all did I take? When I found Cytherea
would not stay with me after the wedding I was much put out at being
left alone again. Was that unnatural?'

'No.'

'And those favouring accidents you mention--that nobody knew my
first wife--seemed an arrangement of Providence for our mutual
benefit, and merely perfected a half-formed impulse--that I should
call you my first wife to escape the scandal that would have arisen
if you had come here as anything else.'

'My love, that story won't do. If Mrs. Manston was burnt, Cytherea,
whom you love better than me, could have been compelled to live with
you as your lawful wife. If she was not burnt, why should you run
the risk of her turning up again at any moment and exposing your
substitution of me, and ruining your name and prospects?'

'Why--because I might have loved you well enough to run the risk
(assuming her not to be burnt, which I deny).'

'No--you would have run the risk the other way. You would rather
have risked her finding you with Cytherea as a second wife, than
with me as a personator of herself--the first one.'

'You came easiest to hand--remember that.'

'Not so very easy either, considering the labour you took to teach
me your first wife's history. All about how she was a native of
Philadelphia. Then making me read up the guide-book to
Philadelphia, and details of American life and manners, in case the
birthplace and history of your wife, Eunice, should ever become
known in this neighbourhood--unlikely as it was. Ah! and then about
the handwriting of hers that I had to imitate, and the dying my
hair, and rouging, to make the transformation complete? You mean to
say that that was taking less trouble than there would have been in
arranging events to make Cytherea believe herself your wife, and
live with you?'

'You were a needy adventuress, who would dare anything for a new
pleasure and an easy life--and I was fool enough to give in to you--'

'Good heavens above!--did I ask you to insert those advertisements
for your old wife, and to make me answer it as if I was she? Did I
ask you to send me the letter for me to copy and send back to you
when the third advertisement appeared--purporting to come from the
long-lost wife, and giving a detailed history of her escape and
subsequent life--all which you had invented yourself? You deluded
me into loving you, and then enticed me here! Ah, and this is
another thing. How did you know the real wife wouldn't answer it,
and upset all your plans?'

'Because I knew she was burnt.'

'Why didn't you force Cytherea to come back, then? Now, my love, I
have caught you, and you may just as well tell first as last, _what
was your motive in having me here as your first wife_?'

'Silence!' he exclaimed.

She was silent for the space of two minutes, and then persisted in
going on to mutter, 'And why was it that Miss Aldclyffe allowed her
favourite young lady, Cythie, to be overthrown and supplanted
without an expostulation or any show of sympathy? Do you know I
often think you exercise a secret power over Miss Aldclyffe. And
she always shuns me as if I shared the power. A poor, ill-used
creature like me sharing power, indeed!'

'She thinks you are Mrs. Manston.'

'That wouldn't make her avoid me.'

'Yes it would,' he exclaimed impatiently. 'I wish I was dead
--dead!' He had jumped up from his seat in uttering the words,
and now walked wearily to the end of the room. Coming back more
decisively, he looked in her face.

'We must leave this place if Raunham suspects what I think he does,'
he said. 'The request of Cytherea and her brother may simply be for
a satisfactory proof, to make her feel legally free--but it may mean
more.'

'What may it mean?'

'How should I know?'

'Well, well, never mind, old boy,' she said, approaching him to make
up the quarrel. 'Don't be so alarmed--anybody would think that you
were the woman and I the man. Suppose they do find out what I am
--we can go away from here and keep house as usual. People will say
of you, "His first wife was burnt to death" (or "ran away to the
Colonies," as the case may be); "He married a second, and deserted
her for Anne Seaway." A very everyday case--nothing so horrible,
after all.'

He made an impatient movement. 'Whichever way we do it, _nobody must
know that you are not my wife Eunice_. And now I must think about
arranging matters.'

Manston then retired to his office, and shut himself up for the
remainder of the evening.



XIX. THE EVENTS OF A DAY AND NIGHT

1. MARCH THE TWENTY-FIRST. MORNING

Next morning the steward went out as usual. He shortly told his
companion, Anne, that he had almost matured their scheme, and that
they would enter upon the details of it when he came home at night.
The fortunate fact that the rector's letter did not require an
immediate answer would give him time to consider.

Anne Seaway then began her duties in the house. Besides daily
superintending the cook and housemaid one of these duties was, at
rare intervals, to dust Manston's office with her own hands, a
servant being supposed to disturb the books and papers
unnecessarily. She softly wandered from table to shelf with the
duster in her hand, afterwards standing in the middle of the room,
and glancing around to discover if any noteworthy collection of dust
had still escaped her.

Her eye fell upon a faint layer which rested upon the ledge of an
old-fashioned chestnut cabinet of French Renaissance workmanship,
placed in a recess by the fireplace. At a height of about four feet
from the floor the upper portion of the front receded, forming the
ledge alluded to, on which opened at each end two small doors, the
centre space between them being filled out by a panel of similar
size, making the third of three squares. The dust on the ledge was
nearly on a level with the woman's eye, and, though insignificant in
quantity, showed itself distinctly on account of this obliquity of
vision. Now opposite the central panel, concentric quarter-circles
were traced in the deposited film, expressing to her that this
panel, too, was a door like the others; that it had lately been
opened, and had skimmed the dust with its lower edge.

At last, then, her curiosity was slightly rewarded. For the right
of the matter was that Anne had been incited to this exploration of
Manston's office rather by a wish to know the reason of his long
seclusion here, after the arrival of the rector's letter, and their
subsequent discourse, than by any immediate desire for cleanliness.
Still, there would have been nothing remarkable to Anne in this
sight but for one recollection. Manston had once casually told her
that each of the two side-lockers included half the middle space,
the panel of which did not open, and was only put in for symmetry.
It was possible that he had opened this compartment by candlelight
the preceding night, or he would have seen the marks in the dust,
and effaced them, that he might not be proved guilty of telling her
an untruth. She balanced herself on one foot and stood pondering.
She considered that it was very vexing and unfair in him to refuse
her all knowledge of his remaining secrets, under the peculiar
circumstances of her connection with him. She went close to the
cabinet. As there was no keyhole, the door must be capable of being
opened by the unassisted hand. The circles in the dust told her at
which edge to apply her force. Here she pulled with the tips of her
fingers, but the panel would not come forward. She fetched a chair
and looked over the top of the cabinet, but no bolt, knob, or spring
was to be seen.

'O, never mind,' she said, with indifference; 'I'll ask him about
it, and he will tell me.' Down she came and turned away. Then
looking back again she thought it was absurd such a trifle should
puzzle her. She retraced her steps, and opened a drawer beneath the
ledge of the cabinet, pushing in her hand and feeling about on the
underside of the board.

Here she found a small round sinking, and pressed her finger into
it. Nothing came of the pressure. She withdrew her hand and looked
at the tip of her finger: it was marked with the impress of the
circle, and, in addition, a line ran across it diametrically.

'How stupid of me; it is the head of a screw.' Whatever mysterious
contrivance had originally existed for opening the puny cupboard of
the cabinet, it had at some time been broken, and this rough
substitute provided. Stimulated curiosity would not allow her to
recede now. She fetched a screwdriver, withdrew the screw, pulled
the door open with a penknife, and found inside a cavity about ten
inches square. The cavity contained--

Letters from different women, with unknown signatures, Christian
names only (surnames being despised in Paphos). Letters from his
wife Eunice. Letters from Anne herself, including that she wrote in
answer to his advertisement. A small pocket-book. Sundry scraps of
paper.

The letters from the strange women with pet names she glanced
carelessly through, and then put them aside. They were too similar
to her own regretted delusion, and curiosity requires contrast to
excite it.

The letters from his wife were next examined. They were dated back
as far as Eunice's first meeting with Manston, and the early ones
before their marriage contained the usual pretty effusions of women
at such a period of their existence. Some little time after he had
made her his wife, and when he had come to Knapwater, the series
began again, and now their contents arrested her attention more
forcibly. She closed the cabinet, carried the letters into the
parlour, reclined herself on the sofa, and carefully perused them in
the order of their dates.


                                            'JOHN STREET,
                                                   October 17, 1864.

'MY DEAREST HUSBAND,--I received your hurried line of yesterday, and
was of course content with it. But why don't you tell me your exact
address instead of that "Post-Office, Budmouth?" This matter is all
a mystery to me, and I ought to be told every detail. I cannot
fancy it is the same kind of occupation you have been used to
hitherto. Your command that I am to stay here awhile until you can
"see how things look" and can arrange to send for me, I must
necessarily abide by. But if, as you say, a married man would have
been rejected by the person who engaged you, and that hence my
existence must be kept a secret until you have secured your
position, why did you think of going at all?

'The truth is, this keeping our marriage a secret is troublesome,
vexing, and wearisome to me. I see the poorest woman in the street
bearing her husband's name openly--living with him in the most
matter-of-fact ease, and why shouldn't I? I wish I was back again
in Liverpool.

'To-day I bought a grey waterproof cloak. I think it is a little
too long for me, but it was cheap for one of such a quality. The
weather is gusty and dreary, and till this morning I had hardly set
foot outside the door since you left. Please do tell me when I am
to come.--Very affectionately yours, EUNICE.'


                                             'JOHN STREET,
                                                    October 25, 1864.

'MY DEAR HUSBAND,--Why don't you write? Do you hate me? I have not
had the heart to do anything this last week. That I, your wife,
should be in this strait, and my husband well to do! I have been
obliged to leave my first lodging for debt--among other things, they
charged me for a lot of brandy which I am quite sure I did not
taste. Then I went to Camberwell and was found out by them. I went
away privately from thence, and changed my name the second time. I
am now Mrs. Rondley. But the new lodging was the wretchedest and
dearest I ever set foot in, and I left it after being there only a
day. I am now at No. 20 in the same street that you left me in
originally. All last night the sash of my window rattled so
dreadfully that I could not sleep, but I had not energy enough to
get out of bed to stop it. This morning I have been walking--I
don't know how far--but far enough to make my feet ache. I have
been looking at the outside of two or three of the theatres, but
they seem forbidding if I regard them with the eye of an actress in
search of an engagement. Though you said I was to think no more of
the stage, I believe you would not care if you found me there. But
I am not an actress by nature, and art will never make me one. I am
too timid and retiring; I was intended for a cottager's wife. I
certainly shall not try to go on the boards again whilst I am in
this strange place. The idea of being brought on as far as London
and then left here alone! Why didn't you leave me in Liverpool?
Perhaps you thought I might have told somebody that my real name was
Mrs. Manston. As if I had a living friend to whom I could impart
it--no such good fortune! In fact, my nearest friend is no nearer
than what most people would call a stranger. But perhaps I ought to
tell you that a week before I wrote my last letter to you, after
wishing that my uncle and aunt in Philadelphia (the only near
relatives I had) were still alive, I suddenly resolved to send a
line to my cousin James, who, I believe, is still living in that
neighbourhood. He has never seen me since we were babies together.
I did not tell him of my marriage, because I thought you might not
like it, and I gave my real maiden name, and an address at the
post-office here. But God knows if the letter will ever reach him.

'Do write me an answer, and send something.--Your affectionate wife,
EUNICE.'


                                                'FRIDAY, October 28.

'MY DEAR HUSBAND,--The order for ten pounds has just come, and I am
truly glad to get it. But why will you write so bitterly? Ah
--well, if I had only had the money I should have been on my way to
America by this time, so don't think I want to bore you of my own
free-will. Who can you have met with at that new place? Remember I
say this in no malignant tone, but certainly the facts go to prove
that you have deserted me! You are inconstant--I know it. O, why
are you so? Now I have lost you, I love you in spite of your
neglect. I am weakly fond--that's my nature. I fear that upon the
whole my life has been wasted. I know there is another woman
supplanting me in your heart--yes, I know it. Come to me--do come.
EUNICE.'


                                      '41 CHARLES SQUARE, HOXTON,
                                                   November 19.

'DEAR AENEAS,--Here I am back again after my visit. Why should you
have been so enraged at my finding your exact address? Any woman
would have tried to do it--you know she would have. And no woman
would have lived under assumed names so long as I did. I repeat
that I did not call myself Mrs. Manston until I came to this lodging
at the beginning of this month--what could you expect?

'A helpless creature I, had not fortune favoured me unexpectedly.
Banished as I was from your house at dawn, I did not suppose the
indignity was about to lead to important results. But in crossing
the park I overheard the conversation of a young man and woman who
had also risen early. I believe her to be the girl who has won you
away from me. Well, their conversation concerned you and Miss
Aldclyffe, _very peculiarly_. The remarkable thing is that you
yourself, without knowing it, told me of what, added to their
conversation, completely reveals a secret to me that neither of you
understand. Two negatives never made such a telling positive
before. One clue more, and you would see it. A single
consideration prevents my revealing it--just one doubt as to whether
your ignorance was real, and was not feigned to deceive me.
Civility now, please.
EUNICE.'


                                          '41 CHARLES SQUARE,
                                               Tuesday, November 22.

'MY DARLING HUSBAND,--Monday will suit me excellently for coming. I
have acted exactly up to your instructions, and have sold my rubbish
at the broker's in the next street. All this movement and bustle is
delightful to me after the weeks of monotony I have endured. It is
a relief to wish the place good-bye--London always has seemed so
much more foreign to me than Liverpool The mid-day train on Monday
will do nicely for me. I shall be anxiously looking out for you on
Sunday night.

'I hope so much that you are not angry with me for writing to Miss
Aldclyffe. You are not, dear, are you? Forgive me.--Your loving
wife, EUNICE.'


This was the last of the letters from the wife to the husband. One
other, in Mrs. Manston's handwriting, and in the same packet, was
differently addressed.


                                    'THREE TRANTERS INN, CARRIFORD,
                                                  November 28, 1864.

'DEAR COUSIN JAMES,--Thank you indeed for answering my letter so
promptly. When I called at the post-office yesterday I did not in
the least think there would be one. But I must leave this subject.
I write again at once under the strangest and saddest conditions it
is possible to conceive.

'I did not tell you in my last that I was a married woman. Don't
blame me--it was my husband's influence. I hardly know where to
begin my story. I had been living apart from him for a time--then
he sent for me (this was last week) and I was glad to go to him.
Then this is what he did. He promised to fetch me, and did not
--leaving me to do the journey alone. He promised to meet me at the
station here--he did not. I went on through the darkness to his
house, and found his door locked and himself away from home. I have
been obliged to come here, and I write to you in a strange room in a
strange village inn! I choose the present moment to write to drive
away my misery. Sorrow seems a sort of pleasure when you detail it
on paper--poor pleasure though.

'But this is what I want to know--and I am ashamed to tell it. I
would gladly do as you say, and come to you as a housekeeper, but I
have not the money even for a steerage passage. James, do you want
me badly enough--do you pity me enough to send it? I could manage
to subsist in London upon the proceeds of my sale for another month
or six weeks. Will you send it to the same address at the
post-office? But how do I know that you . . . '

Thus the letter ended. From creases in the paper it was plain that
the writer, having got so far, had become dissatisfied with her
production, and had crumpled it in her hand. Was it to write
another, or not to write at all?

The next thing Anne Seaway perceived was that the fragmentary story
she had coaxed out of Manston, to the effect that his wife had left
England for America, might be truthful, according to two of these
letters, corroborated by the evidence of the railway-porter. And
yet, at first, he had sworn in a passion that his wife was most
certainly consumed in the fire.

If she had been burnt, this letter, written in her bedroom, and
probably thrust into her pocket when she relinquished it, would have
been burnt with her. Nothing was surer than that. Why, then, did
he say she was burnt, and never show Anne herself this letter?

The question suddenly raised a new and much stranger one--kindling a
burst of amazement in her. How did Manston become possessed of this
letter?

That fact of possession was certainly the most remarkable revelation
of all in connection with this epistle, and perhaps had something to
do with his reason for never showing it to her.

She knew by several proofs, that before his marriage with Cytherea,
and up to the time of the porter's confession, Manston believed
--honestly believed--that Cytherea would be his lawful wife, and
hence, of course, that his wife Eunice was dead. So that no
communication could possibly have passed between his wife and
himself from the first moment that he believed her dead on the night
of the fire, to the day of his wedding. And yet he had that letter.
How soon afterwards could they have communicated with each other?

The existence of the letter--as much as, or more than its contents
--implying that Mrs. Manston was not burnt, his belief in that
calamity must have terminated at the moment he obtained possession
of the letter, if no earlier. Was, then, the only solution to the
riddle that Anne could discern, the true one?--that he had
communicated with his wife somewhere about the commencement of
Anne's residence with him, or at any time since?

It was the most unlikely thing on earth that a woman who had
forsaken her husband should countenance his scheme to personify her
--whether she were in America, in London, or in the neighbourhood
of Knapwater.

Then came the old and harassing question, what was Manston's real
motive in risking his name on the deception he was practising as
regarded Anne. It could not be, as he had always pretended, mere
passion. Her thoughts had reverted to Mr. Raunham's letter, asking
for proofs of her identity with the original Mrs. Manston. She
could see no loophole of escape for the man who supported her.
True, in her own estimation, his worst alternative was not so very
bad after all--the getting the name of libertine, a possible
appearance in the divorce or some other court of law, and a question
of damages. Such an exposure might hinder his worldly progress for
some time. Yet to him this alternative was, apparently, terrible as
death itself.

She restored the letters to their hiding-place, scanned anew the
other letters and memoranda, from which she could gain no fresh
information, fastened up the cabinet, and left everything in its
former condition.

Her mind was ill at ease. More than ever she wished that she had
never seen Manston. Where the person suspected of mysterious moral
obliquity is the possessor of great physical and intellectual
attractions, the mere sense of incongruity adds an extra shudder to
dread. The man's strange bearing terrified Anne as it had terrified
Cytherea; for with all the woman Anne's faults, she had not
descended to such depths of depravity as to willingly participate in
crime. She had not even known that a living wife was being
displaced till her arrival at Knapwater put retreat out of the
question, and had looked upon personation simply as a mode of
subsistence a degree better than toiling in poverty and alone, after
a bustling and somewhat pampered life as housekeeper in a gay
mansion.

              'Non illa colo calathisve Minervae
      Foemineas assueta manus.'

2. AFTERNOON

Mr. Raunham and Edward Springrove had by this time set in motion a
machinery which they hoped to find working out important results.

The rector was restless and full of meditation all the following
morning. It was plain, even to the servants about him, that
Springrove's communication wore a deeper complexion than any that
had been made to the old magistrate for many months or years past.
The fact was that, having arrived at the stage of existence in which
the difficult intellectual feat of suspending one's judgment becomes
possible, he was now putting it in practice, though not without the
penalty of watchful effort.

It was not till the afternoon that he determined to call on his
relative, Miss Aldclyffe, and cautiously probe her knowledge of the
subject occupying him so thoroughly. Cytherea, he knew, was still
beloved by this solitary woman. Miss Aldclyffe had made several
private inquiries concerning her former companion, and there was
ever a sadness in her tone when the young lady's name was mentioned,
which showed that from whatever cause the elder Cytherea's
renunciation of her favourite and namesake proceeded, it was not
from indifference to her fate.

'Have you ever had any reason for supposing your steward anything
but an upright man?' he said to the lady.

'Never the slightest. Have you?' said she reservedly.

'Well--I have.'

'What is it?'

'I can say nothing plainly, because nothing is proved. But my
suspicions are very strong.'

'Do you mean that he was rather cool towards his wife when they were
first married, and that it was unfair in him to leave her? I know
he was; but I think his recent conduct towards her has amply atoned
for the neglect.'

He looked Miss Aldclyffe full in the face. It was plain that she
spoke honestly. She had not the slightest notion that the woman who
lived with the steward might be other than Mrs. Manston--much less
that a greater matter might be behind.

'That's not it--I wish it was no more. My suspicion is, first, that
the woman living at the Old House is not Mr. Manston's wife.'

'Not--Mr. Manston's wife?'

'That is it.'

Miss Aldclyffe looked blankly at the rector. 'Not Mr. Manston's
wife--who else can she be?' she said simply.

'An improper woman of the name of Anne Seaway.'

Mr. Raunham had, in common with other people, noticed the
extraordinary interest of Miss Aldclyffe in the well-being of her
steward, and had endeavoured to account for it in various ways. The
extent to which she was shaken by his information, whilst it proved
that the understanding between herself and Manston did not make her
a sharer of his secrets, also showed that the tie which bound her to
him was still unbroken. Mr. Raunham had lately begun to doubt the
latter fact, and now, on finding himself mistaken, regretted that he
had not kept his own counsel in the matter. This it was too late to
do, and he pushed on with his proofs. He gave Miss Aldclyffe in
detail the grounds of his belief.

Before he had done, she recovered the cloak of reserve that she had
adopted on his opening the subject.

'I might possibly be convinced that you were in the right, after
such an elaborate argument,' she replied, 'were it not for one fact,
which bears in the contrary direction so pointedly, that nothing but
absolute proof can turn it. It is that there is no conceivable
motive which could induce any sane man--leaving alone a man of Mr.
Manston's clear-headedness and integrity--to venture upon such an
extraordinary course of conduct--no motive on earth.'

'That was my own opinion till after the visit of a friend last
night--a friend of mine and poor little Cytherea's.'

'Ah--and Cytherea,' said Miss Aldclyffe, catching at the idea raised
by the name. 'That he loved Cytherea--yes and loves her now, wildly
and devotedly, I am as positive as that I breathe. Cytherea is
years younger than Mrs. Manston--as I shall call her--twice as sweet
in disposition, three times as beautiful. Would he have given her
up quietly and suddenly for a common--Mr. Raunham, your story is
monstrous, and I don't believe it!' She glowed in her earnestness.

The rector might now have advanced his second proposition--the
possible motive--but for reasons of his own he did not.

'Very well, madam. I only hope that facts will sustain you in your
belief. Ask him the question to his face, whether the woman is his
wife or no, and see how he receives it.'

'I will to-morrow, most certainly,' she said. 'I always let these
things die of wholesome ventilation, as every fungus does.'

But no sooner had the rector left her presence, than the grain of
mustard-seed he had sown grew to a tree. Her impatience to set her
mind at rest could not brook a night's delay. It was with the
utmost difficulty that she could wait till evening arrived to screen
her movements. Immediately the sun had dropped behind the horizon,
and before it was quite dark, she wrapped her cloak around her,
softly left the house, and walked erect through the gloomy park in
the direction of the old manor-house.

The same minute saw two persons sit down in the rectory-house to
share the rector's usually solitary dinner. One was a man of
official appearance, commonplace in all except his eyes. The other
was Edward Springrove.



The discovery of the carefully-concealed letters rankled in the mind
of Anne Seaway. Her woman's nature insisted that Manston had no
right to keep all matters connected with his lost wife a secret from
herself. Perplexity had bred vexation; vexation, resentment;
curiosity had been continuous. The whole morning this resentment
and curiosity increased.

The steward said very little to his companion during their luncheon
at mid-day. He seemed reckless of appearances--almost indifferent
to whatever fate awaited him. All his actions betrayed that
something portentous was impending, and still he explained nothing.
By carefully observing every trifling action, as only a woman can
observe them, the thought at length dawned upon her that he was
going to run away secretly. She feared for herself; her knowledge
of law and justice was vague, and she fancied she might in some way
be made responsible for him.

In the afternoon he went out of the house again, and she watched him
drive away in the direction of the county-town. She felt a desire
to go there herself, and, after an interval of half-an-hour,
followed him on foot notwithstanding the distance--ostensibly to do
some shopping.

One among her several trivial errands was to make a small purchase
at the druggist's. Near the druggist's stood the County Bank.
Looking out of the shop window, between the coloured bottles, she
saw Manston come down the steps of the bank, in the act of
withdrawing his hand from his pocket, and pulling his coat close
over its mouth.

It is an almost universal habit with people, when leaving a bank, to
be carefully adjusting their pockets if they have been receiving
money; if they have been paying it in, their hands swing laxly. The
steward had in all likelihood been taking money--possibly on Miss
Aldclyffe's account--that was continual with him. And he might have
been removing his own, as a man would do who was intending to leave
the country.

3. FROM FIVE TO EIGHT O'CLOCK P.M.

Anne reached home again in time to preside over preparations for
dinner. Manston came in half-an-hour later. The lamp was lighted,
the shutters were closed, and they sat down together. He was pale
and worn--almost haggard.

The meal passed off in almost unbroken silence. When preoccupation
withstands the influence of a social meal with one pleasant
companion, the mental scene must be surpassingly vivid. Just as she
was rising a tap came to the door.

Before a maid could attend to the knock, Manston crossed the room
and answered it himself. The visitor was Miss Aldclyffe.

Manston instantly came back and spoke to Anne in an undertone. 'I
should be glad if you could retire to your room for a short time.'

'It is a dry, starlight evening,' she replied. 'I will go for a
little walk if your object is merely a private conversation with
Miss Aldclyffe.'

'Very well, do; there's no accounting for tastes,' he said. A few
commonplaces then passed between her and Miss Aldclyffe, and Anne
went upstairs to bonnet and cloak herself. She came down, opened
the front door, and went out.

She looked around to realize the night. It was dark, mournful, and
quiet. Then she stood still. From the moment that Manston had
requested her absence, a strong and burning desire had prevailed in
her to know the subject of Miss Aldclyffe's conversation with him.
Simple curiosity was not entirely what inspired her. Her suspicions
had been thoroughly aroused by the discovery of the morning. A
conviction that her future depended on her power to combat a man
who, in desperate circumstances, would be far from a friend to her,
prompted a strategic movement to acquire the important secret that
was in handling now. The woman thought and thought, and regarded
the dull dark trees, anxiously debating how the thing could be done.

Stealthily re-opening the front door she entered the hall, and
advancing and pausing alternately, came close to the door of the
room in which Miss Aldclyffe and Manston conversed. Nothing could
be heard through the keyhole or panels. At a great risk she softly
turned the knob and opened the door to a width of about
half-an-inch, performing the act so delicately that three minutes,
at least, were occupied in completing it. At that instant Miss
Aldclyffe said--

'There's a draught somewhere. The door is ajar, I think.'

Anne glided back under the staircase. Manston came forward and
closed the door. This chance was now cut off, and she considered
again. The parlour, or sitting-room, in which the conference took
place, had the window-shutters fixed on the outside of the window,
as is usual in the back portions of old country-houses. The
shutters were hinged one on each side of the opening, and met in the
middle, where they were fastened by a bolt passing continuously
through them and the wood mullion within, the bolt being secured on
the inside by a pin, which was seldom inserted till Manston and
herself were about to retire for the night; sometimes not at all.

If she returned to the door of the room she might be discovered at
any moment, but could she listen at the window, which overlooked a
part of the garden never visited after nightfall, she would be safe
from disturbance. The idea was worth a trial.

She glided round to the window, took the head of the bolt between
her finger and thumb, and softly screwed it round until it was
entirely withdrawn from its position. The shutters remained as
before, whilst, where the bolt had come out, was now a shining hole
three-quarters of an inch in diameter, through which one might see
into the middle of the room. She applied her eye to the orifice.

Miss Aldclyffe and Manston were both standing; Manston with his back
to the window, his companion facing it. The lady's demeanour was
severe, condemnatory, and haughty. No more was to be seen; Anne
then turned sideways, leant with her shoulder against the shutters
and placed her ear upon the hole.

'You know where,' said Miss Aldclyffe. 'And how could you, a man,
act a double deceit like this?'

'Men do strange things sometimes.'

'What was your reason--come?'

'A mere whim.'

'I might even believe that, if the woman were handsomer than
Cytherea, or if you had been married some time to Cytherea and had
grown tired of her.'

'And can't you believe it, too, under these conditions; that I
married Cytherea, gave her up because I heard that my wife was
alive, found that my wife would not come to live with me, and then,
not to let any woman I love so well as Cytherea run any risk of
being displaced and ruined in reputation, should my wife ever think
fit to return, induced this woman to come to me, as being better
than no companion at all?'

'I cannot believe it. Your love for Cytherea was not of such a kind
as that excuse would imply. It was Cytherea or nobody with you. As
an object of passion, you did not desire the company of this Anne
Seaway at all, and certainly not so much as to madly risk your
reputation by bringing her here in the way you have done. I am sure
you didn't, AEneas.'

'So am I,' he said bluntly.

Miss Aldclyffe uttered an exclamation of astonishment; the
confession was like a blow in its suddenness. She began to reproach
him bitterly, and with tears.

'How could you overthrow my plans, disgrace the only girl I ever had
any respect for, by such inexplicable doings! . . . That woman must
leave this place--the country perhaps. Heavens! the truth will leak
out in a day or two!'

'She must do no such thing, and the truth must be stifled somehow
--nobody knows how. If I stay here, or on any spot of the civilized
globe, as AEneas Manston, this woman must live with me as my wife,
or I am damned past redemption!'

'I will not countenance your keeping her, whatever your motive may
be.'

'You must do something,' he murmured. 'You must. Yes, you must.'

'I never will,' she said. 'It is a criminal act.'

He looked at her earnestly. 'Will you not support me through this
deception if my very life depends upon it? Will you not?'

'Nonsense! Life! It will be a scandal to you, but she must leave
this place. It will out sooner or later, and the exposure had
better come now.'

Manston repeated gloomily the same words. 'My life depends upon
your supporting me--my very life.'

He then came close to her, and spoke into her ear. Whilst he spoke
he held her head to his mouth with both his hands. Strange
expressions came over her face; the workings of her mouth were
painful to observe. Still he held her and whispered on.

The only words that could be caught by Anne Seaway, confused as her
hearing frequently was by the moan of the wind and the waterfall in
her outer ear, were these of Miss Aldclyffe, in tones which
absolutely quivered: 'They have no money. What can they prove?'

The listener tasked herself to the utmost to catch his answer, but
it was in vain. Of the remainder of the colloquy one fact alone was
plain to Anne, and that only inductively--that Miss Aldclyffe, from
what he had revealed to her, was going to scheme body and soul on
Manston's behalf.

Miss Aldclyffe seemed now to have no further reason for remaining,
yet she lingered awhile as if loth to leave him. When, finally, the
crestfallen and agitated lady made preparations for departure, Anne
quickly inserted the bolt, ran round to the entrance archway, and
down the steps into the park. Here she stood close to the trunk of
a huge lime-tree, which absorbed her dark outline into its own.

In a few minutes she saw Manston, with Miss Aldclyffe leaning on his
arm, cross the glade before her and proceed in the direction of the
house. She watched them ascend the rise and advance, as two black
spots, towards the mansion. The appearance of an oblong space of
light in the dark mass of walls denoted that the door was opened.
Miss Aldclyffe's outline became visible upon it; the door shut her
in, and all was darkness again. The form of Manston returning alone
arose from the gloom, and passed by Anne in her hiding-place.

Waiting outside a quarter of an hour longer, that no suspicion of
any kind might be excited, Anne returned to the old manor-house.

4. FROM EIGHT TO ELEVEN O'CLOCK P.M.

Manston was very friendly that evening. It was evident to her, now
that she was behind the scenes, that he was making desperate efforts
to disguise the real state of his mind.

Her terror of him did not decrease. They sat down to supper,
Manston still talking cheerfully. But what is keener than the eye
of a mistrustful woman? A man's cunning is to it as was the armour
of Sisera to the thin tent-nail. She found, in spite of his
adroitness, that he was attempting something more than a disguise of
his feeling. He was trying to distract her attention, that he might
be unobserved in some special movement of his hands.

What a moment it was for her then! The whole surface of her body
became attentive. She allowed him no chance whatever. We know the
duplicated condition at such times--when the existence divides
itself into two, and the ostensibly innocent chatterer stands in
front, like another person, to hide the timorous spy.

Manston played the same game, but more palpably. The meal was
nearly over when he seemed possessed of a new idea of how his object
might be accomplished. He tilted back his chair with a reflective
air, and looked steadily at the clock standing against the wall
opposite to him. He said sententiously, 'Few faces are capable of
expressing more by dumb show than the face of a clock. You may see
in it every variety of incentive--from the softest seductions to
negligence to the strongest hints for action.'

'Well, in what way?' she inquired. His drift was, as yet, quite
unintelligible to her.

'Why, for instance: look at the cold, methodical, unromantic,
business-like air of all the right-angled positions of the hands.
They make a man set about work in spite of himself. Then look at
the piquant shyness of its face when the two hands are over each
other. Several attitudes imply "Make ready." The "make ready" of
ten minutes to one differs from the "make ready" of ten minutes to
twelve, as youth differs from age. "Upward and onward" says
twenty-five minutes to eleven. Mid-day or midnight expresses
distinctly "It is done." You surely have noticed that?'

'Yes, I have.'

He continued with affected quaintness:--

'The easy dash of ten minutes past seven, the rakish recklessness of
a quarter past, the drooping weariness of twenty-five minutes past,
must have been observed by everybody.'

'Whatever amount of truth there may be, there is a good deal of
imagination in your fancy,' she said.

He still contemplated the clock.

'Then, again, the general finish of the face has a great effect upon
the eye. This old-fashioned brass-faced one we have here, with its
arched top, half-moon slit for the day of the month, and ship
rocking at the upper part, impresses me with the notion of its being
an old cynic, elevating his brows, whose thoughts can be seen
wavering between good and evil.'

A thought now enlightened her: the clock was behind her, and he
wanted to get her back turned. She dreaded turning, yet, not to
excite his suspicion, she was on her guard; she quickly looked
behind her at the clock as he spoke, recovering her old position
again instantly. The time had not been long enough for any action
whatever on his part.

'Ah,' he casually remarked, and at the same minute began to pour her
out a glass of wine. 'Speaking of the clock has reminded me that it
must nearly want winding up. Remember that it is wound to-night.
Suppose you do it at once, my dear.'

There was no possible way of evading the act. She resolutely turned
to perform the operation: anything was better than that he should
suspect her. It was an old-fashioned eight-day clock, of
workmanship suited to the rest of the antique furniture that Manston
had collected there, and ground heavily during winding.

Anne had given up all idea of being able to watch him during the
interval, and the noise of the wheels prevented her learning
anything by her ears. But, as she wound, she caught sight of his
shadow on the wall at her right hand.

What was he doing? He was in the very act of pouring something into
her glass of wine.

He had completed the manoeuvre before she had done winding. She
methodically closed the clock-case and turned round again. When she
faced him he was sitting in his chair as before she had risen.

In a familiar scene which has hitherto been pleasant it is difficult
to realize that an added condition, which does not alter its aspect,
can have made it terrible. The woman thought that his action must
have been prompted by no other intent than that of poisoning her,
and yet she could not instantly put on a fear of her position.

And before she had grasped these consequences, another supposition
served to make her regard the first as unlikely, if not absurd. It
was the act of a madman to take her life in a manner so easy of
discovery, unless there were far more reason for the crime than any
that Manston could possibly have.

Was it not merely his intention, in tampering with her wine, to make
her sleep soundly that night? This was in harmony with her original
suspicion, that he intended secretly to abscond. At any rate, he
was going to set about some stealthy proceeding, as to which she was
to be kept in utter darkness. The difficulty now was to avoid
drinking the wine.

By means of one pretext and another she put off taking her glass for
nearly five minutes, but he eyed her too frequently to allow her to
throw the potion under the grate. It became necessary to take one
sip. This she did, and found an opportunity of absorbing it in her
handkerchief.

Plainly he had no idea of her countermoves. The scheme seemed to
him in proper train, and he turned to poke out the fire. She
instantly seized the glass, and poured its contents down her bosom.
When he faced round again she was holding the glass to her lips,
empty.

In due course he locked the doors and saw that the shutters were
fastened. She attended to a few closing details of housewifery, and
a few minutes later they retired for the night.

5. FROM ELEVEN O'CLOCK TO MIDNIGHT

When Manston was persuaded, by the feigned heaviness of her
breathing, that Anne Seaway was asleep, he softly arose, and dressed
himself in the gloom. With ears strained to their utmost she heard
him complete this operation; then he took something from his pocket,
put it in the drawer of the dressing-table, went to the door, and
down the stairs. She glided out of bed and looked in the drawer.
He had only restored to its place a small phial she had seen there
before. It was labelled 'Battley's Solution of Opium.' She felt
relieved that her life had not been attempted. That was to have
been her sleeping-draught. No time was to be lost if she meant to
be a match for him. She followed him in her nightdress. When she
reached the foot of the staircase he was in the office and had
closed the door, under which a faint gleam showed that he had
obtained a light. She crept to the door, but could not venture to
open it, however slightly. Placing her ear to the panel, she could
hear him tearing up papers of some sort, and a brighter and
quivering ray of light coming from the threshold an instant later,
implied that he was burning them. By the slight noise of his
footsteps on the uncarpeted floor, she at length imagined that he
was approaching the door. She flitted upstairs again and crept into
bed.

Manston returned to the bedroom close upon her heels, and entered
it--again without a light. Standing motionless for an instant to
assure himself that she still slept, he went to the drawer in which
their ready-money was kept, and removed the casket that contained
it. Anne's ear distinctly caught the rustle of notes, and the chink
of the gold as he handled it. Some he placed in his pocket, some he
returned to its place. He stood thinking, as it were weighing a
possibility. While lingering thus, he noticed the reflected image
of his own face in the glass--pale and spectre-like in its
indistinctness. The sight seemed to be the feather which turned the
balance of indecision: he drew a heavy breath, retired from the
room, and passed downstairs. She heard him unbar the back-door, and
go out into the yard.

Feeling safe in a conclusion that he did not intend to return to the
bedroom again, she arose, and hastily dressed herself. On going to
the door of the apartment she found that he had locked it behind
him. 'A precaution--it can be no more,' she muttered. Yet she was
all the more perplexed and excited on this account. Had he been
going to leave home immediately, he would scarcely have taken the
trouble to lock her in, holding the belief that she was in a drugged
sleep. The lock shot into a mortice, so that there was no
possibility of her pushing back the bolt. How should she follow
him? Easily. An inner closet opened from the bedroom: it was
large, and had some time heretofore been used as a dressing or bath
room, but had been found inconvenient from having no other outlet to
the landing. The window of this little room looked out upon the
roof of the porch, which was flat and covered with lead. Anne took
a pillow from the bed, gently opened the casement of the inner room
and stepped forth on the flat. There, leaning over the edge of the
small parapet that ornamented the porch, she dropped the pillow upon
the gravel path, and let herself down over the parapet by her hands
till her toes swung about two feet from the ground. From this
position she adroitly alighted upon the pillow, and stood in the
path.

Since she had come indoors from her walk in the early part of the
evening the moon had risen. But the thick clouds overspreading the
whole landscape rendered the dim light pervasive and grey: it
appeared as an attribute of the air. Anne crept round to the back
of the house, listening intently. The steward had had at least ten
minutes' start of her. She had waited here whilst one might count
fifty, when she heard a movement in the outhouse--a fragment once
attached to the main building. This outhouse was partitioned into
an outer and an inner room, which had been a kitchen and a scullery
before the connecting erections were pulled down, but they were now
used respectively as a brewhouse and workshop, the only means of
access to the latter being through the brewhouse. The outer door of
this first apartment was usually fastened by a padlock on the
exterior. It was now closed, but not fastened. Manston was
evidently in the outhouse.

She slightly moved the door. The interior of the brewhouse was
wrapped in gloom, but a streak of light fell towards her in a line
across the floor from the inner or workshop door, which was not
quite closed. This light was unexpected, none having been visible
through hole or crevice. Glancing in, the woman found that he had
placed cloths and mats at the various apertures, and hung a sack at
the window to prevent the egress of a single ray. She could also
perceive from where she stood that the bar of light fell across the
brewing-copper just outside the inner door, and that upon it lay the
key of her bedroom. The illuminated interior of the workshop was
also partly visible from her position through the two half-open
doors. Manston was engaged in emptying a large cupboard of the
tools, gallipots, and old iron it contained. When it was quite
cleared he took a chisel, and with it began to withdraw the hooks
and shoulder-nails holding the cupboard to the wall. All these
being loosened, he extended his arms, lifted the cupboard bodily
from the brackets under it, and deposited it on the floor beside
him.

That portion of the wall which had been screened by the cupboard was
now laid bare. This, it appeared, had been plastered more recently
than the bulk of the outhouse. Manston loosened the plaster with
some kind of tool, flinging the pieces into a basket as they fell.
Having now stripped clear about two feet area of wall, he inserted a
crowbar between the joints of the bricks beneath, softly wriggling
it until several were loosened. There was now disclosed the mouth
of an old oven, which was apparently contrived in the thickness of
the wall, and having fallen into disuse, had been closed up with
bricks in this manner. It was formed after the simple old-fashioned
plan of oven-building--a mere oblate cavity without a flue.

Manston now stretched his arm into the oven, dragged forth a heavy
weight of great bulk, and let it slide to the ground. The woman
who watched him could see the object plainly. It was a common
corn-sack, nearly full, and was tied at the mouth in the usual way.

The steward had once or twice started up, as if he had heard sounds,
and his motions now became more cat-like still. On a sudden he put
out the light. Anne had made no noise, yet a foreign noise of some
kind had certainly been made in the intervening portion of the
house. She heard it. 'One of the rats,' she thought.

He seemed soon to recover from his alarm, but changed his tactics
completely. He did not light his candle--going on with his work in
the dark. She had only sounds to go by now, and, judging as well as
she could from these, he was piling up the bricks which closed the
oven's mouth as they had been before he disturbed them. The query
that had not left her brain all the interval of her inspection--how
should she get back into her bedroom again?--now received a
solution. Whilst he was replacing the cupboard, she would glide
across the brewhouse, take the key from the top of the copper, run
upstairs, unlock the door, and bring back the key again: if he
returned to bed, which was unlikely, he would think the lock had
failed to catch in the staple. This thought and intention,
occupying such length of words, flashed upon her in an instant, and
hardly disturbed her strong curiosity to stay and learn the meaning
of his actions in the workshop.

Slipping sideways through the first door and closing it behind her,
she advanced into the darkness towards the second, making every
individual footfall with the greatest care, lest the fragments of
rubbish on the floor should crackle beneath her tread. She soon
stood close by the copper, and not more than a foot from the door of
the room occupied by Manston himself, from which position she could
distinctly hear him breathe between each exertion, although it was
far too dark to discern anything of him.

To secure the key of her chamber was her first anxiety, and
accordingly she cautiously reached out with her hand to where it
lay. Instead of touching it, her fingers came in contact with the
boot of a human being.

She drooped faint in a cold sweat. It was the foot either of a man
or woman, standing on the brewing-copper where the key had lain. A
warm foot, covered with a polished boot.

The startling discovery so terrified her that she could hardly
repress a sound. She withdrew her hand with a motion like the
flight of an arrow. Her touch was so light that the leather seemed
to have been thick enough to keep the owner of the foot in entire
ignorance of it, and the noise of Manston's scraping might have been
quite sufficient to drown the slight rustle of her dress.

The person was obviously not the steward: he was still busy. It
was somebody who, since the light had been extinguished, had taken
advantage of the gloom, to come from some dark recess in the
brewhouse and stand upon the brickwork of the copper. The fear
which had at first paralyzed her lessened with the birth of a sense
that fear now was utter failure: she was in a desperate position
and must abide by the consequences. The motionless person on the
copper was, equally with Manston, quite unconscious of her
proximity, and she ventured to advance her hand again, feeling
behind the feet, till she found the key. On its return to her side,
her finger-tip skimmed the lower verge of a trousers-leg.

It was a man, then, who stood there. To go to the door just at this
time was impolitic, and she shrank back into an inner corner to
wait. The comparative security from discovery that her new position
ensured resuscitated reason a little, and empowered her to form some
logical inferences:--

1. The man who stood on the copper had taken advantage of the
darkness to get there, as she had to enter.

2. The man must have been hidden in the outhouse before she had
reached the door.

3. He must be watching Manston with much calculation and system,
and for purposes of his own.

She could now tell by the noises that Manston had completed his
re-erection of the cupboard. She heard him replacing the articles it
had contained--bottle by bottle, tool by tool--after which he came
into the brewhouse, went to the window, and pulled down the cloths
covering it; but the window being rather small, this unveiling
scarcely relieved the darkness of the interior. He returned to the
workshop, hoisted something to his back by a jerk, and felt about
the room for some other article. Having found it, he emerged from
the inner door, crossed the brewhouse, and went into the yard.
Directly he stepped out she could see his outline by the light of
the clouded and weakly moon. The sack was slung at his back, and in
his hand he carried a spade.

Anne now waited in her corner in breathless suspense for the
proceedings of the other man. In about half-a-minute she heard him
descend from the copper, and then the square opening of the doorway
showed the outline of this other watcher passing through it
likewise. The form was that of a broad-shouldered man enveloped in
a long coat. He vanished after the steward.

The woman vented a sigh of relief, and moved forward to follow.
Simultaneously, she discovered that the watcher whose foot she had
touched was, in his turn, watched and followed also.

It was by one of her own sex. Anne Seaway shrank backward again.
The unknown woman came forward from the further side of the yard,
and pondered awhile in hesitation. Tall, dark, and closely wrapped,
she stood up from the earth like a cypress. She moved, crossed the
yard without producing the slightest disturbance by her footsteps,
and went in the direction the others had taken.

Anne waited yet another minute--then in her turn noiselessly
followed the last woman.

But so impressed was she with the sensation of people in hiding,
that in coming out of the yard she turned her head to see if any
person were following her, in the same way. Nobody was visible, but
she discerned, standing behind the angle of the stable, Manston's
horse and gig, ready harnessed.

He did intend to fly after all, then, she thought. He must have
placed the horse in readiness, in the interval between his leaving
the house and her exit by the window. However, there was not time
to weigh this branch of the night's events. She turned about again,
and continued on the trail of the other three.

6. FROM MIDNIGHT TO HALF-PAST ONE A.M.

Intentness pervaded everything; Night herself seemed to have become
a watcher.

The four persons proceeded across the glade, and into the park
plantation, at equi-distances of about seventy yards. Here the
ground, completely overhung by the foliage, was coated with a thick
moss which was as soft as velvet beneath their feet. The first
watcher, that is, the man walking immediately behind Manston, now
fell back, when Manston's housekeeper, knowing the ground pretty
well, dived circuitously among the trees and got directly behind the
steward, who, encumbered with his load, had proceeded but slowly.
The other woman seemed now to be about opposite to Anne, or a little
in advance, but on Manston's other hand.

He reached a pit, midway between the waterfall and the engine-house.
There he stopped, wiped his face, and listened.

Into this pit had drifted uncounted generations of withered leaves,
half filling it. Oak, beech, and chestnut, rotten and brown alike,
mingled themselves in one fibrous mass. Manston descended into the
midst of them, placed his sack on the ground, and raking the leaves
aside into a large heap, began digging. Anne softly drew nearer,
crept into a bush, and turning her head to survey the rest, missed
the man who had dropped behind, and whom we have called the first
watcher. Concluding that he, too, had hidden himself, she turned
her attention to the second watcher, the other woman, who had
meanwhile advanced near to where Anne lay in hiding, and now seated
herself behind a tree, still closer to the steward than was Anne
Seaway.

Here and thus Anne remained concealed. The crunch of the steward's
spade, as it cut into the soft vegetable mould, was plainly
perceptible to her ears when the periodic cessations between the
creaks of the engine concurred with a lull in the breeze, which
otherwise brought the subdued roar of the cascade from the further
side of the bank that screened it. A large hole--some four or five
feet deep--had been excavated by Manston in about twenty minutes.
Into this he immediately placed the sack, and then began filling in
the earth, and treading it down. Lastly he carefully raked the
whole mass of dead and dry leaves into the middle of the pit,
burying the ground with them as they had buried it before.

For a hiding-place the spot was unequalled. The thick accumulation
of leaves, which had not been disturbed for centuries, might not be
disturbed again for centuries to come, whilst their lower layers
still decayed and added to the mould beneath.

By the time this work was ended the sky had grown clearer, and Anne
could now see distinctly the face of the other woman, stretching
from behind the tree, seemingly forgetful of her position in her
intense contemplation of the actions of the steward. Her
countenance was white and motionless.

It was impossible that Manston should not soon notice her. At the
completion of his labour he turned, and did so.

'Ho--you here!' he exclaimed.

'Don't think I am a spy upon you,' she said, in an imploring
whisper. Anne recognized the voice as Miss Aldclyffe's.

The trembling lady added hastily another remark, which was drowned
in the recurring creak of the engine close at hand The first
watcher, if he had come no nearer than his original position, was
too far off to hear any part of this dialogue, on account of the
roar of the falling water, which could reach him unimpeded by the
bank.

The remark of Miss Aldclyffe to Manston had plainly been concerning
the first watcher, for Manston, with his spade in his hand,
instantly rushed to where the man was concealed, and, before the
latter could disengage himself from the boughs, the steward struck
him on the head with the blade of the instrument. The man fell to
the ground.

'Fly!' said Miss Aldclyffe to Manston. Manston vanished amidst the
trees. Miss Aldclyffe went off in a contrary direction.

Anne Seaway was about to run away likewise, when she turned and
looked at the fallen man. He lay on his face, motionless.

Many of these women who own to no moral code show considerable
magnanimity when they see people in trouble. To act right simply
because it is one's duty is proper; but a good action which is the
result of no law of reflection shines more than any. She went up to
him and gently turned him over, upon which he began to show signs of
life. By her assistance he was soon able to stand upright.

He looked about him with a bewildered air, endeavouring to collect
his ideas. 'Who are you?' he said to the woman, mechanically.

It was bad policy now to attempt disguise. 'I am the supposed Mrs.
Manston,' she said. 'Who are you?'

'I am the officer employed by Mr. Raunham to sift this mystery
--which may be criminal.' He stretched his limbs, pressed his head,
and seemed gradually to awake to a sense of having been incautious
in his utterance. 'Never you mind who I am,' he continued. 'Well,
it doesn't matter now, either--it will no longer be a secret.'

He stooped for his hat and ran in the direction the steward had
taken--coming back again after the lapse of a minute.

'It's only an aggravated assault, after all,' he said hastily,
'until we have found out for certain what's buried here. It may be
only a bag of building rubbish; but it may be more. Come and help
me dig.' He seized the spade with the awkwardness of a town man,
and went into the pit, continuing a muttered discourse. 'It's no
use my running after him single-handed,' he said. 'He's ever so far
off by this time. The best step is to see what is here.'

It was far easier for the detective to re-open the hole than it had
been for Manston to form it. The leaves were raked away, the loam
thrown out, and the sack dragged forth.

'Hold this,' he said to Anne, whose curiosity still kept her
standing near. He turned on the light of a dark lantern he had
brought, and gave it into her hand.

The string which bound the mouth of the sack was now cut. The
officer laid the bag on its side, seized it by the bottom, and
jerked forth the contents. A large package was disclosed, carefully
wrapped up in impervious tarpaulin, also well tied. He was on the
point of pulling open the folds at one end, when a light coloured
thread of something, hanging on the outside, arrested his eye. He
put his hand upon it; it felt stringy, and adhered to his fingers.
'Hold the light close,' he said.

She held it close. He raised his hand to the glass, and they both
peered at an almost intangible filament he held between his finger
and thumb. It was a long hair; the hair of a woman.

'God! I couldn't believe it--no, I couldn't believe it!' the
detective whispered, horror-struck. 'And I have lost the man for
the present through my unbelief. Let's get into a sheltered place.
. . . Now wait a minute whilst I prove it.'

He thrust his hand into his waistcoat pocket, and withdrew thence a
minute packet of brown paper. Spreading it out he disclosed, coiled
in the middle, another long hair. It was the hair the clerk's wife
had found on Manston's pillow nine days before the Carriford fire.
He held the two hairs to the light: they were both of a pale-brown
hue. He laid them parallel and stretched out his arms: they were
of the same length to a nicety. The detective turned to Anne.

'It is the body of his first wife,' he said quietly. 'He murdered
her, as Mr. Springrove and the rector suspected--but how and when,
God only knows.'

'And I!' exclaimed Anne Seaway, a probable and natural sequence of
events and motives explanatory of the whole crime--events and
motives shadowed forth by the letter, Manston's possession of it,
his renunciation of Cytherea, and instalment of herself--flashing
upon her mind with the rapidity of lightning.

'Ah--I see,' said the detective, standing unusually close to her:
and a handcuff was on her wrist. 'You must come with me, madam.
Knowing as much about a secret murder as God knows is a very
suspicious thing: it doesn't make you a goddess--far from it.' He
directed the bull's-eye into her face.

'Pooh--lead on,' she said scornfully, 'and don't lose your principal
actor for the sake of torturing a poor subordinate like me.'

He loosened her hand, gave her his arm, and dragged her out of the
grove--making her run beside him till they had reached the rectory.
A light was burning here, and an auxiliary of the detective's
awaiting him: a horse ready harnessed to a spring-cart was standing
outside.

'You have come--I wish I had known that,' the detective said to his
assistant, hurriedly and angrily. 'Well, we've blundered--he's
gone--you should have been here, as I said! I was sold by that
woman, Miss Aldclyffe--she watched me.' He hastily gave directions
in an undertone to this man. The concluding words were, 'Go in to
the rector--he's up. Detain Miss Aldclyffe. I, in the meantime, am
driving to Casterbridge with this one, and for help. We shall be
sure to have him when it gets light.'

He assisted Anne into the vehicle, and drove off with her. As they
went, the clear, dry road showed before them, between the grassy
quarters at each side, like a white riband, and made their progress
easy. They came to a spot where the highway was overhung by dense
firs for some distance on both sides. It was totally dark here.

There was a smash; and a rude shock. In the very midst of its
length, at the point where the road began to drop down a hill, the
detective drove against something with a jerk which nearly flung
them both to the ground.

The man recovered himself, placed Anne on the seat, and reached out
his hand. He found that the off-wheel of his gig was locked in that
of another conveyance of some kind.

'Hoy!' said the officer.

Nobody answered.

'Hoy, you man asleep there!' he said again.

No reply.

'Well, that's odd--this comes of the folly of travelling without
gig-lamps because you expect the dawn.' He jumped to the ground and
turned on his lantern.

There was the gig which had obstructed him, standing in the middle
of the road; a jaded horse harnessed to it, but no human being in or
near the vehicle.

'Do you know whose gig this is?' he said to the woman.

'No,' she said sullenly. But she did recognize it as the steward's.

'I'll swear it's Manston's! Come, I can hear it by your tone.
However, you needn't say anything which may criminate you. What
forethought the man must have had--how carefully he must have
considered possible contingencies! Why, he must have got the horse
and gig ready before he began shifting the body.'

He listened for a sound among the trees. None was to be heard but
the occasional scamper of a rabbit over the withered leaves. He
threw the light of his lantern through a gap in the hedge, but could
see nothing beyond an impenetrable thicket. It was clear that
Manston was not many yards off, but the question was how to find
him. Nothing could be done by the detective just then, encumbered
as he was by the horse and Anne. If he had entered the thicket on a
search unaided, Manston might have stepped unobserved from behind a
bush and murdered him with the greatest ease. Indeed, there were
such strong reasons for the exploit in Manston's circumstances at
that moment that without showing cowardice, his pursuer felt it
hazardous to remain any longer where he stood.

He hastily tied the head of Manston's horse to the back of his own
vehicle, that the steward might be deprived of the use of any means
of escape other than his own legs, and drove on thus with his
prisoner to the county-town. Arrived there, he lodged her in the
police-station, and then took immediate steps for the capture of
Manston.



XX. THE EVENTS OF THREE HOURS

1. MARCH THE TWENTY-THIRD. MIDDAY

Thirty-six hours had elapsed since Manston's escape.

It was market-day at the county-town. The farmers outside and
inside the corn-exchange looked at their samples of wheat, and
poured them critically as usual from one palm to another, but they
thought and spoke of Manston. Grocers serving behind their
counters, instead of using their constant phrase, 'The next article,
please?' substituted, 'Have you heard if he's caught?' Dairymen and
drovers standing beside the sheep and cattle pens, spread their legs
firmly, readjusted their hats, thrust their hands into the lowest
depths of their pockets, regarded the animals with the utmost
keenness of which the eye was capable, and said, 'Ay, ay, so's:
they'll have him avore night.'

Later in the day Edward Springrove passed along the street hurriedly
and anxiously. 'Well, have you heard any more?' he said to an
acquaintance who accosted him.

'They tracked him in this way,' said the other young man. 'A
vagrant first told them that Manston had passed a rick at daybreak,
under which this man was lying. They followed the track he pointed
out and ultimately came to a stile. On the other side was a heap of
half-hardened mud, scraped from the road. On the surface of the
heap, where it had been smoothed by the shovel, was distinctly
imprinted the form of a man's hand, the buttons of his waistcoat,
and his watch-chain, showing that he had stumbled in hurrying over
the stile, and fallen there. The pattern of the chain proved the
man to have been Manston. They followed on till they reached a ford
crossed by stepping-stones--on the further bank were the same
footmarks that had shown themselves beside the stile. The whole of
this course had been in the direction of Budmouth. On they went,
and the next clue was furnished them by a shepherd. He said that
wherever a clear space three or four yards wide ran in a line
through a flock of sheep lying about a ewe-lease, it was a proof
that somebody had passed there not more than half-an-hour earlier.
At twelve o'clock that day he had noticed such a feature in his
flock. Nothing more could be heard of him, and they got into
Budmouth. The steam-packet to the Channel Islands was to start at
eleven last night, and they at once concluded that his hope was to
get to France by way of Jersey and St. Malo--his only chance, all
the railway-stations being watched.

'Well, they went to the boat: he was not on board then. They went
again at half-past ten: he had not come. Two men now placed
themselves under the lamp immediately beside the gangway. Another
stayed by the office door, and one or two more up Mary Street--the
straight cut to the quay. At a quarter to eleven the mail-bags were
put on board. Whilst the attention of the idlers was directed to
the mails, down Mary Street came a man as boldly as possible. The
gait was Manston's, but not the clothes. He passed over to the
shaded part of the street: heads were turned. I suppose this
warned him, for he never emerged from the shadow. They watched and
waited, but the steward did not reappear. The alarm was raised
--they searched the town high and low--no Manston. All this morning
they have been searching, but there's not a sign of him anywhere.
However, he has lost his last chance of getting across the Channel.
It is reported that he has since changed clothes with a labourer.'

During this narration, Edward, lost in thought, had let his eyes
follow a shabby man in a smock-frock, but wearing light boots--who
was stalking down the street under a bundle of straw which overhung
and concealed his head. It was a very ordinary circumstance for a
man with a bundle of straw on his shoulders and overhanging his
head, to go down the High Street. Edward saw him cross the bridge
which divided the town from the country, place his shaggy
encumbrance by the side of the road, and leave it there.

Springrove now parted from his acquaintance, and went also in the
direction of the bridge, and some way beyond it. As far as he could
see stretched the turnpike road, and, while he was looking, he
noticed a man to leap from the hedge at a point two hundred, or two
hundred and fifty yards ahead, cross the road, and go through a
wicket on the other side. This figure seemed like that of the man
who had been carrying the bundle of straw. He looked at the straw:
it still stood alone.

The subjoined facts sprang, as it were, into juxtaposition in his
brain:--

Manston had been seen wearing the clothes of a labouring man--a
brown smock-frock. So had this man, who seemed other than a
labourer, on second thoughts: and he had concealed his face by his
bundle of straw with the greatest ease and naturalness.

The path the man had taken led, among other places, to Tolchurch,
where Cytherea was living.

If Mrs. Manston was murdered, as some said, on the night of the
fire, Cytherea was the steward's lawful wife. Manston at bay, and
reckless of results, might rush to his wife and harm her.

It was a horrible supposition for a man who loved Cytherea to
entertain; but Springrove could not resist its influence. He
started off for Tolchurch.

2. ONE TO TWO O'CLOCK P.M.

On that self-same mid-day, whilst Edward was proceeding to Tolchurch
by the footpath across the fields, Owen Graye had left the village
and was riding along the turnpike road to the county-town, that he
might ascertain the exact truth of the strange rumour which had
reached him concerning Manston. Not to disquiet his sister, he had
said nothing to her of the matter.

She sat by the window reading. From her position she could see up
the lane for a distance of at least a hundred yards. Passers-by
were so rare in this retired nook, that the eyes of those who dwelt
by the wayside were invariably lifted to every one on the road,
great and small, as to a novelty.

A man in a brown smock-frock turned the corner and came towards the
house. It being market-day at Casterbridge, the village was nearly
deserted, and more than this, the old farm-house in which Owen and
his sister were staying, stood, as has been stated, apart from the
body of cottages. The man did not look respectable; Cytherea arose
and bolted the door.

Unfortunately he was near enough to see her cross the room. He
advanced to the door, knocked, and, receiving no answer, came to the
window; he next pressed his face against the glass, peering in.

Cytherea's experience at that moment was probably as trying a one as
ever fell to the lot of a gentlewoman to endure. She recognized in
the peering face that of the man she had married.

But not a movement was made by her, not a sound escaped her. Her
fear was great; but had she known the truth--that the man outside,
feeling he had nothing on earth to lose by any act, was in the last
stage of recklessness, terrified nature must have given way.

'Cytherea,' he said, 'let me come in: I am your husband.'

'No,' she replied, still not realizing the magnitude of her peril.
'If you want to speak to us, wait till my brother comes.'

'O, he's not at home? Cytherea, I can't live without you! All my
sin has been because I love you so! Will you fly with me? I have
money enough for us both--only come with me.'

'Not now--not now.'

'I am your husband, I tell you, and I must come in.'

'You cannot,' she said faintly. His words began to terrify her.

'I will, I say!' he exclaimed. 'Will you let me in, I ask once
more?'

'No--I will not,' said Cytherea.

'Then I will let myself in!' he answered resolutely. 'I will, if I
die for it!'

The windows were glazed in lattice panes of leadwork, hung in
casements. He broke one of the panes with a stone, thrust his hand
through the hole, unfastened the latch which held the casement
close, and began opening the window.

Instantly the shutters flew together with a slam, and were barred
with desperate quickness by Cytherea on the inside.

'Damn you!' he exclaimed.

He ran round to the back of the house. His impatience was greater
now: he thrust his fist through the pantry window at one blow, and
opened it in the same way as the former one had been opened, before
the terror-stricken girl was aware that he had gone round. In an
instant he stood in the pantry, advanced to the front room where she
was, flung back the shutters, and held out his arms to embrace her.

In extremely trying moments of bodily or mental pain, Cytherea
either flushed hot or faded pale, according to the state of her
constitution at the moment. Now she burned like fire from head to
foot, and this preserved her consciousness.

Never before had the poor child's natural agility served her in such
good stead as now. A heavy oblong table stood in the middle of the
room. Round this table she flew, keeping it between herself and
Manston, her large eyes wide open with terror, their dilated pupils
constantly fixed upon Manston's, to read by his expression whether
his next intention was to dart to the right or the left.

Even he, at that heated moment, could not endure the expression of
unutterable agony which shone from that extraordinary gaze of hers.
It had surely been given her by God as a means of defence. Manston
continued his pursuit with a lowered eye.

The panting and maddened desperado--blind to everything but the
capture of his wife--went with a rush under the table: she went
over it like a bird. He went heavily over it: she flew under it,
and was out at the other side.

     'One on her youth and pliant limbs relies,
      One on his sinews and his giant size.'

But his superior strength was sure to tire her down in the long-run.
She felt her weakness increasing with the quickness of her breath;
she uttered a wild scream, which in its heartrending intensity
seemed to echo for miles.

At the same juncture her hair became unfastened, and rolled down
about her shoulders. The least accident at such critical periods is
sufficient to confuse the overwrought intelligence. She lost sight
of his intended direction for one instant, and he immediately
outmanoeuvred her.

'At last! my Cytherea!' he cried, overturning the table, springing
over it, seizing one of the long brown tresses, pulling her towards
him, and clasping her round. She writhed downwards between his arms
and breast, and fell fainting on the floor. For the first time his
action was leisurely. He lifted her upon the sofa, exclaiming,
'Rest there for a while, my frightened little bird!'

And then there was an end of his triumph. He felt himself clutched
by the collar, and whizzed backwards with the force of a
battering-ram against the fireplace. Springrove, wild, red, and
breathless, had sprung in at the open window, and stood once more
between man and wife.

Manston was on his legs again in an instant. A fiery glance on the
one side, a glance of pitiless justice on the other, passed between
them. It was again the meeting in the vineyard of Naboth the
Jezreelite: 'Hast thou found me, O mine enemy? And he answered, I
have found thee: because thou hast sold thyself to work evil in the
sight of the Lord.'

A desperate wrestle now began between the two men. Manston was the
taller, but there was in Edward much hard tough muscle which the
delicate flesh of the steward lacked. They flew together like the
jaws of a gin. In a minute they were both on the floor, rolling
over and over, locked in each other's grasp as tightly as if they
had been one organic being at war with itself--Edward trying to
secure Manston's arms with a small thong he had drawn from his
pocket, Manston trying to reach his knife.

Two characteristic noises pervaded the apartment through this
momentous space of time. One was the sharp panting of the two
combatants, so similar in each as to be undistinguishable; the other
was the stroke of their heels and toes, as they smote the floor at
every contortion of body or limbs.

Cytherea had not lost consciousness for more than half-a-minute.
She had then leapt up without recognizing that Edward was her
deliverer, unfastened the door, and rushed out, screaming wildly,
'Come! Help! O, help!'

Three men stood not twenty yards off, looking perplexed. They
dashed forward at her words. 'Have you seen a shabby man with a
smock-frock on lately?' they inquired. She pointed to the door, and
ran on the same as before.

Manston, who had just loosened himself from Edward's grasp, seemed
at this moment to renounce his intention of pushing the conflict to
a desperate end. 'I give it all up for life--dear life!' he cried,
with a hoarse laugh. 'A reckless man has a dozen lives--see how
I'll baffle you all yet!'

He rushed out of the house, but no further. The boast was his last.
In one half-minute more he was helpless in the hands of his
pursuers.



Edward staggered to his feet, and paused to recover breath. His
thoughts had never forsaken Cytherea, and his first act now was to
hasten up the lane after her. She had not gone far. He found her
leaning upon a bank by the roadside, where she had flung herself
down in sheer exhaustion. He ran up and lifted her in his arms, and
thus aided she was enabled to stand upright--clinging to him. What
would Springrove have given to imprint a kiss upon her lips then!

They walked slowly towards the house. The distressing sensation of
whose wife she was could not entirely quench the resuscitated
pleasure he felt at her grateful recognition of him, and her
confiding seizure of his arm for support. He conveyed her carefully
into the house.

A quarter of an hour later, whilst she was sitting in a partially
recovered, half-dozing state in an arm-chair, Edward beside her
waiting anxiously till Graye should arrive, they saw a spring-cart
pass the door. Old and dry mud-splashes from long-forgotten rains
disfigured its wheels and sides; the varnish and paint had been
scratched and dimmed; ornament had long been forgotten in a restless
contemplation of use. Three men sat on the seat, the middle one
being Manston. His hands were bound in front of him, his eyes were
set directly forward, his countenance pallid, hard, and fixed.

Springrove had told Cytherea of Manston's crime in a few short
words. He now said solemnly, 'He is to die.'

'And I cannot mourn for him,' she replied with a shudder, leaning
back and covering her face with her hands.

In the silence that followed the two short remarks, Springrove
watched the cart round the corner, and heard the rattle of its
wheels gradually dying away as it rolled in the direction of the
county-town.



XXI. THE EVENTS OF EIGHTEEN HOURS

1. MARCH THE TWENTY-NINTH. NOON

Exactly seven days after Edward Springrove had seen the man with the
bundle of straw walking down the streets of Casterbridge, old Farmer
Springrove was standing on the edge of the same pavement, talking to
his friend, Farmer Baker.

There was a pause in their discourse. Mr. Springrove was looking
down the street at some object which had attracted his attention.
'Ah, 'tis what we shall all come to!' he murmured.

The other looked in the same direction. 'True, neighbour
Springrove; true.'

Two men, advancing one behind the other in the middle of the road,
were what the farmers referred to. They were carpenters, and bore
on their shoulders an empty coffin, covered by a thin black cloth.

'I always feel a satisfaction at being breasted by such a sight as
that,' said Springrove, still regarding the men's sad burden. 'I
call it a sort of medicine.'

'And it is medicine. . . . I have not heard of any body being ill
up this way lately? D'seem as if the person died suddenly.'

'May be so. Ah, Baker, we say sudden death, don't we? But there's
no difference in their nature between sudden death and death of any
other sort. There's no such thing as a random snapping off of what
was laid down to last longer. We only suddenly light upon an end
--thoughtfully formed as any other--which has been existing at that
very same point from the beginning, though unseen by us to be so
soon.'

'It is just a discovery to your own mind, and not an alteration in
the Lord's.'

'That's it. Unexpected is not as to the thing, but as to our
sight.'

'Now you'll hardly believe me, neighbour, but this little scene in
front of us makes me feel less anxious about pushing on wi' that
threshing and winnowing next week, that I was speaking about. Why
should we not stand still, says I to myself, and fling a quiet eye
upon the Whys and the Wherefores, before the end o' it all, and we
go down into the mouldering-place, and are forgotten?'

''Tis a feeling that will come. But 'twont bear looking into.
There's a back'ard current in the world, and we must do our utmost
to advance in order just to bide where we be. But, Baker, they are
turning in here with the coffin, look.'

The two carpenters had borne their load into a narrow way close at
hand. The farmers, in common with others, turned and watched them
along the way.

''Tis a man's coffin, and a tall man's, too,' continued Farmer
Springrove. 'His was a fine frame, whoever he was.'

'A very plain box for the poor soul--just the rough elm, you see.'
The corner of the cloth had blown aside.

'Yes, for a very poor man. Well, death's all the less insult to
him. I have often thought how much smaller the richer class are
made to look than the poor at last pinches like this. Perhaps the
greatest of all the reconcilers of a thoughtful man to poverty--and
I speak from experience--is the grand quiet it fills him with when
the uncertainty of his life shows itself more than usual.'

As Springrove finished speaking, the bearers of the coffin went
across a gravelled square facing the two men and approached a grim
and heavy archway. They paused beneath it, rang a bell, and waited.

Over the archway was written in Egyptian capitals,

                           'COUNTY GAOL.'

The small rectangular wicket, which was constructed in one of the
two iron-studded doors, was opened from the inside. The men
severally stepped over the threshold, the coffin dragged its
melancholy length through the aperture, and both entered the court,
and were covered from sight.

'Somebody in the gaol, then?'

'Yes, one of the prisoners,' said a boy, scudding by at the moment,
who passed on whistling.

'Do you know the name of the man who is dead?' inquired Baker of a
third bystander.

'Yes, 'tis all over town--surely you know, Mr. Springrove? Why,
Manston, Miss Aldclyffe's steward. He was found dead the first
thing this morning. He had hung himself behind the door of his
cell, in some way, by a handkerchief and some strips of his clothes.
The turnkey says his features were scarcely changed, as he looked at
'em with the early sun a-shining in at the grating upon him. He has
left a full account of the murder, and all that led to it. So
there's an end of him.'



It was perfectly true: Manston was dead.

The previous day he had been allowed the use of writing-materials,
and had occupied himself for nearly seven hours in preparing the
following confession:--


                         'LAST WORDS.

'Having found man's life to be a wretchedly conceived scheme, I
renounce it, and, to cause no further trouble, I write down the
facts connected with my past proceedings.

'After thanking God, on first entering my house, on the night of the
fire at Carriford, for my release from bondage to a woman I
detested, I went, a second time, to the scene of the disaster, and,
finding that nothing could be done by remaining there, shortly
afterwards I returned home again in the company of Mr. Raunham.

'He parted from me at the steps of my porch, and went back towards
the rectory. Whilst I still stood at the door, musing on my strange
deliverance, I saw a figure advance from beneath the shadow of the
park trees. It was the figure of a woman.

'When she came near, the twilight was sufficient to show me her
attire: it was a cloak reaching to the bottom of her dress, and a
thick veil covering her face. These features, together with her
size and gait, aided also by a flash of perception as to the chain
of events which had saved her life, told me that she was my wife
Eunice.

'I gnashed my teeth in a frenzy of despair; I had lost Cytherea; I
had gained one whose beauty had departed, whose utterance was
complaint, whose mind was shallow, and who drank brandy every day.
The revulsion of feeling was terrible. Providence, whom I had just
thanked, seemed a mocking tormentor laughing at me. I felt like a
madman.

'She came close--started at seeing me outside--then spoke to me.
Her first words were reproof for what I had unintentionally done,
and sounded as an earnest of what I was to be cursed with as long as
we both lived. I answered angrily; this tone of mine changed her
complaints to irritation. She taunted me with a secret she had
discovered, which concerned Miss Aldclyffe and myself. I was
surprised to learn it--more surprised that she knew it, but
concealed my feeling.

'"How could you serve me so?" she said, her breath smelling of
spirits even then. "You love another woman--yes, you do. See how
you drive me about! I have been to the station, intending to leave
you for ever, and yet I come to try you once more."

'An indescribable exasperation had sprung up in me as she talked
--rage and regret were all in all. Scarcely knowing what I did, I
furiously raised my hand and swung it round with my whole force to
strike her. She turned quickly--and it was the poor creature's end.
By her movement my hand came edgewise exactly in the nape of the
neck--as men strike a hare to kill it. The effect staggered me with
amazement. The blow must have disturbed the vertebrae; she fell at
my feet, made a few movements, and uttered one low sound.

'I ran indoors for water and some wine, I came out and lanced her
arm with my penknife. But she lay still, and I found that she was
dead.

'It was a long time before I could realize my horrible position.
For several minutes I had no idea of attempting to escape the
consequences of my deed. Then a light broke upon me. Had anybody
seen her since she left the Three Tranters? Had they not, she was
already believed by the parishioners to be dust and ashes. I should
never be found out.

'Upon this I acted.

'The first question was how to dispose of the body. The impulse
of the moment was to bury her at once in the pit between the
engine-house and waterfall; but it struck me that I should not have
time. It was now four o'clock, and the working-men would soon be
stirring about the place. I would put off burying her till the next
night. I carried her indoors.

'In turning the outhouse into a workshop, earlier in the season, I
found, when driving a nail into the wall for fixing a cupboard, that
the wall sounded hollow. I examined it, and discovered behind the
plaster an old oven which had long been disused, and was bricked up
when the house was prepared for me.

'To unfix this cupboard and pull out the bricks was the work of a
few minutes. Then, bearing in mind that I should have to remove the
body again the next night, I placed it in a sack, pushed it into the
oven, packed in the bricks, and replaced the cupboard.

'I then went to bed. In bed, I thought whether there were any very
remote possibilities that might lead to the supposition that my wife
was not consumed by the flames of the burning house. The thing
which struck me most forcibly was this, that the searchers might
think it odd that no remains whatever should be found.

'The clinching and triumphant deed would be to take the body and
place it among the ruins of the destroyed house. But I could not do
this, on account of the men who were watching against an outbreak of
the fire. One remedy remained.

'I arose again, dressed myself, and went down to the outhouse. I
must take down the cupboard again. I did take it down. I pulled
out the bricks, pulled out the sack, pulled out the corpse, and took
her keys from her pocket and the watch from her side.

'I then replaced everything as before.

'With these articles in my pocket I went out of the yard, and took
my way through the withy copse to the churchyard, entering it from
the back. Here I felt my way carefully along till I came to the
nook where pieces of bones from newly-dug graves are sometimes piled
behind the laurel-bushes. I had been earnestly hoping to find a
skull among these old bones; but though I had frequently seen one or
two in the rubbish here, there was not one now. I then groped in
the other corner with the same result--nowhere could I find a skull.
Three or four fragments of leg and back-bones were all I could
collect, and with these I was forced to be content.

'Taking them in my hand, I crossed the road, and got round behind
the inn, where the couch heap was still smouldering. Keeping behind
the hedge, I could see the heads of the three or four men who
watched the spot.

'Standing in this place I took the bones, and threw them one by one
over the hedge and over the men's heads into the smoking embers.
When the bones had all been thrown, I threw the keys; last of all I
threw the watch.

'I then returned home as I had gone, and went to bed once more, just
as the dawn began to break. I exulted--"Cytherea is mine again!"

'At breakfast-time I thought, "Suppose the cupboard should by some
unlikely chance get moved to-day!"

'I went to the mason's yard hard by, while the men were at
breakfast, and brought away a shovelful of mortar. I took it into
the outhouse, again shifted the cupboard, and plastered over the
mouth of the oven behind. Simply pushing the cupboard back into its
place, I waited for the next night that I might bury the body,
though upon the whole it was in a tolerably safe hiding-place.

'When the night came, my nerves were in some way weaker than they
had been on the previous night. I felt reluctant to touch the body.
I went to the outhouse, but instead of opening the oven, I firmly
drove in the shoulder-nails that held the cupboard to the wall. "I
will bury her to-morrow night, however," I thought.

'But the next night I was still more reluctant to touch her. And my
reluctance increased, and there the body remained. The oven was,
after all, never likely to be opened in my time.

'I married Cytherea Graye, and never did a bridegroom leave the
church with a heart more full of love and happiness, and a brain
more fixed on good intentions, than I did on that morning.

'When Cytherea's brother made his appearance at the hotel in
Southampton, bearing his strange evidence of the porter's
disclosure, I was staggered beyond expression. I thought they had
found the body. "Am I to be apprehended and to lose her even now?"
I mourned. I saw my error, and instantly saw, too, that I must act
externally like an honourable man. So at his request I yielded her
up to him, and meditated on several schemes for enabling me to claim
the woman I had a legal right to claim as my wife, without
disclosing the reason why I knew myself to have it.

'I went home to Knapwater the next day, and for nearly a week lived
in a state of indecision. I could not hit upon a scheme for proving
my wife dead without compromising myself.

'Mr. Raunham hinted that I should take steps to discover her
whereabouts by advertising. I had no energy for the farce. But one
evening I chanced to enter the Rising Sun Inn. Two notorious
poachers were sitting in the settle, which screened my entrance.
They were half drunk--their conversation was carried on in the
solemn and emphatic tone common to that stage of intoxication, and I
myself was the subject of it.

'The following was the substance of their disjointed remarks: On
the night of the great fire at Carriford, one of them was sent to
meet me, and break the news of the death of my wife to me. This he
did; but because I would not pay him for his news, he left me in a
mood of vindictiveness. When the fire was over, he joined his
comrade. The favourable hour of the night suggested to them the
possibility of some unlawful gain before daylight came. My
fowlhouse stood in a tempting position, and still resenting his
repulse during the evening, one of them proposed to operate upon my
birds. I was believed to have gone to the rectory with Mr. Raunham.
The other was disinclined to go, and the first went off alone.

'It was now about three o'clock. He had advanced as far as the
shrubbery, which grows near the north wall of the house, when he
fancied he heard, above the rush of the waterfall, noises on the
other side of the building. He described them in these words,
"Ghostly mouths talking--then a fall--then a groan--then the rush of
the water and creak of the engine as before." Only one explanation
occurred to him; the house was haunted. And, whether those of the
living or the dead, voices of any kind were inimical to one who had
come on such an errand. He stealthily crept home.

'His unlawful purpose in being behind the house led him to conceal
his adventure. No suspicion of the truth entered his mind till the
railway-porter had startled everybody by his strange announcement.
Then he asked himself, had the horrifying sounds of that night been
really an enactment in the flesh between me and my wife?

'The words of the other man were:

'"Why don't he try to find her if she's alive?"

'"True," said the first. "Well, I don't forget what I heard, and if
she don't turn up alive my mind will be as sure as a Bible upon her
murder, and the parson shall know it, though I do get six months on
the treadmill for being where I was."

'"And if she should turn up alive?"

'"Then I shall know that I am wrong, and believing myself a fool as
well as a rogue, hold my tongue."

'I glided out of the house in a cold sweat. The only pressure in
heaven or earth which could have forced me to renounce Cytherea was
now put upon me--the dread of a death upon the gallows.

'I sat all that night weaving strategy of various kinds. The only
effectual remedy for my hazardous standing that I could see was a
simple one. It was to substitute another woman for my wife before
the suspicions of that one easily-hoodwinked man extended further.

'The only difficulty was to find a practicable substitute.

'The one woman at all available for the purpose was a friendless,
innocent creature, named Anne Seaway, whom I had known in my youth,
and who had for some time been the housekeeper of a lady in London.
On account of this lady's sudden death, Anne stood in rather a
precarious position, as regarded her future subsistence. She was
not the best kind of woman for the scheme; but there was no
alternative. One quality of hers was valuable; she was not a
talker. I went to London the very next day, called at the Hoxton
lodging of my wife (the only place at which she had been known as
Mrs. Manston), and found that no great difficulties stood in the way
of a personation. And thus favouring circumstances determined my
course. I visited Anne Seaway, made love to her, and propounded my
plan.

              *     *     *     *     *

'We lived quietly enough until the Sunday before my apprehension.
Anne came home from church that morning, and told me of the
suspicious way in which a young man had looked at her there.
Nothing could be done beyond waiting the issue of events. Then the
letter came from Raunham. For the first time in my life I was half
indifferent as to what fate awaited me. During the succeeding day I
thought once or twice of running away, but could not quite make up
my mind. At any rate it would be best to bury the body of my wife,
I thought, for the oven might be opened at any time. I went to
Casterbridge and made some arrangements. In the evening Miss
Aldclyffe (who is united to me by a common secret which I have no
right or wish to disclose) came to my house, and alarmed me still
more. She said that she could tell by Mr. Raunham's manner that
evening, that he kept back from her a suspicion of more importance
even than the one he spoke of, and that strangers were in his house
even then.

'I guessed what this further suspicion was, and resolved to
enlighten her to a certain extent, and so secure her assistance. I
said that I killed my wife by an accident on the night of the fire,
dwelling upon the advantage to her of the death of the only woman
who knew her secret.

'Her terror, and fears for my fate, led her to watch the rectory
that evening. She saw the detective leave it, and followed him to
my residence. This she told me hurriedly when I perceived her after
digging my wife's grave in the plantation. She did not suspect what
the sack contained.

'I am now about to enter on my normal condition. For people are
almost always in their graves. When we survey the long race of men,
it is strange and still more strange to find that they are mainly
dead men, who have scarcely ever been otherwise.

                                              'AENEAS MANSTON.'


The steward's confession, aided by circumstantial evidence of
various kinds, was the means of freeing both Anne Seaway and Miss
Aldclyffe from all suspicion of complicity with the murderer.

2. SIX O'CLOCK P.M.

It was evening--just at sunset--on the day of Manston's death.

In the cottage at Tolchurch was gathered a group consisting of
Cytherea, her brother, Edward Springrove, and his father. They sat
by the window conversing of the strange events which had just taken
place. In Cytherea's eye there beamed a hopeful ray, though her
face was as white as a lily.

Whilst they talked, looking out at the yellow evening light that
coated the hedges, trees, and church tower, a brougham rolled round
the corner of the lane, and came in full view. It reflected the
rays of the sun in a flash from its polished panels as it turned the
angle, the spokes of the wheels bristling in the same light like
bayonets. The vehicle came nearer, and arrived opposite Owen's
door, when the driver pulled the rein and gave a shout, and the
panting and sweating horses stopped.

'Miss Aldclyffe's carriage!' they all exclaimed.

Owen went out. 'Is Miss Graye at home?' said the man. 'A note for
her, and I am to wait for an answer.'

Cytherea read in the handwriting of the Rector of Carriford:--


'DEAR MISS GRAYE,--Miss Aldclyffe is ill, though not dangerously.
She continually repeats your name, and now wishes very much to see
you. If you possibly can, come in the carriage.--Very sincerely
yours, JOHN RAUNHAM.'


'How comes she ill?' Owen inquired of the coachman.

'She caught a violent cold by standing out of doors in the damp, on
the night the steward ran away. Ever since, till this morning, she
complained of fulness and heat in the chest. This morning the maid
ran in and told her suddenly that Manston had killed himself in
gaol--she shrieked--broke a blood-vessel--and fell upon the floor.
Severe internal haemorrhage continued for some time and then
stopped. They say she is sure to get over it; but she herself says
no. She has suffered from it before.'

Cytherea was ready in a few moments, and entered the carriage.

3. SEVEN O'CLOCK P.M.

Soft as was Cytherea's motion along the corridors of Knapwater
House, the preternaturally keen intelligence of the suffering
woman caught the maiden's well-known footfall. She entered the
sick-chamber with suspended breath.

In the room everything was so still, and sensation was as it were so
rarefied by solicitude, that thinking seemed acting, and the lady's
weak act of trying to live a silent wrestling with all the powers of
the universe. Nobody was present but Mr. Raunham, the nurse having
left the room on Cytherea's entry, and the physician and surgeon
being engaged in a whispered conversation in a side-chamber. Their
patient had been pronounced out of danger.

Cytherea went to the bedside, and was instantly recognized. O, what
a change--Miss Aldclyffe dependent upon pillows! And yet not a
forbidding change. With weakness had come softness of aspect: the
haughtiness was extracted from the frail thin countenance, and a
sweeter mild placidity had taken its place.

Miss Aldclyffe signified to Mr. Raunham that she would like to be
alone with Cytherea.

'Cytherea?' she faintly whispered the instant the door was closed.

Cytherea clasped the lady's weak hand, and sank beside her.

Miss Aldclyffe whispered again. 'They say I am certain to live; but
I know that I am certainly going to die.'

'They know, I think, and hope.'

'I know best, but we'll leave that. Cytherea--O Cytherea, can you
forgive me!'

Her companion pressed her hand.

'But you don't know yet--you don't know yet,' the invalid murmured.
'It is forgiveness for that misrepresentation to Edward Springrove
that I implore, and for putting such force upon him--that which
caused all the train of your innumerable ills!'

'I know all--all. And I do forgive you. Not in a hasty impulse
that is revoked when coolness comes, but deliberately and sincerely:
as I myself hope to be forgiven, I accord you my forgiveness now.'

Tears streamed from Miss Aldclyffe's eyes, and mingled with those of
her young companion, who could not restrain hers for sympathy.
Expressions of strong attachment, interrupted by emotion, burst
again and again from the broken-spirited woman.

'But you don't know my motive. O, if you only knew it, how you
would pity me then!'

Cytherea did not break the pause which ensued, and the elder woman
appeared now to nerve herself by a superhuman effort. She spoke on
in a voice weak as a summer breeze, and full of intermission, and
yet there pervaded it a steadiness of intention that seemed to
demand firm tones to bear it out worthily.

'Cytherea,' she said, 'listen to me before I die.

'A long time ago--more than thirty years ago--a young girl of
seventeen was cruelly betrayed by her cousin, a wild officer of
six-and-twenty. He went to India, and died.

'One night when that miserable girl had just arrived home with her
parents from Germany, where her baby had been born, she took all the
money she possessed, pinned it on her infant's bosom, together with
a letter, stating, among other things, what she wished the child's
Christian name to be; wrapped up the little thing, and walked with
it to Clapham. Here, in a retired street, she selected a house.
She placed the child on the doorstep and knocked at the door, then
ran away and watched. They took it up and carried it indoors.

'Now that her poor baby was gone, the girl blamed herself bitterly
for cruelty towards it, and wished she had adopted her parents'
counsel to secretly hire a nurse. She longed to see it. She didn't
know what to do. She wrote in an assumed name to the woman who had
taken it in, and asked her to meet the writer with the infant at
certain places she named. These were hotels or coffee-houses in
Chelsea, Pimlico, or Hammersmith. The woman, being well paid,
always came, and asked no questions. At one meeting--at an inn in
Hammersmith--she made her appearance without the child, and told the
girl it was so ill that it would not live through the night. The
news, and fatigue, brought on a fainting-fit . . .'

Miss Aldclyffe's sobs choked her utterance, and she became painfully
agitated. Cytherea, pale and amazed at what she heard, wept for
her, bent over her, and begged her not to go on speaking.

'Yes--I must,' she cried, between her sobs. 'I will--I must go on!
And I must tell yet more plainly! . . . you must hear it before I am
gone, Cytherea.' The sympathizing and astonished girl sat down
again.

'The name of the woman who had taken the child was _Manston_. She was
the widow of a schoolmaster. She said she had adopted the child of
a relation.

'Only one man ever found out who the mother was. He was the keeper
of the inn in which she fainted, and his silence she has purchased
ever since.

'A twelvemonth passed--fifteen months--and the saddened girl met a
man at her father's house named Graye--your father, Cytherea, then
unmarried. Ah, such a man! Inexperience now perceived what it was
to be loved in spirit and in truth! But it was too late. Had he
known her secret he would have cast her out. She withdrew from him
by an effort, and pined.

'Years and years afterwards, when she became mistress of a fortune
and estates by her father's death, she formed the weak scheme of
having near her the son whom, in her father's life-time, she had
been forbidden to recognize. Cytherea, you know who that weak woman
is.

              *     *     *     *     *

'By such toilsome labour as this I got him here as my steward. And
I wanted to see him _your husband_, Cytherea!--the husband of my true
lover's child. It was a sweet dream to me. . . . Pity me--O, pity
me! To die unloved is more than I can bear! I loved your father,
and I love him now.'



That was the burden of Cytherea Aldclyffe.

'I suppose you must leave me again--you always leave me,' she said,
after holding the young woman's hand a long while in silence.

'No--indeed I'll stay always. Do you like me to stay?'

Miss Aldclyffe in the jaws of death was Miss Aldclyffe still, though
the old fire had degenerated to mere phosphorescence now. 'But you
are your brother's housekeeper?'

'Yes.'

'Well, of course you cannot stay with me on a sudden like this.
. . . Go home, or he will be at a loss for things. And to-morrow
morning come again, won't you, dearest, come again--we'll fetch you.
But you mustn't stay now, and put Owen out. O no--it would be absurd.'
The absorbing concern about trifles of daily routine, which is so
often seen in very sick people, was present here.

Cytherea promised to go home, and come the next morning to stay
continuously.

'Stay till I die then, will you not? Yes, till I die--I shan't die
till to-morrow.'

'We hope for your recovery--all of us.'

'I know best. Come at six o'clock, darling.'

'As soon as ever I can,' returned Cytherea tenderly.

'But six is too early--you will have to think of your brother's
breakfast. Leave Tolchurch at eight, will you?'

Cytherea consented to this. Miss Aldclyffe would never have known
had her companion stayed in the house all night; but the honesty of
Cytherea's nature rebelled against even the friendly deceit which
such a proceeding would have involved.

An arrangement was come to whereby she was to be taken home in the
pony-carriage instead of the brougham that fetched her; the carriage
to put up at Tolchurch farm for the night, and on that account to be
in readiness to bring her back earlier.

4. MARCH THE THIRTIETH. DAYBREAK

The third and last instance of Cytherea's subjection to those
periodic terrors of the night which had emphasized her connection
with the Aldclyffe name and blood occurred at the present date.

It was about four o'clock in the morning when Cytherea, though most
probably dreaming, seemed to awake--and instantly was transfixed by
a sort of spell, that had in it more of awe than of affright. At
the foot of her bed, looking her in the face with an expression of
entreaty beyond the power of words to portray, was the form of Miss
Aldclyffe--wan and distinct. No motion was perceptible in her; but
longing--earnest longing--was written in every feature.

Cytherea believed she exercised her waking judgment as usual in
thinking, without a shadow of doubt, that Miss Aldclyffe stood
before her in flesh and blood. Reason was not sufficiently alert to
lead Cytherea to ask herself how such a thing could have occurred.

'I would have remained with you--why would you not allow me to
stay!' Cytherea exclaimed. The spell was broken: she became
broadly awake; and the figure vanished.

It was in the grey time of dawn. She trembled in a sweat of
disquiet, and not being able to endure the thought of her brother
being asleep, she went and tapped at his door.

'Owen!'

He was not a heavy sleeper, and it was verging upon his time to
rise.

'What do you want, Cytherea?'

'I ought not to have left Knapwater last night. I wish I had not.
I really think I will start at once. She wants me, I know.'

'What time is it?'

'A few minutes past four.'

'You had better not. Keep to the time agreed upon. Consider, we
should have such a trouble in rousing the driver, and other things.'

Upon the whole it seemed wiser not to act on a mere fancy. She went
to bed again.

An hour later, when Owen was thinking of getting up, a knocking came
to the front door. The next minute something touched the glass of
Owen's window. He waited--the noise was repeated. A little gravel
had been thrown against it to arouse him.

He crossed the room, pulled up the blind, and looked out. A solemn
white face was gazing upwards from the road, expectantly straining
to catch the first glimpse of a person within the panes. It was the
face of a Knapwater man sitting on horseback.

Owen saw his errand. There is an unmistakable look in the face of
every man who brings tidings of death. Graye opened the window.

'Miss Aldclyffe . . .' said the messenger, and paused.

'Ah--dead?'

'Yes--she is dead.'

'When did she die?'

'At ten minutes past four, after another effusion. She knew best,
you see, sir. I started directly, by the rector's orders.'



                            SEQUEL

Fifteen months have passed, and we are brought on to Midsummer
Night, 1867.

The picture presented is the interior of the old belfry of Carriford
Church, at ten o'clock in the evening.

Six Carriford men and one stranger are gathered there, beneath the
light of a flaring candle stuck on a piece of wood against the wall.
The six Carriford men are the well-known ringers of the fine-toned
old bells in the key of F, which have been music to the ears of
Carriford parish and the outlying districts for the last four
hundred years. The stranger is an assistant, who has appeared from
nobody knows where.

The six natives--in their shirt-sleeves, and without hats--pull and
catch frantically at the dancing bellropes, the locks of their hair
waving in the breeze created by their quick motions; the stranger,
who has the treble bell, does likewise, but in his right mind and
coat. Their ever-changing shadows mingle on the wall in an endless
variety of kaleidoscopic forms, and the eyes of all the seven are
religiously fixed on a diagram like a large addition sum, which is
chalked on the floor.

Vividly contrasting with the yellow light of the candle upon the
four unplastered walls of the tower, and upon the faces and clothes
of the men, is the scene discernible through the screen beneath the
tower archway. At the extremity of the long mysterious avenue of
the nave and chancel can be seen shafts of moonlight streaming in at
the east window of the church--blue, phosphoric, and ghostly.

A thorough renovation of the bell-ringing machinery and accessories
had taken place in anticipation of an interesting event. New ropes
had been provided; every bell had been carefully shifted from its
carriage, and the pivots lubricated. Bright red 'sallies' of
woollen texture--soft to the hands and easily caught--glowed on the
ropes in place of the old ragged knots, all of which newness in
small details only rendered more evident the irrepressible aspect of
age in the mass surrounding them.

The triple-bob-major was ended, and the ringers wiped their faces
and rolled down their shirt-sleeves, previously to tucking away the
ropes and leaving the place for the night.

'Piph--h--h--h! A good forty minutes,' said a man with a streaming
face, and blowing out his breath--one of the pair who had taken the
tenor bell.

'Our friend here pulled proper well--that 'a did--seeing he's but a
stranger,' said Clerk Crickett, who had just resigned the second
rope, and addressing the man in the black coat.

''A did,' said the rest.

'I enjoyed it much,' said the man modestly.

'What we should ha' done without you words can't tell. The man that
d'belong by rights to that there bell is ill o' two gallons o' wold
cider.'

'And now so's,' remarked the fifth ringer, as pertaining to the last
allusion, 'we'll finish this drop o' metheglin and cider, and every
man home--along straight as a line.'

'Wi' all my heart,' Clerk Crickett replied. 'And the Lord send if I
ha'n't done my duty by Master Teddy Springrove--that I have so.'

'And the rest o' us,' they said, as the cup was handed round.

'Ay, ay--in ringen--but I was spaken in a spiritual sense o' this
mornen's business o' mine up by the chancel rails there. 'Twas very
convenient to lug her here and marry her instead o' doen it at that
twopenny-halfpenny town o' Budm'th. Very convenient.'

'Very. There was a little fee for Master Crickett.'

'Ah--well. Money's money--very much so--very--I always have said
it. But 'twas a pretty sight for the nation. He coloured up like
any maid, that 'a did.'

'Well enough 'a mid colour up. 'Tis no small matter for a man to
play wi' fire.'

'Whatever it may be to a woman,' said the clerk absently.

'Thou'rt thinken o' thy wife, clerk,' said Gad Weedy. 'She'll play
wi'it again when thou'st got mildewed.'

'Well--let her, God bless her; for I'm but a poor third man, I. The
Lord have mercy upon the fourth! . . . Ay, Teddy's got his own at
last. What little white ears that maid hev, to be sure! choose your
wife as you choose your pig--a small ear and a small tale--that was
always my joke when I was a merry feller, ah--years agone now! But
Teddy's got her. Poor chap, he was getten as thin as a hermit wi'
grief--so was she.'

'Maybe she'll pick up now.'

'True--'tis nater's law, which no man shall gainsay. Ah, well do I
bear in mind what I said to Pa'son Raunham, about thy mother's
family o' seven, Gad, the very first week of his comen here, when I
was just in my prime. "And how many daughters has that poor Weedy
got, clerk?" he says. "Six, sir," says I, "and every one of 'em has
a brother!" "Poor woman," says he, "a dozen children!--give her
this half-sovereign from me, clerk." 'A laughed a good five minutes
afterwards, when he found out my merry nater--'a did. But there,
'tis over wi' me now. Enteren the Church is the ruin of a man's wit
for wit's nothen without a faint shadder o' sin.'

'If so be Teddy and the lady had been kept apart for life, they'd
both ha' died,' said Gad emphatically.

'But now instead o' death there'll be increase o' life,' answered
the clerk.

'It all went proper well,' said the fifth bell-ringer. 'They didn't
flee off to Babylonish places--not they.' He struck up an attitude
--'Here's Master Springrove standen so: here's the married woman
standen likewise; here they d'walk across to Knapwater House; and
there they d'bide in the chimley corner, hard and fast.'

'Yes, 'twas a pretty wedden, and well attended,' added the clerk.
'Here was my lady herself--red as scarlet: here was Master
Springrove, looken as if he half wished he'd never a-come--ah, poor
souls!--the men always do! The women do stand it best--the maid was
in her glory. Though she was so shy the glory shone plain through
that shy skin. Ah, it did so's.'

'Ay,' said Gad, 'and there was Tim Tankins and his five journeymen
carpenters, standen on tiptoe and peepen in at the chancel winders.
There was Dairyman Dodman waiten in his new spring-cart to see 'em
come out--whip in hand--that 'a was. Then up comes two master
tailors. Then there was Christopher Runt wi' his pickaxe and
shovel. There was wimmen-folk and there was men-folk traypsen up
and down church'ard till they wore a path wi' traypsen so--letten
the squallen children slip down through their arms and nearly
skinnen o' em. And these were all over and above the gentry and
Sunday-clothes folk inside. Well, I seed Mr. Graye at last dressed
up quite the dand. "Well, Mr. Graye," says I from the top o'
church'ard wall, "how's yerself?" Mr. Graye never spoke--he'd
prided away his hearen. Seize the man, I didn' want en to spak.
Teddy hears it, and turns round: "All right, Gad!" says he, and
laughed like a boy. There's more in Teddy.'

'Well,' said Clerk Crickett, turning to the man in black, 'now
you've been among us so long, and d'know us so well, won't ye tell
us what ye've come here for, and what your trade is?'

'I am no trade,' said the thin man, smiling, 'and I came to see the
wickedness of the land.'

'I said thou wast one o' the devil's brood wi' thy black clothes,'
replied a sturdy ringer, who had not spoken before.

'No, the truth is,' said the thin man, retracting at this horrible
translation, 'I came for a walk because it is a fine evening.'

'Now let's be off, neighbours,' the clerk interrupted.

The candle was inverted in the socket, and the whole party stepped
out into the churchyard. The moon was shining within a day or two
of full, and just overlooked the three or four vast yews that stood
on the south-east side of the church, and rose in unvaried and flat
darkness against the illuminated atmosphere behind them.

'Good-night,' the clerk said to his comrades, when the door was
locked. 'My nearest way is through the park.'

'I suppose mine is too?' said the stranger. 'I am going to the
railway-station.'

'Of course--come on.'

The two men went over a stile to the west, the remainder of the
party going into the road on the opposite side.

'And so the romance has ended well,' the clerk's companion remarked,
as they brushed along through the grass. 'But what is the truth of
the story about the property?'

'Now look here, neighbour,' said Clerk Crickett, 'if so be you'll
tell me what your line o' life is, and your purpose in comen here
to-day, I'll tell you the truth about the wedden particulars.'

'Very well--I will when you have done,' said the other man.

''Tis a bargain; and this is the right o' the story. When Miss
Aldclyffe's will was opened, it was found to have been drawn up on
the very day that Manston (her love-child) married Miss Cytherea
Graye. And this is what that deep woman did. Deep? she was as deep
as the North Star. She bequeathed all her property, real and
personal, to "THE WIFE OF AENEAS MANSTON" (with one exception):
failen her life to her husband: failen his life to the heirs of his
head--body I would say: failen them to her absolutely and her heirs
for ever: failen these to Pa'son Raunham, and so on to the end o'
the human race. Now do you see the depth of her scheme? Why,
although upon the surface it appeared her whole property was for
Miss Cytherea, by the word "wife" being used, and not Cytherea's
name, whoever was the wife o' Manston would come in for't. Wasn't
that rale depth? It was done, of course, that her son AEneas, under
any circumstances, should be master o' the property, without folk
knowen it was her son or suspecting anything, as they would if it
had been left to en straightway.'

'A clever arrangement! And what was the exception?'

'The payment of a legacy to her relative, Pa'son Raunham.'

'And Miss Cytherea was now Manston's widow and only relative, and
inherited all absolutely.'

'True, she did. "Well," says she, "I shan't have it" (she didn't
like the notion o' getten anything through Manston, naturally
enough, pretty dear). She waived her right in favour o' Mr.
Raunham. Now, if there's a man in the world that d'care nothen
about land--I don't say there is, but _if_ there is--'tis our pa'son.
He's like a snail. He's a-growed so to the shape o' that there
rectory that 'a wouldn' think o' leaven it even in name. "'Tis
yours, Miss Graye," says he. "No, 'tis yours," says she. "'Tis'n'
mine," says he. The Crown had cast his eyes upon the case, thinken
o' forfeiture by felony--but 'twas no such thing, and 'a gied it up,
too. Did you ever hear such a tale?--three people, a man and a
woman, and a Crown--neither o' em in a madhouse--flingen an estate
backwards and forwards like an apple or nut? Well, it ended in this
way. Mr. Raunham took it: young Springrove was had as agent and
steward, and put to live in Knapwater House, close here at hand
--just as if 'twas his own. He does just what he'd like--Mr. Raunham
never interferen--and hither to-day he's brought his new wife,
Cytherea. And a settlement ha' been drawn up this very day, whereby
their children, heirs, and cetrer, be to inherit after Mr. Raunham's
death. Good fortune came at last. Her brother, too, is doen well.
He came in first man in some architectural competition, and is about
to move to London. Here's the house, look. Stap out from these
bushes, and you'll get a clear sight o't.'

They emerged from the shrubbery, breaking off towards the lake, and
down the south slope. When they arrived exactly opposite the centre
of the mansion, they halted.

It was a magnificent picture of the English country-house. The
whole of the severe regular front, with its columns and cornices,
was built of a white smoothly-faced freestone, which appeared in the
rays of the moon as pure as Pentelic marble. The sole objects in
the scene rivalling the fairness of the facade were a dozen swans
floating upon the lake.

At this moment the central door at the top of the steps was opened,
and two figures advanced into the light. Two contrasting figures
were they. A young lithe woman in an airy fairy dress--Cytherea
Springrove: a young man in black stereotype raiment--Edward, her
husband.

They stood at the top of the steps together, looking at the moon,
the water, and the general loveliness of the prospect.

'That's the married man and wife--there, I've illustrated my story
by rale liven specimens,' the clerk whispered.

'To be sure, how close together they do stand! You couldn' slip a
penny-piece between 'em--that you couldn'! Beautiful to see it,
isn't it--beautiful! . . . But this is a private path, and we won't
let 'em see us, as all the ringers be goen there to a supper and
dance to-morrow night.'

The speaker and his companion softly moved on, passed through the
wicket, and into the coach-road. Arrived at the clerk's house at
the further boundary of the park, they paused to part.

'Now for your half o' the bargain,' said Clerk Crickett. 'What's
your line o' life, and what d'ye come here for?'

'I'm the reporter to the Casterbridge Chronicle, and I come to pick
up the news. Good-night.'



Meanwhile Edward and Cytherea, after lingering on the steps for
several minutes, slowly descended the slope to the lake. The skiff
was lying alongside.

'O, Edward,' said Cytherea, 'you must do something that has just
come into my head!'

'Well, dearest--I know.'

'Yes--give me one half-minute's row on the lake here now, just as
you did on Budmouth Bay three years ago.'

He handed her into the boat, and almost noiselessly pulled off from
shore. When they were half-way between the two margins of the lake,
he paused and looked at her.

'Ah, darling, I remember exactly how I kissed you that first time,'
said Springrove. 'You were there as you are now. I unshipped the
sculls in this way. Then I turned round and sat beside you--in this
way. Then I put my hand on the other side of your little neck--'

'I think it was just on my cheek, in this way.'

'Ah, so it was. Then you moved that soft red mouth round to mine--'

'But, dearest--you pressed it round if you remember; and of course I
couldn't then help letting it come to your mouth without being
unkind to you, and I wouldn't be that.'

'And then I put my cheek against that cheek, and turned my two lips
round upon those two lips, and kissed them--so.'





*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Desperate Remedies" ***

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