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<h2> CHAPTER XIV. GIVING GLIMPSES OF DIANA UNDER HER CLOUD BEFORE THE WORLD AND OF HER FURTHER APPRENTICESHIP </h2>
<p>As the day of her trial became more closely calculable, Diana's
anticipated alarms receded with the deadening of her heart to meet the
shock. She fancied she had put on proof-armour, unconscious that it was
the turning of the inward flutterer to steel, which supplied her cuirass
and shield. The necessity to brave society, in the character of honest
Defendant, caused but a momentary twitch of the nerves. Her heart beat
regularly, like a serviceable clock; none of her faculties abandoned her
save songfulness, and none belied her, excepting a disposition to tartness
almost venomous in the sarcastic shafts she let fly at friends interceding
with Mr. Warwick to spare his wife, when she had determined to be tried. A
strange fit of childishness overcame her powers of thinking, and was
betrayed in her manner of speaking, though—to herself her dwindled
humour allowed her to appear the towering Britomart. She pouted
contemptuously on hearing that a Mr. Sullivan Smith (a remotely
recollected figure) had besought Mr. Warwick for an interview, and gained
it, by stratagem, 'to bring the man to his senses': but an ultra-Irishman
did not compromise her battle-front, as the busybody supplications of a
personal friend like Mr. Redworth did; and that the latter, without
consulting her, should be 'one of the plaintive crew whining about the
heels of the Plaintiff for a mercy she disdained and rejected' was bitter
to her taste.</p>
<p>'He does not see that unless I go through the fire there is no
justification for this wretched character of mine!' she exclaimed. Truce,
treaty, withdrawal, signified publicly pardon, not exoneration by any
means; and now that she was in armour she had no dread of the public. So
she said. Redworth's being then engaged upon the canvass of a borough,
added to the absurdity of his meddling with the dilemmas of a woman. 'Dear
me, Emma! think of stepping aside from the parliamentary road to entreat a
husband to relent, and arrange the domestic alliance of a contrary couple!
Quixottry is agreeable reading, a silly performance.' Lady Dunstane
pleaded his friendship. She had to quit the field where such darts were
showering.</p>
<p>The first dinner-party was aristocratic, easy to encounter. Lord and Lady
Crane, Lady Pennon, Lord and Lady Esquart, Lord Larrian, Mr. and Mrs.
Montvert of Halford Manor, Lady Singleby, Sir Walter Capperston friends,
admirers of Diana; patrons, in the phrase of the time, of her father, were
the guests. Lady Pennon expected to be amused, and was gratified, for
Diana had only to open her mouth to set the great lady laughing. She
petitioned to have Mrs. Warwick at her table that day week, because the
marquis was dying to make her acquaintance, and begged to have all her
sayings repeated to him; vowed she must be salt in the desert. 'And
remember, I back you through thick and thin,' said Lady Pennon. To which
Diana replied: 'If I am salt in the desert, you are the spring'; and the
old lady protested she must put that down for her book. The witty Mrs.
Warwick, of whom wit was expected, had many incitements to be guilty of
cheap wit; and the beautiful Mrs. Warwick, being able to pass anything she
uttered, gave good and bad alike, under the impulsion to give out
something, that the stripped and shivering Mrs. Warwick might find a cover
in applause. She discovered the social uses of cheap wit; she laid
ambushes for anecdotes, a telling form of it among a people of no
conversational interlocution, especially in the circles depending for
dialogue upon perpetual fresh supplies of scandal; which have plentiful
crops, yet not sufficient. The old dinner and supper tables at The
Crossways furnished her with an abundant store; and recollection failing,
she invented. Irish anecdotes are always popular in England, as promoting,
besides the wholesome shake of the sides, a kindly sense of superiority.
Anecdotes also are portable, unlike the lightning flash, which will not go
into the pocket; they can be carried home, they are disbursable at other
tables. These were Diana's weapons. She was perforce the actress of her
part.</p>
<p>In happier times, when light of heart and natural, her vogue had not been
so enrapturing. Doubtless Cleopatra in her simple Egyptian uniform would
hardly have won such plaudits as her stress of barbaric Oriental
splendours evoked for her on the swan and serpent Nile-barge—not
from posterity at least. It is a terrible decree, that all must act who
would prevail; and the more extended the audience, the greater need for
the mask and buskin.</p>
<p>From Lady Pennon's table Diana passed to Lady Crane's, Lady Esquart's,
Lady Singleby's, the Duchess of Raby's, warmly clad in the admiration she
excited. She appeared at Princess Therese Paryli's first ball of the
season, and had her circle, not of worshippers only. She did not dance.
The princess, a fair Austrian, benevolent to her sisterhood, an admirer of
Diana's contrasting complexion, would have had her dance once in a
quadrille of her forming, but yielded to the mute expression of the
refusal. Wherever Mrs. Warwick went, her arts of charming were addressed
to the women. Men may be counted on for falling bowled over by a handsome
face and pointed tongue; women require some wooing from their ensphered
and charioted sister, particularly if she is clouded; and old women—excellent
buttresses—must be suavely courted. Now, to woo the swimming matron
and court the settled dowager, she had to win forgiveness for her beauty;
and this was done, easily done, by forbearing to angle with it in the
press of nibblers. They ranged about her, individually unnoticed. Seeming
unaware of its effect where it kindled, she smote a number of musical
female chords, compassion among them. A general grave affability of her
eyes and smiles was taken for quiet pleasure in the scene. Her fitful
intentness of look when conversing with the older ladies told of the mind
within at work upon what they said, and she was careful that plain
dialogue should make her comprehensible to them. Nature taught her these
arts, through which her wit became extolled entirely on the strength of
her reputation, and her beauty did her service by never taking aim abroad.
They are the woman's arts of self-defence, as legitimately and honourably
hers as the manful use of the fists with a coarser sex. If it had not been
nature that taught her the practice of them in extremity, the sagacious
dowagers would have seen brazenness rather than innocence—or an
excuseable indiscretion—in the part she was performing. They are not
lightly duped by one of their sex. Few tasks are more difficult than for a
young woman under a cloud to hoodwink old women of the world. They are the
prey of financiers, but Time has presented them a magic ancient glass to
scan their sex in.</p>
<p>At Princess Paryli's Ball two young men of singular elegance were observed
by Diana, little though she concentered her attention on any figures of
the groups. She had the woman's faculty (transiently bestowed by perfervid
jealousy upon men) of distinguishing minutely in the calmest of
indifferent glances. She could see without looking; and when her eyes were
wide they had not to dwell to be detective. It did not escape her that the
Englishman of the two hurried for the chance of an introduction, nor that
he suddenly, after putting a question to a man beside him, retired. She
spoke of them to Emma as they drove home. 'The princess's partner in the
first quadrille... Hungarian, I suppose? He was like a Tartar modelled by
a Greek: supple as the Scythian's bow, braced as the string! He has the
air of a born horseman, and valses perfectly. I won't say he was handsomer
than a young Englishman there, but he had the advantage of soldierly
training. How different is that quick springy figure from our young men's
lounging style! It comes of military exercise and discipline.'</p>
<p>'That was Count Jochany, a cousin of the princess, and a cavalry officer,'
said Emma. 'You don't know the other? I am sure the one you mean must be
Percy Dacier.'</p>
<p>His retiring was explained: the Hon. Percy Dacier was the nephew of Lord
Dannisburgh, often extolled to her as the promising youngster of his day,
with the reserve that he wasted his youth: for the young gentleman was
decorous and studious; ambitious, according to report; a politician taking
to politics much too seriously and exclusively to suit his uncle's pattern
for the early period of life. Uncle and nephew went their separate ways,
rarely meeting, though their exchange of esteem was cordial.</p>
<p>Thinking over his abrupt retirement from the crowded semicircle, Diana
felt her position pinch her, she knew not why.</p>
<p>Lady Dunstane was as indefatigable by day as by night in the business of
acting goddess to her beloved Tony, whom she assured that the service,
instead of exhausting, gave her such healthfulness as she had imagined
herself to have lost for ever. The word was passed, and invitations poured
in to choice conversational breakfasts, private afternoon concerts, all
the humming season's assemblies. Mr. Warwick's treatment of his wife was
taken by implication for lunatic; wherever she was heard or seen, he had
no case; a jury of some hundreds of both sexes, ready to be sworn,
pronounced against him. Only the personal enemies of the lord in the suit
presumed to doubt, and they exercised the discretion of a minority.</p>
<p>But there is an upper middle class below the aristocratic, boasting an
aristocracy of morals, and eminently persuasive of public opinion, if not
commanding it. Previous to the relaxation, by amendment, of a certain
legal process, this class was held to represent the austerity of the
country. At present a relaxed austerity is represented; and still the bulk
of the members are of fair repute, though not quite on the level of their
pretensions. They were then, while more sharply divided from the titular
superiors they are socially absorbing, very powerful to brand a woman's
character, whatever her rank might be; having innumerable agencies and
avenues for that high purpose, to say nothing of the printing-press. Lady
Dunstane's anxiety to draw them over to the cause of her friend set her
thinking of the influential Mrs. Cramborne Wathin, with whom she was
distantly connected; the wife of a potent serjeant-at-law fast mounting to
the Bench and knighthood; the centre of a circle, and not strangely that,
despite her deficiency in the arts and graces, for she had wealth and a
cook, a husband proud of his wine-cellar, and the ambition to rule; all
the rewards, together with the expectations, of the virtuous. She was a
lady of incisive features bound in stale parchment. Complexion she had
none, but she had spotlessness of skin, and sons and daughters just
resembling her, like cheaper editions of a precious quarto of a perished
type. You discerned the imitation of the type, you acknowledged the
inferior compositor. Mr. Cramborne Wathin was by birth of a grade beneath
his wife; he sprang (behind a curtain of horror) from tradesmen. The Bench
was in designation for him to wash out the stain, but his children
suffered in large hands and feet, short legs, excess of bone, prominences
misplaced. Their mother inspired them carefully with the religion she
opposed to the pretensions of a nobler blood, while instilling into them
that the blood they drew from her was territorial, far above the vulgar.
Her appearance and her principles fitted her to stand for the Puritan rich
of the period, emerging by the aid of an extending wealth into luxurious
worldliness, and retaining the maxims of their forefathers for the
discipline of the poor and erring.</p>
<p>Lady Dunstane called on her, ostensibly to let her know she had taken a
house in town for the season, and in the course of the chat Mrs. Cramborne
Wathin was invited to dinner. 'You will meet my dear friend, Mrs.
Warwick,' she said, and the reply was: 'Oh, I have heard of her.'</p>
<p>The formal consultation with Mr. Cramborne Wathin ended in an agreement to
accept Lady Dunstane's kind invitation.</p>
<p>Considering her husband's plenitude of old legal anecdotes, and her own
diligent perusal of the funny publications of the day, that she might be
on the level of the wits and celebrities she entertained, Mrs. Cramborne
Wathin had a right to expect the leading share in the conversation to
which she was accustomed. Every honour was paid to them; they met
aristocracy in the persons of Lord Larrian, of Lady Rockden, Colonel
Purlby, the Pettigrews, but neither of them held the table for a moment;
the topics flew, and were no sooner up than down; they were unable to get
a shot. They had to eat in silence, occasionally grinning, because a woman
labouring under a stigma would rattle-rattle, as if the laughter of the
company were her due, and decency beneath her notice. Some one alluded to
a dog of Mrs. Warwick's, whereupon she trips out a story of her dog's
amazing intelligence.</p>
<p>'And pray,' said Mrs. Cramborne Wathin across the table, merely to slip in
a word, 'what is the name of this wonderful dog?'</p>
<p>'His name is Leander,' said Diana.</p>
<p>'Oh, Leander. I don't think I hear myself calling to a dog in a name of
three syllables. Two at the most.'</p>
<p>No, so I call Hero! if I want him to come immediately,' said Diana, and
the gentlemen, to Mrs. Cramborne Wathin's astonishment, acclaimed it. Mr.
Redworth, at her elbow, explained the point, to her disgust...</p>
<p>That was Diana's offence.</p>
<p>If it should seem a small one, let it be remembered that a snub was
intended, and was foiled; and foiled with an apparent simplicity, enough
to exasperate, had there been no laughter of men to back the countering
stroke. A woman under a cloud, she talked, pushed to shine; she would be
heard, would be applauded. Her chronicler must likewise admit the error of
her giving way to a petty sentiment of antagonism on first beholding Mrs.
Cramborne Wathin, before whom she at once resolved to be herself, for a
holiday, instead of acting demurely to conciliate. Probably it was an
antagonism of race, the shrinking of the skin from the burr. But when
Tremendous Powers are invoked, we should treat any simple revulsion of our
blood as a vice. The Gods of this world's contests demand it of us, in
relation to them, that the mind, and not the instincts, shall be at work.
Otherwise the course of a prudent policy is never to invoke them, but
avoid.</p>
<p>The upper class was gained by her intrepidity, her charm, and her
elsewhere offending wit, however the case might go. It is chivalrous, but
not, alas, inflammable in support of innocence. The class below it is
governed in estimates of character by accepted patterns of conduct; yet
where innocence under persecution is believed to exist, the members
animated by that belief can be enthusiastic. Enthusiasm is a heaven-sent
steeplechaser, and takes a flying leap of the ordinary barriers; it is
more intrusive than chivalry, and has a passion to communicate its ardour.
Two letters from stranger ladies reached Diana, through her lawyers and
Lady Dunstane. Anonymous letters, not so welcome, being male effusions,
arrived at her lodgings, one of them comical almost over the verge to
pathos in its termination: 'To me you will ever be the Goddess Diana—my
faith in woman!'</p>
<p>He was unacquainted with her!</p>
<p>She had not the heart to think the writers donkeys. How they obtained her
address was a puzzle; they stole in to comfort her slightly. They attached
her to her position of Defendant by the thought of what would have been
the idea of her character if she had flown—a reflection emanating
from inexperience of the resources of sentimentalists.</p>
<p>If she had flown! She was borne along by the tide like a butterfly that a
fish may gobble unless a friendly hand shall intervene. And could it in
nature? She was past expectation of release. The attempt to imagine living
with any warmth of blood in her vindicated character, for the sake of
zealous friends, consigned her to a cold and empty house upon a foreign
earth. She had to set her mind upon the mysterious enshrouded Twelve, with
whom the verdict would soon be hanging, that she might prompt her human
combativeness to desire the vindication at such a price as she would have
to pay for it. When Emma Dunstane spoke to her of the certainty of
triumphing, she suggested a possible dissentient among the fateful Twelve,
merely to escape the drumming sound of that hollow big word. The
irreverent imp of her humour came to her relief by calling forth the
Twelve, in the tone of the clerk of the Court, and they answered to their
names of trades and crafts after the manner of Titania's elves, and were
questioned as to their fitness, by education, habits, enlightenment, to
pronounce decisively upon the case in dispute, the case being plainly
stated. They replied, that the long habit of dealing with scales enabled
them to weigh the value of evidence the most delicate. Moreover, they were
Englishmen, and anything short of downright bullet facts went to favour
the woman. For thus we light the balance of legal injustice toward the
sex: we conveniently wink, ma'am. A rough, old-fashioned way for us! Is it
a Breach of Promise?—She may reckon on her damages: we have
daughters of our own. Is it a suit for Divorce?—Well, we have wives
of our own, and we can lash, or we can spare; that's as it may be; but
we'll keep the couple tied, let 'em hate as they like, if they can't
furnish pork-butchers' reasons for sundering; because the man makes the
money in this country.—My goodness! what a funny people, sir!—It
's our way of holding the balance, ma'am.—But would it not be better
to rectify the law and the social system, dear sir?—Why, ma'am, we
find it comfortabler to take cases as they come, in the style of our
fathers.—But don't you see, my good man, that you are offering
scapegoats for the comfort of the majority?—Well, ma'am, there
always were scapegoats, and always will be; we find it comes round pretty
square in the end.</p>
<p>'And I may be the scapegoat, Emmy! It is perfectly possible. The grocer,
the pork-butcher, drysalter, stationer, tea-merchant, et caetera—they
sit on me. I have studied the faces of the juries, and Mr. Braddock tells
me of their composition. And he admits that they do justice roughly—a
rough and tumble country! to quote him—though he says they are
honest in intention.'</p>
<p>'More shame to the man who drags you before them—if he persists!'
Emma rejoined.</p>
<p>'He will. I know him. I would not have him draw back now,' said Diana,
catching her breath. 'And, dearest, do not abuse him; for if you do, you
set me imagining guiltiness. Oh, heaven!—suppose me publicly
pardoned! No, I have kinder feelings when we stand opposed. It is odd, and
rather frets my conscience, to think of the little resentment I feel.
Hardly any! He has not cause to like his wife. I can own it, and I am
sorry for him, heartily. No two have ever come together so naturally
antagonistic as we two. We walked a dozen steps in stupefied union, and
hit upon crossways. From that moment it was tug and tug; he me, I him. By
resisting, I made him a tyrant; and he, by insisting, made me a rebel. And
he was the maddest of tyrants—a weak one. My dear, he was also a
double-dealer. Or no, perhaps not in design. He was moved at one time by
his interests; at another by his idea of his honour. He took what I could
get for him, and then turned and drubbed me for getting it.'</p>
<p>'This is the creature you try to excuse!' exclaimed indignant Emma.</p>
<p>'Yes, because—but fancy all the smart things I said being called my
“sallies”!—can a woman live with it?—because I behaved... I
despised him too much, and I showed it. He is not a contemptible man
before the world; he is merely a very narrow one under close inspection. I
could not—or did not—conceal my feeling. I showed it not only
to him, to my friend. Husband grew to mean to me stifler, lung-contractor,
iron mask, inquisitor, everything anti-natural. He suffered under my
“sallies”: and it was the worse for him when he did not perceive their
drift. He is an upright man; I have not seen marked meanness. One might
build up a respectable figure in negatives. I could add a row of noughts
to the single number he cherishes, enough to make a millionnaire of him;
but strike away the first, the rest are wind. Which signifies, that if you
do not take his estimate of himself, you will think little of his:
negative virtues. He is not eminently, that is to say, not saliently,
selfish; not rancorous, not obtrusive—tata-ta-ta. But dull!—dull
as a woollen nightcap over eyes and ears and mouth. Oh! an executioner's
black cap to me. Dull, and suddenly staring awake to the idea of his
honour. I “rendered” him ridiculous—I had caught a trick of “using
men's phrases.” Dearest, now that the day of trial draws nigh—you
have never questioned me, and it was like you to spare me pain—but
now I can speak of him and myself.' Diana dropped her voice. Here was
another confession. The proximity of the trial acted like fire on her
faded recollection of incidents. It may be that partly the shame of
alluding to them had blocked her woman's memory. For one curious operation
of the charge of guiltiness upon the nearly guiltless is to make them
paint themselves pure white, to the obliteration of minor spots, until the
whiteness being acknowledged, or the ordeal imminent, the spots recur and
press upon their consciences. She resumed, in a rapid undertone: 'You know
that a certain degree of independence had been, if not granted by him,
conquered by me. I had the habit of it. Obedience with him is imprisonment—he
is a blind wall. He received a commission, greatly to his advantage, and
was absent. He seems to have received information of some sort. He
returned unexpectedly, at a late hour, and attacked me at once, middling
violent. My friend—and that he is! was coming from the House for a
ten minutes' talk, as usual, on his way home, to refresh him after the
long sitting and bear-baiting he had nightly to endure. Now let me
confess: I grew frightened; Mr. Warwick was “off his head,” as they
say-crazy, and I could not bear the thought of those two meeting. While he
raged I threw open the window and put the lamp near it, to expose the
whole interior—cunning as a veteran intriguer: horrible, but it had
to be done to keep them apart. He asked me what madness possessed me, to
sit by an open window at midnight, in view of the public, with a damp wind
blowing. I complained of want of air and fanned my forehead. I heard the
steps on the pavement; I stung him to retort loudly, and I was relieved;
the steps passed on. So the trick succeeded—the trick! It was the
worst I was guilty of, but it was a trick, and it branded me trickster. It
teaches me to see myself with an abyss in my nature full of infernal
possibilities. I think I am hewn in black rock. A woman who can do as I
did by instinct, needs to have an angel always near her, if she has not a
husband she reveres.'</p>
<p>'We are none of us better than you, dear Tony; only some are more
fortunate, and many are cowards,' Emma said. 'You acted prudently in a
wretched situation, partly of your own making, partly of the
circumstances. But a nature like yours could not sit still and moan. That
marriage was to blame! The English notion of women seems to be that we are
born white sheep or black; circumstances have nothing to do with our
colour. They dread to grant distinctions, and to judge of us discerningly
is beyond them. Whether the fiction, that their homes are purer than
elsewhere, helps to establish the fact, I do not know: there is a class
that does live honestly; and at any rate it springs from a liking for
purity; but I am sure that their method of impressing it on women has the
dangers of things artificial. They narrow their understanding of human
nature, and that is not the way to improve the breed.'</p>
<p>'I suppose we women are taken to be the second thoughts of the Creator;
human nature's fringes, mere finishing touches, not a part of the
texture,' said Diana; 'the pretty ornamentation. However, I fancy I
perceive some tolerance growing in the minds of the dominant sex. Our old
lawyer Mr. Braddock, who appears to have no distaste for conversations
with me, assures me he expects the day to come when women will be
encouraged to work at crafts and professions for their independence. That
is the secret of the opinion of us at present—our dependency. Give
us the means of independence, and we will gain it, and have a turn at
judging you, my lords! You shall behold a world reversed. Whenever I am
distracted by existing circumstances, I lay my finger on the material
conditions, and I touch the secret. Individually, it may be moral with us;
collectively, it is material-gross wrongs, gross hungers. I am a married
rebel, and thereof comes the social rebel. I was once a dancing and
singing girl: You remember the night of the Dublin Ball. A Channel sea in
uproar, stirred by witches, flows between.'</p>
<p>'You are as lovely as you were then—I could say, lovelier,' said
Emma.</p>
<p>'I have unconquerable health, and I wish I could give you the half of it,
dear. I work late into the night, and I wake early and fresh in the
morning. I do not sing, that is all. A few days more, and my character
will be up before the Bull's Head to face him in the arena. The worst of a
position like mine is, that it causes me incessantly to think and talk of
myself. I believe I think less than I talk, but the subject is growing
stale; as those who are long dying feel, I dare say—if they do not
take it as the compensation for their departure.'</p>
<p>The Bull's Head, or British Jury of Twelve, with the wig on it, was faced
during the latter half of a week of good news. First, Mr. Thomas Redworth
was returned to Parliament by a stout majority for the Borough of
Orrybridge: the Hon. Percy Dacier delivered a brilliant speech in the
House of Commons, necessarily pleasing to his uncle: Lord Larrian obtained
the command of the Rock: the house of The Crossways was let to a tenant
approved by Mr. Braddock: Diana received the opening proof-sheets of her
little volume, and an instalment of the modest honorarium: and finally,
the Plaintiff in the suit involving her name was adjudged to have not
proved his charge.</p>
<p>She heard of it without a change of countenance.</p>
<p>She could not have wished it the reverse; she was exonerated. But she was
not free; far from that; and she revenged herself on the friends who made
much of her triumph and overlooked her plight, by showing no sign of
satisfaction. There was in her bosom a revolt at the legal consequences of
the verdict—or blunt acquiescence of the Law in the conditions
possibly to be imposed on her unless she went straight to the relieving
phial; and the burden of keeping it under, set her wildest humour alight,
somewhat as Redworth remembered of her on the journey from The Crossways
to Copsley. This ironic fury, coming of the contrast of the outer and the
inner, would have been indulged to the extent of permanent injury to her
disposition had not her beloved Emma, immediately after the tension of the
struggle ceased, required her tenderest aid. Lady Dunstane chanted
victory, and at night collapsed. By the advice of her physician she was
removed to Copsley, where Diana's labour of anxious nursing restored her
through love to a saner spirit. The hopefulness of life must bloom again
in the heart whose prayers are offered for a life dearer than its own to
be preserved. A little return of confidence in Sir Lukin also refreshed
her when she saw that the poor creature did honestly, in his shaggy rough
male fashion, reverence and cling to the flower of souls he named as his
wife. His piteous groans of self-accusation during the crisis haunted her,
and made the conduct and nature of men a bewilderment to her still young
understanding. Save for the knot of her sensations (hardly a mental
memory, but a sullen knot) which she did not disentangle to charge him
with his complicity in the blind rashness of her marriage, she might have
felt sisterly, as warmly as she compassionated him.</p>
<p>It was midwinter when Dame Gossip, who keeps the exotic world alive with
her fanning whispers, related that the lovely Mrs. Warwick had left
England on board the schooner-yacht Clarissa, with Lord and Lady Esquart,
for a voyage in the Mediterranean: and (behind her hand) that the reason
was urgent, inasmuch as she fled to escape the meshes of the terrific net
of the marital law brutally whirled to capture her by the man her husband.</p>
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