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<h2> CHAPTER XXXII. WHEREIN WE BEHOLD A GIDDY TURN AT THE SPECTRAL CROSSWAYS </h2>
<h3> Danvers accompanied Mr. Dacier to the house-door. Climbing the stairs, she found her mistress in the drawing-room still. </h3>
<p>'You must be cold, ma'am,' she said, glancing at the fire-grate.</p>
<p>'Is it a frost?' said Diana.</p>
<p>'It's midnight and midwinter, ma'am.'</p>
<p>'Has it struck midnight?'</p>
<p>The mantel-piece clock said five minutes past.</p>
<p>'You had better go to bed, Danvers, or you will lose your bloom. Stop; you
are a faithful soul. Great things are happening and I am agitated. Mr.
Dacier has told me news. He came back purposely.'</p>
<p>'Yes, ma'am,' said Danvers. 'He had a great deal to tell?'</p>
<p>'Well, he had.' Diana coloured at the first tentative impertinence she had
heard from her maid. 'What is the secret of you, Danvers? What attaches
you to me?'</p>
<p>'I'm sure I don't know, ma'am. I'm romantic.'</p>
<p>'And you think me a romantic object?'</p>
<p>'I'm sure I can't say, ma'am. I'd rather serve you than any other lady;
and I wish you was happy.'</p>
<p>'Do you suppose I am unhappy?'</p>
<p>'I'm sure—but if I may speak, ma'am: so handsome and clever a lady!
and young! I can't bear to see it.'</p>
<p>'Tush, you silly woman. You read your melting tales, and imagine. I must
go and write for money: it is my profession. And I haven't an idea in my
head. This news disturbs me. Ruin if I don't write; so I must.—I
can't!'</p>
<p>Diana beheld the ruin. She clasped the great news for succour. Great
indeed: and known but to her of all the outer world. She was ahead of all—ahead
of Mr. Tonans!</p>
<p>The visionary figure of Mr. Tonans petrified by the great news, drinking
it, and confessing her ahead of him in the race for secrets, arose
toweringly. She had not ever seen the Editor in his den at midnight. With
the rumble of his machinery about him, and fresh matter arriving and
flying into the printing-press, it must be like being in the very
furnace-hissing of Events: an Olympian Council held in Vulcan's smithy.
Consider the bringing to the Jove there news of such magnitude as to
stupefy him! He, too, who had admonished her rather sneeringly for
staleness in her information. But this news, great though it was, and
throbbing like a heart plucked out of a breathing body, throbbed but for a
brief term, a day or two; after which, great though it was, immense, it
relapsed into a common organ, a possession of the multitude, merely
historically curious.</p>
<p>'You are not afraid of the streets at night?' Diana said to her maid, as
they were going upstairs.</p>
<p>'Not when we're driving, ma'am,' was the answer.</p>
<p>THE MAN OF TWO MINDS faced his creatrix in the dressing-room, still
delivering that most ponderous of sentences—a smothering pillow!</p>
<p>I have mistaken my vocation, thought Diana: I am certainly the flattest
proser who ever penned a line.</p>
<p>She sent Dangers into the bedroom on a trifling errand, unable to bear the
woman's proximity, and oddly unwilling to dismiss her.</p>
<p>She pressed her hands on her eyelids. Would Percy have humiliated her so
if he had respected her? He took advantage of the sudden loss of her
habitual queenly initiative at the wonderful news to debase and stain
their intimacy. The lover's behaviour was judged by her sensations: she
felt humiliated, plucked violently from the throne where she had long been
sitting securely, very proudly. That was at an end. If she was to be
better than the loathsomest of hypocrites, she must deny him his admission
to the house. And then what was her life!</p>
<p>Something that was pressing her low, she knew not how, and left it
unquestioned, incited her to exaggerate the indignity her pride had
suffered. She was a dethroned woman. Deeper within, an unmasked actress,
she said. Oh, she forgave him! But clearly he took her for the same as
other women consenting to receive a privileged visitor. And sounding
herself to the soul, was she so magnificently better? Her face flamed. She
hugged her arms at her breast to quiet the beating, and dropped them when
she surprised herself embracing the memory. He had brought political news,
and treated her as—name the thing! Not designedly, it might be: her
position invited it. 'The world had given her to him.' The world is always
a prophet of the mire; but the world is no longer an utterly mistaken
world. She shook before it.</p>
<p>She asked herself why Percy or the world should think highly of an
adventuress, who was a denounced wife, a wretched author, and on the verge
of bankruptcy. She was an adventuress. When she held The Crossways she had
at least a bit of solid footing: now gone. An adventuress without an idea
in her head: witness her dullard, The Man of Two Minds, at his work of
sermonizing his mistress.</p>
<p>The tremendous pressure upon our consciousness of the material cause, when
we find ourselves cast among the breakers of moral difficulties and
endeavour to elude that mudvisaged monster, chiefly by feigning
unconsciousness, was an experience of Diana's, in the crisis to which she
was wrought. Her wits were too acute, her nature too direct, to permit of
a lengthened confusion. She laid the scourge on her flesh smartly.—I
gave him these privileges because I am weak as the weakest, base as my
enemies proclaim me. I covered my woman's vile weakness with an air of
intellectual serenity that he, choosing his moment, tore away, exposing me
to myself, as well as to him, the most ordinary of reptiles. I kept up a
costly household for the sole purpose of seeing him and having him near
me. Hence this bitter need of money!—Either it must be money or
disgrace. Money would assist her quietly to amend and complete her work.
Yes, and this want of money, in a review of the last two years, was the
material cause of her recklessness. It was, her revived and uprising
pudency declared, the principal; the only cause. Mere want of money.</p>
<p>And she had a secret worth thousands! The secret of a day, no more:
anybody's secret after some four and twenty hours.</p>
<p>She smiled at the fancied elongation and stare of the features of Mr.
Tonans in his editorial midnight den.</p>
<p>What if he knew it and could cap it with something novel and stranger?
Hardly. But it was an inciting suggestion.</p>
<p>She began to tremble as a lightning-flash made visible her fortunes
recovered, disgrace averted, hours of peace for composition stretching
before her: a summer afternoon's vista.</p>
<p>It seemed a duel between herself and Mr. Tonans, and she sure of her
triumph—Diana victrix!</p>
<p>'Danvers!' she called.</p>
<p>'Is it to undress, ma'am?' said the maid, entering to her.</p>
<p>'You are not afraid of the streets, you tell me. I have to go down to the
City, I think. It is urgent. Yes, I must go. If I were to impart the news
to you, your head would be a tolling bell for a month.'</p>
<p>'You will take a cab, ma'am.'</p>
<p>'We must walk out to find one. I must go, though I should have to go on
foot. Quick with bonnet and shawl; muffle up warmly. We have never been
out so late: but does it matter? You're a brave soul, I'm sure, and you
shall have your fee.'</p>
<p>'I don't care for money, ma'am.'</p>
<p>'When we get home you shall kiss me.'</p>
<p>Danvers clothed her mistress in furs and rich wrappings: Not paid for! was
Diana's desperate thought, and a wrong one; but she had to seem the
precipitated bankrupt and succeeded. She was near being it. The boiling of
her secret carried her through the streets rapidly and unobservantly
except of such small things as the glow of the lights on the pavements and
the hushed cognizance of the houses, in silence to a thoroughfare where a
willing cabman was met. The destination named, he nodded alertly he had
driven gentlemen there at night from the House of Commons, he said.</p>
<p>'Our Parliament is now sitting, and you drive ladies,' Diana replied.</p>
<p>'I hope I know one, never mind the hour,' said he of the capes.</p>
<p>He was bidden to drive rapidly.</p>
<p>'Complexion a tulip: you do not often see a pale cabman,' she remarked to
Danvers, who began laughing, as she always expected to do on an excursion
with her mistress.</p>
<p>'Do you remember, ma'am, the cabman taking us to the coach, when you
thought of going to the continent?'</p>
<p>'And I went to The Crossways? I have forgotten him.'</p>
<p>'He declared you was so beautiful a lady he would drive you to the end of
England for nothing.'</p>
<p>'It must have been when I was paying him. Put it out of your mind,
Danvers, that there are individual cabmen. They are the painted flowers of
our metropolitan thoroughfares, and we gather them in rows.'</p>
<p>'They have their feelings, ma'am.'</p>
<p>'Brandied feelings are not pathetic to me.'</p>
<p>'I like to think kindly of them,' Danvers remarked, in reproof of her
inhumanity; adding: 'They may overturn us!' at which Diana laughed. Her
eyes were drawn to a brawl of women and men in the street. 'Ah! that
miserable sight!' she cried. 'It is the everlasting nightmare of London.'</p>
<p>Danvers humped, femininely injured by the notice of it. She wondered her
mistress should deign to.</p>
<p>Rolling on between the blind and darkened houses, Diana transferred her
sensations to them, and in a fit of the nerves imagined them beholding a
funeral convoy without followers.</p>
<p>They came in view of the domed cathedral, hearing, in a pause of the
wheels, the bell of the hour. 'Faster—faster! my dear man,' Diana
murmured, and they entered a small still square of many lighted windows.</p>
<p>'This must be where the morrow is manufactured,' she said. 'Tell the man
to wait.—Or rather it's the mirror of yesterday: we have to look
backward to see forward in life.'</p>
<p>She talked her cool philosophy to mask her excitement from herself. Her
card, marked: 'Imperative-two minutes,' was taken up to Mr. Tonans. They
ascended to the editorial ante-room. Doors opened and shut, hasty feet
traversed the corridors, a dull hum in dumbness told of mighty business at
work. Diana received the summons to the mighty head of the establishment.
Danvers was left to speculate. She heard the voice of Mr. Tonans: 'Not
more than two!' This was not a place for compliments. Men passed her,
hither and yonder, cursorily noticing the presence of a woman. She lost,
very strangely to her, the sense of her sex and became an object—a
disregarded object. Things of more importance were about. Her feminine
self-esteem was troubled; all idea of attractiveness expired. Here was
manifestly a spot where women had dropped from the secondary to the
cancelled stage of their extraordinary career in a world either blowing
them aloft like soap-bubbles or quietly shelving them as supernumeraries.
A gentleman—sweet vision!—shot by to the editor's door,
without even looking cursorily. He knocked. Mr. Tonans appeared and took
him by the arm, dictating at a great rate; perceived Danvers, frowned at
the female, and requested him to wait in the room, which the gentleman
did, not once casting eye upon a woman. At last her mistress returned to
her, escorted so far by Mr. Tonans, and he refreshingly bent his back to
bow over her hand: so we have the satisfaction of knowing that we are not
such poor creatures after all! Suffering in person, Danvers was revived by
the little show of homage to her sex.</p>
<p>They descended the stairs.</p>
<p>'You are not an Editor of a paper, but you may boast that you have been
near the nest of one,' Diana said, when they resumed their seats in the
cab. She breathed deeply from time to time, as if under a weight, or
relieved of it, but she seemed animated, and she dropped now and again a
funny observation of the kind that tickled Danvers and caused the maid to
boast of her everywhere as better than a Play.</p>
<p>At home, Danvers busied her hands to supply her mistress a cup of
refreshing tea and a plate of biscuits.</p>
<p>Diana had stunned herself with the strange weight of the expedition, and
had not a thought. In spite of tea at that hour, she slept soundly through
the remainder of the night, dreamlessly till late into the morning.</p>
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