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<h3>CHAPTER LXXVI. Hetta and Her Lover</h3>
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<br/>Lady Carbury was at this time so miserable in regard to her son
that she found herself unable to be active as she would otherwise
have been in her endeavours to separate Paul Montague and her
daughter. Roger had come up to town and given his opinion,
very freely at any rate with regard to Sir Felix. But Roger
had immediately returned to Suffolk, and the poor mother in want of
assistance and consolation turned naturally to Mr Broune, who came
to see her for a few minutes almost every evening. It had now
become almost a part of Mr Broune's life to see Lady Carbury once
in the day. She told him of the two propositions which Roger
had made: first, that she should fix her residence in some
second-rate French or German town, and that Sir Felix should be
made to go with her; and, secondly, that she should take possession
of Carbury manor for six months. "And where would Mr Carbury
go?" asked Mr Broune.
<br/>"He's so good that he doesn't care what he does with
himself. There's a cottage on the place, he says, that he
would move to." Mr Broune shook his head. Mr Broune did
not think that an offer so quixotically generous as this should be
accepted. As to the German or French town, Mr Broune said
that the plan was no doubt feasible, but he doubted whether the
thing to be achieved was worth the terrible sacrifice
demanded. He was inclined to think that Sir Felix should go
to the colonies. "That he might drink himself to death," said
Lady Carbury, who now had no secrets from Mr Broune. Sir
Felix in the meantime was still in the doctor's hands
upstairs. He had no doubt been very severely thrashed, but
there was not in truth very much ailing him beyond the cuts on his
face. He was, however, at the present moment better satisfied
to be an invalid than to have to come out of his room and to meet
the world. "As to Melmotte," said Mr Broune, "they say now
that he is in some terrible mess which will ruin him and all who
have trusted him."
<br/>"And the girl?"
<br/>"It is impossible to understand it at all. Melmotte was to
have been summoned before the Lord Mayor to-day on some charge of
fraud;—but it was postponed. And I was told this morning
that Nidderdale still means to marry the girl. I don't think
anybody knows the truth about it. We shall hold our tongue
about him till we really do know something." The "we" of whom
Mr Broune spoke was, of course, the "Morning Breakfast Table."
<br/>But in all this there was nothing about Hetta. Hetta,
however, thought very much of her own condition, and found herself
driven to take some special step by the receipt of two letters from
her lover, written to her from Liverpool. They had never met
since she had confessed her love to him. The first letter she
did not at once answer, as she was at that moment waiting to hear
what Roger Carbury would say about Mrs Hurtle. Roger Carbury
had spoken, leaving a conviction on her mind that Mrs Hurtle was by
no means a fiction,—but indeed a fact very injurious to her
happiness. Then Paul's second love-letter had come, full of
joy, and love, and contentment,—with not a word in it which seemed
to have been in the slightest degree influenced by the existence of
a Mrs Hurtle. Had there been no Mrs Hurtle, the letter would
have been all that Hetta could have desired; and she could have
answered it, unless forbidden by her mother, with all a girl's
usual enthusiastic affection for her chosen lord. But it was
impossible that she should now answer it in that strain;—and it
was equally impossible that she should leave such letters
unanswered. Roger had told her to "ask himself;" and she now
found herself constrained to bid him either come to her and answer
the question, or, if he thought it better, to give her some written
account of Mrs Hurtle so that she might know who the lady was, and
whether the lady's condition did in any way interfere with her own
happiness. So she wrote to Paul, as follows:
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<blockquote>
<i>
Welbeck Street, 16 July, 18—<br/>
<br/>
MY DEAR PAUL.<br/>
</i>
</blockquote>
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<br/>She found that after that which had passed between them she
could not call him "My dear Sir," or "My dear Mr Montague," and
that it must either be "Sir" or "My dear Paul." He was dear
to her,—very dear; and she thought that he had not been as yet
convicted of any conduct bad enough to force her to treat him as an
outcast. Had there been no Mrs Hurtle he would have been her
"Dearest Paul,"—but she made her choice, and so commenced.
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<blockquote>
<i>
"MY DEAR PAUL,<br/>
<br/>
A strange report has come round to me
about a lady called Mrs Hurtle. I have been told that she is
an American lady living in London, and that she is engaged to be
your wife. I cannot believe this. It is too horrid to
be true. But I fear,—I fear there is something true that
will be very very sad for me to hear. It was from my brother
I first heard it,—who was of course bound to tell me anything he
knew. I have talked to mamma about it, and to my cousin
Roger. I am sure Roger knows it all;—but he will not tell
me. He said,—"Ask himself." And so I ask you. Of
course I can write about nothing else till I have heard about
this. I am sure I need not tell you that it has made me very
unhappy. If you cannot come and see me at once, you had
better write. I have told mamma about this letter.<br/>
</i>
</blockquote>
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<br/>Then came the difficulty of the signature, with the declaration
which must naturally be attached to it. After some hesitation
she subscribed herself,
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<blockquote>
<i>
Your affectionate friend,<br/>
<br/>
HENRIETTA CARBURY.<br/>
</i>
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<br/>
<br/>"Most affectionately your own Hetta" would have been the form in
which she would have wished to finish the first letter she had ever
written to him.
<br/>Paul received it at Liverpool on the Wednesday morning, and on
the Wednesday evening he was in Welbeck Street. He had been
quite aware that it had been incumbent on him to tell her the whole
history of Mrs Hurtle. He had meant to keep back—almost
nothing. But it had been impossible for him to do so on that
one occasion on which he had pleaded his love to her
successfully. Let any reader who is intelligent in such
matters say whether it would have been possible for him then to
have commenced the story of Mrs Hurtle and to have told it to the
bitter end. Such a story must be postponed for a second or
third interview. Or it may, indeed, be communicated by
letter. When Paul was called away to Liverpool he did
consider whether he should write the story. But there are
many reasons strong against such written communications. A
man may desire that the woman he loves should hear the record of
his folly,—so that, in after days, there may be nothing to detect:
so that, should the Mrs Hurtle of his life at any time intrude upon
his happiness, he may with a clear brow and undaunted heart say to
his beloved one,—"Ah, this is the trouble of which I spoke to
you." And then he and his beloved one will be in one cause
together. But he hardly wishes to supply his beloved one with
a written record of his folly. And then who does not know how
much tenderness a man may show to his own faults by the tone of his
voice, by half-spoken sentences, and by an admixture of words of
love for the lady who has filled up the vacant space once occupied
by the Mrs Hurtle of his romance? But the written record must
go through from beginning to end, self-accusing, thoroughly
perspicuous, with no sweet, soft falsehoods hidden under the
half-expressed truth. The soft falsehoods which would be
sweet as the scent of violets in a personal interview, would stand
in danger of being denounced as deceit added to deceit, if sent in
a letter. I think therefore that Paul Montague did quite
right in hurrying up to London.
<br/>He asked for Miss Carbury, and when told that Miss Henrietta was
with her mother, he sent his name up and said that he would wait in
the dining-room. He had thoroughly made up his mind to this
course. They should know that he had come at once; but he
would not, if it could be helped, make his statement in the
presence of Lady Carbury. Then, upstairs, there was a little
discussion. Hetta pleaded her right to see him alone.
She had done what Roger had advised, and had done it with her
mother's consent. Her mother might be sure that she would not
again accept her lover till this story of Mrs Hurtle had been
sifted to the very bottom. But she must herself hear what her
lover had to say for himself. Felix was at the time in the
drawing-room and suggested that he should go down and see Paul
Montague on his sister's behalf;—but his mother looked at him with
scorn, and his sister quietly said that she would rather see Mr
Montague herself. Felix had been so cowed by circumstances
that he did not say another word, and Hetta left the room alone.
<br/>When she entered the parlour Paul stept forward to take her in
his arms. That was a matter of course. She knew it
would be so, and she had prepared herself for it. "Paul," she
said, "let me hear about all this—first." She sat down at
some distance from him,—and he found himself compelled to seat
himself at some distance from her.
<br/>"And so you have heard of Mrs Hurtle," he said, with a faint
attempt at a smile.
<br/>"Yes;—Felix told me, and Roger evidently had heard about her."
<br/>"Oh yes; Roger Carbury has heard about her from the
beginning;—knows the whole history almost as well as I know it
myself. I don't think your brother is as well informed."
<br/>"Perhaps not. But—isn't it a story that—concerns me?"
<br/>"Certainly it so far concerns you, Hetta, that you ought to know
it. And I trust you will believe that it was my intention to
tell it you."
<br/>"I will believe anything that you will tell me."
<br/>"If so, I don't think that you will quarrel with me when you
know all. I was engaged to marry Mrs Hurtle."
<br/>"Is she a widow?"—He did not answer this at once. "I
suppose she must be a widow if you were going to marry her."
<br/>"Yes;—she is a widow. She was divorced."
<br/>"Oh, Paul! And she is an American?"
<br/>"Yes."
<br/>"And you loved her?"
<br/>Montague was desirous of telling his own story, and did not wish
to be interrogated. "If you will allow me I will tell it you
all from beginning to end."
<br/>"Oh, certainly. But I suppose you loved her. If you
meant to marry her you must have loved her." There was a
frown upon Hetta's brow and a tone of anger in her voice which made
Paul uneasy.
<br/>"Yes;—I loved her once; but I will tell you all." Then he
did tell his story, with a repetition of which the reader need not
be detained. Hetta listened with fair attention,—not
interrupting very often, though when she did interrupt, the little
words which she spoke were bitter enough. But she heard the
story of the long journey across the American continent, of the
ocean journey before the end of which Paul had promised to make
this woman his wife. "Had she been divorced then?" asked
Hetta,—"because I believe they get themselves divorced just when
they like." Simple as the question was he could not answer
it. "I could only know what she told me," he said, as he went
on with his story. Then Mrs Hurtle had gone on to Paris, and
he, as soon as he reached Carbury, had revealed everything to
Roger. "Did you give her up then?" demanded Hetta with stern
severity. No;—not then. He had gone back to San
Francisco, and,—he had not intended to say that the engagement had
been renewed, but he was forced to acknowledge that it had not been
broken off. Then he had written to her on his second return
to England,—and then she had appeared in London at Mrs Pipkin's
lodgings in Islington. "I can hardly tell you how terrible
that was to me," he said, "for I had by that time become quite
aware that my happiness must depend upon you." He tried the
gentle, soft falsehoods that should have been as sweet as
violets. Perhaps they were sweet. It is odd how stern a
girl can be, while her heart is almost breaking with love.
Hetta was very stern.
<br/>"But Felix says you took her to Lowestoft,—quite the other
day."
<br/>Montague had intended to tell all,—almost all. There was
a something about the journey to Lowestoft which it would be
impossible to make Hetta understand, and he thought that that might
be omitted. "It was on account of her health."
<br/>"Oh;—on account of her health. And did you go to the play
with her?"
<br/>"I did."
<br/>"Was that for her health?"
<br/>"Oh, Hetta, do not speak to me like that! Cannot you
understand that when she came here, following me, I could not
desert her?"
<br/>"I cannot understand why you deserted her at all," said
Hetta. "You say you loved her, and you promised to marry
her. It seems horrid to me to marry a divorced woman,—a
woman who just says that she was divorced. But that is
because I don't understand American ways. And I am sure you
must have loved her when you took her to the theatre, and down to
Lowestoft,—for her health. That was only a week ago."
<br/>"It was nearly three weeks," said Paul in despair.
<br/>"Oh;—nearly three weeks! That is not such a very long
time for a gentleman to change his mind on such a matter. You
were engaged to her, not three weeks ago."
<br/>"No, Hetta, I was not engaged to her then."
<br/>"I suppose she thought you were when she went to Lowestoft with
you."
<br/>"She wanted then to force me to—to—to—. Oh, Hetta, it
is so hard to explain, but I am sure that you understand. I
do know that you do not, cannot think that I have, even for one
moment, been false to you."
<br/>"But why should you be false to her? Why should I step in
and crush all her hopes? I can understand that Roger should
think badly of her because she was—divorced. Of course he
would. But an engagement is an engagement. You had
better go back to Mrs Hurtle and tell her that you are quite ready
to keep your promise."
<br/>"She knows now that it is all over."
<br/>"I dare say you will be able to persuade her to reconsider
it. When she came all the way here from San Francisco after
you, and when she asked you to take her to the theatre, and to
Lowestoft—because of her health, she must be very much attached
to you. And she is waiting here,—no doubt on purpose for
you. She is a very old friend,—very old,—and you ought not
to treat her unkindly. Good bye, Mr Montague. I think
you had better lose no time in going—back to Mrs Hurtle."
All this she said with sundry little impedimentary gurgles in her
throat, but without a tear and without any sign of tenderness.
<br/>"You don't mean to tell me, Hetta, that you are going to quarrel
with me!"
<br/>"I don't know about quarrelling. I don't wish to quarrel
with any one. But of course we can't be friends when you have
married Mrs Hurtle."
<br/>"Nothing on earth would induce me to marry her."
<br/>"Of course I cannot say anything about that. When they
told me this story I did not believe them. No; I hardly
believed Roger when,—he would not tell it for he was too
kind,—but when he would not contradict it. It seemed to be
almost impossible that you should have come to me just at the very
same moment. For, after all, Mr Montague, nearly three weeks
is a very short time. That trip to Lowestoft couldn't have
been much above a week before you came to me."
<br/>"What does it matter?"
<br/>"Oh no; of course not;—nothing to you. I think I will go
away now, Mr Montague. It was very good of you to come and
tell me all. It makes it so much easier."
<br/>"Do you mean to say that—you are going to—throw me over?"
<br/>"I don't want you to throw Mrs Hurtle over. Good bye."
<br/>"Hetta!"
<br/>"No; I will not have you lay your hand upon me. Good
night, Mr Montague." And so she left him.
<br/>Paul Montague was beside himself with dismay as he left the
house. He had never allowed himself for a moment to believe
that this affair of Mrs Hurtle would really separate him from Hetta
Carbury. If she could only really know it all, there could be
no such result. He had been true to her from the first moment
in which he had seen her, never swerving from his love. It
was to be supposed that he had loved some woman before; but, as the
world goes, that would not, could not, affect her. But her
anger was founded on the presence of Mrs Hurtle in London,—which
he would have given half his possessions to have prevented.
But when she did come, was he to have refused to see her?
Would Hetta have wished him to be cold and cruel like that?
No doubt he had behaved badly to Mrs Hurtle;—but that trouble he
had overcome. And now Hetta was quarrelling with him, though
he certainly had never behaved badly to her.
<br/>He was almost angry with Hetta as he walked home.
Everything that he could do he had done for her. For her sake
he had quarrelled with Roger Carbury. For her sake,—in order
that he might be effectually free from Mrs Hurtle,—he had
determined to endure the spring of the wild cat. For her
sake,—so he told himself,—he had been content to abide by that
odious railway company, in order that he might if possible preserve
an income on which to support her. And now she told him that
they must part,—and that only because he had not been cruelly
indifferent to the unfortunate woman who had followed him from
America. There was no logic in it, no reason,—and, as he
thought, very little heart. "I don't want you to throw Mrs
Hurtle over," she had said. Why should Mrs Hurtle be anything
to her? Surely she might have left Mrs Hurtle to fight her
own battles. But they were all against him. Roger
Carbury, Lady Carbury, and Sir Felix; and the end of it would be
that she would be forced into marriage with a man almost old enough
to be her father! She could not ever really have loved
him. That was the truth. She must be incapable of such
love as was his own for her. True love always forgives.
And here there was really so very little to forgive! Such
were his thoughts as he went to bed that night. But he
probably omitted to ask himself whether he would have forgiven her
very readily had he found that she had been living "nearly three
weeks ago" in close intercourse with another lover of whom he had
hitherto never even heard the name. But then,—as all the
world knows,—there is a wide difference between young men and
young women!
<br/>Hetta, as soon as she had dismissed her lover, went up at once
to her own room. Thither she was soon followed by her mother,
whose anxious ear had heard the closing of the front door.
"Well; what has he said?" asked Lady Carbury. Hetta was in
tears,—or very nigh to tears,—struggling to repress them, and
struggling almost successfully. "You have found that what we
told you about that woman was all true."
<br/>"Enough of it was true," said Hetta, who, angry as she was with
her lover, was not on that account less angry with her mother for
disturbing her bliss.
<br/>"What do you mean by that, Hetta? Had you not better speak
to me openly?"
<br/>"I say, mamma, that enough was true. I do not know how to
speak more openly. I need not go into all the miserable story
of the woman. He is like other men, I suppose. He has
entangled himself with some abominable creature and then when he is
tired of her thinks that he has nothing to do but to say so,—and
to begin with somebody else."
<br/>"Roger Carbury is very different."
<br/>"Oh, mamma, you will make me ill if you go on like that.
It seems to me that you do not understand in the least."
<br/>"I say he is not like that."
<br/>"Not in the least. Of course I know that he is not in the
least like that."
<br/>"I say that he can be trusted."
<br/>"Of course he can be trusted. Who doubts it?"
<br/>"And that if you would give yourself to him, there would be no
cause for any alarm."
<br/>"Mamma," said Hetta jumping up, "how can you talk to me in that
way? As soon as one man doesn't suit, I am to give myself to
another! Oh, mamma, how can you propose it? Nothing on
earth will ever induce me to be more to Roger Carbury than I am
now."
<br/>"You have told Mr Montague that he is not to come here again?"
<br/>"I don't know what I told him, but he knows very well what I
mean."
<br/>"That it is all over?" Hetta made no reply. "Hetta,
I have a right to ask that, and I have a right to expect a
reply. I do not say that you have hitherto behaved badly
about Mr Montague."
<br/>"I have not behaved badly. I have told you
everything. I have done nothing that I am ashamed of."
<br/>"But we have now found out that he has behaved very badly.
He has come here to you,—with unexampled treachery to your cousin
Roger—"
<br/>"I deny that," exclaimed Hetta.
<br/>"And at the very time was almost living with this woman who says
that she is divorced from her husband in America! Have you
told him that you will see him no more?"
<br/>"He understood that."
<br/>"If you have not told him so plainly, I must tell him."
<br/>"Mamma, you need not trouble yourself. I have told him
very plainly." Then Lady Carbury expressed herself satisfied
for the moment, and left her daughter to her solitude.
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