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<h3>CHAPTER LXXXVII. Down at Carbury</h3>
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<br/>When Roger Carbury returned to Suffolk, after seeing his cousins
in Welbeck Street, he was by no means contented with himself.
That he should be discontented generally with the circumstances of
his life was a matter of course. He knew that he was farther
removed than ever from the object on which his whole mind was
set. Had Hetta Carbury learned all the circumstances of
Paul's engagement with Mrs Hurtle before she had confessed her love
to Paul,—so that her heart might have been turned against the man
before she had made her confession,—then, he thought, she might at
last have listened to him. Even though she had loved the
other man, she might have at last done so, as her love would have
been buried in her own bosom. But the tale had been told
after the fashion which was most antagonistic to his own
interests. Hetta had never heard Mrs Hurtle's name till she
had given herself away, and had declared to all her friends that
she had given herself away to this man, who was so unworthy of
her. The more Roger thought of this, the more angry he was
with Paul Montague, and the more convinced that that man had done
him an injury which he could never forgive.
<br/>But his grief extended even beyond that. Though he was
never tired of swearing to himself that he would not forgive Paul
Montague, yet there was present to him a feeling that an injury was
being done to the man, and that he was in some sort responsible for
that injury. He had declined to tell Hetta any part of the
story about Mrs Hurtle,—actuated by a feeling that he ought not to
betray the trust put in him by a man who was at the time his
friend; and he had told nothing. But no one knew so well as
he did the fact that all the attention latterly given by Paul to
the American woman had by no means been the effect of love, but had
come from a feeling on Paul's part that he could not desert the
woman he had once loved, when she asked him for his kindness.
If Hetta could know everything exactly,—if she could look back and
read the state of Paul's mind as he, Roger, could read it,—then
she would probably forgive the man, or perhaps tell herself that
there was nothing for her to forgive. Roger was anxious that
Hetta's anger should burn hot,—because of the injury done to
himself. He thought that there were ample reasons why Paul
Montague should be punished,—why Paul should be utterly expelled
from among them, and allowed to go his own course. But it was
not right that the man should be punished on false grounds.
It seemed to Roger now that he was doing an injustice to his enemy
by refraining from telling all that he knew.
<br/>As to the girl's misery in losing her lover, much as he loved
her, true as it was that he was willing to devote himself and all
that he had to her happiness, I do not think that at the present
moment he was disturbed in that direction. It is hardly
natural, perhaps, that a man should love a woman with such devotion
as to wish to make her happy by giving her to another man.
Roger told himself that Paul would be an unsafe husband, a fickle
husband,—one who might be carried hither and thither both in his
circumstances and his feelings,—and that it would be better for
Hetta that she should not marry him; but at the same time he was
unhappy as he reflected that he himself was a party to a certain
amount of deceit.
<br/>And yet he had said not a word. He had referred Hetta to
the man himself. He thought that he knew, and he did indeed
accurately know, the state of Hetta's mind. She was wretched
because she thought that while her lover was winning her love,
while she herself was willingly allowing him to win her love, he
was dallying with another woman, and making to that other woman
promises the same as those he made to her. This was not
true. Roger knew that it was not true. But when he
tried to quiet his conscience by saying that they must fight it out
among themselves, he felt himself to be uneasy under that
assurance.
<br/>His life at Carbury, at this time, was very desolate. He
had become tired of the priest, who, in spite of various repulses,
had never for a moment relaxed his efforts to convert his
friend. Roger had told him once that he must beg that
religion might not be made the subject of further conversation
between them. In answer to this, Father Barham had declared
that he would never consent to remain as an intimate associate with
any man on those terms. Roger had persisted in his
stipulation, and the priest had then suggested that it was his
host's intention to banish him from Carbury Hall. Roger had
made no reply, and the priest had of course been banished.
But even this added to his misery. Father Barham was a
gentleman, was a good man, and in great penury. To ill-treat
such a one, to expel such a one from his house, seemed to Roger to
be an abominable cruelty. He was unhappy with himself about
the priest, and yet he could not bid the man come back to
him. It was already being said of him among his neighbours,
at Eardly, at Caversham, and at the Bishop's palace, that he either
had become or was becoming a Roman Catholic, under the priest's
influence. Mrs Yeld had even taken upon herself to write to
him a most affectionate letter, in which she said very little as to
any evidence that had reached her as to Roger's defection, but
dilated at very great length on the abominations of a certain lady
who is supposed to indulge in gorgeous colours.
<br/>He was troubled, too, about old Daniel Ruggles, the farmer at
Sheep's Acre, who had been so angry because his niece would not
marry John Crumb. Old Ruggles, when abandoned by Ruby and
accused by his neighbours of personal cruelty to the girl, had
taken freely to that source of consolation which he found to be
most easily within his reach. Since Ruby had gone he had been
drunk every day, and was making himself generally a scandal and a
nuisance. His landlord had interfered with his usual
kindness, and the old man had always declared that his niece and
John Crumb were the cause of it all; for now, in his maudlin
misery, he attributed as much blame to the lover as he did to the
girl. John Crumb wasn't in earnest. If he had been in
earnest he would have gone after her to London at once.
No;—he wouldn't invite Ruby to come back. If Ruby would come
back, repentant, full of sorrow,—and hadn't been and made a fool
of herself in the meantime,—then he'd think of taking her
back. In the meantime, with circumstances in their present
condition, he evidently thought that he could best face the
difficulties of the world by an unfaltering adhesion to gin, early
in the day and all day long. This, too, was a grievance to
Roger Carbury.
<br/>But he did not neglect his work, the chief of which at the
present moment was the care of the farm which he kept in his own
hands. He was making hay at this time in certain meadows down
by the river side; and was standing by while the men were loading a
cart, when he saw John Crumb approaching across the field. He
had not seen John since the eventful journey to London; nor had he
seen him in London; but he knew well all that had occurred,—how
the dealer in pollard had thrashed his cousin, Sir Felix, how he
had been locked up by the police and then liberated,—and how he
was now regarded in Bungay as a hero, as far as arms were
concerned, but as being very "soft" in the matter of love.
The reader need hardly be told that Roger was not at all disposed
to quarrel with Mr Crumb, because the victim of Crumb's heroism had
been his own cousin. Crumb had acted well, and had never said
a word about Sir Felix since his return to the country. No
doubt he had now come to talk about his love,—and in order that
his confessions might not be made before all the assembled
haymakers, Roger Carbury hurried to meet him. There was soon
evident on Crumb's broad face a whole sunshine of delight. As
Roger approached him he began to laugh aloud, and to wave a bit of
paper that he had in his hands. "She's a coomin; she's a
coomin," were the first words he uttered. Roger knew very
well that in his friend's mind there was but one "she" in the
world, and that the name of that she was Ruby Ruggles.
<br/>"I am delighted to hear it," said Roger. "She has made it
up with her grandfather?"
<br/>"Don't know now't about grandfeyther. She have made it up
wi' me. Know'd she would when I'd polish'd t'other un off a
bit;—know'd she would."
<br/>"Has she written to you, then?"
<br/>"Well, squoire,—she ain't; not just herself. I do suppose
that isn't the way they does it. But it's all as one."
And then Mr Crumb thrust Mrs Hurtle's note into Roger Carbury's
hand.
<br/>Roger certainly was not predisposed to think well or kindly of
Mrs Hurtle. Since he had first known Mrs Hurtle's name, when
Paul Montague had told the story of his engagement on his return
from America, Roger had regarded her as a wicked, intriguing, bad
woman. It may, perhaps, be confessed that he was prejudiced
against all Americans, looking upon Washington much as he did upon
Jack Cade or Wat Tyler; and he pictured to himself all American
women as being loud, masculine, and atheistical. But it
certainly did seem that in this instance Mrs Hurtle was
endeavouring to do a good turn from pure charity. "She is a
lady," Crumb began to explain, "who do be living with Mrs Pipkin;
and she is a lady as is a lady."
<br/>Roger could not fully admit the truth of this assertion; but he
explained that he, too, knew something of Mrs Hurtle, and that he
thought it probable that what she said of Ruby might be true.
"True, squoire," said Crumb, laughing with his whole face. "I
ha' nae a doubt it's true. What's again its being true?
When I had dropped into t'other fellow, of course she made her
choice. It was me as was to blame, because I didn't do it
before. I ought to ha' dropped into him when I first heard as
he was arter her. It's that as girls like. So, squoire,
I'm just going again to Lon'on right away."
<br/>Roger suggested that old Ruggles would, of course, receive his
niece; but as to this John expressed his supreme
indifference. The old man was nothing to him. Of course
he would like to have the old man's money; but the old man couldn't
live for ever, and he supposed that things would come right in
time. But this he knew,—that he wasn't going to cringe to
the old man about his money. When Roger observed that it
would be better that Ruby should have some home to which she might
at once return, John adverted with a renewed grin to all the
substantial comforts of his own house. It seemed to be his
idea, that on arriving in London he would at once take Ruby away to
church and be married to her out of hand. He had thrashed his
rival, and what cause could there now be for delay?
<br/>But before he left the field he made one other speech to the
squire. "You ain't a'taken it amiss, squoire, 'cause he was
coosin to yourself?"
<br/>"Not in the least, Mr Crumb."
<br/>"That's koind now. I ain't a done the yong man a ha'porth
o' harm, and I don't feel no grudge again him, and when me and
Ruby's once spliced, I'm darned if I don't give 'un a bottle of
wine the first day as he'll come to Bungay."
<br/>Roger did not feel himself justified in accepting this
invitation on the part of Sir Felix; but he renewed his assurance
that he, on his own part, thought that Crumb had behaved well in
that matter of the street encounter, and he expressed a strong wish
for the immediate and continued happiness of Mr and Mrs John Crumb.
<br/>"Oh, ay, we'll be 'appy, squoire," said Crumb as he went
exulting out of the field.
<br/>On the day after this Roger Carbury received a letter which
disturbed him very much, and to which he hardly knew whether to
return any answer, or what answer. It was from Paul Montague,
and was written by him but a few hours after he had left his letter
for Hetta with his own hands, at the door of her mother's
house. Paul's letter to Roger was as follows:—
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<blockquote>
<i>
MY DEAR ROGER,—<br/>
<br/>
Though I know that you have cast me
off from you I cannot write to you in any other way, as any other
way would be untrue. You can answer me, of course, as you
please, but I do think that you will owe me an answer, as I appeal
to you in the name of justice.<br/>
<br/>
You know what has taken place between
Hetta and myself. She had accepted me, and therefore I am
justified in feeling sure that she must have loved me. But
she has now quarrelled with me altogether, and has told me that I
am never to see her again. Of course I don't mean to put up
with this. Who would? You will say that it is no
business of yours. But I think that you would not wish that
she should be left under a false impression, if you could put her
right.<br/>
<br/>
Somebody has told her the story of
Mrs Hurtle. I suppose it was Felix, and that he had learned
it from those people at Islington. But she has been told that
which is untrue. Nobody knows and nobody can know the truth
as you do. She supposes that I have willingly been passing my
time with Mrs Hurtle during the last two months, although during
that very time I have asked for and received the assurance of her
love. Now, whether or no I have been to blame about Mrs
Hurtle,—as to which nothing at present need be said,—it is
certainly the truth that her coming to England was not only not
desired by me, but was felt by me to be the greatest possible
misfortune. But after all that had passed I certainly owed it
to her not to neglect her;—and this duty was the more incumbent on
me as she was a foreigner and unknown to any one. I went down
to Lowestoft with her at her request, having named the place to
her as one known to myself, and because I could not refuse her so
small a favour. You know that it was so, and you know also,
as no one else does, that whatever courtesy I have shown to Mrs
Hurtle in England, I have been constrained to show her.<br/>
<br/>
I appeal to you to let Hetta know
that this is true. She had made me understand that not only
her mother and brother, but you also, are well acquainted with the
story of my acquaintance with Mrs Hurtle. Neither Lady
Carbury nor Sir Felix has ever known anything about it. You,
and you only, have known the truth. And now, though at the
present you are angry with me, I call upon you to tell Hetta the
truth as you know it. You will understand me when I say that
I feel that I am being destroyed by a false representation. I
think that you, who abhor a falsehood, will see the justice of
setting me right, at any rate as far as the truth can do so.
I do not want you to say a word for me beyond that.<br/>
<br/>
Yours always,<br/>
<br/>
PAUL MONTAGUE.<br/>
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<br/>
<br/>"What business is all that of mine?" This, of course, was
the first feeling produced in Roger's mind by Montague's
letter. If Hetta had received any false impression, it had
not come from him. He had told no stories against his rival,
whether true or false. He had been so scrupulous that he had
refused to say a word at all. And if any false impression had
been made on Hetta's mind, either by circumstances or by untrue
words, had not Montague deserved any evil that might fall upon
him? Though every word in Montague's letter might be true,
nevertheless, in the end, no more than justice would be done him,
even should he be robbed at last of his mistress under erroneous
impressions. The fact that he had once disgraced himself by
offering to make Mrs Hurtle his wife, rendered him unworthy of
Hetta Carbury. Such, at least, was Roger Carbury's verdict as
he thought over all the circumstances. At any rate, it was no
business of his to correct these wrong impressions.
<br/>And yet he was ill at ease as he thought of it all. He did
believe that every word in Montague's letter was true. Though
he had been very indignant when he met Roger and Mrs Hurtle
together on the sands at Lowestoft, he was perfectly convinced
that the cause of their coming there had been precisely that which
Montague had stated. It took him two days to think over all
this, two days of great discomfort and unhappiness. After
all, why should he be a dog in the manger? The girl did not
care for him,—looked upon him as an old man to be regarded in a
fashion altogether different from that in which she regarded Paul
Montague. He had let his time for love-making go by, and now
it behoved him, as a man, to take the world as he found it, and not
to lose himself in regrets for a kind of happiness which he could
never attain. In such an emergency as this he should do what
was fair and honest, without reference to his own feelings.
And yet the passion which dominated John Crumb altogether, which
made the mealman so intent on the attainment of his object as to
render all other things indifferent to him for the time, was
equally strong with Roger Carbury. Unfortunately for Roger,
strong as his passion was, it was embarrassed by other
feelings. It never occurred to Crumb to think whether he was
a fit husband for Ruby, or whether Ruby, having a decided
preference for another man, could be a fit wife for him. But
with Roger there were a thousand surrounding difficulties to hamper
him. John Crumb never doubted for a moment what he should
do. He had to get the girl, if possible, and he meant to get
her whatever she might cost him. He was always confident
though sometimes perplexed. But Roger had no
confidence. He knew that he should never win the game.
In his sadder moments he felt that he ought not to win it.
The people around him, from old fashion, still called him the young
squire! Why;—he felt himself at times to be eighty years
old,—so old that he was unfitted for intercourse with such
juvenile spirits as those of his neighbour the bishop, and of his
friend Hepworth. Could he, by any training, bring himself to
take her happiness in hand, altogether sacrificing his own?
<br/>In such a mood as this he did at last answer his enemy's
letter,—and he answered it as follows:—
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<blockquote>
<i>
I do not know that I am concerned to
meddle in your affairs at all. I have told no tale against
you, and I do not know that I have any that I wish to tell in your
favour, or that I could so tell if I did wish. I think that
you have behaved badly to me, cruelly to Mrs Hurtle, and
disrespectfully to my cousin. Nevertheless, as you appeal to
me on a certain point for evidence which I can give, and which you
say no one else can give, I do acknowledge that, in my opinion, Mrs
Hurtle's presence in England has not been in accordance with your
wishes, and that you accompanied her to Lowestoft, not as her
lover but as an old friend whom you could not neglect.<br/>
<br/>
ROGER CARBURY.<br/>
<br/>
Paul Montague, Esq.<br/>
<br/>
You are at liberty to show this
letter to Miss Carbury, if you please; but if she reads part she
should read the whole!
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<br/>
<br/>There was more perhaps of hostility in this letter than of that
spirit of self-sacrifice to which Roger intended to train himself;
and so he himself felt after the letter had been dispatched.
<br/>
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