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<h2> CHAPTER XXVI. MORE OF MY OBSTINACY. </h2>
<p>ARIEL was downstairs in the shadowy hall, half asleep, half awake, waiting
to see the visitors clear of the house. Without speaking to us, without
looking at us, she led the way down the dark garden walk, and locked the
gate behind us. "Good-night, Ariel," I called out to her over the paling.
Nothing answered me but the tramp of her heavy footsteps returning to the
house, and the dull thump, a moment afterward, of the closing door.</p>
<p>The footman had thoughtfully lighted the carriage lamps. Carrying one of
them to serve as a lantern, he lighted us over the wilds of the brick
desert, and landed us safely on the path by the high-road.</p>
<p>"Well!" said my mother-in-law, when we were comfortably seated in the
carriage again. "You have seen Miserrimus Dexter, and I hope you are
satisfied. I will do him the justice to declare that I never, in all my
experience, saw him more completely crazy than he was to-night. What do <i>you</i>
say?"</p>
<p>"I don't presume to dispute your opinion," I answered. "But, speaking for
myself, I'm not quite sure that he is mad."</p>
<p>"Not mad!" cried Mrs. Macallan, "after those frantic performances in his
chair? Not mad, after the exhibition he made of his unfortunate cousin?
Not mad, after the song that he sang in your honor, and the falling asleep
by way of conclusion? Oh, Valeria! Valeria! Well said the wisdom of our
ancestors—there are none so blind as those who won't see."</p>
<p>"Pardon me, dear Mrs. Macallan, I saw everything that you mention, and I
never felt more surprised or more confounded in my life. But now I have
recovered from my amazement, and can think it over quietly, I must still
venture to doubt whether this strange man is really mad in the true
meaning of the word. It seems to me that he only expresses—I admit
in a very reckless and boisterous way—thoughts and feelings which
most of us are ashamed of as weaknesses, and which we keep to ourselves
accordingly. I confess I have often fancied myself transformed into some
other person, and have felt a certain pleasure in seeing myself in my new
character. One of our first amusements as children (if we have any
imagination at all) is to get out of our own characters, and to try the
characters of other personages as a change—to fairies, to be queens,
to be anything, in short, but what we really are. Mr. Dexter lets out the
secret just as the children do, and if that is madness, he is certainly
mad. But I noticed that when his imagination cooled down he became
Miserrimus Dexter again—he no more believed himself than we believed
him to be Napoleon or Shakespeare. Besides, some allowance is surely to be
made for the solitary, sedentary life that he leads. I am not learned
enough to trace the influence of that life in making him what he is; but I
think I can see the result in an over-excited imagination, and I fancy I
can trace his exhibiting his power over the poor cousin and his singing of
that wonderful song to no more formidable cause than inordinate
self-conceit. I hope the confession will not lower me seriously in your
good opinion; but I must say I have enjoyed my visit, and, worse still,
Miserrimus Dexter really interests me."</p>
<p>"Does this learned discourse on Dexter mean that you are going to see him
again?" asked Mrs. Macallan.</p>
<p>"I don't know how I may feel about it tomorrow morning," I said; "but my
impulse at this moment is decidedly to see him again. I had a little talk
with him while you were away at the other end of the room, and I believe
he really can be of use to me—"</p>
<p>"Of use to you in what?" interposed my mother-in-law.</p>
<p>"In the one object which I have in view—the object, dear Mrs.
Macallan, which I regret to say you do not approve."</p>
<p>"And you are going to take him into your confidence? to open your whole
mind to such a man as the man we have just left?"</p>
<p>"Yes, if I think of it to-morrow as I think of it to-night. I dare say it
is a risk; but I must run risks. I know I am not prudent; but prudence
won't help a woman in my position, with my end to gain."</p>
<p>Mrs. Macallan made no further remonstrance in words. She opened a
capacious pocket in front of the carriage, and took from it a box of
matches and a railway reading-lamp.</p>
<p>"You provoke me," said the old lady, "into showing you what your husband
thinks of this new whim of yours. I have got his letter with me—his
last letter from Spain. You shall judge for yourself, you poor deluded
young creature, whether my son is worthy of the sacrifice—the
useless and hopeless sacrifice—which you are bent on making of
yourself for his sake. Strike a light!"</p>
<p>I willingly obeyed her. Ever since she had informed me of Eustace's
departure to Spain I had been eager for more news of him, for something to
sustain my spirits, after so much that had disappointed and depressed me.
Thus far I did not even know whether my husband thought of me sometimes in
his self-imposed exile. As to this regretting already the rash act which
had separated us, it was still too soon to begin hoping for that.</p>
<p>The lamp having been lighted, and fixed in its place between the two front
windows of the carriage, Mrs. Macallan produced her son's letter. There is
no folly like the folly of love. It cost me a hard struggle to restrain
myself from kissing the paper on which the dear hand had rested.</p>
<p>"There!" said my mother-in-law. "Begin on the second page, the page
devoted to you. Read straight down to the last line at the bottom, and, in
God's name, come back to your senses, child, before it is too late!"</p>
<p>I followed my instructions, and read these words:</p>
<p>"Can I trust myself to write of Valeria? I <i>must</i> write of her. Tell
me how she is, how she looks, what she is doing. I am always thinking of
her. Not a day passes but I mourn the loss of her. Oh, if she had only
been contented to let matters rest as they were! Oh, if she had never
discovered the miserable truth!</p>
<p>"She spoke of reading the Trial when I saw her last. Has she persisted in
doing so? I believe—I say this seriously, mother—I believe the
shame and the horror of it would have been the death of me if I had met
her face to face when she first knew of the ignominy that I have suffered,
of the infamous suspicion of which I have been publicly made the subject.
Think of those pure eyes looking at a man who has been accused (and never
wholly absolved) of the foulest and the vilest of all murders, and then
think of what that man must feel if he have any heart and any sense of
shame left in him. I sicken as I write of it.</p>
<p>"Does she still meditate that hopeless project—the offspring, poor
angel, of her artless, unthinking generosity? Does she still fancy that it
is in <i>her</i> power to assert my innocence before the world? Oh, mother
(if she do), use your utmost influence to make her give up the idea! Spare
her the humiliation, the disappointment, the insult, perhaps, to which she
may innocently expose herself. For her sake, for my sake, leave no means
untried to attain this righteous, this merciful end.</p>
<p>"I send her no message—I dare not do it. Say nothing, when you see
her, which can recall me to her memory. On the contrary, help her to
forget me as soon as possible. The kindest thing I can do—the one
atonement I can make to her—is to drop out of her life."</p>
<p>With those wretched words it ended. I handed his letter back to his mother
in silence. She said but little on her side.</p>
<p>"If <i>this</i> doesn't discourage you," she remarked, slowly folding up
the letter, "nothing will. Let us leave it there, and say no more."</p>
<p>I made no answer—I was crying behind my veil. My domestic prospect
looked so dreary! my unfortunate husband was so hopelessly misguided, so
pitiably wrong! The one chance for both of us, and the one consolation for
poor Me, was to hold to my desperate resolution more firmly than ever. If
I had wanted anything to confirm me in this view, and to arm me against
the remonstrances of every one of my friends, Eustace's letter would have
proved more than sufficient to answer the purpose. At least he had not
forgotten me; he thought of me, and he mourned the loss of me every day of
his life. That was encouragement enough—for the present. "If Ariel
calls for me in the pony-chaise to-morrow," I thought to myself, "with
Ariel I go."</p>
<p>Mrs. Macallan set me down at Benjamin's door.</p>
<p>I mentioned to her at parting—I stood sufficiently in awe of her to
put it off till the last moment—that Miserrimus Dexter had arranged
to send his cousin and his pony-chaise to her residence on the next day;
and I inquired thereupon whether my mother-in-law would permit me to call
at her house to wait for the appearance of the cousin, or whether she
would prefer sending the chaise on to Benjamin's cottage. I fully expected
an explosion of anger to follow this bold avowal of my plans for the next
day. The old lady agreeably surprised me. She proved that she had really
taken a liking to me: she kept her temper.</p>
<p>"If you persist in going back to Dexter, you certainly shall not go to him
from my door," she said. "But I hope you will <i>not</i> persist. I hope
you will awake a wiser woman to-morrow morning."</p>
<p>The morning came. A little before noon the arrival of the pony-chaise was
announced at the door, and a letter was brought in to me from Mrs.
Macallan.</p>
<p>"I have no right to control your movements," my mother-in-law wrote. "I
send the chaise to Mr. Benjamin's house; and I sincerely trust that you
will not take your place in it. I wish I could persuade you, Valeria, how
truly I am your friend. I have been thinking about you anxiously in the
wakeful hours of the night. <i>How</i> anxiously, you will understand when
I tell you that I now reproach myself for not having done more than I did
to prevent your unhappy marriage. And yet, what more I could have done I
don't really know. My son admitted to me that he was courting you under an
assumed name, but he never told me what the name was. Or who you were, or
where your friends lived. Perhaps I ought to have taken measures to find
this out. Perhaps, if I had succeeded, I ought to have interfered and
enlightened you, even at the sad sacrifice of making an enemy of my own
son. I honestly thought I did my duty in expressing my disapproval, and in
refusing to be present at the marriage. Was I too easily satisfied? It is
too late to ask. Why do I trouble you with an old woman's vain misgivings
and regrets? My child, if you come to any harm, I shall feel (indirectly)
responsible for it. It is this uneasy state of mind which sets me writing,
with nothing to say that can interest you. Don't go to Dexter! The fear
has been pursuing me all night that your going to Dexter will end badly.
Write him an excuse. Valeria! I firmly believe you will repent it if you
return to that house."</p>
<p>Was ever a woman more plainly warned, more carefully advised, than I? And
yet warning and advice were both thrown away on me.</p>
<p>Let me say for myself that I was really touched by the kindness of my
mother-in-law's letter, though I was not shaken by it in the smallest
degree. As long as I lived, moved, and thought, my one purpose now was to
make Miserrimus Dexter confide to me his ideas on the subject of Mrs.
Eustace Macallan's death. To those ideas I looked as my guiding stars
along the dark way on which I was going. I wrote back to Mrs. Macallan, as
I really felt gratefully and penitently. And then I went out to the
chaise.</p>
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