<h3>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h3>
<h4>FAREWELL.<br/> </h4>
<p>Christmas came, and a month beyond Christmas, and by the end of
January Captain Marrable and Miss Lowther had agreed to regard all
their autumn work as null and void,—to look back upon the
love-making as a thing that had not been, and to part as friends.
Both of them suffered much in this arrangement,—the man being the
louder in the objurgations which he made against his ill-fortune, and
in his assurances to himself and others that he was ruined for life.
And, indeed, no man could have been much more unhappy than was Walter
Marrable in these days. To him was added the trouble, which he did
not endeavour to hide from himself or Mary, that all this misery came
to him from his own father. Before the end of November, sundry
renewed efforts were made to save a portion of the money, and the
lawyers descended so low as to make an offer to take £2000. They
might have saved themselves the humiliation, for neither £2000 nor
£200 could have been made to be forthcoming. Walter Marrable, when
the time came, was painfully anxious to fight somebody; but he was
told very clearly by Messrs. Block and Curling, that there was nobody
whom he could fight but his father, and that even by fighting his
father, he would never obtain a penny. "My belief," said Mr. Curling,
"is, that you could put your father in prison, but that probably is
not your object." Marrable was forced to own that that was not his
object; but he did so in a tone which seemed to imply that a prison,
were it even for life, would be the best place for his father. Block
and Curling had been solicitors to the Marrables for ever so many
years; and though they did not personally love the Colonel, they had
a professional feeling that the blackness of a black sheep of a
family should not be made public, at any rate by the family itself or
by the family solicitors. Almost every family has a black sheep, and
it is the especial duty of a family solicitor to keep the family
black sheep from being dragged into the front and visible ranks of
the family. The Captain had been fatally wrong in signing the paper
which he had signed, and must take the consequences. "I don't think,
Captain Marrable, that you would save yourself in any way by
proceeding against the Colonel," said Mr. Curling. "I have not the
slightest intention of proceeding against him," said the Captain, in
great dudgeon,—and then he left the office and shook the dust off
his feet, as against Block and Curling as well as against his father.</p>
<p>After this,—immediately after it,—he had one other interview with
his father. As he told his uncle, the devil prompted him to go down
to Portsmouth to see the man to whom his interests should have been
dearer than to all the world beside, and who had robbed him so
ruthlessly. There was nothing to be gained by such a visit. Neither
money nor counsel, nor even consolation would be forthcoming from
Colonel Marrable. Probably Walter Marrable felt in his anger that it
would be unjust that his father should escape without a word to
remind him from his son's mouth of all that he had done for his son.
The Colonel held some staff office at Portsmouth, and his son came
upon him in his lodgings one evening as he was dressing to go out to
dinner. "Is that you, Walter?" said the battered old reprobate,
appearing at the door of his bed-room; "I am very glad to see you."</p>
<p>"I don't believe it," said the son.</p>
<p>"Well;—what would you have me say? If you'll only behave decently, I
shall be glad to see you."</p>
<p>"You've given me an example in that way, sir; have you not? Decency
indeed!"</p>
<p>"Now, Walter, if you're going to talk about that horrid money, I tell
you at once, that I won't listen to you."</p>
<p>"That's kind of you, sir."</p>
<p>"I've been unfortunate. As soon as I can repay it, or a part of it, I
will. Since you've been back, I've done everything in my power to get
a portion of it for you,—and should have got it, but for those
stupid people in Bedford Row. After all, the money ought to have been
mine, and that's what I suppose you felt when you enabled me to draw
it."</p>
<p>"By heavens, that's cool!"</p>
<p>"I mean to be cool;—I'm always cool. The cab will be here to take me
to dinner in a very few minutes. I hope you will not think I am
running away from you?"</p>
<p>"I don't mean you to go till you've heard what I've got to say," said
the Captain.</p>
<p>"Then, pray say it quickly." Upon this, the Colonel stood still and
faced his son; not exactly with a look of anger, but assuming an
appearance as though he were the person injured. He was a thin old
man, who wore padded coats, and painted his beard and his eyebrows,
and had false teeth, and who, in spite of chronic absence of means,
always was possessed of clothes apparently just new from the hands of
a West-end tailor. He was one of those men who, through their long,
useless, ill-flavoured lives, always contrive to live well, to eat
and drink of the best, to lie softly, and to go about in purple and
fine linen,—and yet, never have any money. Among a certain set
Colonel Marrable, though well known, was still popular. He was
good-tempered, well-mannered, sprightly in conversation, and had not
a scruple in the world. He was over seventy, had lived hard, and must
have known that there was not much more of it for him. But yet he had
no qualms, and no fears. It may be doubted whether he knew that he
was a bad man,—he, than whom you could find none worse though you
were to search the country from one end to another. To lie, to
steal,—not out of tills or pockets, because he knew the danger; to
cheat—not at the card-table, because he had never come in the way of
learning the lesson; to indulge every passion, though the cost to
others might be ruin for life; to know no gods but his own bodily
senses, and no duty but that which he owed to those gods; to eat all,
and produce nothing; to love no one but himself; to have learned
nothing but how to sit at table like a gentleman; to care not at all
for his country, or even for his profession; to have no creed, no
party, no friend, no conscience, to be troubled with nothing that
touched his heart;—such had been, was, and was to be the life of
Colonel Marrable. Perhaps it was accounted to him as a merit by some
that he did not quail at any coming fate. When his doctor warned him
that he must go soon, unless he would refrain from this and that and
the other,—so wording his caution that the Colonel could not but
know and did know, that let him refrain as he would he must go
soon,—he resolved that he would refrain, thinking that the charms of
his wretched life were sweet enough to be worth such sacrifice; but
in no other respect did the caution affect him. He never asked
himself whether he had aught even to regret before he died, or to
fear afterwards.</p>
<p>There are many Colonel Marrables about in the world, known well to be
so at clubs, in drawing-rooms, and by the tradesmen who supply them.
Men give them dinners and women smile upon them. The best of coats
and boots are supplied to them. They never lack cigars nor champagne.
They have horses to ride, and servants to wait upon them more
obsequious than the servants of other people. And men will lend them
money too,—well knowing that there is no chance of repayment. Now
and then one hears a horrid tale of some young girl who surrenders
herself to such a one, absolutely for love! Upon the whole the
Colonel Marrables are popular. It is hard to follow such a man quite
to the end and to ascertain whether or no he does go out softly at
last, like the snuff of a candle,—just with a little stink.</p>
<p>"I will say it as quickly as I can," said the Captain. "I can gain
nothing I know by staying here in your company."</p>
<p>"Not while you are so very uncivil."</p>
<p>"Civil, indeed! I have to-day made up my mind, not for your sake, but
for that of the family, that I will not prosecute you as a criminal
for the gross robbery which you have perpetrated."</p>
<p>"That is nonsense, Walter, and you know it as well as I do."</p>
<p>"I am going back to India in a few weeks, and I trust I may never be
called upon to see you again. I will not, if I can help it. It may be
a toss-up which of us may die first, but this will be our last
meeting. I hope you may remember on your death-bed that you have
utterly ruined your son in every relation of life. I was engaged to
marry a girl,—whom I loved; but it is all over, because of you."</p>
<p>"I had heard of that, Walter, and I really congratulate you on your
escape."</p>
<p>"I can't strike you—"</p>
<p>"No; don't do that."</p>
<p>"Because of your age, and because you are my father. I suppose you
have no heart, and that I cannot make you feel it."</p>
<p>"My dear boy, I have an appetite, and I must go and satisfy it." So
saying the Colonel escaped, and the Captain allowed his father to
make his way down the stairs and into the cab before he followed.</p>
<p>Though he had thus spoken to his father of his blasted hopes in
regard to Mary Lowther, he had not as yet signified his consent to
the measure by which their engagement was to be brought altogether to
an end. The question had come to be discussed widely among their
friends, as is the custom with such questions in such circumstances,
and Mary had been told from all sides that she was bound to give it
up,—that she was bound to give it up for her own sake, and more
especially for his; that the engagement, if continued, would never
lead to a marriage, and that it would in the meantime be absolutely
ruinous to her,—and to him. Parson John came up and spoke to her
with a strength for which she had not hitherto given Parson John
credit. Her Aunt Sarah was very gentle with her, but never veered
from her opinion that the engagement must of necessity be abandoned.
Mr. Fenwick wrote to her a letter full of love and advice, and Mrs.
Fenwick made a journey to Loring to discuss the matter with her. The
discussion between them was very long. "If you are saying this on my
account," said Mary, "it is quite useless."</p>
<p>"On what other account? Mr. Gilmore? Indeed, indeed, I am not
thinking of him. He is out of my mind altogether. I say it because I
know it is impossible that you and your cousin should be married, and
because such an engagement is destructive to both the parties."</p>
<p>"For myself," said Mary, "it can make no difference."</p>
<p>"It will make the greatest difference. It would wear you to pieces
with a deferred hope. There is nothing so killing, so terrible, so
much to be avoided. And then for him!— How is a man, thrown about on
the world as he will be, to live in such a condition."</p>
<p>The upshot of it all was that Mary wrote a letter to her cousin
proposing to surrender her engagement, and declaring that it would be
best for them both that he should agree to accept her surrender. That
plan which she had adopted before, of leaving all the responsibility
to him, would not suffice. She had come to perceive during these
weary discussions that if a way out of his bondage was to be given to
Walter Marrable it must come from her action and not from his. She
had intended to be generous when she left everything to him; but it
was explained to her, both by her aunt and Mrs. Fenwick, that her
generosity was of a kind which he could not use. It was for her to
take the responsibility upon herself; it was for her to make the
move; it was, in short, for her to say that the engagement should be
over.</p>
<p>The very day that Mrs. Fenwick left her she wrote the letter, and
Captain Marrable had it in his pocket when he went down to bid a last
farewell to his father. It had been a sad, weary, tear-laden
performance,—the writing of that letter. She had resolved that no
sign of a tear should be on the paper, and she had rubbed the
moisture away from her eyes a dozen times during the work lest it
should fall. There was but little of intended pathos in it; there
were no expressions of love till she told him at the end that she
would always love him dearly; there was no repining,—no mention of
her own misery. She used all the arguments which others had used to
her, and then drew her conclusion. She remembered that were she to
tell him that she would still be true to him, she would in fact be
asking for some such pledge back from him; and she said not a word of
any such constancy on her own part. It was best for both of them that
the engagement should be broken off; and, therefore, broken off it
was, and should be now and for ever. That was the upshot of Mary
Lowther's letter.</p>
<div class="center"><SPAN name="il11" id="il11"></SPAN>
<table style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="4px">
<tr>
<td align="center">
<SPAN href="images/il11.jpg">
<ANTIMG src="images/il11-t.jpg" height-obs="500" alt="Mary Lowther writes to Walter Marrable." /></SPAN>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="center">
<span class="caption">Mary Lowther writes to Walter Marrable.<br/>
<SPAN href="images/il11.jpg"></SPAN></span>
</td>
</tr>
</table></div>
<p>Captain Marrable when he received it, though he acknowledged the
truth of all the arguments, loved the girl far too well to feel that
this release gave him any comfort. He had doubtless felt that the
engagement was a burthen on him,—that he would not have entered into
it had he not felt sure of his diminished fortune, and that there was
a fearful probability that it might never result in their being
married; but not the less did the breaking up of it make him very
wretched. An engagement for marriage can never be so much to a man as
it is to a woman,—marriage itself can never be so much, can never be
so great a change, produce such utter misery, or of itself be
efficient for such perfect happiness,—but his love was true and
steadfast, and when he learned that she was not to be his, he was as
a man who had been robbed of his treasure. Her letter was long and
argumentative. His reply was short and passionate;—and the reader
shall see it.<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p class="jright">Duke Street, January, 186—.</p>
<p><span class="smallcaps">Dearest Mary</span>,</p>
<p>I suppose you are right. Everybody tells me so, and no
doubt everybody tells you the same. The chances are that I
shall get bowled over; and as for getting back again, I
don't know when I can hope for it. In such a condition it
would I believe be very wrong and selfish were I to go and
leave you to think of me as your future husband. You would
be waiting for that which would never come.</p>
<p>As for me, I shall never care for any other woman. A
soldier can get on very well without a wife, and I shall
always regard myself now as one of those useless but
common animals who are called "not marrying men." I shall
never marry. I shall always carry your picture in my
heart, and shall not think that I am sinning against you
or any one else when I do so after hearing that you are
married.</p>
<p>I need not tell you that I am very wretched. It is not
only that I am separated from you, my own dear, dearest
girl, but that I cannot refrain from thinking how it has
come to pass that it is so. I went down to see my father
yesterday. I did see him, and you may imagine of what
nature was the interview. I sometimes think, when I lie in
bed, that no man was ever so ill-treated as I have been.</p>
<p>Dearest love, good-bye. I could not have brought myself to
say what you have said, but I know that you are right. It
has not been my fault, dear. I did love you, and do love
you as truly as any man ever loved a woman.</p>
<p class="ind8">Yours with all my heart,</p>
<p class="ind12"><span class="smallcaps">Walter Marrable</span>.</p>
<p>I should like to see
you once more before I start. Is
there any harm in this? I must run down to my uncle's, but
I will not go up to you if you think it better not. If you
can bring yourself to see me, pray, pray do.<br/> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>In answer to this Mary wrote to him to say that she would certainly
see him when he came. She knew no reason, she said, why they should
not meet. When she had written her note she asked her aunt's opinion.
Aunt Sarah would not take upon herself to say that no such meeting
ought to take place, but it was very evident that she thought that it
would be dangerous.</p>
<p>Captain Marrable did come down to Loring about the end of January,
and the meeting did take place. Mary had stipulated that she should
be alone when he called. He had suggested that they should walk out
together, as had been their wont; but this she had declined, telling
him that the sadness of such a walk would be too much for her, and
saying to her aunt with a smile that were she once again out with him
on the towing-path, there would be no chance of their ever coming
home. "I could not ask him to turn back," she said, "when I should
know that it would be for the last time." It was arranged, therefore,
that the meeting should take place in the drawing-room at Uphill
Lane.</p>
<p>He came into the room with a quick, uneasy step, and when he reached
her he put his arm round her and kissed her. She had formed certain
little resolutions on this subject. He should kiss her, if he
pleased, once again when he went,—and only once. And now, almost
without a motion on her part that was perceptible, she took herself
out of his arms. There should be no word about that if she could help
it,—but she was bound to remember that he was nothing to her now but
a distant cousin. He must cease to be her lover, though she loved
him. Nay,—he had so ceased already. There must be no more laying of
her head upon his shoulder, no more twisting of her fingers through
his locks, no more looking into his eyes, no more amorous pressing of
her lips against his own. Much as she loved him she must remember now
that such outward signs of love as these would not befit her.
"Walter," she said, "I am so glad to see you! And yet I do not know
but what it would have been better that you should have stayed away."</p>
<p>"Why should it have been better? It would have been unnatural not to
have met each other."</p>
<p>"So I thought. Why should not friends endure to say good-bye, even
though their friendship be as dear as ours? I told Aunt Sarah that I
should be angry with myself afterwards if I feared to tell you to
come."</p>
<p>"There is nothing to fear,—only that it is so wretched an ending,"
said he.</p>
<p>"In one way I will not look on it as an ending. You and I cannot be
married, Walter; but I shall always have your career to look to, and
shall think of you as my dearest friend. I shall expect you to write
to me;—not at first, but after a year or so. You will be able to
write to me then as though you were my brother."</p>
<p>"I shall never be able to do that."</p>
<p>"Oh yes;—that is, if you will make the effort for my sake. I do not
believe but what people can manage and mould their own wills if they
will struggle hard enough. You must not be unhappy, Walter."</p>
<p>"I am not so wise or self-confident as you, Mary. I shall be unhappy.
I should be deceiving myself if I were to tell myself otherwise.
There is nothing before me to make me happy. When I came home there
was very little that I cared for, though I had the prospect of this
money and thought that my cares in that respect were over. Then I met
you, and the whole world seemed altered. I was happy even when I
found how badly I had been treated. Now all that has gone, and I
cannot think that I shall be happy again."</p>
<p>"I mean to be happy, Walter."</p>
<p>"I hope you may, dear."</p>
<p>"There are gradations in happiness. The highest I ever came to yet
was when you told me that you loved me." When she said that, he
attempted to take her hand, but she withdrew from him, almost without
a sign that she was doing so. "I have not quite lost that yet," she
continued, "and I do not mean to lose it altogether. I shall always
remember that you loved me; and you will not forget that I too loved
you."</p>
<p>"Forget it?—no, I don't exactly think that I shall forget it."</p>
<p>"I don't know why it should make us altogether unhappy. For a time, I
suppose, we shall be down-hearted."</p>
<p>"I shall, I know. I can't pretend to such strength as to say that I
can lose what I want, and not feel it."</p>
<p>"We shall both feel it, Walter;—but I do not know that we must be
miserable. When do you leave England?"</p>
<p>"Nothing is settled. I have not had the heart to think of it. It will
not be for a month or two yet. I suppose I shall stay out my regular
Indian time."</p>
<p>"And what shall you do with yourself?"</p>
<p>"I have no plans at all, Mary. Sir Gregory has asked me to Dunripple,
and I shall remain there probably till I am tired of it. It will be
so pleasant, talking to my uncle of my father."</p>
<p>"Do not talk of him at all, Walter. You will best forgive him by not
talking of him. We shall hear, I suppose, of what you do from Parson
John."</p>
<p>She had seated herself a little away from him, and he did not attempt
to draw near to her again till at her bidding he rose to leave her.
He sat there for nearly an hour, and during that time much more was
said by her than by him. She endeavoured to make him understand that
he was as free as air, and that she would hope some day to hear that
he was married. In reply to this, he asserted very loudly that he
would never call any woman his wife, unless unexpected circumstances
should enable him to return and again ask for her hand. "Not that you
are to wait for me, Mary," he said. She smiled, but made no definite
answer to this. She had told herself that it would not be for his
welfare that she should allude to the possibility of a renewed
engagement, and she did not allude to it.</p>
<p>"God bless you, Walter," she said at last, coming to him and offering
him her hand.</p>
<p>"God bless you, for ever and ever, dearest Mary," he said, taking her
in his arms and kissing her again and again. It was to be the last,
and she did not seem to shun him. Then he left her, went as far as
the door,—and returned again. "Dearest, dearest Mary. You will give
me one more kiss?"</p>
<p>"It shall be the last, Walter," she said. Then she did kiss him, as
she would have kissed her brother that was going from her, and
escaping from his arms she left the room.</p>
<p>He had come to Loring late on the previous evening, and on that same
day he returned to London. No doubt he dined at his club, drank a
pint of wine and smoked a cigar or two, though he did it all after a
lugubrious fashion. Men knew that he had fallen into great trouble in
the matter of his inheritance, and did not expect him to be joyful
and of pleasant countenance. "By George!" said little Captain Boodle,
"if it was my governor, I'd go very near being hung for him; I would,
by George!" Which remark obtained a good deal of general sympathy in
the billiard-room of that military club. In the meantime Mary Lowther
at Loring had resolved that she would not be lugubrious, and she sat
down to dinner opposite to her aunt with a pleasant smile on her
face. Before the evening was over, however, she had in some degree
broken down. "I fear I can't get along with novels, Aunt Sarah," she
said. "Don't you think I could find something to do." Then the old
lady came round the room and kissed her niece;—but she made no other
reply.</p>
<p><SPAN name="c34" id="c34"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />