<SPAN name="Chapter_Ten" id="Chapter_Ten"></SPAN>
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<p><span class="dropcapt_ribbons"><span class="dropcap">T</span></span>he Osborns were breakfasting in their unpleasant sitting-room in Duke
Street when Lady Walderhurst's letter arrived. The toast was tough and
smoked, and the eggs were of the variety labelled "18 a shilling" in the
shops; the apartment was also redolent of kippered herring, and Captain
Osborn was scowling over the landlady's weekly bill when Hester opened
the envelope stamped with a coronet. (Each time Emily wrote a note and
found herself confronting the coronet on the paper, she blushed a little
and felt that she must presently awake from her dream.) Mrs. Osborn
herself was looking far from amiable. She was ill and nervous and
irritable, and had, in fact, just been crying and wishing that she was
dead, which had given rise to unpleasantness between herself and her
husband, who was not in the mood to feel patient with nerves.</p>
<p>"Here's one from the Marchioness," she remarked slightingly.</p>
<p>"I have had none from the Marquis," sneered Osborn. "He might have
condescended a reply—the cold-blooded beggar!"</p>
<p>Hester was reading her letter. As she turned the first page her
expression changed. As has previously been suggested, the epistolary
methods of Lady Walderhurst were neither brilliant nor literary, and yet
Mrs. Osborn seemed to be pleased by what she read. During the reading of
a line or so she wore an expression of slowly questioning wonder, which,
a little later on, settled into relief.</p>
<p>"I can only say I think it's very decent of them," she ejaculated at
last; "really decent!"</p>
<p>Alec Osborn looked up, still scowlingly.</p>
<p>"I don't see any cheque," he observed. "That would be the most decent
thing. It's the thing we want most, with this damned woman sending in
bills like this for the fourth-rate things we live on, and for her
confounded tenth-rate rooms."</p>
<p>"This is better than cheques. It means our having something we couldn't
hope for cheques enough to pay for. They are offering to lend us a
beautiful old place to live in for the rest of our stay."</p>
<p>"What!" Osborn exclaimed. "Where?"</p>
<p>"Near Palstrey Manor, where they are staying now."</p>
<p>"Near Palstrey! How near?" He had been slouching in his chair and now
sat up and leaned forward on the table. He was eager.</p>
<p>Hester referred to the letter again.</p>
<p>"She doesn't say. It is a sort of antiquity, I gather. It's called The
Kennel Farm. Have you ever been to Palstrey?"</p>
<p>"Not as a guest." He was generally somewhat sardonic when he spoke of
anything connected with Walderhurst. "But once I was in the nearest
county town by chance and rode over. By Jove!" starting a little, "I
wonder if it can be a rum old place I passed and reined in to have a
look at. I hope it is."</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"It's near enough to the Manor to be convenient."</p>
<p>"Do you think," hesitating, "that we shall see much of them?"</p>
<p>"We shall if we manage things decently. She likes you, and she's the
kind of woman to be sympathising and make a fuss over another
woman—particularly one who is under the weather and can be
sentimentalised over."</p>
<p>Hester was pushing crumbs about on the tablecloth with her knife, and a
dull red showed itself on her cheek.</p>
<p>"I am not going to make capital of—circumstances," she said sullenly.
"I won't."</p>
<p>She was not a woman easily managed, and Osborn had had reason on more
than one occasion to realise a certain wicked stubbornness in her. There
was a look in her eye now which frightened him. It was desperately
necessary that she should be kept in a tractable mood. As she was a girl
with affections, and he was a man without any, he knew what to do.</p>
<p>He got up and went to her side, putting his arm round her shoulders as
he sat in a chair near her. "Now, little woman," he said. "Now! For
God's sake don't take it that way. Don't think I don't understand how
you feel."</p>
<p>"I don't believe you know anything about the way I feel," she said,
setting her narrow white teeth and looking more like a native woman than
he had ever seen her. A thing which did not aid his affection for her,
such as it was, happened to be that in certain moods she suggested a
Hindoo beauty to him in a way which brought back to him memories of the
past he did not care to have awakened.</p>
<p>"Yes I do, yes I do," he protested, getting hold of her hand and trying
to make her look at him. "There are things such a woman as you can't
help feeling. It's because you feel them that you must be on your
mettle—Lord knows you've got pluck enough—and stand by a fellow now.
What shall I do, my God, if you don't?"</p>
<p>He was, in fact, in such straits that the ring of emotion in his voice
was not by any means assumed.</p>
<p>"My God!" he repeated, "what shall we all do if you won't?"</p>
<p>She lifted her eyes then to look at him. She was in a sufficiently
nervous condition to be conscious that tears were always near.</p>
<p>"Are there worse things than you have told me?" she faltered.</p>
<p>"Yes, worse things than it would be fair to bother you with. I don't
want you to be tormented. I was a deuced fool before I met you and began
to run straight. Things pile in now that would have lain quiet enough if
Walderhurst had not married. Hang it all! he ought to do the decent
thing by me. He owes something to the man who may stand in his shoes,
after all."</p>
<p>Hester lifted her slow eyes again.</p>
<p>"You've not much of a chance now," she said. "She's a fine healthy
woman."</p>
<p>Osborn sprang up and paced the floor, set upon by a sudden spasm of
impotent rage. He snapped his teeth rather like a dog.</p>
<p>"Oh! curse her!" he gave forth. "The great, fresh-coloured lumping
brute! What did she come into it for? Of all the devilish things that
can happen to a man, the worst is to be born to the thing I was born to.
To know through your whole life that you're just a stone's-throw from
rank and wealth and splendour, and to have to live and look on as an
outsider. Upon my word, I've felt more of an outsider just because of
it. There's a dream I've had every month or so for years. It's a dream
of opening a letter that tells me he's dead, or of a man coming into the
room or meeting me in the street and saying suddenly, 'Walderhurst died
last night, Walderhurst died last night!' They're always the same words,
'Walderhurst died last night!' And I wake up shaking and in a cold sweat
for joy at the gorgeous luck that's come at last."</p>
<p>Hester gave a low cry like a little howl, and dropped her head on her
arms on the table among the cups and saucers.</p>
<p>"She'll have a son! She'll have a son!" she cried. "And then it won't
matter whether <i>he</i> dies or not."</p>
<p>"Ough!" was the sound wrenched from Osborn's fury. "And our son might
have been in it. Ours might have had it all! Damn—damn!"</p>
<p>"He won't,—he won't now, even if he lives to be born," she sobbed, and
clutched at the dingy tablecloth with her lean little hands.</p>
<p>It was hard on her. She had had a thousand feverish dreams he had never
heard of. She had lain awake hours at night and stared with wide-open
eyes at the darkness, picturing to her inner soul the dream of splendour
that she would be part of, the solace for past miseries, the high
revenges for past slights that would be hers after the hour in which she
heard the words Osborn had just quoted, "Walderhurst died last night!"
Oh! if luck had only helped them! if the spells her Ayah had taught her
in secret had only worked as they would have worked if she had been a
native woman and had really used them properly! There was a spell she
had wrought once which Ameerah had sworn to her was to be relied on. It
took ten weeks to accomplish its end. In secret she had known of a man
on whom it had been worked. She had found out about it partly from the
remote hints which had aided her half knowledge of strange things and by
keeping a close watch. The man had died—he had died. She herself, and
with her own eyes had seen him begin to ail, had heard of his fevers and
pains and final death. He had died. She knew that. And she had tried the
thing herself in dead secrecy. And at the fifth week, just as with the
native who had died, she heard that Walderhurst was ill. During the next
four weeks she was sick with the tension of combined horror and delight.
But he did not die in the tenth week. They heard that he had gone to
Tangiers with a party of notable people, and that his "slight"
indisposition had passed, leaving him in admirable health and spirits.</p>
<p>Her husband had known nothing of her frenzy. She would not have dared to
tell him. There were many things she did not tell him. He used to laugh
at her native stories of occult powers, though she knew that he had seen
some strange things done, as most foreigners had. He always explained
such things contemptuously on grounds which presupposed in the
performers of the mysteries powers of agility, dexterity, and universal
knowledge quite as marvellous as anything occult could have been. He did
not like her to show belief in the "tricks of the natives," as he called
them. It made a woman look a fool, he said, to be so credulous.</p>
<p>During the last few months a new fever had tormented her. Feelings had
awakened in her which were new. She thought things she had never thought
before. She had never cared for children or suspected herself of being
the maternal woman. But Nature worked in her after her weird fashion.
She began to care less for some things and more for others. She cared
less for Osborn's moods and was better able to defy them. He began to be
afraid of her temper, and she began to like at times to defy his. There
had been some fierce scenes between them in which he had found her meet
with a flare of fury words she would once have been cowed by. He had
spoken one day with the coarse slightingness of a selfish, irritable
brute, of the domestic event which was before them. He did not speak
twice.</p>
<p>She sprang up before him and shook her clenched fist in his face, so
near that he started back.</p>
<p>"Don't say a word!" she cried. "Don't dare—don't dare. I tell you—look
out, if you don't want to be killed."</p>
<p>During the outpouring of her frenzy he saw her in an entirely new light
and made discoveries. She would fight for her young, as a tigress fights
for hers. She was nursing a passion of secret feeling of which he had
known nothing. He had not for a moment suspected her of it. She had not
seemed that kind of girl. She had been of the kind that cares for finery
and social importance and the world's favour, not for sentiments.</p>
<p>On this morning of the letter's arrival he watched her sobbing and
clutching the tablecloth, and reflected. He walked up and down and
pondered. There were a lot of things to be thought over.</p>
<p>"We may as well accept the invitation at once," he said. "Grovel as much
as you choose. The more the better. They'll like it."</p>
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