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<h3>CHAPTER XXXV.</h3>
<h4>THE SERJEANT AND MRS. BLUESTONE AT HOME.<br/> </h4>
<p>Lady Anna was not told till the Saturday that she was to meet her
lover, the tailor, on the following Monday. She was living at this
time, as it were, in chains, though the chains were gilded. It was
possible that she might be off at any moment with Daniel
Thwaite,—and now the more possible because he had money at his
command. If this should occur, then would the game which the Countess
and her friends were playing, be altogether lost. Then would the
checkmate have been absolute. The reader will have known that such a
step had never been contemplated by the man, and will also have
perceived that it would have been altogether opposed to the girl's
character; but it is hoped that the reader has looked more closely
into the man's motives and the girl's character than even her mother
was able to do. The Countess had thought that she had known her
daughter. She had been mistaken, and now there was hardly anything of
which she could not suspect her girl to be capable. Lady Anna was
watched, therefore, during every minute of the four and twenty hours.
A policeman was told off to protect the house at night from rope
ladders or any other less cumbrous ingenuity. The servants were set
on guard. Sarah, the lady's-maid, followed her mistress almost like a
ghost when the poor young lady went to her bedroom. Mrs. Bluestone,
or one of the girls, was always with her, either indoors or out of
doors. Out of doors, indeed, she never went without more guards than
one. A carriage had been hired,—a luxury with which Mrs. Bluestone
had hitherto dispensed,—and the carriage was always there when Lady
Anna suggested that she should like to leave the house. She was
warmly invited to go shopping, and made to understand that in the way
of ordinary shopping she could buy what she pleased. But her life was
inexpressibly miserable. "What does mamma mean to do?" she said to
Mrs. Bluestone on the Saturday morning.</p>
<p>"In what way, my dear?"</p>
<p>"Where does she mean to go? She won't live always in Keppel Street?"</p>
<p>"No,—I do not think that she will live always in Keppel Street. It
depends a good deal upon you, I think."</p>
<p>"I will go wherever she pleases to take me. The lawsuit is over now,
and I don't know why we should stay here. I am sure you can't like
it."</p>
<p>To tell the truth, Mrs. Bluestone did not like it at all.
Circumstances had made her a gaoler, but by nature she was very ill
constituted for that office. The harshness of it was detestable to
her, and then there was no reason whatever why she should sacrifice
her domestic comfort for the Lovels. The thing had grown upon them,
till the Lovels had become an incubus to her. Personally, she liked
Lady Anna, but she was unable to treat Lady Anna as she would treat
any other girl that she liked. She had told the Serjeant more than
once that she could not endure it much longer. And the Serjeant did
not like it better than did his wife. It was all a labour of love,
and a most unpleasant labour. "The Countess must take her away," the
Serjeant had said. And now the Serjeant had been told by the tailor,
in his own chambers, that his word was worth nothing!</p>
<p>"To tell you the truth, Lady Anna, we none of us like it,—not
because we do not like you, but because the whole thing is
disagreeable. You are creating very great misery, my dear, because
you are obstinate."</p>
<p>"Because I won't marry my cousin?"</p>
<p>"No, my dear; not because you won't marry your cousin. I have never
advised you to marry your cousin, unless you could love him. I don't
think girls should ever be told to marry this man or that. But it is
very proper that they should be told not to marry this man or that.
You are making everybody about you miserable, because you will not
give up a most improper engagement, made with a man who is in every
respect beneath you."</p>
<p>"I wish I were dead," said Lady Anna.</p>
<p>"It is very easy to say that, my dear; but what you ought to wish is,
to do your duty."</p>
<p>"I do wish to do my duty, Mrs. Bluestone."</p>
<p>"It can't be dutiful to stand out against your mother in this way.
You are breaking your mother's heart. And if you were to do this
thing, you would soon find that you had broken your own. It is
downright obstinacy. I don't like to be harsh, but as you are here,
in my charge, I am bound to tell you the truth."</p>
<p>"I wish mamma would let me go away," said Lady Anna, bursting into
tears.</p>
<p>"She will let you go at once, if you will only make the promise that
she asks of you." In saying this, Mrs. Bluestone was hardly more upon
the square than her husband had been, for she knew very well, at that
moment, that Lady Anna was to go to Keppel Street early on the Monday
morning, and she had quite made up her mind that her guest should not
come back to Bedford Square. She had now been moved to the special
severity which she had shown by certain annoyances of her own to
which she had been subjected by the presence of Lady Anna in her
house. She could neither entertain her friends nor go out to be
entertained by them, and had told the Serjeant more than once that a
great mistake had been made in having the girl there at all. But
judgment had operated with her as well as feeling. It was necessary
that Lady Anna should be made to understand before she saw the tailor
that she could not be happy, could not be comfortable, could not be
other than very wretched,—till she had altogether dismissed her
low-born lover.</p>
<p>"I did not think you would be so unkind to me," sobbed Lady Anna
through her tears.</p>
<p>"I do not mean to be unkind, but you must be told the truth. Every
minute that you spend in thinking of that man is a disgrace to you."</p>
<p>"Then I shall be disgraced all my life," said Lady Anna, bursting out
of the room.</p>
<p>On that day the Serjeant dined at his club, but came home about nine
o'clock. It had all been planned so that the information might be
given in the most solemn manner possible. The two girls were sitting
up in the drawing-room with the guest who, since the conversation in
the morning, had only seen Mrs. Bluestone during dinner. First there
was the knock at the door, and then, after a quarter of an hour,
which was spent up-stairs in perfect silence, there came a message.
Would Lady Anna have the kindness to go to the Serjeant in the
dining-room. In silence she left the room, and in silence descended
the broad staircase. The Serjeant and Mrs. Bluestone were sitting on
one side of the fireplace, the Serjeant in his own peculiar
arm-chair, and the lady close to the fender, while a seat opposite to
them had been placed for Lady Anna. The room was gloomy with dark red
curtains and dark flock paper. On the table there burned two candles,
and no more. The Serjeant got up and motioned Lady Anna to a chair.
As soon as she had seated herself, he began his speech. "My dear
young lady, you must be no doubt aware that you are at present
causing a great deal of trouble to your best friends."</p>
<p>"I don't want to cause anybody trouble," said Lady Anna, thinking
that the Serjeant in speaking of her best friends alluded to himself
and his wife. "I only want to go away."</p>
<p>"I am coming to that directly, my dear. I cannot suppose that you do
not understand the extent of the sorrow that you have inflicted on
your parent by,—by the declaration which you made to Lord Lovel in
regard to Mr. Daniel Thwaite." There is nothing, perhaps, in the way
of exhortation and scolding which the ordinary daughter,—or
son,—dislikes so much as to be told of her, or his, "parent." "My
dear fellow, your father will be annoyed," is taken in good part.
"What will mamma say?" is seldom received amiss. But when young
people have their "parents" thrown at them, they feel themselves to
be aggrieved, and become at once antagonistic. Lady Anna became
strongly antagonistic. If her mother, who had always been to her her
"own, own mamma," was going to be her parent, there must be an end of
all hope of happiness. She said nothing, but compressed her lips
together. She would not allow herself to be led an inch any way by a
man who talked to her of her parent. "The very idea of such a
marriage as this man had suggested to you under the guise of
friendship was dreadful to her. It could be no more than an
idea;—but that you should have entertained it was dreadful. She has
since asked you again and again to repudiate the idea, and hitherto
you have refused to obey."</p>
<p>"I can never know what mamma really wants till I go and live with her
again."</p>
<p>"I am coming to that, Lady Anna. The Countess has informed Mrs.
Bluestone that you had refused to give the desired promise unless you
should be allowed to see Mr. Daniel Thwaite, intimating, I presume,
that his permission would be necessary to free you from your
imaginary bond to him."</p>
<p>"It would be necessary."</p>
<p>"Very well. The Countess naturally felt an abhorrence at allowing you
again to be in the presence of one so much beneath you,—who had
ventured to address you as he has done. It was a most natural
feeling. But it has occurred to Mrs. Bluestone and myself, that as
you entertain this idea of an obligation, you should be allowed to
extricate yourself from it after your own fashion. You are to meet
Mr. Thwaite,—on Monday,—at eleven o'clock,—in Keppel Street."</p>
<p>"And I am not to come back again?"</p>
<p>When one executes the office of gaoler without fee or reward, giving
up to one's prisoner one's best bedroom, and having a company dinner,
more or less, cooked for one's prisoner every day, one does not like
to be told too plainly of the anticipated joys of enfranchisement.
Mrs. Bluestone, who had done her best both for the mother and the
girl, and had done it all from pure motherly sympathy, was a little
hurt. "I am sure, Lady Anna, we shall not wish you to return," she
said.</p>
<p>"Oh, Mrs. Bluestone, you don't understand me. I don't think you know
how unhappy I am because of mamma."</p>
<p>Mrs. Bluestone relented at once. "If you will only do as your mamma
wishes, everything will be made happy for you."</p>
<p>"Mr. Thwaite will be in Keppel Street at eleven o'clock on Monday,"
continued the Serjeant, "and an opportunity will then be given you of
obtaining from him a release from that unfortunate promise which I
believe you once made him. I may tell you that he has expressed
himself willing to give you that release. The debt due to him, or
rather to his late father, has now been paid by the estate, and I
think you will find that he will make no difficulty. After that
anything that he may require shall be done to forward his views."</p>
<p>"Am I to take my things?" she asked.</p>
<p>"Sarah shall pack them up, and they shall be sent after you if it be
decided that you are to stay with Lady Lovel." They then went to bed.</p>
<p>In all this neither the Serjeant nor his wife had been "on the
square." Neither of them had spoken truly to the girl. Mrs. Bluestone
had let the Countess know that with all her desire to assist her
ladyship, and her ladyship's daughter, she could not receive Lady
Anna back in Bedford Square. As for that sending of her things upon
certain conditions,—it was a simple falsehood. The things would
certainly be sent. And the Serjeant, without uttering an actual lie,
had endeavoured to make the girl think that the tailor was in pursuit
of money,—and of money only, though he must have known that it was
not so. The Serjeant no doubt hated a lie,—as most of us do hate
lies; and had a strong conviction that the devil is the father of
them. But then the lies which he hated, and as to the parentage of
which he was quite certain, were lies told to him. Who yet ever met a
man who did not in his heart of hearts despise an attempt made by
others to deceive—himself? They whom we have found to be gentler in
their judgment towards attempts made in another direction have been
more than one or two. The object which the Serjeant had in view was
so good that it seemed to him to warrant some slight deviation from
parallelogrammatic squareness;—though he held it as one of his first
rules of life that the end cannot justify the means.</p>
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