<SPAN name="chap15"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XV </h3>
<h3> THE JOYS OF HOME </h3>
<p>Monica and her husband, on leaving the house in Queen's Road, walked
slowly in the eastward direction. Though night had fallen, the air was
not unpleasant; they had no object before them, and for five minutes
they occupied themselves with their thoughts. Then Widdowson stopped.</p>
<p>'Shall we go home again?' he asked, just glancing at Monica, then
letting his eyes stray vaguely in the gloom.</p>
<p>'I should like to see Milly, but I'm afraid I can hardly take you there
to call with me.'</p>
<p>'Why not?'</p>
<p>'It's a very poor little sitting-room, you know, and she might have
some friend. Isn't there anywhere you could go, and meet me afterwards?'</p>
<p>Frowning, Widdowson looked at his watch.</p>
<p>'Nearly six o'clock. There isn't much time.'</p>
<p>'Edmund, suppose you go home, and let me come back by myself? You
wouldn't mind, for once? I should like so much to have a talk with
Milly. If I got back about nine or half-past, I could have a little
supper, and that's all I should want.'</p>
<p>He answered abruptly,—</p>
<p>'Oh, but I can't have you going about alone at night.'</p>
<p>'Why not?' answered Monica, with a just perceptible note of irritation.
'Are you afraid I shall be robbed or murdered?'</p>
<p>'Nonsense. But you mustn't be alone.'</p>
<p>'Didn't I always use to be alone?'</p>
<p>He made an angry gesture.</p>
<p>'I have begged you not to speak of that. Why do you say what you know
is disagreeable to me? You used to do all sorts of things that you
never ought to have been obliged to do, and it's very painful to
remember it.'</p>
<p>Monica, seeing that people were approaching, walked on, and neither
spoke until they had nearly reached the end of the road.</p>
<p>'I think we had better go home,' Widdowson at length remarked.</p>
<p>'If you wish it; but I really don't see why I shouldn't call on Milly,
now that we are here.'</p>
<p>'Why didn't you speak of it before we left home? You ought to be more
methodical, Monica. Each morning I always plan how my day is to be
spent, and it would be much better if you would do the same. Then you
wouldn't be so restless and uncertain.'</p>
<p>'If I go to Rutland Street,' said Monica, without heeding this
admonition, 'couldn't you leave me there for an hour?'</p>
<p>'What in the world am I to do?'</p>
<p>'I should have thought you might walk about. It's a pity you don't know
more people, Edmund. It would make things so much pleasanter for you.'</p>
<p>In the end he consented to see her safely as far as Rutland Street,
occupy himself for an hour, and come back for her. They went by cab,
which was dismissed in Hampstead Road. Widdowson did not turn away
until he had ocular proof of his wife's admittance to the house where
Miss Vesper lived, and even then he walked no farther than the
neighbouring streets, returning about every ten minutes to watch the
house from a short distance, as though he feared Monica might have some
project of escape. His look was very bilious; trudging mechanically
hither and thither where fewest people were to be met, he kept his eyes
on the ground, and clumped to a dismal rhythm with the end of his
walking-stick. In the three or four months since his marriage, he
seemed to have grown older; he no longer held himself so upright.</p>
<p>At the very moment agreed upon he was waiting close by the house. Five
minutes passed; twice he had looked at his watch, and he grew
excessively impatient, stamping as if it were necessary to keep himself
warm. Another five minutes, and he uttered a nervous ejaculation. He
had all but made up his mind to go and knock at the door when Monica
came forth.</p>
<p>'You haven't been waiting here long, I hope?' she said cheerfully.</p>
<p>'Ten minutes. But it doesn't matter.'</p>
<p>'I'm very sorry. We were talking on—'</p>
<p>'Yes, but one must always be punctual. I wish I could impress that upon
you. Life without punctuality is quite impossible.'</p>
<p>'I'm very sorry, Edmund. I will be more careful. Please don't lecture
me, dear. How shall we go home?'</p>
<p>'We had better take a cab to Victoria. No knowing how long we may have
to wait for a train when we get there.'</p>
<p>'Now don't be so grumpy. Where have you been all the time?'</p>
<p>'Oh, walking about. What else was I to do?'</p>
<p>On the drive they held no conversation. At Victoria they were delayed
about half an hour before a train started for Herne Hill; Monica sat in
a waiting-room, and her husband trudged about the platform, still
clumping rhythmically with his stick.</p>
<p>Their Sunday custom was to dine at one o'clock, and at six to have tea.
Widdowson hated the slightest interference with domestic routine, and
he had reluctantly indulged Monica's desire to go to Chelsea this
afternoon. Hunger was now added to his causes of discontent.</p>
<p>'Let us have something to eat at once,' he said on entering the house.
'This disorder really won't do: we must manage better somehow.'</p>
<p>Without replying, Monica rang the dining-room bell, and gave orders.</p>
<p>Little change had been made in the interior of the house since its
master's marriage. The dressing-room adjoining the principal
bed-chamber was adapted to Monica's use, and a few ornaments were added
to the drawing-room. Unlike his deceased brother, Widdowson had the
elements of artistic taste; in furnishing his abode he took counsel
with approved decorators, and at moderate cost had made himself a home
which presented no original features, but gave no offence to a
cultivated eye. The first sight of the rooms pleased Monica greatly.
She declared that all was perfect, nothing need be altered. In those
days, if she had bidden him spend a hundred pounds on reconstruction,
the lover would have obeyed, delighted to hear her express a wish.</p>
<p>Though competence had come to him only after a lifetime of narrow
means, Widdowson felt no temptation to parsimony. Secure in his
all-sufficing income, he grudged no expenditure that could bring
himself or his wife satisfaction. On the wedding-tour in Cornwall,
Devon, and Somerset—it lasted about seven weeks—Monica learnt, among
other things less agreeable, that her husband was generous with money.</p>
<p>He was anxious she should dress well, though only, as Monica soon
discovered, for his own gratification. Soon after they had settled down
at home she equipped herself for the cold season, and Widdowson cared
little about the price so long as the effect of her new costumes was
pleasing to him.</p>
<p>'You are making a butterfly of me,' said Monica merrily, when he
expressed strong approval of a bright morning dress that had just come
home.</p>
<p>'A beautiful woman,' he replied, with the nervous gravity which still
possessed him when complimenting her, or saying tender things, 'a
beautiful woman ought to be beautifully clad.'</p>
<p>At the same time he endeavoured to impress her with the gravest sense
of a married woman's obligations. His raptures, genuine enough, were
sometimes interrupted in the oddest way if Monica chanced to utter a
careless remark of which he could not strictly approve, and such
interruptions frequently became the opportunity for a long and solemn
review of the wifely status. Without much trouble he had brought her
into a daily routine which satisfied him. During the whole of the
morning she was to be absorbed in household cares. In the afternoon he
would take her to walk or drive, and the evening he wished her to spend
either in drawing-room or library, occupied with a book. Monica soon
found that his idea of wedded happiness was that they should always be
together. Most reluctantly he consented to her going any distance
alone, for whatever purpose. Public entertainments he regarded with no
great favour, but when he saw how Monica enjoyed herself at concert or
theatre, he made no objection to indulging her at intervals of a
fortnight or so; his own fondness for music made this compliance
easier. He was jealous of her forming new acquaintances; indifferent to
society himself, he thought his wife should be satisfied with her
present friends, and could not understand why she wished to see them so
often.</p>
<p>The girl was docile, and for a time he imagined that there would never
be conflict between his will and hers. Whilst enjoying their holiday
they naturally went everywhere together, and were scarce an hour out of
each other's presence, day or night. In quiet spots by the seashore,
when they sat in solitude, Widdowson's tongue was loosened, and he
poured forth his philosophy of life with the happy assurance that
Monica would listen passively. His devotion to her proved itself in a
thousand ways; week after week he grew, if anything, more kind, more
tender; yet in his view of their relations he was unconsciously the
most complete despot, a monument of male autocracy. Never had it
occurred to Widdowson that a wife remains an individual, with rights
and obligations independent of her wifely condition. Everything he said
presupposed his own supremacy; he took for granted that it was his to
direct, hers to be guided. A display of energy, purpose, ambition, on
Monica's part, which had no reference to domestic pursuits, would have
gravely troubled him; at once he would have set himself to subdue, with
all gentleness, impulses so inimical to his idea of the married state.
It rejoiced him that she spoke with so little sympathy of the
principles supported by Miss Barfoot and Miss Nunn; these persons
seemed to him well-meaning, but grievously mistaken. Miss Nunn he
judged 'unwomanly,' and hoped in secret that Monica would not long
remain on terms of friendship with her. Of course his wife's former
pursuits were an abomination to him; he could not bear to hear them
referred to.</p>
<p>'Woman's sphere is the home, Monica. Unfortunately girls are often
obliged to go out and earn their living, but this is unnatural, a
necessity which advanced civilization will altogether abolish. You
shall read John Ruskin; every word he says about women is good and
precious. If a woman can neither have a home of her own, nor find
occupation in any one else's she is deeply to be pitied; her life is
bound to be unhappy. I sincerely believe that an educated woman had
better become a domestic servant than try to imitate the life of a man.'</p>
<p>Monica seemed to listen attentively, but before long she accustomed
herself to wear this look whilst in truth she was thinking her own
thoughts. And as often as not they were of a nature little suspected by
her prosing companion.</p>
<p>He believed himself the happiest of men. He had taken a daring step,
but fortune smiled upon him, Monica was all he had imagined in his
love-fever; knowledge of her had as yet brought to light no single
untruth, not trait of character that he could condemn. That she
returned his love he would not and could not doubt. And something she
said to him one day, early in their honeymoon, filled up the measure of
his bliss.</p>
<p>'What a change you have made in my life, Edmund! How much I have to
thank you for!'</p>
<p>That was what he had hoped to hear. He had thought it himself; had
wondered whether Monica saw her position in this light. And when the
words actually fell from her lips he glowed with joy. This, to his
mind, was the perfect relation of wife to husband. She must look up to
him as her benefactor, her providence. It would have pleased him still
better if she had not possessed a penny of her own, but happily Monica
seemed never to give a thought to the sum at her disposal.</p>
<p>Surely he was the easiest of men to live with. When he first became
aware that Monica suffered an occasional discontent, it caused him
troublous surprise. As soon as he understood that she desired more
freedom of movement, he became anxious, suspicious irritable. Nothing
like a quarrel had yet taken place between them, but Widdowson began to
perceive that he must exert authority in a way he had imagined would
never be necessary. All his fears, after all, were not groundless.
Monica's undomestic life, and perhaps the association with those
Chelsea people, had left results upon her mind. By way of mild
discipline, he first of all suggested a closer attention to the affairs
of the house. Would it not be well if she spent an hour a day in sewing
or fancy work? Monica so far obeyed as to provide herself with some
plain needlework, but Widdowson, watching with keen eye, soon remarked
that her use of the needle was only a feint. He lay awake o' nights,
pondering darkly.</p>
<p>On the present evening he was more decidedly out of temper than ever
hitherto. He satisfied his hunger hurriedly and in silence. Then,
observing that Monica ate only a few morsels, he took offence at this.</p>
<p>'I'm afraid you are not well, dear. You have had no appetite for
several days.'</p>
<p>'As much as usual, I think,' she replied absently.</p>
<p>They went into the library, commonly their resort of an evening.
Widdowson possessed several hundred volumes of English literature, most
of them the works which are supposed to be indispensible to a
well-informed man, though very few men even make a pretence of reading
them. Self-educated, Widdowson deemed it his duty to make acquaintance
with the great, the solid authors. Nor was his study of them
affectation. For the poets he had little taste; the novelists he
considered only profitable in intervals of graver reading; but history,
political economy, even metaphysics, genuinely appealed to him. He had
always two or three solid books on hand, each with its marker; he
studied them at stated hours, and always sitting at a table, a notebook
open beside him. A little work once well-known, Todd's 'Student's
Manual,' had formed his method and inspired him with zeal.</p>
<p>To-night, it being Sunday, he took down a volume of Barrow's Sermons.
Though not strictly orthodox in religious faith, he conformed to the
practices of the Church of England, and since his marriage had been
more scrupulous on this point than before. He abhorred unorthodoxy in a
woman, and would not on any account have suffered Monica to surmise
that he had his doubts concerning any article of the Christian faith.
Like most men of his kind, he viewed religion as a precious and
powerful instrument for directing the female conscience. Frequently he
read aloud to his wife, but this evening he showed no intention of
doing so. Monica, however, sat unoccupied. After glancing at her once
or twice, he said reprovingly,—</p>
<p>'Have you finished your Sunday book?'</p>
<p>'Not quite. But I don't care to read just now.'</p>
<p>The silence that followed was broken by Monica herself.</p>
<p>'Have you accepted Mrs. Luke's invitation to dinner?' she asked.</p>
<p>'I have declined it,' was the reply, carelessly given.</p>
<p>Monica bit her lip.</p>
<p>'But why?'</p>
<p>'Surely we needn't discuss that over again, Monica.'</p>
<p>His eyes were still on the book, and he stirred impatiently.</p>
<p>'But,' urged his wife, 'do you mean to break with her altogether? If
so, I think it's very unwise, Edmund. What an opinion you must have of
me, if you think I can't see people's faults! I know it's very true,
all you say about her. But she wishes to be kind to us, I'm sure—and I
like to see something of a life so different from our own.'</p>
<p>Widdowson drummed on the floor with his foot. In a few moments,
ignoring Monica's remarks, he stroked his beard, and asked, with a show
of casual interest—</p>
<p>'How was it you knew that Mr. Barfoot?'</p>
<p>'I had met him before—when I went there on the Saturday.'</p>
<p>Widdowson's eyes fell; his brow was wrinkled.</p>
<p>'He's often there, then?'</p>
<p>'I don't know. Perhaps he is. He's Miss Barfoot's cousin, you know.'</p>
<p>'You haven't seen him more than once before?'</p>
<p>'No. Why do you ask?'</p>
<p>'Oh, it was only that he seemed to speak as if you were old
acquaintances.'</p>
<p>'That's his way, I suppose.'</p>
<p>Monica had already learnt that the jealousy which Widdowson so often
betrayed before their manage still lurked in his mind. Perceiving why
he put these questions, she could not look entirely unconcerned, and
the sense of his eye being upon her caused her some annoyance.</p>
<p>'You talked to him, didn't you?' she said, changing her position in the
deep chair.</p>
<p>'Oh, the kind of talk that is possible with a perfect stranger. I
suppose he is in some profession?'</p>
<p>'I really don't know. Why, Edmund? Does he interest you?'</p>
<p>'Only that one likes to know something about the people that are
introduced to one's wife,' Widdowson answered rather acridly.</p>
<p>Their bedtime was half-past ten. Precisely at that moment Widdowson
closed his book—glad to be relieved from the pretence of reading—and
walked over the lower part of the house to see that all was right. He
had a passion for routine. Every night, before going upstairs, he did a
number of little things in unvarying sequence—changed the calendar for
next day, made perfect order on his writing-table, wound lip his watch,
and so on. That Monica could not direct her habits with like exactitude
was frequently a distress to him; if she chanced to forget any most
trivial detail of daily custom he looked very solemn, and begged her to
be more vigilant.</p>
<p>Next morning after breakfast, as Monica stood by the dining-room window
and looked rather cheerlessly at a leaden sky, her husband came towards
her as if he had something to say. She turned, and saw that his face no
longer wore the austere expression which had made her miserable last
night, and even during the meal this morning.</p>
<p>'Are we friends?' he said, with the attempt at playfulness which always
made him look particularly awkward.</p>
<p>'Of course we are,' Monica answered, smiling, but not regarding him.</p>
<p>'Didn't he behave gruffly last night to his little girl?'</p>
<p>'Just a little.'</p>
<p>'And what can the old bear do to show that he's sorry?'</p>
<p>'Never be gruff again.'</p>
<p>'The old bear is sometimes an old goose as well, and torments himself
in the silliest way. Tell him so, if ever he begins to behave badly.
Isn't it account-book morning?'</p>
<p>'Yes. I'll come to you at eleven.'</p>
<p>'And if we have a nice, quiet, comfortable week, I'll take you to the
Crystal Palace concert next Saturday.'</p>
<p>Monica nodded cheerfully, and went off to look after her housekeeping.</p>
<p>The week was in all respects what Widdowson desired. Not a soul came to
the house; Monica went to see no one. Save on two days, it rained,
sleeted, drizzled, fogged; on those two afternoons they had an hour's
walk. Saturday brought no improvement of the atmosphere, but Widdowson
was in his happiest mood; he cheerfully kept his promise about the
concert. As they sat together at night, his contentment overflowed in
tenderness like that of the first days of marriage.</p>
<p>'Now, why can't we always live like this? What have we to do with other
people? Let us be everything to each other, and forget that any one
else exists.'</p>
<p>'I can't help thinking that's a mistake,' Monica ventured to reply.
'For one thing, if we saw more people, we should have so much more to
talk about when we are alone.'</p>
<p>'It's better to talk about ourselves. I shouldn't care if I never again
saw any living creature but you. You see, the old bear loves his little
girl better than she loves him.'</p>
<p>Monica was silent.</p>
<p>'Isn't it true? You don't feel that my company would be enough for you?'</p>
<p>'Would it be right if I ceased to care for every one else? There are my
sisters. I ought to have asked Virginia to come to-morrow; I'm sure she
thinks I neglect her, and it must be dreadful living all alone like she
does.'</p>
<p>'Haven't they made up their mind yet about the school? I'm sure it's
the right thing for them to do. If the venture were to fail, and they
lost money, we would see that they never came to want.'</p>
<p>'They're so timid about it. And it wouldn't be nice, you know, to feel
they were going to be dependent upon us for the rest of their lives. I
had better go and see Virgie to-morrow morning, and bring her back for
dinner.</p>
<p>'If you like,' Widdowson assented slowly. 'But why not send a message,
and ask her to come here?'</p>
<p>'I had rather go. It makes a change for me.'</p>
<p>This was a word Widdowson detested. Change, on Monica's lips, always
seemed to mean a release from his society. But he swallowed his
dissatisfaction, and finally consented to the arrangement.</p>
<p>Virginia came to dinner, and stayed until nightfall. Thanks to her
sister's kindness, she was better clad than in former days, but her
face signified no improvement of health. The enthusiasm with which
Rhoda Nunn had inspired her appeared only in fitful affectations of
interest when Monica pressed her concerning the projected undertaking
down in Somerset. In general she had a dreamy, reticent look, and
became uncomfortable when any one gazed at her inquiringly. Her talk
was of the most insignificant things; this afternoon she spent nearly
half an hour in describing a kitten which Mrs. Conisbee had given her;
care of the little animal appeared to have absorbed her whole attention
for many days past.</p>
<p>Another visitor to-day was Mr. Newdick, the City clerk who had been
present at Monica's wedding. He and Mrs. Luke Widdowson were the sole
friends of her husband that Monica had seen. Mr. Newdick enjoyed coming
to Herne Hill. Always lugubrious to begin with, he gradually cheered
up, and by the time for departure was loquacious. But he had the oddest
ideas of talk suitable to a drawing-room. Had he been permitted, he
would have held forth to Monica by the hour on the history of the
business firm which he had served for a quarter of a century. This
subject alone could animate him. His anecdotes were as often as not
quite unintelligible, save to people of City experience. For all that
Monica did not dislike the man; he was a good, simple, unselfish
fellow, and to her he behaved with exaggeration of respect.</p>
<p>A few days later Monica had a sudden fit of illness. Her marriage, and
the long open-air holiday, had given her a much healthier appearance
than when she was at the shop; but this present disorder resembled the
attack she had suffered in Rutland Street. Widdowson hoped that it
signified a condition for which he was anxiously waiting. That,
however, did not seem to be the case. The medical man who was called in
asked questions about the patient's mode of life. Did she take enough
exercise? Had she wholesome variety of occupation? At these inquiries
Widdowson inwardly raged. He was tormented with a suspicion that they
resulted from something Monica had said to the doctor.</p>
<p>She kept her bed for three or four days, and on rising could only sit
by the fireside, silent, melancholy. Widdowson indulged his hope,
though Monica herself laughed it aside, and even showed annoyance if he
return to the subject. Her temper was strangely uncertain; some chance
word in a conversation would irritate her beyond endurance, and after
an outburst of petulant displeasure she became obstinately mute. At
other times she behaved with such exquisite docility and sweetness that
Widdowson was beside himself with rapture.</p>
<p>After a week of convalescence, she said one morning,—</p>
<p>'Couldn't we go away somewhere? I don't think I shall ever be quite
well staying here.'</p>
<p>'It's wretched weather,' replied her husband.</p>
<p>'Oh, but there are places where it wouldn't be like this. You don't
mind the expense, do you, Edmund?'</p>
<p>'Expense? Not I, indeed! But—were you thinking of abroad?'</p>
<p>She looked at him with eyes that had suddenly brightened.</p>
<p>'Oh! would it be possible? People do go out of England in the winter.'</p>
<p>Widdowson plucked at his grizzled beard and fingered his watch-chain.
It was a temptation. Why not take her away to some place where only
foreigners and strangers would be about them? Yet the enterprise
alarmed him.</p>
<p>'I have never been out of England,' he said, with misgiving.</p>
<p>'All the more reason why we should go. I think Miss Barfoot could
advise us about it. She has been abroad, I know, and she has so many
friends.'</p>
<p>'I don't see any need to consult Miss Barfoot,' he replied stiffly. 'I
am not such a helpless man, Monica.'</p>
<p>Yet a feeling of inability to grapple with such an undertaking as this
grew on him the more he thought of it. Naturally, his mind busied
itself with such vague knowledge as he had gathered of those places in
the South of France, where rich English people go to escape their own
climate: Nice, Cannes. He could not imagine himself setting forth to
these regions. Doubtless it was possible to travel thither, and live
there when one arrived, without a knowledge of French; but he pictured
all sorts of humiliating situations resulting from his ignorance. Above
everything he dreaded humiliation in Monica's sight; it would be
intolerable to have her comparing him with men who spoke foreign
languages, and were at home on the Continent.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, he wrote to his friend Newdick, and invited him to dine,
solely for the purpose of talking over this question with him in
private. After dinner he broached the subject. To his surprise, Newdick
had ideas concerning Nice and Cannes and such places. He had heard
about them from the junior partner of his firm, a young gentleman who
talked largely of his experiences abroad.</p>
<p>'An immoral lot there,' he said, smiling and shaking his head. 'Queer
goings on.'</p>
<p>'Oh, but that's among the foreigners, isn't it?'</p>
<p>Thereupon Mr. Newdick revealed his acquaintance with English literature.</p>
<p>'Did you ever read any of Ouida's novels?'</p>
<p>'No, I never did.'</p>
<p>'I advise you to before you think of taking your wife over there. She
writes a great deal about those parts. People get mixed up so, it
seems. You couldn't live by yourself. You have to eat at public tables,
and you'd have all sorts of people trying to make acquaintance with
Mrs. Widdowson. They're a queer lot, I believe.'</p>
<p>He abandoned the thought, at once and utterly. When Monica learnt
this—he gave only vague and unsatisfactory reasons—she fell back into
her despondent mood. For a whole day she scarcely uttered a word.</p>
<p>On the next day, in the dreary afternoon, they were surprised by a call
from Mrs. Luke. The widow—less than ever a widow in externals—came in
with a burst of exuberant spirits, and began to scold the moping couple
like an affectionate parent.</p>
<p>'When are you silly young people coming to an end of your honeymoon? Do
you sit here day after day and call each other pretty names? Really
it's very charming in its way. I never knew such an obstinate
case.—Monica, my black-eyed beauty, change your frock, and come with
me to look up the Hodgson Bulls. They're quite too awful; I can't face
them alone; but I'm bound to keep in with them. Be off, and let me
pitch into your young man for daring to refuse my dinner. Don't you
know, sir, that my invitations are like those of Royalty—polite
commands?'</p>
<p>Widdowson kept silence, waiting to see what his wife would do. He could
not with decency object to her accompanying Mrs. Luke, yet hated the
thought of such a step. A grim smile on his face, he sat stiffly,
staring at the wall. To his inexpressible delight, Monica, after a
short hesitation, excused herself; she was not well; she did not feel
able—</p>
<p>'Oh!' laughed the visitor. 'I see, I see! Do just as you like, of
course. But if Edmund has any <i>nous</i>'—this phrase she had learnt from
a young gentleman, late of Oxford, now of Tattersall's and
elsewhere—'he won't let you sit here in the dumps. You <i>are</i> in the
dumps, I can see.'</p>
<p>The vivacious lady did not stay long. When she had rustled forth again
to her carriage, Widdowson broke into a paean of amorous gratitude.
What could he do to show how he appreciated Monica's self-denial on his
behalf? For a day or two he was absent rather mysteriously, and in the
meantime made up his mind, after consultation with Newdick, to take his
wife for a holiday in Guernsey.</p>
<p>Monica, when she heard of this project, was at first moderately
grateful, but in a day or two showed by reviving strength and spirits
that she looked forward eagerly to the departure. Her husband
advertised for lodgings in St. Peter Port; he would not face the
disagreeable chances of a hotel. In a fortnight's time all their
preparations were made. During their absence, which might extend over a
month, Virginia was to live at Herne Hill, in supervision of the two
servants.</p>
<p>On the last Sunday Monica went to see her friends in Queen's Road.
Widdowson was ashamed to offer an objection; he much disliked her going
there alone, but disliked equally the thought of accompanying her, for
at Miss Barfoot's he could not pretend to sit, stand, or converse with
ease.</p>
<p>It happened that Mrs. Cosgrove was again calling. On the first occasion
of meeting with Monica this lady paid her no particular attention;
to-day she addressed her in a friendly manner, and their conversation
led to the discovery that both of them were about to spend the ensuing
month in the same place. Mrs. Cosgrove hoped they might occasionally
see each other.</p>
<p>Of this coincidence Monica thought better to say nothing on her return
home. She could not be sure that her husband might not, at the last
moment, decide to stay at Herne Hill rather than incur the risk of her
meeting an acquaintance in Guernsey. On this point he could not be
trusted to exercise common sense. For the first time Monica had a
secret she desired to keep from him, and the necessity was one which
could not but have an unfavourable effect on her manner of regarding
Widdowson. They were to start on Monday evening. Through the day her
mind was divided between joy in the thought of seeing a new part of the
world and a sense of weary dislike for her home. She had not understood
until now how terrible would be the prospect of living here for a long
time with no companionship but her husband's. On the return that
prospect would lie before her. But no; their way of life must somehow
be modified; on that she was resolved.</p>
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