<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
<p>That day was rainy like its predecessor; but towards evening
it began to clear up a little, and the next morning was fair and
promising. I was out on the hill with the reapers. A
light wind swept over the corn, and all nature laughed in the
sunshine. The lark was rejoicing among the silvery floating
clouds. The late rain had so sweetly freshened and cleared
the air, and washed the sky, and left such glittering gems on
branch and blade, that not even the farmers could have the heart
to blame it. But no ray of sunshine could reach my heart,
no breeze could freshen it; nothing could fill the void my faith,
and hope, and joy in Helen Graham had left, or drive away the
keen regrets and bitter dregs of lingering love that still
oppressed it.</p>
<p>While I stood with folded arms abstractedly gazing on the
undulating swell of the corn, not yet disturbed by the reapers,
something gently pulled my skirts, and a small voice, no longer
welcome to my ears, aroused me with the startling
words,—‘Mr. Markham, mamma wants you.’</p>
<p>‘Wants me, Arthur?’</p>
<p>‘Yes. Why do you look so queer?’ said he,
half laughing, half frightened at the unexpected aspect of my
face in suddenly turning towards him,—‘and why have
you kept so long away? Come! Won’t you
come?’</p>
<p>‘I’m busy just now,’ I replied, scarce
knowing what to answer.</p>
<p>He looked up in childish bewilderment; but before I could
speak again the lady herself was at my side.</p>
<p>‘Gilbert, I must speak with you!’ said she, in a
tone of suppressed vehemence.</p>
<p>I looked at her pale cheek and glittering eye, but answered
nothing.</p>
<p>‘Only for a moment,’ pleaded she.
‘Just step aside into this other field.’ She
glanced at the reapers, some of whom were directing looks of
impertinent curiosity towards her. ‘I won’t
keep you a minute.’</p>
<p>I accompanied her through the gap.</p>
<p>‘Arthur, darling, run and gather those bluebells,’
said she, pointing to some that were gleaming at some distance
under the hedge along which we walked. The child hesitated,
as if unwilling to quit my side. ‘Go, love!’
repeated she more urgently, and in a tone which, though not
unkind, demanded prompt obedience, and obtained it.</p>
<p>‘Well, Mrs. Graham?’ said I, calmly and coldly;
for, though I saw she was miserable, and pitied her, I felt glad
to have it in my power to torment her.</p>
<p>She fixed her eyes upon me with a look that pierced me to the
heart; and yet it made me smile.</p>
<p>‘I don’t ask the reason of this change,
Gilbert,’ said she, with bitter calmness: ‘I know it
too well; but though I could see myself suspected and condemned
by every one else, and bear it with calmness, I cannot endure it
from you.—Why did you not come to hear my explanation on
the day I appointed to give it?’</p>
<p>‘Because I happened, in the interim, to learn all you
would have told me—and a trifle more, I imagine.’</p>
<p>‘Impossible, for I would have told you all!’ cried
she, passionately—‘but I won’t now, for I see
you are not worthy of it!’</p>
<p>And her pale lips quivered with agitation.</p>
<p>‘Why not, may I ask?’</p>
<p>She repelled my mocking smile with a glance of scornful
indignation.</p>
<p>‘Because you never understood me, or you would not soon
have listened to my traducers—my confidence would be
misplaced in you—you are not the man I thought you.
Go! I won’t care what you think of me.’</p>
<p>She turned away, and I went; for I thought that would torment
her as much as anything; and I believe I was right; for, looking
back a minute after, I saw her turn half round, as if hoping or
expecting to find me still beside her; and then she stood still,
and cast one look behind. It was a look less expressive of
anger than of bitter anguish and despair; but I immediately
assumed an aspect of indifference, and affected to be gazing
carelessly around me, and I suppose she went on; for after
lingering awhile to see if she would come back or call, I
ventured one more glance, and saw her a good way off, moving
rapidly up the field, with little Arthur running by her side and
apparently talking as he went; but she kept her face averted from
him, as if to hide some uncontrollable emotion. And I
returned to my business.</p>
<p>But I soon began to regret my precipitancy in leaving her so
soon. It was evident she loved me—probably she was
tired of Mr. Lawrence, and wished to exchange him for me; and if
I had loved and reverenced her less to begin with, the preference
might have gratified and amused me; but now the contrast between
her outward seeming and her inward mind, as I
supposed,—between my former and my present opinion of her,
was so harrowing—so distressing to my feelings, that it
swallowed up every lighter consideration.</p>
<p>But still I was curious to know what sort of an explanation
she would have given me—or would give now, if I pressed her
for it—how much she would confess, and how she would
endeavour to excuse herself. I longed to know what to
despise, and what to admire in her; how much to pity, and how
much to hate;—and, what was more, I would know. I
would see her once more, and fairly satisfy myself in what light
to regard her, before we parted. Lost to me she was, for
ever, of course; but still I could not bear to think that we had
parted, for the last time, with so much unkindness and misery on
both sides. That last look of hers had sunk into my heart;
I could not forget it. But what a fool I was! Had she
not deceived me, injured me—blighted my happiness for
life? ‘Well, I’ll see her, however,’ was
my concluding resolve, ‘but not to-day: to-day and to-night
she may think upon her sins, and be as miserable as she will:
to-morrow I will see her once again, and know something more
about her. The interview may be serviceable to her, or it
may not. At any rate, it will give a breath of excitement
to the life she has doomed to stagnation, and may calm with
certainty some agitating thoughts.’</p>
<p>I did go on the morrow, but not till towards evening, after
the business of the day was concluded, that is, between six and
seven; and the westering sun was gleaming redly on the old Hall,
and flaming in the latticed windows, as I reached it, imparting
to the place a cheerfulness not its own. I need not dilate
upon the feelings with which I approached the shrine of my former
divinity—that spot teeming with a thousand delightful
recollections and glorious dreams—all darkened now by one
disastrous truth</p>
<p>Rachel admitted me into the parlour, and went to call her
mistress, for she was not there: but there was her desk left open
on the little round table beside the high-backed chair, with a
book laid upon it. Her limited but choice collection of
books was almost as familiar to me as my own; but this volume I
had not seen before. I took it up. It was Sir Humphry
Davy’s ‘Last Days of a Philosopher,’ and on the
first leaf was written, ‘Frederick Lawrence.’ I
closed the book, but kept it in my hand, and stood facing the
door, with my back to the fire-place, calmly waiting her arrival;
for I did not doubt she would come. And soon I heard her
step in the hall. My heart was beginning to throb, but I
checked it with an internal rebuke, and maintained my
composure—outwardly at least. She entered, calm,
pale, collected.</p>
<p>‘To what am I indebted for this favour, Mr.
Markham?’ said she, with such severe but quiet dignity as
almost disconcerted me; but I answered with a smile, and
impudently enough,—</p>
<p>‘Well, I am come to hear your explanation.’</p>
<p>‘I told you I would not give it,’ said she.
‘I said you were unworthy of my confidence.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, very well,’ replied I, moving to the
door.</p>
<p>‘Stay a moment,’ said she. ‘This is
the last time I shall see you: don’t go just
yet.’</p>
<p>I remained, awaiting her further commands.</p>
<p>‘Tell me,’ resumed she, ‘on what grounds you
believe these things against me; who told you; and what did they
say?’</p>
<p>I paused a moment. She met my eye as unflinchingly as if
her bosom had been steeled with conscious innocence. She
was resolved to know the worst, and determined to dare it
too. ‘I can crush that bold spirit,’ thought
I. But while I secretly exulted in my power, I felt
disposed to dally with my victim like a cat. Showing her
the book that I still held, in my hand, and pointing to the name
on the fly-leaf, but fixing my eye upon her face, I
asked,—‘Do you know that gentleman?’</p>
<p>‘Of course I do,’ replied she; and a sudden flush
suffused her features—whether of shame or anger I could not
tell: it rather resembled the latter. ‘What next,
sir?’</p>
<p>‘How long is it since you saw him?’</p>
<p>‘Who gave you the right to catechize me on this or any
other subject?’</p>
<p>‘Oh, no one!—it’s quite at your option
whether to answer or not. And now, let me ask—have
you heard what has lately befallen this friend of
yours?—because, if you have not—’</p>
<p>‘I will not be insulted, Mr. Markham!’ cried she,
almost infuriated at my manner. ‘So you had better
leave the house at once, if you came only for that.’</p>
<p>‘I did not come to insult you: I came to hear your
explanation.’</p>
<p>‘And I tell you I won’t give it!’ retorted
she, pacing the room in a state of strong excitement, with her
hands clasped tightly together, breathing short, and flashing
fires of indignation from her eyes. ‘I will not
condescend to explain myself to one that can make a jest of such
horrible suspicions, and be so easily led to entertain
them.’</p>
<p>‘I do not make a jest of them, Mrs. Graham,’
returned I, dropping at once my tone of taunting sarcasm.
‘I heartily wish I could find them a jesting matter.
And as to being easily led to suspect, God only knows what a
blind, incredulous fool I have hitherto been, perseveringly
shutting my eyes and stopping my ears against everything that
threatened to shake my confidence in you, till proof itself
confounded my infatuation!’</p>
<p>‘What proof, sir?’</p>
<p>‘Well, I’ll tell you. You remember that
evening when I was here last?’</p>
<p>‘I do.’</p>
<p>‘Even then you dropped some hints that might have opened
the eyes of a wiser man; but they had no such effect upon me: I
went on trusting and believing, hoping against hope, and adoring
where I could not comprehend. It so happened, however, that
after I left you I turned back—drawn by pure depth of
sympathy and ardour of affection—not daring to intrude my
presence openly upon you, but unable to resist the temptation of
catching one glimpse through the window, just to see how you
were: for I had left you apparently in great affliction, and I
partly blamed my own want of forbearance and discretion as the
cause of it. If I did wrong, love alone was my incentive,
and the punishment was severe enough; for it was just as I had
reached that tree, that you came out into the garden with your
friend. Not choosing to show myself, under the
circumstances, I stood still, in the shadow, till you had both
passed by.’</p>
<p>‘And how much of our conversation did you
hear?’</p>
<p>‘I heard quite enough, Helen. And it was well for
me that I did hear it; for nothing less could have cured my
infatuation. I always said and thought, that I would never
believe a word against you, unless I heard it from your own
lips. All the hints and affirmations of others I treated as
malignant, baseless slanders; your own self-accusations I
believed to be overstrained; and all that seemed unaccountable in
your position I trusted that you could account for if you
chose.’</p>
<p>Mrs. Graham had discontinued her walk. She leant against
one end of the chimney-piece, opposite that near which I was
standing, with her chin resting on her closed hand, her
eyes—no longer burning with anger, but gleaming with
restless excitement—sometimes glancing at me while I spoke,
then coursing the opposite wall, or fixed upon the carpet.</p>
<p>‘You should have come to me after all,’ said she,
‘and heard what I had to say in my own justification.
It was ungenerous and wrong to withdraw yourself so secretly and
suddenly, immediately after such ardent protestations of
attachment, without ever assigning a reason for the change.
You should have told me all-no matter how bitterly. It
would have been better than this silence.’</p>
<p>‘To what end should I have done so? You could not
have enlightened me further, on the subject which alone concerned
me; nor could you have made me discredit the evidence of my
senses. I desired our intimacy to be discontinued at once,
as you yourself had acknowledged would probably be the case if I
knew all; but I did not wish to upbraid you,—though (as you
also acknowledged) you had deeply wronged me. Yes, you have
done me an injury you can never repair—or any other
either—you have blighted the freshness and promise of
youth, and made my life a wilderness! I might live a
hundred years, but I could never recover from the effects of this
withering blow—and never forget it!
Hereafter—You smile, Mrs. Graham,’ said I, suddenly
stopping short, checked in my passionate declamation by
unutterable feelings to behold her actually smiling at the
picture of the ruin she had wrought.</p>
<p>‘Did I?’ replied she, looking seriously up;
‘I was not aware of it. If I did, it was not for
pleasure at the thoughts of the harm I had done you. Heaven
knows I have had torment enough at the bare possibility of that;
it was for joy to find that you had some depth of soul and
feeling after all, and to hope that I had not been utterly
mistaken in your worth. But smiles and tears are so alike
with me, they are neither of them confined to any particular
feelings: I often cry when I am happy, and smile when I am
sad.’</p>
<p>She looked at me again, and seemed to expect a reply; but I
continued silent.</p>
<p>‘Would you be very glad,’ resumed she, ‘to
find that you were mistaken in your conclusions?’</p>
<p>‘How can you ask it, Helen?’</p>
<p>‘I don’t say I can clear myself altogether,’
said she, speaking low and fast, while her heart beat visibly and
her bosom heaved with excitement,—‘but would you be
glad to discover I was better than you think me?’</p>
<p>‘Anything that could in the least degree tend to restore
my former opinion of you, to excuse the regard I still feel for
you, and alleviate the pangs of unutterable regret that accompany
it, would be only too gladly, too eagerly received!’
Her cheeks burned, and her whole frame trembled, now, with excess
of agitation. She did not speak, but flew to her desk, and
snatching thence what seemed a thick album or manuscript volume,
hastily tore away a few leaves from the end, and thrust the rest
into my hand, saying, ‘You needn’t read it all; but
take it home with you,’ and hurried from the room.
But when I had left the house, and was proceeding down the walk,
she opened the window and called me back. It was only to
say,—‘Bring it back when you have read it; and
don’t breathe a word of what it tells you to any living
being. I trust to your honour.’</p>
<p>Before I could answer she had closed the casement and turned
away. I saw her cast herself back in the old oak chair, and
cover her face with her hands. Her feelings had been
wrought to a pitch that rendered it necessary to seek relief in
tears.</p>
<p>Panting with eagerness, and struggling to suppress my hopes, I
hurried home, and rushed up-stairs to my room, having first
provided myself with a candle, though it was scarcely twilight
yet—then, shut and bolted the door, determined to tolerate
no interruption; and sitting down before the table, opened out my
prize and delivered myself up to its perusal—first hastily
turning over the leaves and snatching a sentence here and there,
and then setting myself steadily to read it through.</p>
<p>I have it now before me; and though you could not, of course,
peruse it with half the interest that I did, I know you would not
be satisfied with an abbreviation of its contents, and you shall
have the whole, save, perhaps, a few passages here and there of
merely temporary interest to the writer, or such as would serve
to encumber the story rather than elucidate it. It begins
somewhat abruptly, thus—but we will reserve its
commencement for another chapter.</p>
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