<h2>CHAPTER XXXIII</h2>
<p>Seventh.—Yes, I will hope! To-night I heard
Grimsby and Hattersley grumbling together about the inhospitality
of their host. They did not know I was near, for I happened
to be standing behind the curtain in the bow of the window,
watching the moon rising over the clump of tall dark elm-trees
below the lawn, and wondering why Arthur was so sentimental as to
stand without, leaning against the outer pillar of the portico,
apparently watching it too.</p>
<p>‘So, I suppose we’ve seen the last of our merry
carousals in this house,’ said Mr. Hattersley; ‘I
thought his good-fellowship wouldn’t last long.
But,’ added he, laughing, ‘I didn’t expect it
would meet its end this way. I rather thought our pretty
hostess would be setting up her porcupine quills, and threatening
to turn us out of the house if we didn’t mind our
manners.’</p>
<p>‘You didn’t foresee this, then?’ answered
Grimsby, with a guttural chuckle. ‘But he’ll
change again when he’s sick of her. If we come here a
year or two hence, we shall have all our own way, you’ll
see.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t know,’ replied the other:
‘she’s not the style of woman you soon tire of.
But be that as it may, it’s devilish provoking now that we
can’t be jolly, because he chooses to be on his good
behaviour.’</p>
<p>‘It’s all these cursed women!’ muttered
Grimsby: ‘they’re the very bane of the world!
They bring trouble and discomfort wherever they come, with their
false, fair faces and their deceitful tongues.’</p>
<p>At this juncture I issued from my retreat, and smiling on Mr.
Grimsby as I passed, left the room and went out in search of
Arthur. Having seen him bend his course towards the
shrubbery, I followed him thither, and found him just entering
the shadowy walk. I was so light of heart, so overflowing
with affection, that I sprang upon him and clasped him in my
arms. This startling conduct had a singular effect upon
him: first, he murmured, ‘Bless you, darling!’ and
returned my close embrace with a fervour like old times, and then
he started, and, in a tone of absolute terror, exclaimed,
‘Helen! what the devil is this?’ and I saw, by the
faint light gleaming through the overshadowing tree, that he was
positively pale with the shock.</p>
<p>How strange that the instinctive impulse of affection should
come first, and then the shock of the surprise! It shows,
at least, that the affection is genuine: he is not sick of me
yet.</p>
<p>‘I startled you, Arthur,’ said I, laughing in my
glee. ‘How nervous you are!’</p>
<p>‘What the deuce did you do it for?’ cried he,
quite testily, extricating himself from my arms, and wiping his
forehead with his handkerchief. ‘Go back,
Helen—go back directly! You’ll get your death
of cold!’</p>
<p>‘I won’t, till I’ve told you what I came
for. They are blaming you, Arthur, for your temperance and
sobriety, and I’m come to thank you for it. They say
it is all “these cursed women,” and that we are the
bane of the world; but don’t let them laugh or grumble you
out of your good resolutions, or your affection for
me.’</p>
<p>He laughed. I squeezed him in my arms again, and cried
in tearful earnest, ‘Do, do persevere! and I’ll love
you better than ever I did before!’</p>
<p>‘Well, well, I will!’ said he, hastily kissing
me. ‘There, now, go. You mad creature, how
could you come out in your light evening dress this chill autumn
night?’</p>
<p>‘It is a glorious night,’ said I.</p>
<p>‘It is a night that will give you your death, in another
minute. Run away, do!’</p>
<p>‘Do you see my death among those trees, Arthur?’
said I, for he was gazing intently at the shrubs, as if he saw it
coming, and I was reluctant to leave him, in my new-found
happiness and revival of hope and love. But he grew angry
at my delay, so I kissed him and ran back to the house.</p>
<p>I was in such a good humour that night: Milicent told me I was
the life of the party, and whispered she had never seen me so
brilliant. Certainly, I talked enough for twenty, and
smiled upon them all. Grimsby, Hattersley, Hargrave, Lady
Lowborough, all shared my sisterly kindness. Grimsby stared
and wondered; Hattersley laughed and jested (in spite of the
little wine he had been suffered to imbibe), but still behaved as
well as he knew how. Hargrave and Annabella, from different
motives and in different ways, emulated me, and doubtless both
surpassed me, the former in his discursive versatility and
eloquence, the latter in boldness and animation at least.
Milicent, delighted to see her husband, her brother, and her
over-estimated friend acquitting themselves so well, was lively
and gay too, in her quiet way. Even Lord Lowborough caught
the general contagion: his dark greenish eyes were lighted up
beneath their moody brows; his sombre countenance was beautified
by smiles; all traces of gloom and proud or cold reserve had
vanished for the time; and he astonished us all, not only by his
general cheerfulness and animation, but by the positive flashes
of true force and brilliance he emitted from time to time.
Arthur did not talk much, but he laughed, and listened to the
rest, and was in perfect good-humour, though not excited by
wine. So that, altogether, we made a very merry, innocent,
and entertaining party.</p>
<p>9th.—Yesterday, when Rachel came to dress me for dinner,
I saw that she had been crying. I wanted to know the cause
of it, but she seemed reluctant to tell. Was she
unwell? No. Had she heard bad news from her
friends? No. Had any of the servants vexed her?</p>
<p>‘Oh, no, ma’am!’ she answered;
‘it’s not for myself.’</p>
<p>‘What then, Rachel? Have you been reading
novels?’</p>
<p>‘Bless you, no!’ said she, with a sorrowful shake
of the head; and then she sighed and continued: ‘But to
tell you the truth, ma’am, I don’t like
master’s ways of going on.’</p>
<p>‘What do you mean, Rachel? He’s going on
very properly at present.’</p>
<p>‘Well, ma’am, if you think so, it’s
right.’</p>
<p>And she went on dressing my hair, in a hurried way, quite
unlike her usual calm, collected manner, murmuring, half to
herself, she was sure it was beautiful hair: she ‘could
like to see ’em match it.’ When it was done,
she fondly stroked it, and gently patted my head.</p>
<p>‘Is that affectionate ebullition intended for my hair,
or myself, nurse?’ said I, laughingly turning round upon
her; but a tear was even now in her eye.</p>
<p>‘What do you mean, Rachel?’ I exclaimed.</p>
<p>‘Well, ma’am, I don’t know; but
if—’</p>
<p>‘If what?’</p>
<p>‘Well, if I was you, I wouldn’t have that Lady
Lowborough in the house another minute—not another minute I
wouldn’t!</p>
<p>I was thunderstruck; but before I could recover from the shock
sufficiently to demand an explanation, Milicent entered my room,
as she frequently does when she is dressed before me; and she
stayed with me till it was time to go down. She must have
found me a very unsociable companion this time, for
Rachel’s last words rang in my ears. But still I
hoped, I trusted they had no foundation but in some idle rumour
of the servants from what they had seen in Lady
Lowborough’s manner last month; or perhaps from something
that had passed between their master and her during her former
visit. At dinner I narrowly observed both her and Arthur,
and saw nothing extraordinary in the conduct of either, nothing
calculated to excite suspicion, except in distrustful minds,
which mine was not, and therefore I would not suspect.</p>
<p>Almost immediately after dinner Annabella went out with her
husband to share his moonlight ramble, for it was a splendid
evening like the last. Mr. Hargrave entered the
drawing-room a little before the others, and challenged me to a
game of chess. He did it without any of that sad but proud
humility he usually assumes in addressing me, unless he is
excited with wine. I looked at his face to see if that was
the case now. His eye met mine keenly, but steadily: there
was something about him I did not understand, but he seemed sober
enough. Not choosing to engage with him, I referred him to
Milicent.</p>
<p>‘She plays badly,’ said he, ‘I want to match
my skill with yours. Come now! you can’t pretend you
are reluctant to lay down your work. I know you never take
it up except to pass an idle hour, when there is nothing better
you can do.’</p>
<p>‘But chess-players are so unsociable,’ I objected;
‘they are no company for any but themselves.’</p>
<p>‘There is no one here but Milicent, and
she—’</p>
<p>‘Oh, I shall be delighted to watch you!’ cried our
mutual friend. ‘Two such players—it will be
quite a treat! I wonder which will conquer.’</p>
<p>I consented.</p>
<p>‘Now, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said Hargrave, as he
arranged the men on the board, speaking distinctly, and with a
peculiar emphasis, as if he had a double meaning to all his
words, ‘you are a good player, but I am a better: we shall
have a long game, and you will give me some trouble; but I can be
as patient as you, and in the end I shall certainly
win.’ He fixed his eyes upon me with a glance I did
not like, keen, crafty, bold, and almost impudent;—already
half triumphant in his anticipated success.</p>
<p>‘I hope not, Mr. Hargrave!’ returned I, with
vehemence that must have startled Milicent at least; but he only
smiled and murmured, ‘Time will show.’</p>
<p>We set to work: he sufficiently interested in the game, but
calm and fearless in the consciousness of superior skill: I,
intensely eager to disappoint his expectations, for I considered
this the type of a more serious contest, as I imagined he did,
and I felt an almost superstitious dread of being beaten: at all
events, I could ill endure that present success should add one
tittle to his conscious power (his insolent self-confidence I
ought to say), or encourage for a moment his dream of future
conquest. His play was cautious and deep, but I struggled
hard against him. For some time the combat was doubtful: at
length, to my joy, the victory seemed inclining to my side: I had
taken several of his best pieces, and manifestly baffled his
projects. He put his hand to his brow and paused, in
evident perplexity. I rejoiced in my advantage, but dared
not glory in it yet. At length, he lifted his head, and
quietly making his move, looked at me and said, calmly,
‘Now you think you will win, don’t you?’</p>
<p>‘I hope so,’ replied I, taking his pawn that he
had pushed into the way of my bishop with so careless an air that
I thought it was an oversight, but was not generous enough, under
the circumstances, to direct his attention to it, and too
heedless, at the moment, to foresee the after-consequences of my
move. ‘It is those bishops that trouble me,’
said he; ‘but the bold knight can overleap the reverend
gentlemen,’ taking my last bishop with his knight;
‘and now, those sacred persons once removed, I shall carry
all before me.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, Walter, how you talk!’ cried Milicent;
‘she has far more pieces than you still.’</p>
<p>‘I intend to give you some trouble yet,’ said I;
‘and perhaps, sir, you will find yourself checkmated before
you are aware. Look to your queen.’</p>
<p>The combat deepened. The game was a long one, and I did
give him some trouble: but he was a better player than I.</p>
<p>‘What keen gamesters you are!’ said Mr.
Hattersley, who had now entered, and been watching us for some
time. ‘Why, Mrs. Huntingdon, your hand trembles as if
you had staked your all upon it! and, Walter, you dog, you look
as deep and cool as if you were certain of success, and as keen
and cruel as if you would drain her heart’s blood!
But if I were you, I wouldn’t beat her, for very fear:
she’ll hate you if you do—she will, by heaven!
I see it in her eye.’</p>
<p>‘Hold your tongue, will you?’ said I: his talk
distracted me, for I was driven to extremities. A few more
moves, and I was inextricably entangled in the snare of my
antagonist.</p>
<p>‘Check,’ cried he: I sought in agony some means of
escape. ‘Mate!’ he added, quietly, but with
evident delight. He had suspended the utterance of that
last fatal syllable the better to enjoy my dismay. I was
foolishly disconcerted by the event. Hattersley laughed;
Milicent was troubled to see me so disturbed. Hargrave
placed his hand on mine that rested on the table, and squeezing
it with a firm but gentle pressure, murmured, ‘Beaten,
beaten!’ and gazed into my face with a look where
exultation was blended with an expression of ardour and
tenderness yet more insulting.</p>
<p>‘No, never, Mr. Hargrave!’ exclaimed I, quickly
withdrawing my hand.</p>
<p>‘Do you deny?’ replied he, smilingly pointing to
the board. ‘No, no,’ I answered, recollecting
how strange my conduct must appear: ‘you have beaten me in
that game.’</p>
<p>‘Will you try another, then?’</p>
<p>‘No.’</p>
<p>‘You acknowledge my superiority?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, as a chess-player.’</p>
<p>I rose to resume my work.</p>
<p>‘Where is Annabella?’ said Hargrave, gravely,
after glancing round the room.</p>
<p>‘Gone out with Lord Lowborough,’ answered I, for
he looked at me for a reply.</p>
<p>‘And not yet returned!’ he said, seriously.</p>
<p>‘I suppose not.’</p>
<p>‘Where is Huntingdon?’ looking round again.</p>
<p>‘Gone out with Grimsby, as you know,’ said
Hattersley, suppressing a laugh, which broke forth as he
concluded the sentence. Why did he laugh? Why did
Hargrave connect them thus together? Was it true,
then? And was this the dreadful secret he had wished to
reveal to me? I must know, and that quickly. I
instantly rose and left the room to go in search of Rachel and
demand an explanation of her words; but Mr. Hargrave followed me
into the anteroom, and before I could open its outer door, gently
laid his hand upon the lock. ‘May I tell you
something, Mrs. Huntingdon?’ said he, in a subdued tone,
with serious, downcast eyes.</p>
<p>‘If it be anything worth hearing,’ replied I,
struggling to be composed, for I trembled in every limb.</p>
<p>He quietly pushed a chair towards me. I merely leant my
hand upon it, and bid him go on.</p>
<p>‘Do not be alarmed,’ said he: ‘what I wish
to say is nothing in itself; and I will leave you to draw your
own inferences from it. You say that Annabella is not yet
returned?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, yes—go on!’ said I, impatiently; for I
feared my forced calmness would leave me before the end of his
disclosure, whatever it might be.</p>
<p>‘And you hear,’ continued he, ‘that
Huntingdon is gone out with Grimsby?’</p>
<p>‘Well?’</p>
<p>‘I heard the latter say to your husband—or the man
who calls himself so—’</p>
<p>‘Go on, sir!’</p>
<p>He bowed submissively, and continued: ‘I heard him
say,—“I shall manage it, you’ll see!
They’re gone down by the water; I shall meet them there,
and tell him I want a bit of talk with him about some things that
we needn’t trouble the lady with; and she’ll say she
can be walking back to the house; and then I shall apologise, you
know, and all that, and tip her a wink to take the way of the
shrubbery. I’ll keep him talking there, about those
matters I mentioned, and anything else I can think of, as long as
I can, and then bring him round the other way, stopping to look
at the trees, the fields, and anything else I can find to
discourse of.”’ Mr. Hargrave paused, and looked
at me.</p>
<p>Without a word of comment or further questioning, I rose, and
darted from the room and out of the house. The torment of
suspense was not to be endured: I would not suspect my husband
falsely, on this man’s accusation, and I would not trust
him unworthily—I must know the truth at once. I flew
to the shrubbery. Scarcely had I reached it, when a sound
of voices arrested my breathless speed.</p>
<p>‘We have lingered too long; he will be back,’ said
Lady Lowborough’s voice.</p>
<p>‘Surely not, dearest!’ was his reply; ‘but
you can run across the lawn, and get in as quietly as you can;
I’ll follow in a while.’</p>
<p>My knees trembled under me; my brain swam round. I was
ready to faint. She must not see me thus. I shrunk
among the bushes, and leant against the trunk of a tree to let
her pass.</p>
<p>‘Ah, Huntingdon!’ said she reproachfully, pausing
where I had stood with him the night before—‘it was
here you kissed that woman!’ she looked back into the leafy
shade. Advancing thence, he answered, with a careless
laugh,—</p>
<p>‘Well, dearest, I couldn’t help it. You know
I must keep straight with her as long as I can.
Haven’t I seen you kiss your dolt of a husband scores of
times?—and do I ever complain?’</p>
<p>‘But tell me, don’t you love her still—a
little?’ said she, placing her hand on his arm, looking
earnestly in his face—for I could see them, plainly, the
moon shining full upon them from between the branches of the tree
that sheltered me.</p>
<p>‘Not one bit, by all that’s sacred!’ he
replied, kissing her glowing cheek.</p>
<p>‘Good heavens, I must be gone!’ cried she,
suddenly breaking from him, and away she flew.</p>
<p>There he stood before me; but I had not strength to confront
him now: my tongue cleaved to the roof of my mouth; I was
well-nigh sinking to the earth, and I almost wondered he did not
hear the beating of my heart above the low sighing of the wind
and the fitful rustle of the falling leaves. My senses
seemed to fail me, but still I saw his shadowy form pass before
me, and through the rushing sound in my ears I distinctly heard
him say, as he stood looking up the lawn,—‘There goes
the fool! Run, Annabella, run! There—in with
you! Ah,—he didn’t see! That’s
right, Grimsby, keep him back!’ And even his low
laugh reached me as he walked away.</p>
<p>‘God help me now!’ I murmured, sinking on my knees
among the damp weeds and brushwood that surrounded me, and
looking up at the moonlit sky, through the scant foliage
above. It seemed all dim and quivering now to my darkened
sight. My burning, bursting heart strove to pour forth its
agony to God, but could not frame its anguish into prayer; until
a gust of wind swept over me, which, while it scattered the dead
leaves, like blighted hopes, around, cooled my forehead, and
seemed a little to revive my sinking frame. Then, while I
lifted up my soul in speechless, earnest supplication, some
heavenly influence seemed to strengthen me within: I breathed
more freely; my vision cleared; I saw distinctly the pure moon
shining on, and the light clouds skimming the clear, dark sky;
and then I saw the eternal stars twinkling down upon me; I knew
their God was mine, and He was strong to save and swift to
hear. ‘I will never leave thee, nor forsake
thee,’ seemed whispered from above their myriad orbs.
No, no; I felt He would not leave me comfortless: in spite of
earth and hell I should have strength for all my trials, and win
a glorious rest at last!</p>
<p>Refreshed, invigorated, if not composed, I rose and returned
to the house. Much of my new-born strength and courage
forsook me, I confess, as I entered it, and shut out the fresh
wind and the glorious sky: everything I saw and heard seemed to
sicken my heart—the hall, the lamp, the staircase, the
doors of the different apartments, the social sound of talk and
laughter from the drawing-room. How could I bear my future
life! In this house, among those people—oh, how could
I endure to live! John just then entered the hall, and
seeing me, told me he had been sent in search of me, adding that
he had taken in the tea, and master wished to know if I were
coming.</p>
<p>‘Ask Mrs. Hattersley to be so kind as to make the tea,
John,’ said I. ‘Say I am not well to-night, and
wish to be excused.’</p>
<p>I retired into the large, empty dining-room, where all was
silence and darkness, but for the soft sighing of the wind
without, and the faint gleam of moonlight that pierced the blinds
and curtains; and there I walked rapidly up and down, thinking of
my bitter thoughts alone. How different was this from the
evening of yesterday! That, it seems, was the last expiring
flash of my life’s happiness. Poor, blinded fool that
I was to be so happy! I could now see the reason of
Arthur’s strange reception of me in the shrubbery; the
burst of kindness was for his paramour, the start of horror for
his wife. Now, too, I could better understand the
conversation between Hattersley and Grimsby; it was doubtless of
his love for her they spoke, not for me.</p>
<p>I heard the drawing-room door open: a light quick step came
out of the ante-room, crossed the hall, and ascended the
stairs. It was Milicent, poor Milicent, gone to see how I
was—no one else cared for me; but she still was kind.
I shed no tears before, but now they came, fast and free.
Thus she did me good, without approaching me. Disappointed
in her search, I heard her come down, more slowly than she had
ascended. Would she come in there, and find me out?
No, she turned in the opposite direction and re-entered the
drawing-room. I was glad, for I knew not how to meet her,
or what to say. I wanted no confidante in my
distress. I deserved none, and I wanted none. I had
taken the burden upon myself; let me bear it alone.</p>
<p>As the usual hour of retirement approached I dried my eyes,
and tried to clear my voice and calm my mind. I must see
Arthur to-night, and speak to him; but I would do it calmly:
there should be no scene—nothing to complain or to boast of
to his companions—nothing to laugh at with his
lady-love. When the company were retiring to their chambers
I gently opened the door, and just as he passed, beckoned him
in.</p>
<p>‘What’s to do with you, Helen?’ said
he. ‘Why couldn’t you come to make tea for us?
and what the deuce are you here for, in the dark? What ails
you, young woman: you look like a ghost!’ he continued,
surveying me by the light of his candle.</p>
<p>‘No matter,’ I answered, ‘to you; you have
no longer any regard for me it appears; and I have no longer any
for you.’</p>
<p>‘Hal-lo! what the devil is this?’ he
muttered. ‘I would leave you to-morrow,’
continued I, ‘and never again come under this roof, but for
my child’—I paused a moment to steady, my voice.</p>
<p>‘What in the devil’s name is this, Helen?’
cried he. ‘What can you be driving at?’</p>
<p>‘You know perfectly well. Let us waste no time in
useless explanation, but tell me, will you—?’</p>
<p>He vehemently swore he knew nothing about it, and insisted
upon hearing what poisonous old woman had been blackening his
name, and what infamous lies I had been fool enough to
believe.</p>
<p>‘Spare yourself the trouble of forswearing yourself and
racking your brains to stifle truth with falsehood,’ I
coldly replied. ‘I have trusted to the testimony of
no third person. I was in the shrubbery this evening, and I
saw and heard for myself.’</p>
<p>This was enough. He uttered a suppressed exclamation of
consternation and dismay, and muttering, ‘I shall catch it
now!’ set down his candle on the nearest chair, and rearing
his back against the wall, stood confronting me with folded
arms.</p>
<p>‘Well, what then?’ said he, with the calm
insolence of mingled shamelessness and desperation.</p>
<p>‘Only this,’ returned I; ‘will you let me
take our child and what remains of my fortune, and go?’</p>
<p>‘Go where?’</p>
<p>‘Anywhere, where he will be safe from your contaminating
influence, and I shall be delivered from your presence, and you
from mine.’</p>
<p>‘No.’</p>
<p>‘Will you let me have the child then, without the
money?’</p>
<p>‘No, nor yourself without the child. Do you think
I’m going to be made the talk of the country for your
fastidious caprices?’</p>
<p>‘Then I must stay here, to be hated and despised.
But henceforth we are husband and wife only in the
name.’</p>
<p>‘Very good.’</p>
<p>‘I am your child’s mother, and your housekeeper,
nothing more. So you need not trouble yourself any longer
to feign the love you cannot feel: I will exact no more heartless
caresses from you, nor offer nor endure them either. I will
not be mocked with the empty husk of conjugal endearments, when
you have given the substance to another!’</p>
<p>‘Very good, if you please. We shall see who will
tire first, my lady.’</p>
<p>‘If I tire, it will be of living in the world with you:
not of living without your mockery of love. When you tire
of your sinful ways, and show yourself truly repentant, I will
forgive you, and, perhaps, try to love you again, though that
will be hard indeed.’</p>
<p>‘Humph! and meantime you will go and talk me over to
Mrs. Hargrave, and write long letters to aunt Maxwell to complain
of the wicked wretch you have married?’</p>
<p>‘I shall complain to no one. Hitherto I have
struggled hard to hide your vices from every eye, and invest you
with virtues you never possessed; but now you must look to
yourself.’</p>
<p>I left him muttering bad language to himself, and went
up-stairs.</p>
<p>‘You are poorly, ma’am,’ said Rachel,
surveying me with deep anxiety.</p>
<p>‘It is too true, Rachel,’ said I, answering her
sad looks rather than her words.</p>
<p>‘I knew it, or I wouldn’t have mentioned such a
thing.’</p>
<p>‘But don’t you trouble yourself about it,’
said I, kissing her pale, time-wasted cheek. ‘I can
bear it better than you imagine.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, you were always for “bearing.”
But if I was you I wouldn’t bear it; I’d give way to
it, and cry right hard! and I’d talk too, I just
would—I’d let him know what it was
to—’</p>
<p>‘I have talked,’ said I; ‘I’ve said
enough.’</p>
<p>‘Then I’d cry,’ persisted she.
‘I wouldn’t look so white and so calm, and burst my
heart with keeping it in.’</p>
<p>‘I have cried,’ said I, smiling, in spite of my
misery; ‘and I am calm now, really: so don’t
discompose me again, nurse: let us say no more about it, and
don’t mention it to the servants. There, you may go
now. Good-night; and don’t disturb your rest for me:
I shall sleep well—if I can.’</p>
<p>Notwithstanding this resolution, I found my bed so intolerable
that, before two o’clock, I rose, and lighting my candle by
the rushlight that was still burning, I got my desk and sat down
in my dressing-gown to recount the events of the past
evening. It was better to be so occupied than to be lying
in bed torturing my brain with recollections of the far past and
anticipations of the dreadful future. I have found relief
in describing the very circumstances that have destroyed my
peace, as well as the little trivial details attendant upon their
discovery. No sleep I could have got this night would have
done so much towards composing my mind, and preparing me to meet
the trials of the day. I fancy so, at least; and yet, when
I cease writing, I find my head aches terribly; and when I look
into the glass, I am startled at my haggard, worn appearance.</p>
<p>Rachel has been to dress me, and says I have had a sad night
of it, she can see. Milicent has just looked in to ask me
how I was. I told her I was better, but to excuse my
appearance admitted I had had a restless night. I wish this
day were over! I shudder at the thoughts of going down to
breakfast. How shall I encounter them all? Yet let me
remember it is not I that am guilty: I have no cause to fear; and
if they scorn me as a victim of their guilt, I can pity their
folly and despise their scorn.</p>
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