<h2>CHAPTER XXXVIII</h2>
<p>December 20th, 1826.—The fifth anniversary of my
wedding-day, and, I trust, the last I shall spend under this
roof. My resolution is formed, my plan concocted, and
already partly put in execution. My conscience does not
blame me, but while the purpose ripens let me beguile a few of
these long winter evenings in stating the case for my own
satisfaction: a dreary amusement enough, but having the air of a
useful occupation, and being pursued as a task, it will suit me
better than a lighter one.</p>
<p>In September, quiet Grassdale was again alive with a party of
ladies and gentlemen (so called), consisting of the same
individuals as those invited the year before last, with the
addition of two or three others, among whom were Mrs. Hargrave
and her younger daughter. The gentlemen and Lady Lowborough
were invited for the pleasure and convenience of the host; the
other ladies, I suppose, for the sake of appearances, and to keep
me in check, and make me discreet and civil in my
demeanour. But the ladies stayed only three weeks; the
gentlemen, with two exceptions, above two months: for their
hospitable entertainer was loth to part with them and be left
alone with his bright intellect, his stainless conscience, and
his loved and loving wife.</p>
<p>On the day of Lady Lowborough’s arrival, I followed her
into her chamber, and plainly told her that, if I found reason to
believe that she still continued her criminal connection with Mr.
Huntingdon, I should think it my absolute duty to inform her
husband of the circumstance—or awaken his suspicions at
least—however painful it might be, or however dreadful the
consequences. She was startled at first by the declaration,
so unexpected, and so determinately yet calmly delivered; but
rallying in a moment, she coolly replied that, if I saw anything
at all reprehensible or suspicious in her conduct, she would
freely give me leave to tell his lordship all about it.
Willing to be satisfied with this, I left her; and certainly I
saw nothing thenceforth particularly reprehensible or suspicious
in her demeanour towards her host; but then I had the other
guests to attend to, and I did not watch them narrowly—for,
to confess the truth, I feared to see anything between
them. I no longer regarded it as any concern of mine, and
if it was my duty to enlighten Lord Lowborough, it was a painful
duty, and I dreaded to be called to perform it.</p>
<p>But my fears were brought to an end in a manner I had not
anticipated. One evening, about a fortnight after the
visitors’ arrival, I had retired into the library to snatch
a few minutes’ respite from forced cheerfulness and
wearisome discourse, for after so long a period of seclusion,
dreary indeed as I had often found it, I could not always bear to
be doing violence to my feelings, and goading my powers to talk,
and smile and listen, and play the attentive hostess, or even the
cheerful friend: I had just ensconced myself within the bow of
the window, and was looking out upon the west, where the
darkening hills rose sharply defined against the clear amber
light of evening, that gradually blended and faded away into the
pure, pale blue of the upper sky, where one bright star was
shining through, as if to promise—‘When that dying
light is gone, the world will not be left in darkness, and they
who trust in God, whose minds are unbeclouded by the mists of
unbelief and sin, are never wholly comfortless,’—when
I heard a hurried step approaching, and Lord Lowborough
entered. This room was still his favourite resort. He
flung the door to with unusual violence, and cast his hat aside
regardless where it fell. What could be the matter with
him? His face was ghastly pale; his eyes were fixed upon
the ground; his teeth clenched: his forehead glistened with the
dews of agony. It was plain he knew his wrongs at last!</p>
<p>Unconscious of my presence, he began to pace the room in a
state of fearful agitation, violently wringing his hands and
uttering low groans or incoherent ejaculations. I made a
movement to let him know that he was not alone; but he was too
preoccupied to notice it. Perhaps, while his back was
towards me, I might cross the room and slip away
unobserved. I rose to make the attempt, but then he
perceived me. He started and stood still a moment; then
wiped his streaming forehead, and, advancing towards me, with a
kind of unnatural composure, said in a deep, almost sepulchral
tone,—‘Mrs. Huntingdon, I must leave you
to-morrow.’</p>
<p>‘To-morrow!’ I repeated. ‘I do not ask
the cause.’</p>
<p>‘You know it then, and you can be so calm!’ said
he, surveying me with profound astonishment, not unmingled with a
kind of resentful bitterness, as it appeared to me.</p>
<p>‘I have so long been aware of—‘ I paused in
time, and added, ‘of my husband’s character, that
nothing shocks me.’</p>
<p>‘But this—how long have you been aware of
this?’ demanded he, laying his clenched hand on the table
beside him, and looking me keenly and fixedly in the face.</p>
<p>I felt like a criminal.</p>
<p>‘Not long,’ I answered.</p>
<p>‘You knew it!’ cried he, with bitter
vehemence—‘and you did not tell me! You helped
to deceive me!’</p>
<p>‘My lord, I did not help to deceive you.’</p>
<p>‘Then why did you not tell me?’</p>
<p>‘Because I knew it would be painful to you. I
hoped she would return to her duty, and then there would be no
need to harrow your feelings with such—’</p>
<p>‘O God! how long has this been going on? How long
has it been, Mrs. Huntingdon?—Tell me—I must
know!’ exclaimed, with intense and fearful eagerness.</p>
<p>‘Two years, I believe.’</p>
<p>‘Great heaven! and she has duped me all this
time!’ He turned away with a suppressed groan of
agony, and paced the room again in a paroxysm of renewed
agitation. My heart smote me; but I would try to console
him, though I knew not how to attempt it.</p>
<p>‘She is a wicked woman,’ I said. ‘She
has basely deceived and betrayed you. She is as little
worthy of your regret as she was of your affection. Let her
injure you no further; abstract yourself from her, and stand
alone.’</p>
<p>‘And you, Madam,’ said he sternly, arresting
himself, and turning round upon me, ‘you have injured me
too by this ungenerous concealment!’</p>
<p>There was a sudden revulsion in my feelings. Something
rose within me, and urged me to resent this harsh return for my
heartfelt sympathy, and defend myself with answering
severity. Happily, I did not yield to the impulse. I
saw his anguish as, suddenly smiting his forehead, he turned
abruptly to the window, and, looking upward at the placid sky,
murmured passionately, ‘O God, that I might
die!’—and felt that to add one drop of bitterness to
that already overflowing cup would be ungenerous indeed.
And yet I fear there was more coldness than gentleness in the
quiet tone of my reply:—‘I might offer many excuses
that some would admit to be valid, but I will not attempt to
enumerate them—’</p>
<p>‘I know them,’ said he hastily: ‘you would
say that it was no business of yours: that I ought to have taken
care of myself; that if my own blindness has led me into this pit
of hell, I have no right to blame another for giving me credit
for a larger amount of sagacity than I
possessed—’</p>
<p>‘I confess I was wrong,’ continued I, without
regarding this bitter interruption; ‘but whether want of
courage or mistaken kindness was the cause of my error, I think
you blame me too severely. I told Lady Lowborough two weeks
ago, the very hour she came, that I should certainly think it my
duty to inform you if she continued to deceive you: she gave me
full liberty to do so if I should see anything reprehensible or
suspicious in her conduct; I have seen nothing; and I trusted she
had altered her course.’</p>
<p>He continued gazing from the window while I spoke, and did not
answer, but, stung by the recollections my words awakened,
stamped his foot upon the floor, ground his teeth, and corrugated
his brow, like one under the influence of acute physical
pain.</p>
<p>‘It was wrong, it was wrong!’ he muttered at
length. ‘Nothing can excuse it; nothing can atone for
it,—for nothing can recall those years of cursed credulity;
nothing obliterate them!—nothing, nothing!’ he
repeated in a whisper, whose despairing bitterness precluded all
resentment.</p>
<p>‘When I put the case to myself, I own it was
wrong,’ I answered; ‘but I can only now regret that I
did not see it in this light before, and that, as you say,
nothing can recall the past.’</p>
<p>Something in my voice or in the spirit of this answer seemed
to alter his mood. Turning towards me, and attentively
surveying my face by the dim light, he said, in a milder tone
than he had yet employed,—‘You, too, have suffered, I
suppose.’</p>
<p>‘I suffered much, at first.’</p>
<p>‘When was that?’</p>
<p>‘Two years ago; and two years hence you will be as calm
as I am now, and far, far happier, I trust, for you are a man,
and free to act as you please.’</p>
<p>Something like a smile, but a very bitter one, crossed his
face for a moment.</p>
<p>‘You have not been happy, lately?’ he said, with a
kind of effort to regain composure, and a determination to waive
the further discussion of his own calamity.</p>
<p>‘Happy?’ I repeated, almost provoked at such a
question. ‘Could I be so, with such a
husband?’</p>
<p>‘I have noticed a change in your appearance since the
first years of your marriage,’ pursued he: ‘I
observed it to—to that infernal demon,’ he muttered
between his teeth; ‘and he said it was your own sour temper
that was eating away your bloom: it was making you old and ugly
before your time, and had already made his fireside as
comfortless as a convent cell. You smile, Mrs. Huntingdon;
nothing moves you. I wish my nature were as calm as
yours.’</p>
<p>‘My nature was not originally calm,’ said I.
‘I have learned to appear so by dint of hard lessons and
many repeated efforts.’</p>
<p>At this juncture Mr. Hattersley burst into the room.</p>
<p>‘Hallo, Lowborough!’ he began—‘Oh! I
beg your pardon,’ he exclaimed on seeing me. ‘I
didn’t know it was a
<i>tête-à-tête</i>. Cheer up,
man,’ he continued, giving Lord Lowborough a thump on the
back, which caused the latter to recoil from him with looks of
ineffable disgust and irritation. ‘Come, I want to
speak with you a bit.’</p>
<p>‘Speak, then.’</p>
<p>‘But I’m not sure it would be quite agreeable to
the lady what I have to say.’</p>
<p>‘Then it would not be agreeable to me,’ said his
lordship, turning to leave the room.</p>
<p>‘Yes, it would,’ cried the other, following him
into the hall. ‘If you’ve the heart of a man,
it would be the very ticket for you. It’s just this,
my lad,’ he continued, rather lowering his voice, but not
enough to prevent me from hearing every word he said, though the
half-closed door stood between us. ‘I think
you’re an ill-used man—nay, now, don’t flare
up; I don’t want to offend you: it’s only my rough
way of talking. I must speak right out, you know, or else
not at all; and I’m come—stop now! let me
explain—I’m come to offer you my services, for though
Huntingdon is my friend, he’s a devilish scamp, as we all
know, and I’ll be your friend for the nonce. I know
what it is you want, to make matters straight: it’s just to
exchange a shot with him, and then you’ll feel yourself all
right again; and if an accident happens—why, that’ll
be all right too, I daresay, to a desperate fellow like
you. Come now, give me your hand, and don’t look so
black upon it. Name time and place, and I’ll manage
the rest.’</p>
<p>‘That,’ answered the more low, deliberate voice of
Lord Lowborough, ‘is just the remedy my own heart, or the
devil within it, suggested—to meet him, and not to part
without blood. Whether I or he should fall, or both, it
would be an inexpressible relief to me, if—’</p>
<p>‘Just so! Well then,—’</p>
<p>‘No!’ exclaimed his lordship, with deep,
determined emphasis. ‘Though I hate him from my
heart, and should rejoice at any calamity that could befall him,
I’ll leave him to God; and though I abhor my own life,
I’ll leave that, too, to Him that gave it.’</p>
<p>‘But you see, in this case,’ pleaded
Hattersley—</p>
<p>‘I’ll not hear you!’ exclaimed his
companion, hastily turning away. ‘Not another
word! I’ve enough to do against the fiend within
me.’</p>
<p>‘Then you’re a white-livered fool, and I wash my
hands of you,’ grumbled the tempter, as he swung himself
round and departed.</p>
<p>‘Right, right, Lord Lowborough,’ cried I, darting
out and clasping his burning hand, as he was moving away to the
stairs. ‘I begin to think the world is not worthy of
you!’ Not understanding this sudden ebullition, he
turned upon me with a stare of gloomy, bewildered amazement, that
made me ashamed of the impulse to which I had yielded; but soon a
more humanised expression dawned upon his countenance, and before
I could withdraw my hand, he pressed it kindly, while a gleam of
genuine feeling flashed from his eyes as he murmured, ‘God
help us both!’</p>
<p>‘Amen!’ responded I; and we parted.</p>
<p>I returned to the drawing-room, where, doubtless, my presence
would be expected by most, desired by one or two. In the
ante-room was Mr. Hattersley, railing against Lord
Lowborough’s poltroonery before a select audience, viz. Mr.
Huntingdon, who was lounging against the table, exulting in his
own treacherous villainy, and laughing his victim to scorn, and
Mr. Grimsby, standing by, quietly rubbing his hands and chuckling
with fiendish satisfaction.</p>
<p>In the drawing-room I found Lady Lowborough, evidently in no
very enviable state of mind, and struggling hard to conceal her
discomposure by an overstrained affectation of unusual
cheerfulness and vivacity, very uncalled-for under the
circumstances, for she had herself given the company to
understand that her husband had received unpleasant intelligence
from home, which necessitated his immediate departure, and that
he had suffered it so to bother his mind that it had brought on a
bilious headache, owing to which, and the preparations he judged
necessary to hasten his departure, she believed they would not
have the pleasure of seeing him to-night. However, she
asserted, it was only a business concern, and so she did not
intend it should trouble her. She was just saying this as I
entered, and she darted upon me such a glance of hardihood and
defiance as at once astonished and revolted me.</p>
<p>‘But I am troubled,’ continued she, ‘and
vexed too, for I think it my duty to accompany his lordship, and
of course I am very sorry to part with all my kind friends so
unexpectedly and so soon.’</p>
<p>‘And yet, Annabella,’ said Esther, who was sitting
beside her, ‘I never saw you in better spirits in my
life.’</p>
<p>‘Precisely so, my love: because I wish to make the best
of your society, since it appears this is to be the last night I
am to enjoy it till heaven knows when; and I wish to leave a good
impression on you all,’—she glanced round, and seeing
her aunt’s eye fixed upon her, rather too scrutinizingly,
as she probably thought, she started up and continued: ‘To
which end I’ll give you a song—shall I, aunt? shall
I, Mrs. Huntingdon? shall I ladies and gentlemen all? Very
well. I’ll do my best to amuse you.’</p>
<p>She and Lord Lowborough occupied the apartments next to
mine. I know not how she passed the night, but I lay awake
the greater part of it listening to his heavy step pacing
monotonously up and down his dressing-room, which was nearest my
chamber. Once I heard him pause and throw something out of
the window with a passionate ejaculation; and in the morning,
after they were gone, a keen-bladed clasp-knife was found on the
grass-plot below; a razor, likewise, was snapped in two and
thrust deep into the cinders of the grate, but partially corroded
by the decaying embers. So strong had been the temptation
to end his miserable life, so determined his resolution to resist
it.</p>
<p>My heart bled for him as I lay listening to that ceaseless
tread. Hitherto I had thought too much of myself, too
little of him: now I forgot my own afflictions, and thought only
of his; of the ardent affection so miserably wasted, the fond
faith so cruelly betrayed, the—no, I will not attempt to
enumerate his wrongs—but I hated his wife and my husband
more intensely than ever, and not for my sake, but for his.</p>
<p>They departed early in the morning, before any one else was
down, except myself, and just as I was leaving my room Lord
Lowborough was descending to take his place in the carriage,
where his lady was already ensconced; and Arthur (or Mr.
Huntingdon, as I prefer calling him, for the other is my
child’s name) had the gratuitous insolence to come out in
his dressing-gown to bid his ‘friend’ good-by.</p>
<p>‘What, going already, Lowborough!’ said he.
‘Well, good-morning.’ He smilingly offered his
hand.</p>
<p>I think the other would have knocked him down, had he not
instinctively started back before that bony fist quivering with
rage and clenched till the knuckles gleamed white and glistening
through the skin. Looking upon him with a countenance livid
with furious hate, Lord Lowborough muttered between his closed
teeth a deadly execration he would not have uttered had he been
calm enough to choose his words, and departed.</p>
<p>‘I call that an unchristian spirit now,’ said the
villain. ‘But I’d never give up an old friend
for the sake of a wife. You may have mine if you like, and
I call that handsome; I can do no more than offer restitution,
can I?’</p>
<p>But Lowborough had gained the bottom of the stairs, and was
now crossing the hall; and Mr. Huntingdon, leaning over the
banisters, called out, ‘Give my love to Annabella! and I
wish you both a happy journey,’ and withdrew, laughing, to
his chamber.</p>
<p>He subsequently expressed himself rather glad she was
gone. ‘She was so deuced imperious and
exacting,’ said he. ‘Now I shall be my own man
again, and feel rather more at my ease.’</p>
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