<h2>CHAPTER XLIII</h2>
<p>October 10th.—Mr. Huntingdon returned about three weeks
ago. His appearance, his demeanour and conversation, and my
feelings with regard to him, I shall not trouble myself to
describe. The day after his arrival, however, he surprised
me by the announcement of an intention to procure a governess for
little Arthur: I told him it was quite unnecessary, not to say
ridiculous, at the present season: I thought I was fully
competent to the task of teaching him myself—for some years
to come, at least: the child’s education was the only
pleasure and business of my life; and since he had deprived me of
every other occupation, he might surely leave me that.</p>
<p>He said I was not fit to teach children, or to be with them: I
had already reduced the boy to little better than an automaton; I
had broken his fine spirit with my rigid severity; and I should
freeze all the sunshine out of his heart, and make him as gloomy
an ascetic as myself, if I had the handling of him much
longer. And poor Rachel, too, came in for her share of
abuse, as usual; he cannot endure Rachel, because he knows she
has a proper appreciation of him.</p>
<p>I calmly defended our several qualifications as nurse and
governess, and still resisted the proposed addition to our
family; but he cut me short by saying it was no use bothering
about the matter, for he had engaged a governess already, and she
was coming next week; so that all I had to do was to get things
ready for her reception. This was a rather startling piece
of intelligence. I ventured to inquire her name and
address, by whom she had been recommended, or how he had been led
to make choice of her.</p>
<p>‘She is a very estimable, pious young person,’
said he; ‘you needn’t be afraid. Her name is
Myers, I believe; and she was recommended to me by a respectable
old dowager: a lady of high repute in the religious world.
I have not seen her myself, and therefore cannot give you a
particular account of her person and conversation, and so forth;
but, if the old lady’s eulogies are correct, you will find
her to possess all desirable qualifications for her position: an
inordinate love of children among the rest.’</p>
<p>All this was gravely and quietly spoken, but there was a
laughing demon in his half-averted eye that boded no good, I
imagined. However, I thought of my asylum in —shire,
and made no further objections.</p>
<p>When Miss Myers arrived, I was not prepared to give her a very
cordial reception. Her appearance was not particularly
calculated to produce a favourable impression at first sight, nor
did her manners and subsequent conduct, in any degree, remove the
prejudice I had already conceived against her. Her
attainments were limited, her intellect noways above
mediocrity. She had a fine voice, and could sing like a
nightingale, and accompany herself sufficiently well on the
piano; but these were her only accomplishments. There was a
look of guile and subtlety in her face, a sound of it in her
voice. She seemed afraid of me, and would start if I
suddenly approached her. In her behaviour she was
respectful and complaisant, even to servility: she attempted to
flatter and fawn upon me at first, but I soon checked that.
Her fondness for her little pupil was overstrained, and I was
obliged to remonstrate with her on the subject of over-indulgence
and injudicious praise; but she could not gain his heart.
Her piety consisted in an occasional heaving of sighs, and
uplifting of eyes to the ceiling, and the utterance of a few cant
phrases. She told me she was a clergyman’s daughter,
and had been left an orphan from her childhood, but had had the
good fortune to obtain a situation in a very pious family; and
then she spoke so gratefully of the kindness she had experienced
from its different members, that I reproached myself for my
uncharitable thoughts and unfriendly conduct, and relented for a
time, but not for long: my causes of dislike were too rational,
my suspicions too well founded for that; and I knew it was my
duty to watch and scrutinize till those suspicions were either
satisfactorily removed or confirmed.</p>
<p>I asked the name and residence of the kind and pious
family. She mentioned a common name, and an unknown and
distant place of abode, but told me they were now on the
Continent, and their present address was unknown to her. I
never saw her speak much to Mr. Huntingdon; but he would
frequently look into the school-room to see how little Arthur got
on with his new companion, when I was not there. In the
evening, she sat with us in the drawing-room, and would sing and
play to amuse him or us, as she pretended, and was very attentive
to his wants, and watchful to anticipate them, though she only
talked to me; indeed, he was seldom in a condition to be talked
to. Had she been other than she was, I should have felt her
presence a great relief to come between us thus, except, indeed,
that I should have been thoroughly ashamed for any decent person
to see him as he often was.</p>
<p>I did not mention my suspicions to Rachel; but she, having
sojourned for half a century in this land of sin and sorrow, has
learned to be suspicious herself. She told me from the
first she was ‘down of that new governess,’ and I
soon found she watched her quite as narrowly as I did; and I was
glad of it, for I longed to know the truth: the atmosphere of
Grassdale seemed to stifle me, and I could only live by thinking
of Wildfell Hall.</p>
<p>At last, one morning, she entered my chamber with such
intelligence that my resolution was taken before she had ceased
to speak. While she dressed me I explained to her my
intentions and what assistance I should require from her, and
told her which of my things she was to pack up, and what she was
to leave behind for herself, as I had no other means of
recompensing her for this sudden dismissal after her long and
faithful service: a circumstance I most deeply regretted, but
could not avoid.</p>
<p>‘And what will you do, Rachel?’ said I;
‘will you go home, or seek another place?’</p>
<p>‘I have no home, ma’am, but with you,’ she
replied; ‘and if I leave you I’ll never go into place
again as long as I live.’</p>
<p>‘But I can’t afford to live like a lady
now,’ returned I: ‘I must be my own maid and my
child’s nurse.’</p>
<p>‘What signifies!’ replied she, in some
excitement. ‘You’ll want somebody to clean and
wash, and cook, won’t you? I can do all that; and
never mind the wages: I’ve my bits o’ savings yet,
and if you wouldn’t take me I should have to find my own
board and lodging out of ’em somewhere, or else work among
strangers: and it’s what I’m not used to: so you can
please yourself, ma’am.’ Her voice quavered as she
spoke, and the tears stood in her eyes.</p>
<p>‘I should like it above all things, Rachel, and
I’d give you such wages as I could afford: such as I should
give to any servant-of-all-work I might employ: but don’t
you see I should be dragging you down with me when you have done
nothing to deserve it?’</p>
<p>‘Oh, fiddle!’ ejaculated she.</p>
<p>‘And, besides, my future way of living will be so widely
different to the past: so different to all you have been
accustomed to—’</p>
<p>‘Do you think, ma’am, I can’t bear what my
missis can? surely I’m not so proud and so dainty as that
comes to; and my little master, too, God bless him!’</p>
<p>‘But I’m young, Rachel; I sha’n’t mind
it; and Arthur is young too: it will be nothing to
him.’</p>
<p>‘Nor me either: I’m not so old but what I can
stand hard fare and hard work, if it’s only to help and
comfort them as I’ve loved like my own bairns: for all
I’m too old to bide the thoughts o’ leaving ’em
in trouble and danger, and going amongst strangers
myself.’</p>
<p>‘Then you sha’n’t, Rachel!’ cried I,
embracing my faithful friend. ‘We’ll all go
together, and you shall see how the new life suits
you.’</p>
<p>‘Bless you, honey!’ cried she, affectionately
returning my embrace. ‘Only let us get shut of this
wicked house, and we’ll do right enough, you’ll
see.’</p>
<p>‘So think I,’ was my answer; and so that point was
settled.</p>
<p>By that morning’s post I despatched a few hasty lines to
Frederick, beseeching him to prepare my asylum for my immediate
reception: for I should probably come to claim it within a day
after the receipt of that note: and telling him, in few words,
the cause of my sudden resolution. I then wrote three
letters of adieu: the first to Esther Hargrave, in which I told
her that I found it impossible to stay any longer at Grassdale,
or to leave my son under his father’s protection; and, as
it was of the last importance that our future abode should be
unknown to him and his acquaintance, I should disclose it to no
one but my brother, through the medium of whom I hoped still to
correspond with my friends. I then gave her his address,
exhorted her to write frequently, reiterated some of my former
admonitions regarding her own concerns, and bade her a fond
farewell.</p>
<p>The second was to Milicent; much to the same effect, but a
little more confidential, as befitted our longer intimacy, and
her greater experience and better acquaintance with my
circumstances.</p>
<p>The third was to my aunt: a much more difficult and painful
undertaking, and therefore I had left it to the last; but I must
give her some explanation of that extraordinary step I had taken:
and that quickly, for she and my uncle would no doubt hear of it
within a day or two after my disappearance, as it was probable
that Mr. Huntingdon would speedily apply to them to know what was
become of me. At last, however, I told her I was sensible
of my error: I did not complain of its punishment, and I was
sorry to trouble my friends with its consequences; but in duty to
my son I must submit no longer; it was absolutely necessary that
he should be delivered from his father’s corrupting
influence. I should not disclose my place of refuge even to
her, in order that she and my uncle might be able, with truth, to
deny all knowledge concerning it; but any communications
addressed to me under cover to my brother would be certain to
reach me. I hoped she and my uncle would pardon the step I
had taken, for if they knew all, I was sure they would not blame
me; and I trusted they would not afflict themselves on my
account, for if I could only reach my retreat in safety and keep
it unmolested, I should be very happy, but for the thoughts of
them; and should be quite contented to spend my life in
obscurity, devoting myself to the training up of my child, and
teaching him to avoid the errors of both his parents.</p>
<p>These things were done yesterday: I have given two whole days
to the preparation for our departure, that Frederick may have
more time to prepare the rooms, and Rachel to pack up the things:
for the latter task must be done with the utmost caution and
secrecy, and there is no one but me to assist her. I can
help to get the articles together, but I do not understand the
art of stowing them into the boxes, so as to take up the smallest
possible space; and there are her own things to do, as well as
mine and Arthur’s. I can ill afford to leave anything
behind, since I have no money, except a few guineas in my purse;
and besides, as Rachel observed, whatever I left would most
likely become the property of Miss Myers, and I should not relish
that.</p>
<p>But what trouble I have had throughout these two days,
struggling to appear calm and collected, to meet him and her as
usual, when I was obliged to meet them, and forcing myself to
leave my little Arthur in her hands for hours together! But
I trust these trials are over now: I have laid him in my bed for
better security, and never more, I trust, shall his innocent lips
be defiled by their contaminating kisses, or his young ears
polluted by their words. But shall we escape in
safety? Oh, that the morning were come, and we were on our
way at least! This evening, when I had given Rachel all the
assistance I could, and had nothing left me but to wait, and wish
and tremble, I became so greatly agitated that I knew not what to
do. I went down to dinner, but I could not force myself to
eat. Mr. Huntingdon remarked the circumstance.</p>
<p>‘What’s to do with you now?’ said he, when
the removal of the second course gave him time to look about
him.</p>
<p>‘I am not well,’ I replied: ‘I think I must
lie down a little; you won’t miss me much?’</p>
<p>‘Not the least: if you leave your chair, it’ll do
just as well—better, a trifle,’ he muttered, as I
left the room, ‘for I can fancy somebody else fills
it.’</p>
<p>‘Somebody else may fill it to-morrow,’ I thought,
but did not say. ‘There! I’ve seen the
last of you, I hope,’ I muttered, as I closed the door upon
him.</p>
<p>Rachel urged me to seek repose at once, to recruit my strength
for to-morrow’s journey, as we must be gone before the
dawn; but in my present state of nervous excitement that was
entirely out of the question. It was equally out of the
question to sit, or wander about my room, counting the hours and
the minutes between me and the appointed time of action,
straining my ears and trembling at every sound, lest someone
should discover and betray us after all. I took up a book
and tried to read: my eyes wandered over the pages, but it was
impossible to bind my thoughts to their contents. Why not
have recourse to the old expedient, and add this last event to my
chronicle? I opened its pages once more, and wrote the
above account—with difficulty, at first, but gradually my
mind became more calm and steady. Thus several hours have
passed away: the time is drawing near; and now my eyes feel heavy
and my frame exhausted. I will commend my cause to God, and
then lie down and gain an hour or two of sleep; and
then!—</p>
<p>Little Arthur sleeps soundly. All the house is still:
there can be no one watching. The boxes were all corded by
Benson, and quietly conveyed down the back stairs after dusk, and
sent away in a cart to the M— coach-office. The name
upon the cards was Mrs. Graham, which appellation I mean
henceforth to adopt. My mother’s maiden name was
Graham, and therefore I fancy I have some claim to it, and prefer
it to any other, except my own, which I dare not resume.</p>
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