<h2>CHAPTER LI</h2>
<p>We will now turn to a certain still, cold, cloudy afternoon
about the commencement of December, when the first fall of snow
lay thinly scattered over the blighted fields and frozen roads,
or stored more thickly in the hollows of the deep cart-ruts and
footsteps of men and horses impressed in the now petrified mire
of last month’s drenching rains. I remember it well,
for I was walking home from the vicarage with no less remarkable
a personage than Miss Eliza Millward by my side. I had been
to call upon her father,—a sacrifice to civility undertaken
entirely to please my mother, not myself, for I hated to go near
the house; not merely on account of my antipathy to the once so
bewitching Eliza, but because I had not half forgiven the old
gentleman himself for his ill opinion of Mrs. Huntingdon; for
though now constrained to acknowledge himself mistaken in his
former judgment, he still maintained that she had done wrong to
leave her husband; it was a violation of her sacred duties as a
wife, and a tempting of Providence by laying herself open to
temptation; and nothing short of bodily ill-usage (and that of no
trifling nature) could excuse such a step—nor even that,
for in such a case she ought to appeal to the laws for
protection. But it was not of him I intended to speak; it
was of his daughter Eliza. Just as I was taking leave of
the vicar, she entered the room, ready equipped for a walk.</p>
<p>‘I was just coming to see, your sister, Mr.
Markham,’ said she; ‘and so, if you have no
objection, I’ll accompany you home. I like company
when I’m walking out—don’t you?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, when it’s agreeable.’</p>
<p>‘That of course,’ rejoined the young lady, smiling
archly.</p>
<p>So we proceeded together.</p>
<p>‘Shall I find Rose at home, do you think?’ said
she, as we closed the garden gate, and set our faces towards
Linden-Car.</p>
<p>‘I believe so.’</p>
<p>‘I trust I shall, for I’ve a little bit of news
for her—if you haven’t forestalled me.’</p>
<p>‘I?’</p>
<p>‘Yes: do you know what Mr. Lawrence is gone
for?’ She looked up anxiously for my reply.</p>
<p>‘Is he gone?’ said I; and her face brightened.</p>
<p>‘Ah! then he hasn’t told you about his
sister?’</p>
<p>‘What of her?’ I demanded in terror, lest some
evil should have befallen her.</p>
<p>‘Oh, Mr. Markham, how you blush!’ cried she, with
a tormenting laugh. ‘Ha, ha, you have not forgotten
her yet. But you had better be quick about it, I can tell
you, for—alas, alas!—she’s going to be married
next Thursday!’</p>
<p>‘No, Miss Eliza, that’s false.’</p>
<p>‘Do you charge me with a falsehood, sir?’</p>
<p>‘You are misinformed.’</p>
<p>‘Am I? Do you know better, then?’</p>
<p>‘I think I do.’</p>
<p>‘What makes you look so pale then?’ said she,
smiling with delight at my emotion. ‘Is it anger at
poor me for telling such a fib? Well, I only “tell
the tale as ’twas told to me:” I don’t vouch
for the truth of it; but at the same time, I don’t see what
reason Sarah should have for deceiving me, or her informant for
deceiving her; and that was what she told me the footman told
her:—that Mrs. Huntingdon was going to be married on
Thursday, and Mr. Lawrence was gone to the wedding. She did
tell me the name of the gentleman, but I’ve forgotten
that. Perhaps you can assist me to remember it. Is
there not some one that lives near—or frequently visits the
neighbourhood, that has long been attached to her?—a
Mr.—oh, dear! Mr.—’</p>
<p>‘Hargrave?’ suggested I, with a bitter smile.</p>
<p>‘You’re right,’ cried she; ‘that was
the very name.’</p>
<p>‘Impossible, Miss Eliza!’ I exclaimed, in a tone
that made her start.</p>
<p>‘Well, you know, that’s what they told me,’
said she, composedly staring me in the face. And then she
broke out into a long shrill laugh that put me to my wit’s
end with fury.</p>
<p>‘Really you must excuse me,’ cried she.
‘I know it’s very rude, but ha, ha, ha!—did you
think to marry her yourself? Dear, dear, what a
pity!—ha, ha, ha! Gracious, Mr. Markham, are you
going to faint? Oh, mercy! shall I call this man?
Here, Jacob—‘ But checking the word on her
lips, I seized her arm and gave it, I think, a pretty severe
squeeze, for she shrank into herself with a faint cry of pain or
terror; but the spirit within her was not subdued: instantly
rallying, she continued, with well-feigned concern, ‘What
can I do for you? Will you have some water—some
brandy? I daresay they have some in the public-house down
there, if you’ll let me run.’</p>
<p>‘Have done with this nonsense!’ cried I,
sternly. She looked confounded—almost frightened
again, for a moment. ‘You know I hate such
jests,’ I continued.</p>
<p>‘Jests indeed! I wasn’t jesting!’</p>
<p>‘You were laughing, at all events; and I don’t
like to be laughed at,’ returned I, making violent efforts
to speak with proper dignity and composure, and to say nothing
but what was coherent and sensible. ‘And since you
are in such a merry mood, Miss Eliza, you must be good enough
company for yourself; and therefore I shall leave you to finish
your walk alone—for, now I think of it, I have business
elsewhere; so good-evening.’</p>
<p>With that I left her (smothering her malicious laughter) and
turned aside into the fields, springing up the bank, and pushing
through the nearest gap in the hedge. Determined at once to
prove the truth—or rather the falsehood—of her story,
I hastened to Woodford as fast as my legs could carry me; first
veering round by a circuitous course, but the moment I was out of
sight of my fair tormentor cutting away across the country, just
as a bird might fly, over pasture-land, and fallow, and stubble,
and lane, clearing hedges and ditches and hurdles, till I came to
the young squire’s gates. Never till now had I known
the full fervour of my love—the full strength of my hopes,
not wholly crushed even in my hours of deepest despondency,
always tenaciously clinging to the thought that one day she might
be mine, or, if not that, at least that something of my memory,
some slight remembrance of our friendship and our love, would be
for ever cherished in her heart. I marched up to the door,
determined, if I saw the master, to question him boldly
concerning his sister, to wait and hesitate no longer, but cast
false delicacy and stupid pride behind my back, and know my fate
at once.</p>
<p>‘Is Mr. Lawrence at home?’ I eagerly asked of the
servant that opened the door.</p>
<p>‘No, sir, master went yesterday,’ replied he,
looking very alert.</p>
<p>‘Went where?’</p>
<p>‘To Grassdale, sir—wasn’t you aware,
sir? He’s very close, is master,’ said the
fellow, with a foolish, simpering grin. ‘I suppose,
sir—’</p>
<p>But I turned and left him, without waiting to hear what he
supposed. I was not going to stand there to expose my
tortured feelings to the insolent laughter and impertinent
curiosity of a fellow like that.</p>
<p>But what was to be done now? Could it be possible that
she had left me for that man? I could not believe it.
Me she might forsake, but not to give herself to him! Well,
I would know the truth; to no concerns of daily life could I
attend while this tempest of doubt and dread, of jealousy and
rage, distracted me. I would take the morning coach from
L— (the evening one would be already gone), and fly to
Grassdale—I must be there before the marriage. And
why? Because a thought struck me that perhaps I might
prevent it—that if I did not, she and I might both lament
it to the latest moment of our lives. It struck me that
someone might have belied me to her: perhaps her brother; yes, no
doubt her brother had persuaded her that I was false and
faithless, and taking advantage of her natural indignation, and
perhaps her desponding carelessness about her future life, had
urged her, artfully, cruelly, on to this other marriage, in order
to secure her from me. If this was the case, and if she
should only discover her mistake when too late to repair
it—to what a life of misery and vain regret might she be
doomed as well as me; and what remorse for me to think my foolish
scruples had induced it all! Oh, I must see her—she
must know my truth even if I told it at the church door! I
might pass for a madman or an impertinent fool—even she
might be offended at such an interruption, or at least might tell
me it was now too late. But if I could save her, if she
might be mine!—it was too rapturous a thought!</p>
<p>Winged by this hope, and goaded by these fears, I hurried
homewards to prepare for my departure on the morrow. I told
my mother that urgent business which admitted no delay, but which
I could not then explain, called me away.</p>
<p>My deep anxiety and serious preoccupation could not be
concealed from her maternal eyes; and I had much ado to calm her
apprehensions of some disastrous mystery.</p>
<p>That night there came a heavy fall of snow, which so retarded
the progress of the coaches on the following day that I was
almost driven to distraction. I travelled all night, of
course, for this was Wednesday: to-morrow morning, doubtless, the
marriage would take place. But the night was long and dark:
the snow heavily clogged the wheels and balled the horses’
feet; the animals were consumedly lazy; the coachman most
execrably cautious; the passengers confoundedly apathetic in
their supine indifference to the rate of our progression.
Instead of assisting me to bully the several coachmen and urge
them forward, they merely stared and grinned at my impatience:
one fellow even ventured to rally me upon it—but I silenced
him with a look that quelled him for the rest of the journey; and
when, at the last stage, I would have taken the reins into my own
hand, they all with one accord opposed it.</p>
<p>It was broad daylight when we entered M— and drew up at
the ‘Rose and Crown.’ I alighted and called
aloud for a post-chaise to Grassdale. There was none to be
had: the only one in the town was under repair. ‘A
gig, then—a fly—car—anything—only be
quick!’ There was a gig, but not a horse to
spare. I sent into the town to seek one: but they were such
an intolerable time about it that I could wait no longer—I
thought my own feet could carry me sooner; and bidding them send
the conveyance after me, if it were ready within an hour, I set
off as fast as I could walk. The distance was little more
than six miles, but the road was strange, and I had to keep
stopping to inquire my way; hallooing to carters and clodhoppers,
and frequently invading the cottages, for there were few abroad
that winter’s morning; sometimes knocking up the lazy
people from their beds, for where so little work was to be done,
perhaps so little food and fire to be had, they cared not to
curtail their slumbers. I had no time to think of them,
however; aching with weariness and desperation, I hurried
on. The gig did not overtake me: and it was well I had not
waited for it; vexatious rather, that I had been fool enough to
wait so long.</p>
<p>At length, however, I entered the neighbourhood of
Grassdale. I approached the little rural church—but
lo! there stood a train of carriages before it; it needed not the
white favours bedecking the servants and horses, nor the merry
voices of the village idlers assembled to witness the show, to
apprise me that there was a wedding within. I ran in among
them, demanding, with breathless eagerness, had the ceremony long
commenced? They only gaped and stared. In my
desperation, I pushed past them, and was about to enter the
churchyard gate, when a group of ragged urchins, that had been
hanging like bees to the window, suddenly dropped off and made a
rush for the porch, vociferating in the uncouth dialect of their
country something which signified, ‘It’s
over—they’re coming out!’</p>
<p>If Eliza Millward had seen me then she might indeed have been
delighted. I grasped the gate-post for support, and stood
intently gazing towards the door to take my last look on my
soul’s delight, my first on that detested mortal who had
torn her from my heart, and doomed her, I was certain, to a life
of misery and hollow, vain repining—for what happiness
could she enjoy with him? I did not wish to shock her with
my presence now, but I had not power to move away. Forth
came the bride and bridegroom. Him I saw not; I had eyes
for none but her. A long veil shrouded half her graceful
form, but did not hide it; I could see that while she carried her
head erect, her eyes were bent upon the ground, and her face and
neck were suffused with a crimson blush; but every feature was
radiant with smiles, and gleaming through the misty whiteness of
her veil were clusters of golden ringlets! Oh, heavens! it
was not my Helen! The first glimpse made me start—but
my eyes were darkened with exhaustion and despair. Dare I
trust them? ‘Yes—it is not she! It was a
younger, slighter, rosier beauty—lovely indeed, but with
far less dignity and depth of soul—without that indefinable
grace, that keenly spiritual yet gentle charm, that ineffable
power to attract and subjugate the heart—my heart at
least. I looked at the bridegroom—it was Frederick
Lawrence! I wiped away the cold drops that were trickling
down my forehead, and stepped back as he approached; but, his
eyes fell upon me, and he knew me, altered as my appearance must
have been.</p>
<p>‘Is that you, Markham?’ said he, startled and
confounded at the apparition—perhaps, too, at the wildness
of my looks.</p>
<p>‘Yes, Lawrence; is that you?’ I mustered the
presence of mind to reply.</p>
<p>He smiled and coloured, as if half-proud and half-ashamed of
his identity; and if he had reason to be proud of the sweet lady
on his arm, he had no less cause to be ashamed of having
concealed his good fortune so long.</p>
<p>‘Allow me to introduce you to my bride,’ said he,
endeavouring to hide his embarrassment by an assumption of
careless gaiety. ‘Esther, this is Mr. Markham; my
friend Markham, Mrs. Lawrence, late Miss Hargrave.’</p>
<p>I bowed to the bride, and vehemently wrung the
bridegroom’s hand.</p>
<p>‘Why did you not tell me of this?’ I said,
reproachfully, pretending a resentment I did not feel (for in
truth I was almost wild with joy to find myself so happily
mistaken, and overflowing with affection to him for this and for
the base injustice I felt that I had done him in my mind—he
might have wronged me, but not to that extent; and as I had hated
him like a demon for the last forty hours, the reaction from such
a feeling was so great that I could pardon all offences for the
moment—and love him in spite of them too).</p>
<p>‘I did tell you,’ said he, with an air of guilty
confusion; ‘you received my letter?’</p>
<p>‘What letter?’</p>
<p>‘The one announcing my intended marriage.’</p>
<p>‘I never received the most distant hint of such an
intention.’</p>
<p>‘It must have crossed you on your way then—it
should have reached you yesterday morning—it was rather
late, I acknowledge. But what brought you here, then, if
you received no information?’</p>
<p>It was now my turn to be confounded; but the young lady, who
had been busily patting the snow with her foot during our short
sotto-voce colloquy, very opportunely came to my assistance by
pinching her companion’s arm and whispering a suggestion
that his friend should be invited to step into the carriage and
go with them; it being scarcely agreeable to stand there among so
many gazers, and keeping their friends waiting into the
bargain.</p>
<p>‘And so cold as it is too!’ said he, glancing with
dismay at her slight drapery, and immediately handing her into
the carriage. ‘Markham, will you come? We are
going to Paris, but we can drop you anywhere between this and
Dover.’</p>
<p>‘No, thank you. Good-by—I needn’t wish
you a pleasant journey; but I shall expect a very handsome
apology, some time, mind, and scores of letters, before we meet
again.’</p>
<p>He shook my hand, and hastened to take his place beside his
lady. This was no time or place for explanation or
discourse: we had already stood long enough to excite the wonder
of the village sight-seers, and perhaps the wrath of the
attendant bridal party; though, of course, all this passed in a
much shorter time than I have taken to relate, or even than you
will take to read it. I stood beside the carriage, and, the
window being down, I saw my happy friend fondly encircle his
companion’s waist with his arm, while she rested her
glowing cheek on his shoulder, looking the very impersonation of
loving, trusting bliss. In the interval between the
footman’s closing the door and taking his place behind she
raised her smiling brown eyes to his face, observing,
playfully,—‘I fear you must think me very insensible,
Frederick: I know it is the custom for ladies to cry on these
occasions, but I couldn’t squeeze a tear for my
life.’</p>
<p>He only answered with a kiss, and pressed her still closer to
his bosom.</p>
<p>‘But what is this?’ he murmured. ‘Why,
Esther, you’re crying now!’</p>
<p>‘Oh, it’s nothing—it’s only too much
happiness—and the wish,’ sobbed she, ‘that our
dear Helen were as happy as ourselves.’</p>
<p>‘Bless you for that wish!’ I inwardly responded,
as the carriage rolled away—‘and heaven grant it be
not wholly vain!’</p>
<p>I thought a cloud had suddenly darkened her husband’s
face as she spoke. What did he think? Could he grudge
such happiness to his dear sister and his friend as he now felt
himself? At such a moment it was impossible. The
contrast between her fate and his must darken his bliss for a
time. Perhaps, too, he thought of me: perhaps he regretted
the part he had had in preventing our union, by omitting to help
us, if not by actually plotting against us. I exonerated
him from that charge now, and deeply lamented my former
ungenerous suspicions; but he had wronged us, still—I
hoped, I trusted that he had. He had not attempted to cheek
the course of our love by actually damming up the streams in
their passage, but he had passively watched the two currents
wandering through life’s arid wilderness, declining to
clear away the obstructions that divided them, and secretly
hoping that both would lose themselves in the sand before they
could be joined in one. And meantime he had been quietly
proceeding with his own affairs; perhaps, his heart and head had
been so full of his fair lady that he had had but little thought
to spare for others. Doubtless he had made his first
acquaintance with her—his first intimate acquaintance at
least—during his three months’ sojourn at F—,
for I now recollected that he had once casually let fall an
intimation that his aunt and sister had a young friend staying
with them at the time, and this accounted for at least one-half
his silence about all transactions there. Now, too, I saw a
reason for many little things that had slightly puzzled me
before; among the rest, for sundry departures from Woodford, and
absences more or less prolonged, for which he never
satisfactorily accounted, and concerning which he hated to be
questioned on his return. Well might the servant say his
master was ‘very close.’ But why this strange
reserve to me? Partly, from that remarkable idiosyncrasy to
which I have before alluded; partly, perhaps, from tenderness to
my feelings, or fear to disturb my philosophy by touching upon
the infectious theme of love.</p>
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