<h2><SPAN name="page193"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>XXX</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was almost her last outbreak of
passive grief; at least, she never indulged in another that the
world knew anything about. But this one was long and
terrible; she flung herself on the sofa and gave herself up to
her misery. She hardly knew what had happened; ostensibly
she had only had a difference with her lover, as other girls had
had before, and the thing was not only not a rupture, but she was
under no obligation to regard it even as a menace.
Nevertheless, she felt a wound, even if he had not dealt it; it
seemed to her that a mask had suddenly fallen from his
face. He had wished to get away from her; he had been angry
and cruel, and said strange things, with strange looks. She
was smothered and stunned; she buried her head in the cushions,
sobbing and talking to herself. But at last she raised
herself, with the fear that either her father or Mrs. Penniman
would come in; and then she sat there, staring before her, while
the room grew darker. She said to herself that perhaps he
would come back to tell her he had not meant what he said; and
she listened for his ring at the door, trying to believe that
this was probable. A long time passed, but Morris remained
absent; the shadows gathered; the evening settled down on the
meagre elegance of the light, clear-coloured room; the fire went
out. When it had grown dark, Catherine went to the window
and looked out; she stood there for half an hour, on the mere
chance that he would come up the steps. At last she turned
away, for she saw her father come in. He had seen her at
the window looking out, and he stopped a moment at the bottom of
the white steps, and gravely, with an air of exaggerated
courtesy, lifted his hat to her. The gesture was so
incongruous to the condition she was in, this stately tribute of
respect to a poor girl despised and forsaken was so out of place,
that the thing gave her a kind of horror, and she hurried away to
her room. It seemed to her that she had given Morris
up.</p>
<p>She had to show herself half an hour later, and she was
sustained at table by the immensity of her desire that her father
should not perceive that anything had happened. This was a
great help to her afterwards, and it served her (though never as
much as she supposed) from the first. On this occasion Dr.
Sloper was rather talkative. He told a great many stories
about a wonderful poodle that he had seen at the house of an old
lady whom he visited professionally. Catherine not only
tried to appear to listen to the anecdotes of the poodle, but she
endeavoured to interest herself in them, so as not to think of
her scene with Morris. That perhaps was an hallucination;
he was mistaken, she was jealous; people didn’t change like
that from one day to another. Then she knew that she had
had doubts before—strange suspicions, that were at once
vague and acute—and that he had been different ever since
her return from Europe: whereupon she tried again to listen to
her father, who told a story so remarkably well. Afterwards
she went straight to her own room; it was beyond her strength to
undertake to spend the evening with her aunt. All the
evening, alone, she questioned herself. Her trouble was
terrible; but was it a thing of her imagination, engendered by an
extravagant sensibility, or did it represent a clear-cut reality,
and had the worst that was possible actually come to pass?
Mrs. Penniman, with a degree of tact that was as unusual as it
was commendable, took the line of leaving her alone. The
truth is, that her suspicions having been aroused, she indulged a
desire, natural to a timid person, that the explosion should be
localised. So long as the air still vibrated she kept out
of the way.</p>
<p>She passed and repassed Catherine’s door several times
in the course of the evening, as if she expected to hear a
plaintive moan behind it. But the room remained perfectly
still; and accordingly, the last thing before retiring to her own
couch, she applied for admittance. Catherine was sitting
up, and had a book that she pretended to be reading. She
had no wish to go to bed, for she had no expectation of
sleeping. After Mrs. Penniman had left her she sat up half
the night, and she offered her visitor no inducement to
remain. Her aunt came stealing in very gently, and
approached her with great solemnity.</p>
<p>“I am afraid you are in trouble, my dear. Can I do
anything to help you?”</p>
<p>“I am not in any trouble whatever, and do not need any
help,” said Catherine, fibbing roundly, and proving thereby
that not only our faults, but our most involuntary misfortunes,
tend to corrupt our morals.</p>
<p>“Has nothing happened to you?”</p>
<p>“Nothing whatever.”</p>
<p>“Are you very sure, dear?”</p>
<p>“Perfectly sure.”</p>
<p>“And can I really do nothing for you?”</p>
<p>“Nothing, aunt, but kindly leave me alone,” said
Catherine.</p>
<p>Mrs. Penniman, though she had been afraid of too warm a
welcome before, was now disappointed at so cold a one; and in
relating afterwards, as she did to many persons, and with
considerable variations of detail, the history of the termination
of her niece’s engagement, she was usually careful to
mention that the young lady, on a certain occasion, had
“hustled” her out of the room. It was
characteristic of Mrs. Penniman that she related this fact, not
in the least out of malignity to Catherine, whom she very
sufficiently pitied, but simply from a natural disposition to
embellish any subject that she touched.</p>
<p>Catherine, as I have said, sat up half the night, as if she
still expected to hear Morris Townsend ring at the door. On
the morrow this expectation was less unreasonable; but it was not
gratified by the reappearance of the young man. Neither had
he written; there was not a word of explanation or
reassurance. Fortunately for Catherine she could take
refuge from her excitement, which had now become intense, in her
determination that her father should see nothing of it. How
well she deceived her father we shall have occasion to learn; but
her innocent arts were of little avail before a person of the
rare perspicacity of Mrs. Penniman. This lady easily saw
that she was agitated, and if there was any agitation going
forward, Mrs. Penniman was not a person to forfeit her natural
share in it. She returned to the charge the next evening,
and requested her niece to lean upon her—to unburden her
heart. Perhaps she should be able to explain certain things
that now seemed dark, and that she knew more about than Catherine
supposed. If Catherine had been frigid the night before,
to-day she was haughty.</p>
<p>“You are completely mistaken, and I have not the least
idea what you mean. I don’t know what you are trying
to fasten on me, and I have never had less need of any
one’s explanations in my life.”</p>
<p>In this way the girl delivered herself, and from hour to hour
kept her aunt at bay. From hour to hour Mrs.
Penniman’s curiosity grew. She would have given her
little finger to know what Morris had said and done, what tone he
had taken, what pretext he had found. She wrote to him,
naturally, to request an interview; but she received, as
naturally, no answer to her petition. Morris was not in a
writing mood; for Catherine had addressed him two short notes
which met with no acknowledgment. These notes were so brief
that I may give them entire. “Won’t you give me
some sign that you didn’t mean to be so cruel as you seemed
on Tuesday?”—that was the first; the other was a
little longer. “If I was unreasonable or suspicious
on Tuesday—if I annoyed you or troubled you in any
way—I beg your forgiveness, and I promise never again to be
so foolish. I am punished enough, and I don’t
understand. Dear Morris, you are killing me!”
These notes were despatched on the Friday and Saturday; but
Saturday and Sunday passed without bringing the poor girl the
satisfaction she desired. Her punishment accumulated; she
continued to bear it, however, with a good deal of superficial
fortitude. On Saturday morning the Doctor, who had been
watching in silence, spoke to his sister Lavinia.</p>
<p>“The thing has happened—the scoundrel has backed
out!”</p>
<p>“Never!” cried Mrs. Penniman, who had bethought
herself what she should say to Catherine, but was not provided
with a line of defence against her brother, so that indignant
negation was the only weapon in her hands.</p>
<p>“He has begged for a reprieve, then, if you like that
better!”</p>
<p>“It seems to make you very happy that your
daughter’s affections have been trifled with.”</p>
<p>“It does,” said the Doctor; ‘“for I
had foretold it! It’s a great pleasure to be in the
right.”</p>
<p>“Your pleasures make one shudder!” his sister
exclaimed.</p>
<p>Catherine went rigidly through her usual occupations; that is,
up to the point of going with her aunt to church on Sunday
morning. She generally went to afternoon service as well;
but on this occasion her courage faltered, and she begged of Mrs.
Penniman to go without her.</p>
<p>“I am sure you have a secret,” said Mrs. Penniman,
with great significance, looking at her rather grimly.</p>
<p>“If I have, I shall keep it!” Catherine answered,
turning away.</p>
<p>Mrs. Penniman started for church; but before she had arrived,
she stopped and turned back, and before twenty minutes had
elapsed she re-entered the house, looked into the empty parlours,
and then went upstairs and knocked at Catherine’s
door. She got no answer; Catherine was not in her room, and
Mrs. Penniman presently ascertained that she was not in the
house. “She has gone to him, she has fled!”
Lavinia cried, clasping her hands with admiration and envy.
But she soon perceived that Catherine had taken nothing with
her—all her personal property in her room was
intact—and then she jumped at the hypothesis that the girl
had gone forth, not in tenderness, but in resentment.
“She has followed him to his own door—she has burst
upon him in his own apartment!” It was in these terms
that Mrs. Penniman depicted to herself her niece’s errand,
which, viewed in this light, gratified her sense of the
picturesque only a shade less strongly than the idea of a
clandestine marriage. To visit one’s lover, with
tears and reproaches, at his own residence, was an image so
agreeable to Mrs. Penniman’s mind that she felt a sort of
æsthetic disappointment at its lacking, in this case, the
harmonious accompaniments of darkness and storm. A quiet
Sunday afternoon appeared an inadequate setting for it; and,
indeed, Mrs. Penniman was quite out of humour with the conditions
of the time, which passed very slowly as she sat in the front
parlour in her bonnet and her cashmere shawl, awaiting
Catherine’s return.</p>
<p>This event at last took place. She saw her—at the
window—mount the steps, and she went to await her in the
hall, where she pounced upon her as soon as she had entered the
house, and drew her into the parlour, closing the door with
solemnity. Catherine was flushed, and her eye was
bright. Mrs. Penniman hardly knew what to think.</p>
<p>“May I venture to ask where you have been?” she
demanded.</p>
<p>“I have been to take a walk,” said
Catherine. “I thought you had gone to
church.”</p>
<p>“I did go to church; but the service was shorter than
usual. And pray, where did you walk?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know!” said Catherine.</p>
<p>“Your ignorance is most extraordinary! Dear
Catherine, you can trust me.”</p>
<p>“What am I to trust you with?”</p>
<p>“With your secret—your sorrow.”</p>
<p>“I have no sorrow!” said Catherine fiercely.</p>
<p>“My poor child,” Mrs. Penniman insisted,
“you can’t deceive me. I know everything.
I have been requested to—a—to converse with
you.”</p>
<p>“I don’t want to converse!”</p>
<p>“It will relieve you. Don’t you know
Shakespeare’s lines?—‘the grief that does not
speak!’ My dear girl, it is better as it
is.”</p>
<p>“What is better?” Catherine asked.</p>
<p>She was really too perverse. A certain amount of
perversity was to be allowed for in a young lady whose lover had
thrown her over; but not such an amount as would prove
inconvenient to his apologists. “That you should be
reasonable,” said Mrs. Penniman, with some sternness.
“That you should take counsel of worldly prudence, and
submit to practical considerations. That you should agree
to—a—separate.”</p>
<p>Catherine had been ice up to this moment, but at this word she
flamed up. “Separate? What do you know about
our separating?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Penniman shook her head with a sadness in which there was
almost a sense of injury. “Your pride is my pride,
and your susceptibilities are mine. I see your side
perfectly, but I also”—and she smiled with melancholy
suggestiveness—“I also see the situation as a
whole!”</p>
<p>This suggestiveness was lost upon Catherine, who repeated her
violent inquiry. “Why do you talk about separation;
what do you know about it?”</p>
<p>“We must study resignation,” said Mrs. Penniman,
hesitating, but sententious at a venture.</p>
<p>“Resignation to what?”</p>
<p>“To a change of—of our plans.”</p>
<p>“My plans have not changed!” said Catherine, with
a little laugh.</p>
<p>“Ah, but Mr. Townsend’s have,” her aunt
answered very gently.</p>
<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
<p>There was an imperious brevity in the tone of this inquiry,
against which Mrs. Penniman felt bound to protest; the
information with which she had undertaken to supply her niece
was, after all, a favour. She had tried sharpness, and she
had tried sternness: but neither would do; she was shocked at the
girl’s obstinacy. “Ah, well,” she said,
“if he hasn’t told you! . . . ” and she turned
away.</p>
<p>Catherine watched her a moment in silence; then she hurried
after her, stopping her before she reached the door.
“Told me what? What do you mean? What are you
hinting at and threatening me with?”</p>
<p>“Isn’t it broken off?” asked Mrs.
Penniman.</p>
<p>“My engagement? Not in the least!”</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon in that case. I have spoken too
soon!”</p>
<p>“Too soon! Soon or late,” Catherine broke
out, “you speak foolishly and cruelly!”</p>
<p>“What has happened between you, then?” asked her
aunt, struck by the sincerity of this cry. “For
something certainly has happened.”</p>
<p>“Nothing has happened but that I love him more and
more!”</p>
<p>Mrs. Penniman was silent an instant. “I suppose
that’s the reason you went to see him this
afternoon.”</p>
<p>Catherine flushed as if she had been struck. “Yes,
I did go to see him! But that’s my own
business.”</p>
<p>“Very well, then; we won’t talk about
it.” And Mrs. Penniman moved towards the door
again. But she was stopped by a sudden imploring cry from
the girl.</p>
<p>“Aunt Lavinia, <i>where</i> has he gone?”</p>
<p>“Ah, you admit, then, that he has gone away?
Didn’t they know at his house?”</p>
<p>“They said he had left town. I asked no more
questions; I was ashamed,” said Catherine, simply
enough.</p>
<p>“You needn’t have taken so compromising a step if
you had had a little more confidence in me,” Mrs. Penniman
observed, with a good deal of grandeur.</p>
<p>“Is it to New Orleans?” Catherine went on
irrelevantly.</p>
<p>It was the first time Mrs. Penniman had heard of New Orleans
in this connexion; but she was averse to letting Catherine know
that she was in the dark. She attempted to strike an
illumination from the instructions she had received from
Morris. “My dear Catherine,” she said,
“when a separation has been agreed upon, the farther he
goes away the better.”</p>
<p>“Agreed upon? Has he agreed upon it with
you?” A consummate sense of her aunt’s
meddlesome folly had come over her during the last five minutes,
and she was sickened at the thought that Mrs. Penniman had been
let loose, as it were, upon her happiness.</p>
<p>“He certainly has sometimes advised with me,” said
Mrs. Penniman.</p>
<p>“Is it you, then, that have changed him and made him so
unnatural?” Catherine cried. “Is it you that
have worked on him and taken him from me? He doesn’t
belong to you, and I don’t see how you have anything to do
with what is between us! Is it you that have made this plot
and told him to leave me? How could you be so wicked, so
cruel? What have I ever done to you; why can’t you
leave me alone? I was afraid you would spoil everything;
for you <i>do</i> spoil everything you touch; I was afraid of you
all the time we were abroad; I had no rest when I thought that
you were always talking to him.” Catherine went on
with growing vehemence, pouring out in her bitterness and in the
clairvoyance of her passion (which suddenly, jumping all
processes, made her judge her aunt finally and without appeal)
the uneasiness which had lain for so many months upon her
heart.</p>
<p>Mrs. Penniman was scared and bewildered; she saw no prospect
of introducing her little account of the purity of Morris’s
motives. “You are a most ungrateful girl!” she
cried. “Do you scold me for talking with him? I
am sure we never talked of anything but you!”</p>
<p>“Yes; and that was the way you worried him; you made him
tired of my very name! I wish you had never spoken of me to
him; I never asked your help!”</p>
<p>“I am sure if it hadn’t been for me he would never
have come to the house, and you would never have known what he
thought of you,” Mrs. Penniman rejoined, with a good deal
of justice.</p>
<p>“I wish he never had come to the house, and that I never
had known it! That’s better than this,” said
poor Catherine.</p>
<p>“You are a very ungrateful girl,” Aunt Lavinia
repeated.</p>
<p>Catherine’s outbreak of anger and the sense of wrong
gave her, while they lasted, the satisfaction that comes from all
assertion of force; they hurried her along, and there is always a
sort of pleasure in cleaving the air. But at the bottom she
hated to be violent, and she was conscious of no aptitude for
organised resentment. She calmed herself with a great
effort, but with great rapidity, and walked about the room a few
moments, trying to say to herself that her aunt had meant
everything for the best. She did not succeed in saying it
with much conviction, but after a little she was able to speak
quietly enough.</p>
<p>“I am not ungrateful, but I am very unhappy.
It’s hard to be grateful for that,” she said.
“Will you please tell me where he is?”</p>
<p>“I haven’t the least idea; I am not in secret
correspondence with him!” And Mrs. Penniman wished
indeed that she were, so that she might let him know how
Catherine abused her, after all she had done.</p>
<p>“Was it a plan of his, then, to break
off—?” By this time Catherine had become
completely quiet.</p>
<p>Mrs. Penniman began again to have a glimpse of her chance for
explaining. “He shrank—he shrank,” she
said. “He lacked courage, but it was the courage to
injure you! He couldn’t bear to bring down on you
your father’s curse.”</p>
<p>Catherine listened to this with her eyes fixed upon her aunt,
and continued to gaze at her for some time afterwards.
“Did he tell you to say that?”</p>
<p>“He told me to say many things—all so delicate, so
discriminating. And he told me to tell you he hoped you
wouldn’t despise him.”</p>
<p>“I don’t,” said Catherine. And then
she added: “And will he stay away for ever?”</p>
<p>“Oh, for ever is a long time. Your father,
perhaps, won’t live for ever.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps not.”</p>
<p>“I am sure you appreciate—you
understand—even though your heart bleeds,” said Mrs.
Penniman. “You doubtless think him too
scrupulous. So do I, but I respect his scruples. What
he asks of you is that you should do the same.”</p>
<p>Catherine was still gazing at her aunt, but she spoke at last,
as if she had not heard or not understood her. “It
has been a regular plan, then. He has broken it off
deliberately; he has given me up.”</p>
<p>“For the present, dear Catherine. He has put it
off only.”</p>
<p>“He has left me alone,” Catherine went on.</p>
<p>“Haven’t you <i>me</i>?” asked Mrs.
Penniman, with much expression.</p>
<p>Catherine shook her head slowly. “I don’t
believe it!” and she left the room.</p>
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