<h2><SPAN name="page205"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>XXXI</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Though</span> she had forced herself to be
calm, she preferred practising this virtue in private, and she
forbore to show herself at tea—a repast which, on Sundays,
at six o’clock, took the place of dinner. Dr. Sloper
and his sister sat face to face, but Mrs. Penniman never met her
brother’s eye. Late in the evening she went with him,
but without Catherine, to their sister Almond’s, where,
between the two ladies, Catherine’s unhappy situation was
discussed with a frankness that was conditioned by a good deal of
mysterious reticence on Mrs. Penniman’s part.</p>
<p>“I am delighted he is not to marry her,” said Mrs.
Almond, “but he ought to be horsewhipped all the
same.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Penniman, who was shocked at her sister’s
coarseness, replied that he had been actuated by the noblest of
motives—the desire not to impoverish Catherine.</p>
<p>“I am very happy that Catherine is not to be
impoverished—but I hope he may never have a penny too
much! And what does the poor girl say to <i>you</i>?”
Mrs. Almond asked.</p>
<p>“She says I have a genius for consolation,” said
Mrs. Penniman.</p>
<p>This was the account of the matter that she gave to her
sister, and it was perhaps with the consciousness of genius that,
on her return that evening to Washington Square, she again
presented herself for admittance at Catherine’s door.
Catherine came and opened it; she was apparently very quiet.</p>
<p>“I only want to give you a little word of advice,”
she said. “If your father asks you, say that
everything is going on.”</p>
<p>Catherine stood there, with her hand on the knob looking at
her aunt, but not asking her to come in. “Do you
think he will ask me?”</p>
<p>“I am sure he will. He asked me just now, on our
way home from your Aunt Elizabeth’s. I explained the
whole thing to your Aunt Elizabeth. I said to your father I
know nothing about it.”</p>
<p>“Do you think he will ask me when he sees—when he
sees—?” But here Catherine stopped.</p>
<p>“The more he sees the more disagreeable he will
be,” said her aunt.</p>
<p>“He shall see as little as possible!” Catherine
declared.</p>
<p>“Tell him you are to be married.”</p>
<p>“So I am,” said Catherine softly; and she closed
the door upon her aunt.</p>
<p>She could not have said this two days later—for
instance, on Tuesday, when she at last received a letter from
Morris Townsend. It was an epistle of considerable length,
measuring five large square pages, and written at
Philadelphia. It was an explanatory document, and it
explained a great many things, chief among which were the
considerations that had led the writer to take advantage of an
urgent “professional” absence to try and banish from
his mind the image of one whose path he had crossed only to
scatter it with ruins. He ventured to expect but partial
success in this attempt, but he could promise her that, whatever
his failure, he would never again interpose between her generous
heart and her brilliant prospects and filial duties. He
closed with an intimation that his professional pursuits might
compel him to travel for some months, and with the hope that when
they should each have accommodated themselves to what was sternly
involved in their respective positions—even should this
result not be reached for years—they should meet as
friends, as fellow-sufferers, as innocent but philosophic victims
of a great social law. That her life should be peaceful and
happy was the dearest wish of him who ventured still to subscribe
himself her most obedient servant. The letter was
beautifully written, and Catherine, who kept it for many years
after this, was able, when her sense of the bitterness of its
meaning and the hollowness of its tone had grown less acute, to
admire its grace of expression. At present, for a long time
after she received it, all she had to help her was the
determination, daily more rigid, to make no appeal to the
compassion of her father.</p>
<p>He suffered a week to elapse, and then one day, in the
morning, at an hour at which she rarely saw him, he strolled into
the back parlour. He had watched his time, and he found her
alone. She was sitting with some work, and he came and
stood in front of her. He was going out, he had on his hat
and was drawing on his gloves.</p>
<p>“It doesn’t seem to me that you are treating me
just now with all the consideration I deserve,” he said in
a moment.</p>
<p>“I don’t know what I have done,” Catherine
answered, with her eyes on her work.</p>
<p>“You have apparently quite banished from your mind the
request I made you at Liverpool, before we sailed; the request
that you would notify me in advance before leaving my
house.”</p>
<p>“I have not left your house!” said Catherine.</p>
<p>“But you intend to leave it, and by what you gave me to
understand, your departure must be impending. In fact,
though you are still here in body, you are already absent in
spirit. Your mind has taken up its residence with your
prospective husband, and you might quite as well be lodged under
the conjugal roof, for all the benefit we get from your
society.”</p>
<p>“I will try and be more cheerful!” said
Catherine.</p>
<p>“You certainly ought to be cheerful, you ask a great
deal if you are not. To the pleasure of marrying a
brilliant young man, you add that of having your own way; you
strike me as a very lucky young lady!”</p>
<p>Catherine got up; she was suffocating. But she folded
her work, deliberately and correctly, bending her burning face
upon it. Her father stood where he had planted himself; she
hoped he would go, but he smoothed and buttoned his gloves, and
then he rested his hands upon his hips.</p>
<p>“It would be a convenience to me to know when I may
expect to have an empty house,” he went on.
“When you go, your aunt marches.”</p>
<p>She looked at him at last, with a long silent gaze, which, in
spite of her pride and her resolution, uttered part of the appeal
she had tried not to make. Her father’s cold grey eye
sounded her own, and he insisted on his point.</p>
<p>“Is it to-morrow? Is it next week, or the week
after?”</p>
<p>“I shall not go away!” said Catherine.</p>
<p>The Doctor raised his eyebrows. “Has he backed
out?”</p>
<p>“I have broken off my engagement.”</p>
<p>“Broken it off?”</p>
<p>“I have asked him to leave New York, and he has gone
away for a long time.”</p>
<p>The Doctor was both puzzled and disappointed, but he solved
his perplexity by saying to himself that his daughter simply
misrepresented—justifiably, if one would? but nevertheless
misrepresented—the facts; and he eased off his
disappointment, which was that of a man losing a chance for a
little triumph that he had rather counted on, by a few words that
he uttered aloud.</p>
<p>“How does he take his dismissal?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know!” said Catherine, less
ingeniously than she had hitherto spoken.</p>
<p>“You mean you don’t care? You are rather
cruel, after encouraging him and playing with him for so
long!”</p>
<p>The Doctor had his revenge, after all.</p>
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