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<h2> CHAPTER VII. THE CRISIS </h2>
<p>It was a confirmed suspicion when he beheld Lord Dannisburgh on the box of
a four-in-hand, and the peerless Diana beside him, cockaded lackeys in
plain livery and the lady's maid to the rear. But Lord Dannisburgh's visit
was a compliment, and the freak of his driving down under the beams of
Aurora on a sober Sunday morning capital fun; so with a gaiety that was
kept alive for the invalid Emma to partake of it, they rattled away to the
heights, and climbed them, and Diana rushed to the arms of her friend,
whispering and cooing for pardon if she startled her, guilty of a little
whiff of blarney:—Lord Dannisburgh wanted so much to be introduced
to her, and she so much wanted her to know him, and she hoped to be
graciously excused for thus bringing them together, 'that she might be
chorus to them!' Chorus was a pretty fiction on the part of the thrilling
and topping voice. She was the very radiant Diana of her earliest opening
day, both in look and speech, a queenly comrade, and a spirit leaping and
shining like a mountain water. She did not seduce, she ravished. The
judgement was taken captive and flowed with her. As to the prank of the
visit, Emma heartily enjoyed it and hugged it for a holiday of her own,
and doating on the beautiful, darkeyed, fresh creature, who bore the name
of the divine Huntress, she thought her a true Dian in stature, step, and
attributes, the genius of laughter superadded. None else on earth so
sweetly laughed, none so spontaneously, victoriously provoked the
healthful openness. Her delicious chatter, and her museful sparkle in
listening, equally quickened every sense of life. Adorable as she was to
her friend Emma at all times, she that day struck a new fountain in
memory. And it was pleasant to see the great lord's admiration of this
wonder. One could firmly believe in their friendship, and his winning
ideas from the abounding bubbling well. A recurrent smile beamed on his
face when hearing and observing her. Certain dishes provided at the table
were Diana's favourites, and he relished them, asking for a second help,
and remarking that her taste was good in that as in all things. They
lunched, eating like boys. They walked over the grounds of Copsley, and
into the lanes and across the meadows of the cowslip, rattling, chatting,
enlivening the frosty air, happy as children biting to the juices of ripe
apples off the tree. But Tony was the tree, the dispenser of the rosy
gifts. She had a moment of reflection, only a moment, and Emma felt the
pause as though a cloud had shadowed them and a spirit had been shut away.
Both spoke of their happiness at the kiss of parting. That melancholy note
at the top of the wave to human hearts conscious of its enforced decline
was repeated by them, and Diana's eyelids blinked to dismiss a tear.</p>
<p>'You have no troubles?' Emma said.</p>
<p>'Only the pain of the good-bye to my beloved,' said Diana. 'I have never
been happier—never shall be! Now you know him you think with me? I
knew you would. You have seen him as he always is—except when he is
armed for battle. He is the kindest of souls. And soul I say. He is the
one man among men who gives me notions of a soul in men.'</p>
<p>The eulogy was exalted. Lady Dunstane made a little mouth for Oh, in
correction of the transcendental touch, though she remembered their
foregone conversations upon men—strange beings that they are!—and
understood Diana's meaning.</p>
<p>'Really! really! honour!' Diana emphasized her extravagant praise, to
print it fast. 'Hear him speak of Ireland.'</p>
<p>'Would he not speak of Ireland in a tone to catch the Irishwoman?'</p>
<p>'He is past thoughts of catching, dearest. At that age men are pools of
fish, or what you will: they are not anglers. Next year, if you invite us,
we will come again.'</p>
<p>'But you will come to stay in the Winter?'</p>
<p>'Certainly. But I am speaking of one of my holidays.'</p>
<p>They kissed fervently. The lady mounted; the grey and portly lord followed
her; Sir Lukin flourished his whip, and Emma was left to brood over her
friend's last words: 'One of my holidays.' Not a hint to the detriment of
her husband had passed. The stray beam balefully illuminating her marriage
slipped from her involuntarily. Sir Lukin was troublesome with his
ejaculations that evening, and kept speculating on the time of the arrival
of the four-in-hand in London; upon which he thought a great deal
depended. They had driven out of town early, and if they drove back late
they would not be seen, as all the cacklers were sure then to be dressing
for dinner, and he would not pass the Clubs. 'I couldn't suggest it,' he
said. 'But Dannisburgh's an old hand. But they say he snaps his fingers at
tattle, and laughs. Well, it doesn't matter for him, perhaps, but a game
of two.... Oh! it'll be all right. They can't reach London before dusk.
And the cat's away.'</p>
<p>'It's more than ever incomprehensible to me how she could have married
that man,' said his wife.</p>
<p>'I've long since given it up,' said he.</p>
<p>Diana wrote her thanks for the delightful welcome, telling of her drive
home to smoke and solitude, with a new host of romantic sensations to keep
her company. She wrote thrice in the week, and the same addition of one to
the ordinary number next week. Then for three weeks not a line. Sir Lukin
brought news from London that Warwick had returned, nothing to explain the
silence. A letter addressed to The Crossways was likewise unnoticed. The
supposition that they must be visiting on a round, appeared rational; but
many weeks elapsed, until Sir Lukin received a printed sheet in the
superscription of a former military comrade, who had marked a paragraph.
It was one of those journals, now barely credible, dedicated to the putrid
of the upper circle, wherein initials raised sewer-lamps, and Asmodeus
lifted a roof, leering hideously. Thousands detested it, and fattened
their crops on it. Domesticated beasts of superior habits to the common
will indulge themselves with a luxurious roll in carrion, for a revival of
their original instincts. Society was largely a purchaser. The ghastly
thing was dreaded as a scourge, hailed as a refreshment, nourished as a
parasite. It professed undaunted honesty, and operated in the fashion of
the worms bred of decay. Success was its boasted justification. The animal
world, when not rigorously watched, will always crown with success the
machine supplying its appetites. The old dog-world took signal from it.
The one-legged devil-god waved his wooden hoof, and the creatures in view,
the hunt was uproarious. Why should we seem better than we are? down with
hypocrisy, cried the censor morum, spicing the lamentable derelictions of
this and that great person, male and female. The plea of corruption of
blood in the world, to excuse the public chafing of a grievous itch, is
not less old than sin; and it offers a merry day of frisky truant running
to the animal made unashamed by another and another stripped, branded, and
stretched flat. Sir Lukin read of Mr. and Mrs. W. and a distinguished Peer
of the realm. The paragraph was brief; it had a flavour. Promise of more
to come, pricked curiosity. He read it enraged, feeling for his wife; and
again indignant, feeling for Diana. His third reading found him out: he
felt for both, but as a member of the whispering world, much behind the
scenes, he had a longing for the promised insinuations, just to know what
they could say, or dared say. The paper was not shown to Lady Dunstane. A
run to London put him in the tide of the broken dam of gossip. The names
were openly spoken and swept from mouth to mouth of the scandalmongers,
gathering matter as they flew. He knocked at Diana's door, where he was
informed that the mistress of the house was absent. More than official
gravity accompanied the announcement. Her address was unknown. Sir Lukin
thought it now time to tell his wife. He began with a hesitating
circumlocution, in order to prepare her mind for bad news. She divined
immediately that it concerned Diana, and forcing him to speak to the
point, she had the story jerked out to her in a sentence. It stopped her
heart.</p>
<p>The chill of death was tasted in that wavering ascent from oblivion to
recollection. Why had not Diana come to her, she asked herself, and asked
her husband; who, as usual, was absolutely unable to say. Under compulsory
squeezing, he would have answered, that she did not come because she could
not fib so easily to her bosom friend: and this he thought,
notwithstanding his personal experience of Diana's generosity. But he had
other personal experiences of her sex, and her sex plucked at the bright
star and drowned it.</p>
<p>The happy day of Lord Dannisburgh's visit settled in Emma's belief as the
cause of Mr. Warwick's unpardonable suspicions and cruelty. Arguing from
her own sensations of a day that had been like the return of sweet health
to her frame, she could see nothing but the loveliest freakish innocence
in Diana's conduct, and she recalled her looks, her words, every fleeting
gesture, even to the ingenuousness of the noble statesman's admiration of
her, for the confusion of her unmanly and unworthy husband. And Emma was
nevertheless a thoughtful person; only her heart was at the head of her
thoughts, and led the file, whose reasoning was accurate on erratic
tracks. All night her heart went at fever pace. She brought the repentant
husband to his knees, and then doubted, strongly doubted, whether she
would, whether in consideration for her friend she could, intercede with
Diana to forgive him. In the morning she slept heavily. Sir Lukin had gone
to London early for further tidings. She awoke about midday, and found a
letter on her pillow. It was Diana's. Then while her fingers eagerly tore
it open, her heart, the champion rider over-night, sank. It needed support
of facts, and feared them: not in distrust of that dear persecuted soul,
but because the very bravest of hearts is of its nature a shivering
defender, sensitive in the presence of any hostile array, much craving for
material support, until the mind and spirit displace it, depute it to
second them instead of leading.</p>
<p>She read by a dull November fog-light a mixture of the dreadful and the
comforting, and dwelt upon the latter in abandonment, hugged it, though
conscious of evil and the little that there was to veritably console.</p>
<p>The close of the letter struck the blow. After bluntly stating that Mr.
Warwick had served her with a process, and that he had no case without
suborning witnesses, Diana said: 'But I leave the case, and him, to the
world. Ireland, or else America, it is a guiltless kind of suicide to bury
myself abroad. He has my letters. They are such as I can own to you; and
ask you to kiss me—and kiss me when you have heard all the evidence,
all that I can add to it, kiss me. You know me too well to think I would
ask you to kiss criminal lips. But I cannot face the world. In the dock,
yes. Not where I am expected to smile and sparkle, on pain of incurring
suspicion if I show a sign of oppression. I cannot do that. I see myself
wearing a false grin—your Tony! No, I do well to go. This is my
resolution; and in consequence,—my beloved! my only truly loved on
earth! I do not come to you, to grieve you, as I surely should. Nor would
it soothe me, dearest. This will be to you the best of reasons. It could
not soothe me to see myself giving pain to Emma. I am like a pestilence,
and let me swing away to the desert, for there I do no harm. I know I am
right. I have questioned myself—it is not cowardice. I do not quail.
I abhor the part of actress. I should do it well—too well; destroy
my soul in the performance. Is a good name before such a world as this
worth that sacrifice? A convent and self-quenching;—cloisters would
seem to me like holy dew. But that would be sleep, and I feel the powers
of life. Never have I felt them so mightily. If it were not for being
called on to act and mew, I would stay, fight, meet a bayonet-hedge of
charges and rebut them. I have my natural weapons and my cause. It must be
confessed that I have also more knowledge of men and the secret contempt—it
must be—the best of them entertain for us. Oh! and we confirm it if
we trust them. But they have been at a wicked school.</p>
<p>'I will write. From whatever place, you shall have letters, and constant.
I write no more now. In my present mood I find no alternative between
rageing and drivelling. I am henceforth dead to the world. Never dead to
Emma till my breath is gone—poor flame! I blow at a bed-room candle,
by which I write in a brown fog, and behold what I am—though not
even serving to write such a tangled scrawl as this. I am of no mortal
service. In two days I shall be out of England. Within a week you shall
hear where. I long for your heart on mine, your dear eyes. You have faith
in me, and I fly from you!—I must be mad. Yet I feel calmly
reasonable. I know that this is the thing to do. Some years hence a grey
woman may return, to hear of a butterfly Diana, that had her day and
disappeared. Better than a mewing and courtseying simulacrum of the woman—I
drivel again. Adieu. I suppose I am not liable to capture and imprisonment
until the day when my name is cited to appear. I have left London. This
letter and I quit the scene by different routes—I would they were
one. My beloved! I have an ache—I think I am wronging you. I am not
mistress of myself, and do as something within me, wiser, than I,
dictates.—You will write kindly. Write your whole heart. It is not
compassion I want, I want you. I can bear stripes from you. Let me hear
Emma's voice—the true voice. This running away merits your
reproaches. It will look like—. I have more to confess: the tigress
in me wishes it were! I should then have a reckless passion to fold me
about, and the glory infernal, if you name it so, and so it would be—of
suffering for and with some one else. As it is, I am utterly solitary,
sustained neither from above nor below, except within myself, and that is
all fire and smoke, like their new engines.—I kiss this miserable
sheet of paper. Yes, I judge that I have run off a line—and what a
line! which hardly shows a trace for breathing things to follow until they
feel the transgression in wreck. How immensely nature seems to prefer men
to women!—But this paper is happier than the writer.</p>
<p>'Your TONY.'<br/></p>
<p>That was the end. Emma kissed it in tears. They had often talked of the
possibility of a classic friendship between women, the alliance of a
mutual devotedness men choose to doubt of. She caught herself accusing
Tony of the lapse from friendship. Hither should the true friend have
flown unerringly.</p>
<p>The blunt ending of the letter likewise dealt a wound. She reperused it,
perused and meditated. The flight of Mrs. Warwick! She heard that
cry-fatal! But she had no means of putting a hand on her. 'Your Tony.' The
coldness might be set down to exhaustion: it might, yet her not coming to
her friend for counsel and love was a positive weight in the indifferent
scale. She read the letter backwards, and by snatches here and there; many
perusals and hours passed before the scattered creature exhibited in its
pages came to her out of the flying threads of the web as her living Tony,
whom she loved and prized and was ready to defend gainst the world. By
that time the fog had lifted; she saw the sky on the borders of milky
cloudfolds. Her invalid's chill sensitiveness conceived a sympathy in the
baring heavens, and lying on her sofa in the drawing-room she gained
strength of meditative vision, weak though she was to help, through
ceasing to brood on her wound and herself. She cast herself into her dear
Tony's feelings; and thus it came, that she imagined Tony would visit The
Crossways, where she kept souvenirs of her father, his cane, and his
writing-desk, and a precious miniature of him hanging above it, before
leaving England forever. The fancy sprang to certainty; every speculation
confirmed it.</p>
<p>Had Sir Lukin been at home she would have despatched him to The Crossways
at once. The West wind blew, and gave her a view of the Downs beyond the
Weald from her southern window. She thought it even possible to drive
there and reach the place, on the chance of her vivid suggestion, some
time after nightfall; but a walk across the room to try her forces was too
convincing of her inability. She walked with an ebony silver-mounted
stick, a present from Mr. Redworth. She was leaning on it when the card of
Thomas Redworth was handed to her.</p>
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