<p><SPAN name="c36" id="c36"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XXXVI.</h3>
<h3>John Grey Goes a Second Time to London.<br/> </h3>
<p>Early in that conversation which Mr. Vavasor had with his daughter,
and which was recorded a few pages back, he implored her to pause a
while before she informed Mr. Grey of her engagement with her cousin.
Nothing, however, on that point had been settled between them. Mr.
Vavasor had wished her to say that she would not write till he should
have assented to her doing so. She had declined to bind herself in
this way, and then they had gone off to other things;—to George
Vavasor's character and the disposition of her money. Alice, however,
had felt herself bound not to write to Mr. Grey quite at once. Indeed,
when her cousin left her she had no appetite for writing such a
letter as hers was to be. A day or two passed by her in this way, and
nothing more was said by her or her father. It was now the middle of
January, and the reader may remember that Mr. Grey had promised that
he would come to her in London in that month, as soon as he should
know that she had returned from Westmoreland. She must at any rate do
something to prevent that visit. Mr. Grey would not come without
giving her notice. She knew enough of the habits of the man to be
sure of that. But she desired that her letter to him should be in
time to prevent his to her; so when those few days were gone, she sat
down to write without speaking to her father again upon the subject.</p>
<p>It was a terrible job;—perhaps the most difficult of all the
difficult tasks which her adverse fate had imposed upon her. She
found when she did attempt it, that she could have done it better if
she had done it at the moment when she was writing the other letter
to her cousin George. Then Kate had been near her, and she had been
comforted by Kate's affectionate happiness. She had been strengthened
at that moment by a feeling that she was doing the best in her power,
if not for herself, at any rate for others. All that comfort and all
that strength had left her now. The atmosphere of the fells had
buoyed her up, and now the thick air of London depressed her. She sat
for hours with the pen in her hand, and could not write the letter.
She let a day go by and a night, and still it was not written. She
hardly knew herself in her unnatural weakness. As the mental
photographs of the two men forced themselves upon her, she could not
force herself to forget those words—"Look here, upon this
picture—and on this." How was it that she now knew how great was the
difference between the two men, how immense the pre-eminence of him
whom she had rejected;—and that she had not before been able to see
this on any of those many previous occasions on which she had
compared the two together? As she thought of her cousin George's face
when he left her room a few days since, and remembered Mr. Grey's
countenance when last he held her hand at Cheltenham, the quiet
dignity of his beauty which would submit to show no consciousness of
injury, she could not but tell herself that when Paradise had been
opened to her, she had declared herself to be fit only for
Pandemonium. In that was her chief misery; that now,—now when it was
too late,—she could look at it aright.</p>
<p>But the letter must be written, and on the second day she declared to
herself that she would not rise from her chair till it was done. The
letter was written on that day and was posted. I will now ask the
reader to go down with me to Nethercoats that we may be present with
John Grey when he received it. He was sitting at breakfast in his
study there, and opposite to him, lounging in an arm-chair, with a
<i>Quarterly</i> in his hand, was the most intimate of his friends, Frank
Seward, a fellow of the college to which they had both belonged. Mr.
Seward was a clergyman, and the tutor of his college, and a man who
worked very hard at Cambridge. In the days of his leisure he spent
much of his time at Nethercoats, and he was the only man to whom Grey
had told anything of his love for Alice and of his disappointment.
Even to Seward he had not told the whole story. He had at first
informed his friend that he was engaged to be married, and as he had
told this as no secret,—having even said that he hated secrets on
such matters,—the engagement had been mentioned in the common room
of their college, and men at Cambridge knew that Mr. Grey was going to
take to himself a wife. Then Mr. Seward had been told that trouble had
come, and that it was not improbable that there would be no such
marriage. Even when saying this Mr. Grey told none of the particulars,
though he owned to his friend that a heavy blow had struck him. His
intimacy with Seward was of that thorough kind which is engendered
only out of such young and lasting friendship as had existed between
them; but even to such a friend as this Mr. Grey could not open his
whole heart. It was only to a friend who should also be his wife that
he could do that,—as he himself thoroughly understood. He had felt
that such a friend was wanting to him, and he had made the attempt.</p>
<p>"Don't speak of this as yet," he had said to Mr. Seward. "Of course
when the matter is settled, those few people who know me must know
it. But perhaps there may be a doubt as yet, and as long as there is
a doubt, it is better that it should not be discussed."</p>
<p>He had said no more than this,—had imputed no blame to Alice,—had
told none of the circumstances; but Seward had known that the girl
had jilted his friend, and had made up his mind that she must be
heartless and false. He had known also that his friend would never
look for any other such companion for his home.</p>
<p>Letters were brought to each of them on this morning, and Seward's
attention was of course occupied by those which he received. Grey, as
soon as the envelopes had touched his hand, became aware that one of
them was from Alice, and this he at once opened. He did it very
calmly, but without any of that bravado of indifference with which
George Vavasor had received Alice's letter from Westmoreland. "It is
right that I should tell you at once," said Alice, rushing into the
middle of her subject without even the formality of the customary
address—"It is right that I should tell you at once
<span class="nowrap">that—." </span>Oh, the
difficulty which she had encountered when her words had carried her
as far as this!—"that my cousin, George Vavasor, has repeated to me
his offer of marriage, and that I have accepted it. I tell you,
chiefly in order that I may save you from the trouble which you
purposed to take when I last saw you at Cheltenham. I will not tell
you any of the circumstances of this engagement, because I have no
right to presume that you will care to hear them. I hardly dare to
ask you to believe of me that in all that I have done, I have
endeavoured to act with truth and honesty. That I have been very
ignorant, foolish,—what you will that is bad, I know well; otherwise
there could not have been so much in the last few years of my life on
which I am utterly ashamed to look back. For the injury that I have
done you, I can only express deep contrition. I do not dare to ask
you to forgive me.—ALICE VAVASOR." She had tormented herself in
writing this,—had so nearly driven herself distracted with attempts
which she had destroyed, that she would not even read once to herself
these last words. "He'll know it, and that is all that is necessary,"
she said to herself as she sent the letter away from her.</p>
<p>Mr. Grey read it twice over, leaving the other letters unnoticed on
the table by his tea-cup. He read it twice over, and the work of
reading it was one to him of intense agony. Hitherto he had fed
himself with hope. That Alice should have been brought to think of
her engagement with him in a spirit of doubt and with a mind so
troubled, that she had been inclined to attempt an escape from it,
had been very grievous to him; but it had been in his mind a fantasy,
a morbid fear of himself, which might be cured by time. He, at any
rate, would give all his energies towards achieving such a cure.
There had been one thing, however, which he most feared;—which he
had chiefly feared, though he had forbidden himself to think that it
could be probable, and this thing had now happened.</p>
<p>He had ever disliked and feared George Vavasor;—not from any effect
which the man had upon himself, for as we know his acquaintance with
Vavasor was of the slightest;—but he had feared and disliked his
influence upon Alice. He had also feared the influence of her cousin
Kate. To have cautioned Alice against her cousins would have been to
him impossible. It was not his nature to express suspicion to one he
loved. Is the tone of that letter remembered in which he had answered
Alice when she informed him that her cousin George was to go with
Kate and her to Switzerland? He had written, with a pleasant joke,
words which Alice had been able to read with some little feeling of
triumph to her two friends. He had not so written because he liked
what he knew of the man. He disliked all that he knew of him. But it
had not been possible for him to show that he distrusted the prudence
of her, whom, as his future wife, he was prepared to trust in all
things.</p>
<p>I have said that he read Alice's letter with an agony of sorrow; as
he sat with it in his hand he suffered as, probably, he had never
suffered before. But there was nothing in his countenance to show
that he was in pain. Seward had received some long epistle, crossed
from end to end,—indicative, I should say, of a not far distant
termination to that college tutorship,—and was reading it with
placid contentment. It did not occur to him to look across at Grey,
but had he done so, I doubt whether he would have seen anything to
attract his attention. But Grey, though he was wounded, would not
allow himself to be dismayed. There was less hope now than before,
but there might still be hope;—hope for her, even though there might
be none for him. Tidings had reached his ears also as to George
Vavasor, which had taught him to believe that the man was needy,
reckless, and on the brink of ruin. Such a marriage to Alice Vavasor
would be altogether ruinous. Whatever might be his own ultimate fate
he would still seek to save her from that. Her cousin, doubtless,
wanted her money. Might it not be possible that he would be satisfied
with her money, and that thus the woman might be saved?</p>
<p>"Seward," he said at last, addressing his friend, who had not yet
come to the end of the last crossed page.</p>
<p>"Is there anything wrong?" said Seward.</p>
<p>"Well;—yes; there is something a little wrong. I fear I must leave
you, and go up to town to-day."</p>
<p>"Nobody ill, I hope?"</p>
<p>"No;—nobody is ill. But I must go up to London. Mrs. Bole will take
care of you, and you must not be angry with me for leaving you."</p>
<p>Seward assured him that he would not be in the least angry, and that
he was thoroughly conversant with the capabilities and good
intentions of Mrs. Bole the housekeeper; but added, that as he was so
near his own college, he would of course go back to Cambridge. He
longed to say some word as to the purpose of Grey's threatened
journey; to make some inquiry as to this new trouble; but he knew
that Grey was a man who did not well bear close inquiries, and he was
silent.</p>
<p>"Why not stay here?" said Grey, after a minute's pause. "I wish you
would, old fellow; I do, indeed." There was a tone of special
affection in his voice which struck Seward at once. "If I can be of
the slightest service or comfort to you, I will of course."</p>
<p>Grey again sat silent for a little while. "I wish you would; I do,
indeed."</p>
<p>"Then I will." And again there was a pause.</p>
<p>"I have got a letter here from—Miss Vavasor," said Grey.</p>
<p>"May I hope that—"</p>
<p>"No;—it does not bring good news to me. I do not know that I can
tell it you all. I would if I could, but the whole story is one not
to be told in a hurry. I should leave false impressions. There are
things which a man cannot tell."</p>
<p>"Indeed there are," said Seward.</p>
<p>"I wish with all my heart that you knew it all as I know it; but that
is impossible. There are things which happen in a day which it would
take a lifetime to explain." Then there was another pause. "I have
heard bad news this morning, and I must go up to London at once. I
shall go into Ely so as to be there by twelve; and if you will, you
shall drive me over. I may be back in a day; certainly in less than a
week; but it will be a comfort to me to know that I shall find you
here."</p>
<p>The matter was so arranged, and at eleven they started. During the
first two miles not a word was spoken between them. "Seward," Grey
said at last, "if I fail in what I am going to attempt, it is
probable that you will never hear Alice Vavasor's name mentioned by
me again; but I want you always to bear this in mind;—that at no
moment has my opinion of her ever been changed, nor must you in such
case imagine from my silence that it has changed. Do you understand
me?"</p>
<p>"I think I do."</p>
<p>"To my thinking she is the finest of God's creatures that I have
known. It may be that in her future life she will be severed from me
altogether; but I shall not, therefore, think the less well of her;
and I wish that you, as my friend, should know that I so esteem her,
even though her name should never be mentioned between us." Seward,
in some few words, assured him that it should be so, and then they
finished their journey in silence.</p>
<p>From the station at Ely, Grey sent a message by the wires up to John
Vavasor, saying that he would call on him that afternoon at his
office in Chancery Lane. The chances were always much against finding
Mr. Vavasor at his office; but on this occasion the telegram did reach
him there, and he remained till the unaccustomed hour of half past
four to meet the man who was to have been his son-in-law.</p>
<p>"Have you heard from her?" he asked as soon as Grey entered the dingy
little room, not in Chancery Lane, but in its neighbourhood, which
was allocated to him for his signing purposes.</p>
<p>"Yes,"—said Grey; "she has written to me."</p>
<p>"And told you about her cousin George. I tried to hinder her from
writing, but she is very wilful."</p>
<p>"Why should you have hindered her? If the thing was to be told, it is
better that it should be done at once."</p>
<p>"But I hoped that there might be an escape. I don't know what you
think of all this, Grey, but to me it is the bitterest misfortune
that I have known. And I've had some bitter things, too," he
added,—thinking of that period of his life, when the work of which
he was ashamed was first ordained as his future task.</p>
<p>"What is the escape that you hoped?" asked Grey.</p>
<p>"I hardly know. The whole thing seems to me to be so mad, that I
partly trusted that she would see the madness of it. I am not sure
whether you know anything of my nephew George?" asked Mr. Vavasor.</p>
<p>"Very little," said Grey.</p>
<p>"I believe him to be utterly an adventurer,—a man without means and
without principle,—upon the whole about as bad a man as you may
meet. I give you my word, Grey, that I don't think I know a worse
man. He's going to marry her for her money; then he will beggar her,
after that he'll ill-treat her, and yet what can I do?"</p>
<p>"Prevent the marriage."</p>
<p>"But how, my dear fellow? Prevent it! It's all very well to say that,
and it's the very thing I want to do. But how am I to prevent it?
She's as much her own master as you are yours. She can give him every
shilling of her fortune to-morrow. How am I to prevent her from
marrying him?"</p>
<p>"Let her give him every shilling of her fortune to-morrow," said
Grey.</p>
<p>"And what is she to do then?" asked Mr. Vavasor.</p>
<p>"Then—then,—then,—then let her come to
me," said John Grey; and as
he spoke there was the fragment of a tear in his eye, and the hint of
quiver in his voice.</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/ill36-t.jpg" height-obs="500" alt='"Then—then,—then let her come to me."' />
<p>Even the worldly, worn-out, unsympathetic nature of John Vavasor was
struck, and, as it were, warmed by this.</p>
<p>"God bless you; God bless you, my dear fellow. I heartily wish for
her sake that I could look forward to any such an end to this
affair."</p>
<p>"And why not look forward to it? You say that he merely wants her
money. As he wants it let him have it!"</p>
<p>"But Grey, you do not know Alice; you do not understand my girl. When
she had lost her fortune nothing would induce her to become your
wife."</p>
<p>"Leave that to follow as it may," said John Grey. "Our first object
must be to sever her from a man, who is, as you say, himself on the
verge of ruin; and who would certainly make her wretched. I am here
now, not because I wish her to be my own wife, but because I wish
that she should not become the wife of such a one as your nephew. If
I were you I would let him have her money."</p>
<p>"If you were I, you would have nothing more to do with it than the
man that is as yet unborn. I know that she will give him her money
because she has said so; but I have no power as to her giving it or
as to her withholding it. That's the hardship of my position;—but it
is of no use to think of that now."</p>
<p>John Grey certainly did not think about it. He knew well that Alice
was independent, and that she was not inclined to give up that
independence to anyone. He had not expected that her father would be
able to do much towards hindering his daughter from becoming the wife
of George Vavasor, but he had wished that he himself and her father
should be in accord in their views, and he found that this was so.
When he left Mr. Vavasor's room nothing had been said about the period
of the marriage. Grey thought it improbable that Alice would find
herself able to give herself in marriage to her cousin
immediately,—so soon after her breach with him; but as to this he
had no assurance, and he determined to have the facts from her own
lips, if she would see him. So he wrote to her, naming a day on which
he would call upon her early in the morning; and having received from
her no prohibition, he was in Queen Anne Street at the hour
appointed.</p>
<p>He had conceived a scheme which he had not made known to Mr. Vavasor,
and as to the practicability of which he had much doubt; but which,
nevertheless, he was resolved to try if he should find the attempt
possible. He himself would buy off George Vavasor. He had ever been a
prudent man, and he had money at command. If Vavasor was such a man
as they, who knew him best, represented him, such a purchase might be
possible. But then, before this was attempted, he must be quite sure
that he knew his man, and he must satisfy himself also that in doing
so he would not, in truth, add to Alice's misery. He could hardly
bring himself to think it possible that she did, in truth, love her
cousin with passionate love. It seemed to him, as he remembered what
Alice had been to himself, that this must be impossible. But if it
were so, that of course must put an end to his interference. He
thought that if he saw her he might learn all this, and therefore he
went to Queen Anne Street.</p>
<p>"Of course he must come if he will," she said to herself when she
received his note. "It can make no matter. He will say nothing half
so hard to me as what I say to myself all day long." But when the
morning came, and the hour came, and the knock at the door for which
her ears were on the alert, her heart misgave her, and she felt that
the present moment of her punishment, though not the heaviest, would
still be hard to bear.</p>
<p>He came slowly up-stairs,—his step was ever slow,—and gently opened
the door for himself. Then, before he even looked at her, he closed
it again. I do not know how to explain that it was so; but it was
this perfect command of himself at all seasons which had in part made
Alice afraid of him, and drove her to believe that they were not
fitted for each other. She, when he thus turned for a moment from
her, and then walked slowly towards her, stood with both her hands
leaning on the centre table of the room, and with her eyes fixed upon
its surface.</p>
<p>"Alice," he said, walking up to her very slowly.</p>
<p>Her whole frame shuddered as she heard the sweetness of his voice.
Had I not better tell the truth of her at once? Oh, if she could only
have been his again! What madness during these last six months had
driven her to such a plight as this! The old love came back upon her.
Nay; it had never gone. But that trust in his love returned to
her,—that trust which told her that such love and such worth would
have sufficed to make her happy. But this confidence in him was
worthless now! Even though he should desire it, she could not change
again.</p>
<p>"Alice," he said again. And then, as slowly she looked up at him, he
asked her for her hand. "You may give it me," he said, "as to an old
friend." She put her hand in his hand, and then, withdrawing it, felt
that she must never trust herself to do so again.</p>
<p>"Alice," he continued, "I do not expect you to say much to me; but
there is a question or two which I think you will answer. Has a day
been fixed for this marriage?"</p>
<p>"No," she said.</p>
<p>"Will it be in a month?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no;—not for a year," she replied hurriedly;—and he knew at
once by her voice that she already dreaded this new wedlock. Whatever
of anger he might before have felt for her was banished. She had
brought herself by her ill-judgement,—by her ignorance, as she had
confessed,—to a sad pass; but he believed that she was still worthy
of his love.</p>
<p>"And now one other question, Alice;—but if you are silent, I will
not ask it again. Can you tell me why you have again accepted your
cousin's offer?"</p>
<p>"Because—," she said very quickly, looking up as though she were
about to speak with all her old courage. "But you would never
understand me," she said,—"and there can be no reason why I should
dare to hope that you should ever think well of me again."</p>
<p>He knew that there was no love,—no love for that man to whom she had
pledged her hand. He did not know, on the other hand, how strong, how
unchanged, how true was her love for himself. Indeed, of himself he
was thinking not at all. He desired to learn whether she would
suffer, if by any scheme he might succeed in breaking off this
marriage. When he had asked her whether she were to be married at
once, she had shuddered at the thought. When he asked her why she had
accepted her cousin, she had faltered, and hinted at some excuse
which he might fail to understand. Had she loved George Vavasor, he
could have understood that well enough.</p>
<p>"Alice," he said, speaking still very slowly, "nothing has ever yet
been done which need to a certainty separate you and me. I am a
persistent man, and I do not even yet give up all hope. A year is a
long time. As you say yourself, I do not as yet quite understand you.
But, Alice,—and I think that the position in which we stood a few
months since justifies me in saying so without offence,—I love you
now as well as ever, and should things change with you, I cannot tell
you with how much joy and eagerness I should take you back to my
bosom. My heart is yours now as it has been since I knew you."</p>
<p>Then he again just touched her hand, and left her before she had been
able to answer a word.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />