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<h3>CHAPTER LII. The Results of Love and Wine</h3>
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<br/>Two, three, four, and even five o'clock still found Sir Felix
Carbury in bed on that fatal Thursday. More than once or
twice his mother crept up to his room, but on each occasion he
feigned to be fast asleep and made no reply to her gentle
words. But his condition was one which only admits of short
snatches of uneasy slumber. From head to foot, he was sick
and ill and sore, and could find no comfort anywhere. To lie
where he was, trying by absolute quiescence to soothe the agony of
his brows and to remember that as long as he lay there he would be
safe from attack by the outer world, was all the solace within his
reach. Lady Carbury sent the page up to him, and to the page
he was awake. The boy brought him tea. He asked for
soda and brandy; but there was none to be had, and in his present
condition he did not dare to hector about it till it was procured
for him.
<br/>The world surely was now all over to him. He had made
arrangements for running away with the great heiress of the day,
and had absolutely allowed the young lady to run away without
him. The details of their arrangement had been such that she
absolutely would start upon her long journey across the ocean
before she could find out that he had failed to keep his
appointment. Melmotte's hostility would be incurred by the
attempt, and hers by the failure. Then he had lost all his
money,—and hers. He had induced his poor mother to assist in
raising a fund for him,—and even that was gone. He was so
cowed that he was afraid even of his mother. And he could
remember something, but no details, of some row at the club,—but
still with a conviction on his mind that he had made the row.
Ah,—when would he summon courage to enter the club again?
When could he show himself again anywhere? All the world
would know that Marie Melmotte had attempted to run off with him,
and that at the last moment he had failed her. What lie could
he invent to cover his disgrace? And his clothes! All
his things were at the club;—or he thought that they were, not
being quite certain whether he had not made some attempt to carry
them off to the Railway Station. He had heard of
suicide. If ever it could be well that a man should cut his
own throat, surely the time had come for him now. But as this
idea presented itself to him he simply gathered the clothes around
him and tried to sleep. The death of Cato would hardly have
for him persuasive charms.
<br/>Between five and six his mother again came up to him, and when
he appeared to sleep, stood with her hand upon his shoulder.
There must be some end to this. He must at any rate be
fed. She, wretched woman, had been sitting all day,—thinking
of it. As regarded her son himself; his condition told his
story with sufficient accuracy. What might be the fate of the
girl she could not stop to inquire. She had not heard all the
details of the proposed scheme; but she had known that Felix had
proposed to be at Liverpool on the Wednesday night, and to start on
Thursday for New York with the young lady; and with the view of
aiding him in his object she had helped him with money. She
had bought clothes for him, and had been busy with Hetta for two
days preparing for his long journey,—having told some lie to her
own daughter as to the cause of her brother's intended
journey. He had not gone, but had come, drunk and degraded,
back to the house. She had searched his pockets with less
scruple than she had ever before felt, and had found his ticket for
the vessel and the few sovereigns which were left to him.
About him she could read the riddle plainly. He had stayed at
his club till he was drunk, and had gambled away all his
money. When she had first seen him she had asked herself what
further lie she should now tell to her daughter. At breakfast
there was instant need for some story. "Mary says that Felix
came back this morning, and that he has not gone at all," Hetta
exclaimed. The poor woman could not bring herself to expose
the vices of the son to her daughter. She could not say that
he had stumbled into the house drunk at six o'clock. Hetta no
doubt had her own suspicions. "Yes; he has come back," said
Lady Carbury, broken-hearted by her troubles. "It was some
plan about the Mexican railway I believe, and has broken
through. He is very unhappy and not well. I will see to
him." After that Hetta had said nothing during the whole
day. And now, about an hour before dinner, Lady Carbury was
standing by her son's bedside, determined that he should speak to
her.
<br/>"Felix," she said,—"speak to me, Felix.—I know that you are
awake." He groaned, and turned himself away from her, burying
himself further under the bedclothes. "You must get up for
your dinner. It is near six o'clock."
<br/>"All right," he said at last.
<br/>"What is the meaning of this, Felix? You must tell
me. It must be told sooner or later. I know you are
unhappy. You had better trust your mother."
<br/>"I am so sick, mother."
<br/>"You will be better up. What were you doing last
night? What has come of it all? Where are your things?"
<br/>"At the club.—You had better leave me now, and let Sam
come up to me." Sam was the page.
<br/>"I will leave you presently; but, Felix, you must tell me about
this. What has been done?"
<br/>"It hasn't come off."
<br/>"But how has it not come off?"
<br/>"I didn't get away. What's the good of asking?"
<br/>"You said this morning when you came in, that Mr Melmotte had
discovered it."
<br/>"Did I? Then I suppose he has. Oh, mother, I wish I
could die. I don't see what's the use of anything. I
won't get up to dinner. I'd rather stay here."
<br/>"You must have something to eat, Felix."
<br/>"Sam can bring it me. Do let him get me some brandy and
water. I'm so faint and sick with all this that I can hardly
bear myself. I can't talk now. If he'll get me a bottle
of soda water and some brandy, I'll tell you all about it then."
<br/>"Where is the money, Felix?"
<br/>"I paid it for the ticket," said he, with both his hands up to
his head.
<br/>Then his mother again left him with the understanding that he
was to be allowed to remain in bed till the next morning; but that
he was to give her some further explanation when he had been
refreshed and invigorated after his own prescription. The boy
went out and got him soda water and brandy, and meat was carried up
to him, and then he did succeed for a while in finding oblivion
from his misery in sleep.
<br/>"Is he ill, mamma?" Hetta asked.
<br/>"Yes, my dear."
<br/>"Had you not better send for a doctor?"
<br/>"No, my dear. He will be better to-morrow."
<br/>"Mamma, I think you would be happier if you would tell me
everything."
<br/>"I can't," said Lady Carbury, bursting out into tears.
"Don't ask. What's the good of asking? It is all misery
and wretchedness. There is nothing to tell,—except that I am
ruined."
<br/>"Has he done anything, mamma?"
<br/>"No. What should he have done? How am I to know what
he does? He tells me nothing. Don't talk about it any
more. Oh, God,—how much better it would be to be childless!"
<br/>"Oh, mamma, do you mean me?" said Hetta, rushing across the
room, and throwing herself close to her mother's side on the
sofa. "Mamma, say that you do not mean me."
<br/>"It concerns you as well as me and him. I wish I were
childless."
<br/>"Oh, mamma, do not be cruel to me! Am I not good to
you? Do I not try to be a comfort to you?"
<br/>"Then marry your cousin, Roger Carbury, who is a good man, and
who can protect you. You can, at any rate, find a home for
yourself, and a friend for us. You are not like Felix.
You do not get drunk and gamble,—because you are a woman.
But you are stiff-necked, and will not help me in my trouble."
<br/>"Shall I marry him, mamma, without loving him?"
<br/>"Love! Have I been able to love? Do you see much of
what you call love around you? Why should you not love
him? He is a gentleman, and a good man,—soft-hearted, of a
sweet nature, whose life would be one effort to make yours
happy. You think that Felix is very bad."
<br/>"I have never said so."
<br/>"But ask yourself whether you do not give as much pain, seeing
what you could do for us if you would. But it never occurs to
you to sacrifice even a fantasy for the advantage of others."
<br/>Hetta retired from her seat on the sofa, and when her mother
again went upstairs she turned it all over in her mind. Could
it be right that she should marry one man when she loved
another? Could it be right that she should marry at all, for
the sake of doing good to her family? This man, whom she
might marry if she would,—who did in truth worship the ground on
which she trod,—was, she well knew, all that her mother had
said. And he was more than that. Her mother had spoken
of his soft heart, and his sweet nature. But Hetta knew also
that he was a man of high honour and a noble courage. In such
a condition as was hers now he was the very friend whose advice she
could have asked,—had he not been the very lover who was desirous
of making her his wife. Hetta felt that she could sacrifice
much for her mother. Money, if she had it, she could have
given, though she left herself penniless. Her time, her
inclinations, her very heart's treasure, and, as she thought, her
life, she could give. She could doom herself to poverty, and
loneliness, and heart-rending regrets for her mother's sake.
But she did not know how she could give herself into the arms of a
man she did not love.
<br/>"I don't know what there is to explain," said Felix to his
mother. She had asked him why he had not gone to Liverpool,
whether he had been interrupted by Melmotte himself, whether news
had reached him from Marie that she had been stopped, or
whether,—as might have been possible,—Marie had changed her own
mind. But he could not bring himself to tell the truth, or
any story bordering on the truth. "It didn't come off," he
said, "and of course that knocked me off my legs. Well;
yes. I did take some champagne when I found how it was.
A fellow does get cut up by that kind of thing. Oh, I heard
it at the club,—that the whole thing was off. I can't
explain anything more. And then I was so mad, I can't tell
what I was after. I did get the ticket. There it
is. That shows I was in earnest. I spent the £30
in getting it. I suppose the change is there. Don't
take it, for I haven't another shilling in the world." Of
course he said nothing of Marie's money, or of that which he had
himself received from Melmotte. And as his mother had heard
nothing of these sums she could not contradict what he said.
She got from him no further statement, but she was sure that there
was a story to be told which would reach her ears sooner or later.
<br/>That evening, about nine o'clock, Mr Broune called in Welbeck
Street. He very often did call now, coming up in a cab,
staying for a cup of tea, and going back in the same cab to the
office of his newspaper. Since Lady Carbury had, so
devotedly, abstained from accepting his offer, Mr Broune had become
almost sincerely attached to her. There was certainly between
them now more of the intimacy of real friendship than had ever
existed in earlier days. He spoke to her more freely about
his own affairs, and even she would speak to him with some attempt
at truth. There was never between them now even a shade of
love-making. She did not look into his eyes, nor did he hold
her hand. As for kissing her,—he thought no more of it than
of kissing the maid-servant. But he spoke to her of the
things that worried him,—the unreasonable exactions of
proprietors, and the perilous inaccuracy of contributors. He
told her of the exceeding weight upon his shoulders, under which an
Atlas would have succumbed. And he told her something too of
his triumphs;—how he had had this fellow bowled over in punishment
for some contradiction, and that man snuffed out for daring to be
an enemy. And he expatiated on his own virtues, his justice
and clemency. Ah,—if men and women only knew his good nature
and his patriotism;—how he had spared the rod here, how he had
made the fortune of a man there, how he had saved the country
millions by the steadiness of his adherence to some grand
truth! Lady Carbury delighted in all this and repaid him by
flattery, and little confidences of her own. Under his
teaching she had almost made up her mind to give up Mr Alf.
Of nothing was Mr Broune more certain than that Mr Alf was making a
fool of himself in regard to the Westminster election and those
attacks on Melmotte. "The world of London generally knows
what it is about," said Mr Broune, "and the London world believes
Mr Melmotte to be sound. I don't pretend to say that he has
never done anything that he ought not to do. I am not going
into his antecedents. But he is a man of wealth, power, and
genius, and Alf will get the worst of it." Under such
teaching as this, Lady Carbury was almost obliged to give up Mr
Alf.
<br/>Sometimes they would sit in the front room with Hetta, to whom
also Mr Broune had become attached; but sometimes Lady Carbury
would be in her own sanctum. On this evening she received him
there, and at once poured forth all her troubles about Felix.
On this occasion she told him everything, and almost told him
everything truly. He had already heard the story. "The
young lady went down to Liverpool, and Sir Felix was not there."
<br/>"He could not have been there. He has been in bed in this
house all day. Did she go?"
<br/>"So I am told;—and was met at the station by the senior officer
of the police at Liverpool, who brought her back to London without
letting her go down to the ship at all. She must have thought
that her lover was on board;—probably thinks so now. I pity
her."
<br/>"How much worse it would have been, had she been allowed to
start," said Lady Carbury.
<br/>"Yes; that would have been bad. She would have had a sad
journey to New York, and a sadder journey back. Has your son
told you anything about money?"
<br/>"What money?"
<br/>"They say that the girl entrusted him with a large sum which she
had taken from her father. If that be so he certainly ought
to lose no time in restoring it. It might be done through
some friend. I would do it, for that matter. If it be
so,—to avoid unpleasantness,—it should be sent back at
once. It will be for his credit." This Mr Broune said
with a clear intimation of the importance of his advice.
<br/>It was dreadful to Lady Carbury. She had no money to give
back, nor, as she was well aware, had her son. She had heard
nothing of any money. What did Mr Broune mean by a large
sum? "That would be dreadful," she said.
<br/>"Had you not better ask him about it?"
<br/>Lady Carbury was again in tears. She knew that she could
not hope to get a word of truth from her son. "What do you
mean by a large sum?"
<br/>"Two or three hundred pounds, perhaps."
<br/>"I have not a shilling in the world, Mr Broune." Then it
all came out,—the whole story of her poverty, as it had been
brought about by her son's misconduct. She told him every
detail of her money affairs from the death of her husband, and his
will, up to the present moment.
<br/>"He is eating you up, Lady Carbury." Lady Carbury thought
that she was nearly eaten up already, but she said nothing.
"You must put a stop to this."
<br/>"But how?"
<br/>"You must rid yourself of him. It is dreadful to say so,
but it must be done. You must not see your daughter
ruined. Find out what money he got from Miss Melmotte and I
will see that it is repaid. That must be done;—and we will
then try to get him to go abroad. No;—do not contradict
me. We can talk of the money another time. I must be
off now, as I have stayed too long. Do as I bid you.
Make him tell you, and send me word down to the office. If
you could do it early to-morrow, that would be best. God
bless you." And so he hurried off.
<br/>Early on the following morning a letter from Lady Carbury was
put into Mr Broune's hands, giving the story of the money as far as
she had been able to extract it from Sir Felix. Sir Felix
declared that Mr Melmotte had owed him £600, and that he had
received £250 out of this from Miss Melmotte,—so that there
was still a large balance due to him. Lady Carbury went on to
say that her son had at last confessed that he had lost this money
at play. The story was fairly true; but Lady Carbury in her
letter acknowledged that she was not justified in believing it
because it was told to her by her son.
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