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<h3>CHAPTER XC. Hetta's Sorrow</h3>
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<br/>When Hetta Carbury received that letter from her lover which was
given to the reader some chapters back, it certainly did not tend
in any way to alleviate her misery. Even when she had read it
over half-a-dozen times, she could not bring herself to think it
possible that she could be reconciled to the man. It was not
only that he had sinned against her by giving his society to
another woman to whom he had at any rate been engaged not long
since, at the very time at which he was becoming engaged to
her,—but also that he had done this in such a manner as to make
his offence known to all her friends. Perhaps she had been
too quick;—but there was the fact that with her own consent she
had acceded to her mother's demand that the man should be
rejected. The man had been rejected, and even Roger Carbury
knew that it was so. After this it was, she thought,
impossible that she should recall him. But they should all
know that her heart was unchanged. Roger Carbury should
certainly know that, if he ever asked her further question on the
matter. She would never deny it; and though she knew that the
man had behaved badly,—having entangled himself with a nasty
American woman,—yet she would be true to him as far as her own
heart was concerned.
<br/>And now he told her that she had been most unjust to him.
He said that he could not understand her injustice. He did
not fill his letter with entreaties, but with reproaches. And
certainly his reproaches moved her more than any prayer would have
done. It was too late now to remedy the evil; but she was not
quite sure within her own bosom that she had not been unjust to
him. The more she thought of it the more puzzled her mind
became. Had she quarrelled with him because he had once been
in love with Mrs Hurtle, or because she had grounds for regarding
Mrs Hurtle as her present rival? She hated Mrs Hurtle, and
she was very angry with him in that he had ever been on
affectionate terms with a woman she hated;—but that had not been
the reason put forward by her for quarrelling with him.
Perhaps it was true that he, too, had of late loved Mrs Hurtle
hardly better than she did herself. It might be that he had
been indeed constrained by hard circumstances to go with the woman
to Lowestoft. Having so gone with her, it was no doubt right
that he should be rejected;—for how can it be that a man who is
engaged shall be allowed to travel about the country with another
woman to whom also he was engaged a few months back? But
still there might be hardship in it. To her, to Hetta
herself, the circumstances were very hard. She loved the man
with all her heart. She could look forward to no happiness in
life without him. But yet it must be so.
<br/>At the end of his letter he had told her to go to Mrs Hurtle
herself if she wanted corroboration of the story as told by
him. Of course he had known when he wrote it that she could
not and would not go to Mrs Hurtle. But when the letter had
been in her possession three or four days,—unanswered, for, as a
matter of course, no answer to it from herself was possible,—and
had been read and re-read till she knew every word of it by heart,
she began to think that if she could hear the story as it might be
told by Mrs Hurtle, a good deal that was now dark might become
light to her. As she continued to read the letter, and to
brood over it all, by degrees her anger was turned from her lover
to her mother, her brother, and to her cousin Roger. Paul had
of course behaved badly, very badly,—but had it not been for them
she might have had an opportunity of forgiving him. They had
driven her on to the declaration of a purpose from which she could
now see no escape. There had been a plot against her, and she
was a victim. In the first dismay and agony occasioned by
that awful story of the American woman,—which had, at the moment,
struck her with a horror which was now becoming less and less every
hour,—she had fallen head foremost into the trap laid for
her. She acknowledged to herself that it was too late to
recover her ground. She was, at any rate, almost sure that it
must be too late. But yet she was disposed to do battle with
her mother and her cousin in the matter—if only with the object
of showing that she would not submit her own feelings to their
control. She was savage to the point of rebellion against all
authority. Roger Carbury would of course think that any
communication between herself and Mrs Hurtle must be
improper,—altogether indelicate. Two or three days ago she
thought so herself. But the world was going so hard with her,
that she was beginning to feel herself capable of throwing
propriety and delicacy to the winds. This man whom she had
once accepted, whom she altogether loved, and who, in spite of all
his faults, certainly still loved her,—of that she was beginning
to have no further doubt,—accused her of dishonesty, and referred
her to her rival for a corroboration of his story. She would
appeal to Mrs Hurtle. The woman was odious, abominable, a
nasty intriguing American female. But her lover desired that
she should hear the woman's story; and she would hear the
story,—if the woman would tell it.
<br/>So resolving, she wrote as follows to Mrs Hurtle, finding great
difficulty in the composition of a letter which should tell neither
too little nor too much, and determined that she would be
restrained by no mock modesty, by no girlish fear of declaring the
truth about herself. The letter at last was stiff and hard,
but it sufficed for its purpose.
<br/>
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<i>
Madam,—<br/>
<br/>
Mr Paul Montague has referred me to
you as to certain circumstances which have taken place between him
and you. It is right that I should tell you that I was a
short time since engaged to marry him, but that I have found myself
obliged to break off that engagement in consequence of what I have
been told as to his acquaintance with you. I make this
proposition to you, not thinking that anything you will say to me
can change my mind, but because he has asked me to do so, and has,
at the same time, accused me of injustice towards him. I do
not wish to rest under an accusation of injustice from one to whom
I was once warmly attached. If you will receive me, I will
make it my business to call any afternoon you may name.<br/>
<br/>
Yours truly,<br/>
<br/>
HENRIETTA CARBURY.<br/>
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<br/>When the letter was written she was not only ashamed of it, but
very much afraid of it also. What if the American woman
should put it in a newspaper! She had heard that everything
was put into newspapers in America. What if this Mrs Hurtle
should send back to her some horribly insolent answer;—or should
send such answer to her mother, instead of herself! And then,
again, if the American woman consented to receive her, would not
the American woman, as a matter of course, trample upon her with
rough words? Once or twice she put the letter aside, and
almost determined that it should not be sent;—but at last, with
desperate fortitude, she took it out with her and posted it
herself. She told no word of it to any one. Her mother,
she thought, had been cruel to her, had disregarded her feelings,
and made her wretched for ever. She could not ask her mother
for sympathy in her present distress. There was no friend who
would sympathize with her. She must do everything alone.
<br/>Mrs Hurtle, it will be remembered, had at last determined that
she would retire from the contest and own herself to have been
worsted. It is, I fear, impossible to describe adequately the
various half resolutions which she formed, and the changing phases
of her mind before she brought herself to this conclusion.
And soon after she had assured herself that this should be the
conclusion,—after she had told Paul Montague that it should be
so,—there came back upon her at times other half resolutions to a
contrary effect. She had written a letter to the man
threatening desperate revenge, and had then abstained from sending
it, and had then shown it to the man,—not intending to give it to
him as a letter upon which he would have to act, but only that she
might ask him whether, had he received it, he would have said that
he had not deserved it. Then she had parted with him,
refusing either to hear or to say a word of farewell, and had told
Mrs Pipkin that she was no longer engaged to be married. At
that moment everything was done that could be done. The game
had been played and the stakes lost,—and she had schooled herself
into such restraint as to have abandoned all idea of
vengeance. But from time to time there arose in her heart a
feeling that such softness was unworthy of her. Who had ever
been soft to her? Who had spared her? Had she not long
since found out that she must fight with her very nails and teeth
for every inch of ground, if she did not mean to be trodden into
the dust? Had she not held her own among rough people after a
very rough fashion, and should she now simply retire that she might
weep in a corner like a love-sick schoolgirl? And she had
been so stoutly determined that she would at any rate avenge her
own wrongs, if she could not turn those wrongs into triumph!
There were moments in which she thought that she could still seize
the man by the throat, where all the world might see her, and dare
him to deny that he was false, perjured, and mean.
<br/>Then she received a long passionate letter from Paul Montague,
written at the same time as those other letters to Roger Carbury
and Hetta, in which he told her all the circumstances of his
engagement to Hetta Carbury, and implored her to substantiate the
truth of his own story. It was certainly marvellous to her
that the man who had so long been her own lover and who had parted
with her after such a fashion should write such a letter to
her. But it had no tendency to increase either her anger or
her sorrow. Of course she had known that it was so, and at
certain times she had told herself that it was only natural,—had
almost told herself that it was right. She and this young
Englishman were not fit to be mated. He was to her thinking a
tame, sleek household animal, whereas she knew herself to be
wild,—fitter for the woods than for polished cities. It had
been one of the faults of her life that she had allowed herself to
be bound by tenderness of feeling to this soft over-civilised
man. The result had been disastrous, as might have been
expected. She was angry with him,—almost to the extent of
tearing him to pieces,—but she did not become more angry because
he wrote to her of her rival.
<br/>Her only present friend was Mrs Pipkin, who treated her with the
greatest deference, but who was never tired of asking questions
about the lost lover. "That letter was from Mr Montague?"
said Mrs Pipkin on the morning after it had been received.
<br/>"How can you know that?"
<br/>"I'm sure it was. One does get to know handwritings when
letters come frequent."
<br/>"It was from him. And why not?"
<br/>"Oh dear no;—why not certainly? I wish he'd write every
day of his life, so that things would come round again.
Nothing ever troubles me so much as broken love. Why don't he
come again himself, Mrs Hurtle?"
<br/>"It is not at all likely that he should come again. It is
all over, and there is no good in talking of it. I shall
return to New York on Saturday week."
<br/>"Oh, Mrs Hurtle!"
<br/>"I can't remain here, you know, all my life doing nothing.
I came over here for a certain purpose and that has—gone by.
Now I may just go back again."
<br/>"I know he has ill-treated you. I know he has."
<br/>"I am not disposed to talk about it, Mrs Pipkin."
<br/>"I should have thought it would have done you good to speak your
mind out free. I knew it would me if I'd been served in that
way."
<br/>"If I had anything to say at all after that fashion it would be
to the gentleman, and not to any other else. As it is I shall
never speak of it again to any one. You have been very kind
to me, Mrs Pipkin, and I shall be sorry to leave you."
<br/>"Oh, Mrs Hurtle, you can't understand what it is to me. It
isn't only my feelings. The likes of me can't stand by their
feelings only, as their betters do. I've never been above
telling you what a godsend you've been to me this summer;—have
I? I've paid everything, butcher, baker, rates and all, just
like clockwork. And now you're going away!" Then Mrs
Pipkin began to sob.
<br/>"I suppose I shall see Mr Crumb before I go," said Mrs Hurtle.
<br/>"She don't deserve it; do she? And even now she never says
a word about him that I call respectful. She looks on him as
just being better than Mrs Buggins's children. That's all."
<br/>"She'll be all right when he has once got her home."
<br/>"And I shall be all alone by myself," said Mrs Pipkin, with her
apron up to her eyes.
<br/>It was after this that Mrs Hurtle received Hetta's letter.
She had as yet returned no answer to Paul Montague,—nor had she
intended to send any written answer. Were she to comply with
his request she could do so best by writing to the girl who was
concerned rather than to him. And though she wrote no such
letter she thought of it,—of the words she would use were she to
write it, and of the tale which she would have to tell. She
sat for hours thinking of it, trying to resolve whether she would
tell the tale,—if she told it at all,—in a manner to suit Paul's
purpose, or so as to bring that purpose utterly to shipwreck.
She did not doubt that she could cause the shipwreck were she so
minded. She could certainly have her revenge after that
fashion. But it was a woman's fashion, and, as such, did not
recommend itself to Mrs Hurdle's feelings. A pistol or a
horsewhip, a violent seizing by the neck, with sharp taunts and
bitter-ringing words, would have made the fitting revenge. If
she abandoned that she could do herself no good by telling a story
of her wrongs to another woman.
<br/>Then came Hetta's note, so stiff, so cold, so true,—so like the
letter of an Englishwoman, as Mrs Hurtle said to herself. Mrs
Hurtle smiled as she read the letter. "I make this
proposition not thinking that anything you can say to me can change
my mind." Of course the girl's mind would be changed.
The girl's mind, indeed, required no change. Mrs Hurtle could
see well enough that the girl's heart was set upon the man.
Nevertheless she did not doubt but that she could tell the story
after such a fashion as to make it impossible that the girl should
marry him,—if she chose to do so.
<br/>At first she thought that she would not answer the letter at
all. What was it to her? Let them fight their own
lovers' battles out after their own childish fashion. If the
man meant at last to be honest, there could be no doubt, Mrs Hurtle
thought, that the girl would go to him. It would require no
interference of hers. But after a while she thought that she
might as well see this English chit who had superseded herself in
the affections of the Englishman she had condescended to
love. And if it were the case that all revenge was to be
abandoned, that no punishment was to be exacted in return for all
the injury that had been done, why should she not say a kind word
so as to smooth away the existing difficulties? Wild cat as
she was, kindness was more congenial to her nature than
cruelty. So she wrote to Hetta making an appointment.
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DEAR MISS CARBURY,—<br/>
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If you could make it convenient to
yourself to call here either Thursday or Friday at any hour between
two and four, I shall be very happy to see you.<br/>
<br/>
Yours sincerely,<br/>
<br/>
WINIFRED HURTLE.<br/>
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