<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Well, we must allow for one another; and there is no
accounting for tastes. <i>Jupiter</i> likes turtle; but the other dogs
won’t touch it. I had a dog once who would eat cigars. If he
found a stump in the road, it was quite as good as a bone to
him; but he did not live very long, poor fellow! Now let them
take away the things; and when you have had your glass of
port, come to me in the drawing-room. Don’t hurry, because I
mean to have my nap.”</p>
<p>As yet, she had never mentioned Kitty’s name, which surprised
me not a little; but I thought it likely that she was still
rather sore at my behaviour. For when she had come to see us
lately, it had been more than I could bear to listen calmly while
everybody offered any sort of guess; just as they might discuss
a case of abduction in the papers, or the theft of a female dog,
who “answered to the name of Kitty.”</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2>CHAPTER XLI.<br/> <small>TRUE COMFORT.</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">Every</span> allowance should be made for a man who is in deep
trouble. Not because it is his due, for that would count but
little; but because he expects it, which he never does of his
other debts, after experience. But he does hope to receive fine
feeling, when he knows how cheap it is; and his sense of bad
luck blackens in him, when he cannot even get that much.</p>
<p>And yet he ought to feel how trumpery are his trivial joys
and sorrows, in the whirligig of this great world. He does his
utmost thus to take it; to shudder at the wrongs of others, and
to glow at their redress, to suck his fingers more and more with
the relish of his neighbour’s pie; and perhaps with practice he
begins to get some moonlight pleasure thus. But, alas! before
he is perfect in it, some little turn of thought comes home,
some soft remembrance thrills his heart, as the sun quivers in
a well-spring, and all his nature lets him know that he belongs
to it, and is itself.</p>
<p>A little touch of this kind took me, when I was full of
higher things, or at least was trying so to be. I had not been
to church since my day of dole, my day of doom and desolation.
How could I go to Sunbury church, and see the spot where<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</SPAN></span>
Kitty stood and stole my whole devotion, and see the altar-rails
where she had knelt and vowed herself mine for ever; and now,
with no Kitty at my side, be stared at by a hundred eyes, all
asking—“Well, how do you get on?” But now in this strange
place, I went to the Sunday morning service, though Kitty had
been there too with me, in the happy days not long gone by.
My aunt came with me, and with much fine feeling allowed
me to sit where my dear had sat, and to put my hat on the
selfsame peg on which she had placed it for me.</p>
<p>At first it was a bitter time; but I went through it bravely,
though at first I could not bring myself to open the Prayer-book,
which I had brought in the bag with my clothes from
Sunbury. My wife had given it to me at Baycliff, when I
happened to admire it in a window, and I remembered that she
had written “Kit,” and nothing else, on the fly-leaf.</p>
<p>But the first psalm for that morning service, being a very
sad one, suited my state of mind so well that I opened my book
to follow it. And I remember reading with all my heart—“My
heart is smitten down, and withered like grass; so that I forget
to eat my bread. I am become like a pelican in the wilderness;
and like an owl that is in the desert.”</p>
<p>Perhaps through the shaking of my thumb, the cover of
the book fell back, and showed me some words on the fly-leaf
written with a pencil by my own wife. Before the word
“Kit,” which was in ink, she had written with a pencil
“Darling,” and after it, “God’s will be done.” The writing
was faint, as if the pencil wanted cutting, and it seemed to
have been dashed off in great haste.</p>
<p>This then was her farewell to me. I was sure that the
words had not been there, the last time I used the Prayer-book;
and indeed there would have been no meaning in them.
Over and over again I read them, forgetting everything else, I
fear, and standing up after the first lesson had begun, until my
aunt gave my coat a jerk. I longed to rush out of the church
and think; and the rest of the service went by me, as a dream.</p>
<p>Though very little light was thrown hereby upon my dark
enigma, I found more comfort perhaps than reason would
warrant, in this discovery. In the first place, if my wife had
left me, in bitterness at some fancied wrong, she would never
have addressed me thus; and this alone removed a weight of
misery from my bosom. For it had been agony to me to
think, as I could not help doing, that my own Kitty all the
while was nursing bitterness against me, as if it had been<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</SPAN></span>
possible for me to wrong her. And again that she should not
have gone entirely without a word, was a piece of real comfort
to me; though others, who have not been so placed, may think
that I was foolish there. Very likely I was; but never mind.
The Prayer-book, as we all acknowledge, is a very noble work;
and nobody can write such English now, as is to be found in it
at every page; and I think that Kitty was quite right in
choosing it for her last word to me. But if it comes to that,
she was always right; at least according to my ideas.</p>
<p>Strange as it may seem to some—who cannot enter into
odd states of mind, such as long had been my lot—I did not
say a word, as yet, to my Aunt Parslow about this matter. She
had formed her own theory, like everybody else, and I meant
to let her go through with it. And so she did, that afternoon,
having put great pressure upon herself—for my sake, as she
told me—to enable her to hold her tongue, until she could
speak with advantage, and without any risk of being taken by
any one for a meddler.</p>
<p>For she liked to dine early on Sundays, and she always
denied herself the pleasure of going to church in the afternoon,
being one of the most unselfish persons I have ever met with.
After a dinner not to be gainsaid, at any rate till supper-time,
we sat in the garden and listened to the bells, and thought with
pleasure of the congregation now going to have a hot time of
it. I was full of tender recollections, for this was the very
spot where Kitty had shown some delightful want of reason
about Sally Chalker. And I told my aunt all about it now,
with a sigh at the back of every smile. Then she laughed with
superior wisdom, and no longer could contain herself.</p>
<p>“I knew she was a jealous little puss. Every woman has
her fault, almost as much as men have. It took me a long
time to discover any fault in her, until I started that idea myself.
To make up for the want of other faults, she has that
one to an extreme, you see. And that is at the bottom of your
present trouble, my poor boy. But she has carried it to an
extreme, I admit. It seems a little too absurd.”</p>
<p>“It is too absurd to be thought of twice,” I answered
rather savagely; “my Kitty is not quite a fool. And she
would have been something worse than a fool, if she had acted
from that motive. She would have been unjust and cruel, not
to afford me so much as a chance of clearing myself from wicked
lies. Our married life was short indeed; but long enough for
her to learn that I am not a scoundrel.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Don’t be so hot, Kit. You have no idea what a woman’s
mind is. She thought you, of course, a perfect angel, and
herself not good enough to wipe your shoes. She was always
humble, as you know; and that tyrant of a woman must have
beaten into her poor head a bitter sense of her own defects. It
is only natural, she would think, that this great wonder of a
man should want some one better than poor me. And when
some villain laid before her some strong evidence, we know
not what, she would say to herself—‘It is as I thought. I
will not trouble him to explain. I will leave him for a while,
and perhaps his love will return, when he has lost me. With
this in my heart, I could not bear to look at him, and know all
the while he was longing to be rid of me. I will have no
scene, which would only make him think even less of me than
he does.’ And so she would go, without caring where.”</p>
<p>“Possibly, aunt, some women might have done so. But
not Kitty. She felt to her heart my affection for her; and
she trusted me, as I trusted her. Do you suppose that if what
you say had even seemed possible to me, I should have remained,
as I have done, waiting for some news of her. I
should have rushed up to every one, who had any motive for
deceiving her, and taken them by the throat, and wrung their
wicked, murderous lies out. No, it is something much worse than
that. If Kitty had left me in petulance, would she have
written these last words, would she have called me her
‘darling Kit’? See what I found this morning.”</p>
<p>“That proves nothing,” resumed my aunt, when I had
shown her my Prayer-book, and we had discussed that matter;
“she may very well have relented, at the last moment, and
written that to you.”</p>
<p>“Then would she have taken all our money? Was that
the way to cure my jealousy, and bring me back to her in
penitence? She had a right to the money, because you put it
into her own hand. But I am astonished at her taking it.”</p>
<p>Miss Parslow was even more astonished, when I told her
that part of the tale, which I had begged Uncle Corny not to
do. It grieved me that she should ever hear of it; but she
certainly had the right to know.</p>
<p>“Perhaps you told her in so many words that you meant it
entirely for herself,” I suggested, hoping that it might be so;
for, little as I cared for that trumpery loss, I was cut to the
quick that my wife should have inflicted it; “Kitty must
have believed it her own, or she never would have touched it.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“I said nothing of the kind,” my aunt replied indignantly;
“I gave it to her, but I meant it for you—that is to say conjointly.
Her taking it was robbery, and nothing else.”</p>
<p>I laughed a little at these words, which I had heard from
other quarters. That my Kitty should be called a robber,
seemed a little too absurd. But I could not be angry in the
teeth of facts, at any rate with the donor.</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you what it is,” she said, even as I had been told
before; “either your wife is as deep a little hypocrite as ever
lived, which I cannot believe, for I should never trust any one
again if I did; or else she ran away from you in a moment of
insanity. My poor boy, I am so sorry for you. I cannot bear
to ask you, but have you ever noticed any tendency that way—anything
even odd, or absent, or inconsequential in her
manner? The professor is a very queer man, I have heard.
All great men of science are—well, to say the least eccentric.”</p>
<p>“Captain Fairthorn is perfectly sound and clear-headed,
though not a good man of business. And his daughter is as
rational as I am—much more so, if I am to endure much more
of this. She is quick, and bright-witted, and full of common
sense; except that, like her father, she is a little too confiding.
I never saw a token of even the slightest absence of mind about
her. Her only insanity was that she loved me a great deal
better than she loved herself. I believe she would have laid
down her life with pleasure—”</p>
<p>“Don’t talk about it, my dear Kit. I think you have
borne things wonderfully well, now that I know all you have
told me. And you must not break down now, my dear. All
will come right in the end, be sure, although we are in thick
darkness now. In spite of all difficulties, I still hold to my
idea of jealousy. However, we won’t talk of that any more.
You know that I called upon Miss Coldpepper, the last time I
was at Sunbury?”</p>
<p>“Yes. But I never heard what she said. I cannot see
how she could help us at all.”</p>
<p>“Well, I thought it worth while to try; and I found her
much kinder than I expected. A little bit stiff at first perhaps,
and rather of the grand lady style; but I am sure that she
would help you, if she could. She likes Kitty better than her
own nieces; that I am quite sure of; and she does not side a bit
with that horrid Mrs. Fairthorn, at least as everybody makes her
out, though I always form my own opinion. She perceived, of
course, that I was a lady, and not to be treated as a fruit-grower<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</SPAN></span>
might be, such as everybody looks upon as a sort of
apple-pie. I explained that my connection with your Uncle
Orchardson was casual, and had been against my wishes; while
my family had been in the China-trade; and she asked very
kindly, if I would have a cup of tea. I accepted, because I
knew how it makes ladies talk. Then she asked me what I
thought of it, and I said it was poor stuff; for I had no idea
of being patronized by her, and I saw that she had sense
enough to like the truth, especially when it was to her advantage,
although not very complimentary. Then she asked me
where she could get a better article; and I told her that I
never recommended any place, having nothing to do with any
business now, but living in a very pretty place of my own.
Naturally this made her press me more; and not liking to be
disagreeable, I told her of a place, where by taking twelve
pounds she could get a tea worth two of hers, for fifteen pence
a pound less money. And this made a very fine impression
upon her; for she loves good value for her money. Then she
became very gracious indeed; especially after her cur of a dog
came in, and smelling souvenirs of my high breed, did his
utmost to improve himself, by licking them. For your sake,
Kit, I was obliged to say, that the wretched mongrel looked
well-bred. Oh dear, oh dear!”</p>
<p>“Well, never mind, aunt; he has done me a good turn—”
I remembered in time to stop sharply. My Aunt Parslow
would take it as worse than high treason, that I should have
stolen even such a dog; and how could I call it a good turn
now?</p>
<p>“No dog would do you a bad turn, Kit,” she continued
quite serenely; “at any rate no well-bred dog; they are as
good as a woman, and infinitely better than any man, in judging
human character. Now listen to what I have to say. I
am not very sharp, for I live out of the world; and everybody
owns that it gets much worse, from year to year, and from day
to day. But I don’t care twopence for that, my dear, because
nothing I can do will alter it. Only I am as sure as I am of
the nature of the very best dog I ever had—and there he lies,
beneath that tree—that your Kitty has never done a thing to
wrong you, at least according to her view of things. I will not
attempt to explain that money matter; for it is beyond me,
and I am sorry that I spoke so harshly. I should have considered
your feelings more, for I know that you are as true as
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