<p><SPAN name="39"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XXXIX</h3>
<h3>Lady Laura Is Told<br/> </h3>
<p>By the time that Mr. Mildmay's great bill was going into committee
Phineas was able to move about London in comfort,—with his arm,
however, still in a sling. There had been nothing more about him
and his wound in the <i>People's Banner</i>, and he was beginning to
hope that that nuisance would also be allowed to die away. He had
seen Lady Laura,—having dined in Grosvenor Place, where he had
been petted to his heart's content. His dinner had been cut up for
him, and his wound had been treated with the tenderest sympathy.
And, singular to say, no questions were asked. He had been to Kent
and had come by an accident. No more than that was told, and his
dear sympathising friends were content to receive so much
information, and to ask for no more. But he had not as yet seen
Violet Effingham, and he was beginning to think that this romance
about Violet might as well be brought to a close. He had not,
however, as yet been able to go into crowded rooms, and unless he
went out to large parties he could not be sure that he would meet
Miss Effingham.</p>
<p>At last he resolved that he would tell Lady Laura the whole
truth,—not the truth about the duel, but the truth about Violet
Effingham, and ask for her assistance. When making this
resolution, I think that he must have forgotten much that he had
learned of his friend's character; and by making it, I think that
he showed also that he had not learned as much as his
opportunities might have taught him. He knew Lady Laura's
obstinacy of purpose, he knew her devotion to her brother, and he
knew also how desirous she had been that her brother should win
Violet Effingham for himself. This knowledge should, I think, have
sufficed to show him how improbable it was that Lady Laura should
assist him in his enterprise. But beyond all this was the fact,—a
fact as to the consequences of which Phineas himself was entirely
blind, beautifully ignorant,—that Lady Laura had once
condescended to love himself. Nay;—she had gone farther than
this, and had ventured to tell him, even after her marriage, that
the remembrance of some feeling that had once dwelt in her heart
in regard to him was still a danger to her. She had warned him
from Loughlinter, and then had received him in London;—and now he
selected her as his confidante in this love affair! Had he not
been beautifully ignorant and most modestly blind, he would surely
have placed his confidence elsewhere.</p>
<p>It was not that Lady Laura Kennedy ever confessed to herself the
existence of a vicious passion. She had, indeed, learned to tell
herself that she could not love her husband; and once, in the
excitement of such silent announcements to herself, she had asked
herself whether her heart was quite a blank, and had answered
herself by desiring Phineas Finn to absent himself from
Loughlinter. During all the subsequent winter she had scourged
herself inwardly for her own imprudence, her quite unnecessary
folly in so doing. What! could not she, Laura Standish, who from
her earliest years of girlish womanhood had resolved that she
would use the world as men use it, and not as women do,—could not
she have felt the slight shock of a passing tenderness for a
handsome youth without allowing the feeling to be a rock before
her big enough and sharp enough for the destruction of her entire
barque? Could not she command, if not her heart, at any rate her
mind, so that she might safely assure herself that, whether this
man or any man was here or there, her course would be unaltered?
What though Phineas Finn had been in the same house with her
throughout all the winter, could not she have so lived with him on
terms of friendship, that every deed and word and look of her
friendship might have been open to her husband,—or open to all
the world? She could have done so. She told herself that that was
not,—need not have been her great calamity. Whether she could
endure the dull, monotonous control of her slow but imperious
lord,—or whether she must not rather tell him that it was not to
be endured,—that was her trouble. So she told herself, and again
admitted Phineas to her intimacy in London. But, nevertheless,
Phineas, had he not been beautifully ignorant and most blind to
his own achievements, would not have expected from Lady Laura
Kennedy assistance with Miss Violet Effingham.</p>
<p>Phineas knew when to find Lady Laura alone, and he came upon her
one day at the favourable hour. The two first clauses of the bill
had been passed after twenty fights and endless divisions. Two
points had been settled, as to which, however, Mr. Gresham had
been driven to give way so far and to yield so much, that men
declared that such a bill as the Government could consent to call
its own could never be passed by that Parliament in that session.
Immediately on his entrance into her room Lady Laura began about
the third clause. Would the House let Mr. Gresham have his way
about the—? Phineas stopped her at once. "My dear friend," he
said, "I have come to you in a private trouble, and I want you to
drop politics for half an hour. I have come to you for help."</p>
<p>"A private trouble, Mr. Finn! Is it serious?"</p>
<p>"It is very serious,—but it is no trouble of the kind of which
you are thinking. But it is serious enough to take up every
thought."</p>
<p>"Can I help you?"</p>
<p>"Indeed you can. Whether you will or no is a different thing."</p>
<p>"I would help you in anything in my power, Mr. Finn. Do you not
know it?"</p>
<p>"You have been very kind to me!"</p>
<p>"And so would Mr. Kennedy."</p>
<p>"Mr. Kennedy cannot help me here."</p>
<p>"What is it, Mr. Finn?"</p>
<p>"I suppose I may as well tell you at once,—in plain language, I
do not know how to put my story into words that shall fit it. I
love Violet Effingham. Will you help me to win her to be my wife?"</p>
<p>"You love Violet Effingham!" said Lady Laura. And as she spoke the
look of her countenance towards him was so changed that he became
at once aware that from her no assistance might be expected. His
eyes were not opened in any degree to the second reason above
given for Lady Laura's opposition to his wishes, but he instantly
perceived that she would still cling to that destination of
Violet's hand which had for years past been the favourite scheme
of her life. "Have you not always known, Mr. Finn, what have been
our hopes for Violet?"</p>
<p>Phineas, though he had perceived his mistake, felt that he must go
on with his cause. Lady Laura must know his wishes sooner or
later, and it was as well that she should learn them in this way
as in any other. "Yes;—but I have known also, from your brother's
own lips,—and indeed from yours also, Lady Laura,—that Chiltern
has been three times refused by Miss Effingham."</p>
<p>"What does that matter? Do men never ask more than three times?"</p>
<p>"And must I be debarred for ever while he prosecutes a hopeless
suit?"</p>
<p>"Yes;—you of all men."</p>
<p>"Why so, Lady Laura?"</p>
<p>"Because in this matter you have been his chosen friend,—and
mine. We have told you everything, trusting to you. We have
believed in your honour. We have thought that with you, at any
rate, we were safe." These words were very bitter to Phineas, and
yet when he had written his letter at Loughton, he had intended to
be so perfectly honest, chivalrously honest! Now Lady Laura spoke
to him and looked at him as though he had been most basely
false—most untrue to that noble friendship which had been
lavished upon him by all her family. He felt that he would become
the prey of her most injurious thoughts unless he could fully
explain his ideas, and he felt, also, that the circumstances did
not admit of his explaining them. He could not take up the
argument on Violet's side, and show how unfair it would be to her
that she should be debarred from the homage due to her by any man
who really loved her, because Lord Chiltern chose to think that he
still had a claim,—or at any rate a chance. And Phineas knew well
of himself,—or thought that he knew well,—that he would not have
interfered had there been any chance for Lord Chiltern. Lord
Chiltern had himself told him more than once that there was no
such chance. How was he to explain all this to Lady Laura? "Mr.
Finn," said Lady Laura, "I can hardly believe this of you, even
when you tell it me yourself."</p>
<p>"Listen to me, Lady Laura, for a moment."</p>
<p>"Certainly, I will listen. But that you should come to me for
assistance! I cannot understand it. Men sometimes become harder
than stones."</p>
<p>"I do not think that I am hard." Poor blind fool! He was still
thinking only of Violet, and of the accusation made against him
that he was untrue to his friendship for Lord Chiltern. Of that
other accusation which could not be expressed in open words he
understood nothing,—nothing at all as yet.</p>
<p>"Hard and false,—capable of receiving no impression beyond the
outside husk of the heart."</p>
<p>"Oh, Lady Laura, do not say that. If you could only know how true
I am in my affection for you all."</p>
<p>"And how do you show it?—by coming in between Oswald and the only
means that are open to us of reconciling him to his father;—means
that have been explained to you exactly as though you had been one
of ourselves. Oswald has treated you as a brother in the matter,
telling you everything, and this is the way you would repay him
for his confidence!"</p>
<p>"Can I help it, that I have learnt to love this girl?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir,—you can help it. What if she had been Oswald's
wife;—would you have loved her then? Do you speak of loving a
woman as if it were an affair of fate, over which you have no
control? I doubt whether your passions are so strong as that. You
had better put aside your love for Miss Effingham. I feel assured
that it will never hurt you." Then some remembrance of what had
passed between him and Lady Laura Standish near the falls of the
Linter, when he first visited Scotland, came across his mind.
"Believe me," she said with a smile, "this little wound in your
heart will soon be cured."</p>
<p>He stood silent before her, looking away from her, thinking over
it all. He certainly had believed himself to be violently in love
with Lady Laura, and yet when he had just now entered her
drawing-room, he had almost forgotten that there had been such a
passage in his life. And he had believed that she had forgotten
it,—even though she had counselled him not to come to Loughlinter
within the last nine months! He had been a boy then, and had not
known himself;—but now he was a man, and was proud of the
intensity of his love. There came upon him some passing throb of
pain from his shoulder, reminding him of the duel, and he was
proud also of that. He had been willing to risk everything,—life,
prospects, and position,—sooner than abandon the slight hope
which was his of possessing Violet Effingham. And now he was told
that this wound in his heart would soon be cured, and was told so
by a woman to whom he had once sung a song of another passion. It
is very hard to answer a woman in such circumstances, because her
womanhood gives her so strong a ground of vantage! Lady Laura
might venture to throw in his teeth the fickleness of his heart,
but he could not in reply tell her that to change a love was
better than to marry without love,—that to be capable of such a
change showed no such inferiority of nature as did the capacity
for such a marriage. She could hit him with her argument; but he
could only remember his, and think how violent might be the blow
he could inflict,—if it were not that she were a woman, and
therefore guarded. "You will not help me then?" he said, when they
had both been silent for a while.</p>
<p>"Help you? How should I help you?"</p>
<p>"I wanted no other help than this,—that I might have had an
opportunity of meeting Violet here, and of getting from her some
answer."</p>
<p>"Has the question then never been asked already?" said Lady Laura.
To this Phineas made no immediate reply. There was no reason why
he should show his whole hand to an adversary. "Why do you not go
to Lady Baldock's house?" continued Lady Laura. "You are admitted
there. You know Lady Baldock. Go and ask her to stand your friend
with her niece. See what she will say to you. As far as I
understand these matters, that is the fair, honourable, open way
in which gentlemen are wont to make their overtures."</p>
<p>"I would make mine to none but to herself," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"Then why have you made it to me, sir?" demanded Lady Laura.</p>
<p>"I have come to you as I would to my sister."</p>
<p>"Your sister? Psha! I am not your sister, Mr. Finn. Nor, were I
so, should I fail to remember that I have a dearer brother to whom
my faith is pledged. Look here. Within the last three weeks Oswald
has sacrificed everything to his father, because he was determined
that Mr. Kennedy should have the money which he thought was due to
my husband. He has enabled my father to do what he will with
Saulsby. Papa will never hurt him;—I know that. Hard as papa is
with him, he will never hurt Oswald's future position. Papa is too
proud to do that. Violet has heard what Oswald has done; and now
that he has nothing of his own to offer her for the future but his
bare title, now that he has given papa power to do what he will
with the property, I believe that she would accept him instantly.
That is her disposition."</p>
<p>Phineas again paused a moment before he replied. "Let him try," he
said.</p>
<p>"He is away,—in Brussels."</p>
<p>"Send to him, and bid him return. I will be patient, Lady Laura.
Let him come and try, and I will bide my time. I confess that I
have no right to interfere with him if there be a chance for him.
If there is no chance, my right is as good as that of any other."</p>
<p>There was something in this which made Lady Laura feel that she
could not maintain her hostility against this man on behalf of her
brother;—and yet she could not force herself to be other than
hostile to him. Her heart was sore, and it was he that had made it
sore. She had lectured herself, schooling herself with mental
sackcloth and ashes, rebuking herself with heaviest censures from
day to day, because she had found herself to be in danger of
regarding this man with a perilous love; and she had been constant
in this work of penance till she had been able to assure herself
that the sackcloth and ashes had done their work, and that the
danger was past. "I like him still and love him well," she had
said to herself with something almost of triumph, "but I have
ceased to think of him as one who might have been my lover." And
yet she was now sick and sore, almost beside herself with the
agony of the wound, because this man whom she had been able to
throw aside from her heart had also been able so to throw her
aside. And she felt herself constrained to rebuke him with what
bitterest words she might use. She had felt it easy to do this at
first, on her brother's score. She had accused him of treachery to
his friendship,—both as to Oswald and as to herself. On that she
could say cutting words without subjecting herself to suspicion
even from herself. But now this power was taken away from her, and
still she wished to wound him. She desired to taunt him with his
old fickleness, and yet to subject herself to no imputation. "Your
right!" she said. "What gives you any right in the matter?"</p>
<p>"Simply the right of a fair field, and no favour."</p>
<p>"And yet you come to me for favour,—to me, because I am her
friend. You cannot win her yourself, and think I may help you! I
do not believe in your love for her. There! If there were no other
reason, and I could help you, I would not, because I think your
heart is a sham heart. She is pretty, and has money—"</p>
<p>"Lady Laura!"</p>
<p>"She is pretty, and has money, and is the fashion. I do not wonder
that you should wish to have her. But, Mr. Finn, I believe that
Oswald really loves her;—and that you do not. His nature is
deeper than yours."</p>
<p>He understood it all now as he listened to the tone of her voice,
and looked into the lines of her face. There was written there
plainly enough that spretæ injuria formæ of which she herself was
conscious, but only conscious. Even his eyes, blind as he had
been, were opened,—and he knew that he had been a fool.</p>
<p>"I am sorry that I came to you," he said.</p>
<p>"It would have been better that you should not have done so," she
replied.</p>
<p>"And yet perhaps it is well that there should be no
misunderstanding between us."</p>
<p>"Of course I must tell my brother."</p>
<p>He paused but for a moment, and then he answered her with a sharp
voice, "He has been told."</p>
<p>"And who told him?"</p>
<p>"I did. I wrote to him the moment that I knew my own mind. I owed
it to him to do so. But my letter missed him, and he only learned
it the other day."</p>
<p>"Have you seen him since?"</p>
<p>"Yes;—I have seen him."</p>
<p>"And what did he say? How did he take it? Did he bear it from you
quietly?"</p>
<p>"No, indeed;" and Phineas smiled as he spoke.</p>
<p>"Tell me, Mr. Finn; what happened? What is to be done?"</p>
<p>"Nothing is to be done. Everything has been done. I may as well
tell you all. I am sure that for the sake of me, as well as of
your brother, you will keep our secret. He required that I should
either give up my suit, or that I should,—fight him. As I could
not comply with the one request, I found myself bound to comply
with the other."</p>
<p>"And there has been a duel?"</p>
<p>"Yes;—there has been a duel. We went over to Belgium, and it was
soon settled. He wounded me here in the arm."</p>
<p>"Suppose you had killed him, Mr. Finn?"</p>
<p>"That, Lady Laura, would have been a misfortune so terrible that I
was bound to prevent it." Then he paused again, regretting what he
had said. "You have surprised me, Lady Laura, into an answer that
I should not have made. I may be sure,—may I not,—that my words
will not go beyond yourself?"</p>
<p>"Yes;—you may be sure of that." This she said plaintively, with a
tone of voice and demeanour of body altogether different from that
which she lately bore. Neither of them knew what was taking place
between them; but she was, in truth, gradually submitting herself
again to this man's influence. Though she rebuked him at every
turn for what he said, for what he had done, for what he proposed
to do, still she could not teach herself to despise him, or even
to cease to love him for any part of it. She knew it all
now,—except that word or two which had passed between Violet and
Phineas in the rides of Saulsby Park. But she suspected something
even of that, feeling sure that the only matter on which Phineas
would say nothing would be that of his own success,—if success
there had been. "And so you and Oswald have quarrelled, and there
has been a duel. That is why you were away?"</p>
<p>"That is why I was away."</p>
<p>"How wrong of you,—how very wrong! Had he been,—killed, how
could you have looked us in the face again?"</p>
<p>"I could not have looked you in the face again."</p>
<p>"But that is over now. And were you friends afterwards?"</p>
<p>"No;—we did not part as friends. Having gone there to fight with
him,—most unwillingly,—I could not afterwards promise him that I
would give up Miss Effingham. You say she will accept him now. Let
him come and try." She had nothing further to say,—no other
argument to use. There was the soreness at her heart still present
to her, making her wretched, instigating her to hurt him if she
knew how to do so, in spite of her regard for him. But she felt
that she was weak and powerless. She had shot her arrows at
him,—all but one,—and if she used that, its poisoned point would
wound herself far more surely than it would touch him. "The duel
was very silly," he said. "You will not speak of it."</p>
<p>"No; certainly not."</p>
<p>"I am glad at least that I have told you everything."</p>
<p>"I do not know why you should be glad. I cannot help you."</p>
<p>"And you will say nothing to Violet?"</p>
<p>"Everything that I can say in Oswald's favour. I will say nothing
of the duel; but beyond that you have no right to demand my
secrecy with her. Yes; you had better go, Mr. Finn, for I am
hardly well. And remember this,—If you can forget this little
episode about Miss Effingham, so will I forget it also; and so
will Oswald. I can promise for him." Then she smiled and gave him
her hand, and he went.</p>
<p>She rose from her chair as he left the room, and waited till she
heard the sound of the great door closing behind him before she
again sat down. Then, when he was gone,—when she was sure that he
was no longer there with her in the same house,—she laid her head
down upon the arm of the sofa, and burst into a flood of tears.
She was no longer angry with Phineas. There was no further longing
in her heart for revenge. She did not now desire to injure him,
though she had done so as long as he was with her. Nay,—she
resolved instantly, almost instinctively, that Lord Brentford must
know nothing of all this, lest the political prospects of the
young member for Loughton should be injured. To have rebuked him,
to rebuke him again and again, would be only fair,—would at least
be womanly; but she would protect him from all material injury as
far as her power of protection might avail. And why was she
weeping now so bitterly? Of course she asked herself, as she
rubbed away the tears with her hands,—Why should she weep? She
was not weak enough to tell herself that she was weeping for any
injury that had been done to Oswald. She got up suddenly from the
sofa, and pushed away her hair from her face, and pushed away the
tears from her cheeks, and then clenched her fists as she held
them out at full length from her body, and stood, looking up with
her eyes fixed upon the wall. "Ass!" she exclaimed. "Fool! Idiot!
That I should not be able to crush it into nothing and have done
with it! Why should he not have her? After all, he is better than
Oswald. Oh,—is that you?" The door of the room had been opened
while she was standing thus, and her husband had entered.</p>
<p>"Yes,—it is I. Is anything wrong?"</p>
<p>"Very much is wrong."</p>
<p>"What is it, Laura?"</p>
<p>"You cannot help me."</p>
<p>"If you are in trouble you should tell me what it is, and leave it
to me to try to help you."</p>
<p>"Nonsense!" she said, shaking her head.</p>
<p>"Laura, that is uncourteous,—not to say undutiful also."</p>
<p>"I suppose it was,—both. I beg your pardon, but I could not help
it."</p>
<p>"Laura, you should help such words to me."</p>
<p>"There are moments, Robert, when even a married woman must be
herself rather than her husband's wife. It is so, though you
cannot understand it."</p>
<p>"I certainly do not understand it."</p>
<p>"You cannot make a woman subject to you as a dog is so. You may
have all the outside and as much of the inside as you can master.
With a dog you may be sure of both."</p>
<p>"I suppose this means that you have secrets in which I am not to
share."</p>
<p>"I have troubles about my father and my brother which you cannot
share. My brother is a ruined man."</p>
<p>"Who ruined him?"</p>
<p>"I will not talk about it any more. I will not speak to you of him
or of papa. I only want you to understand that there is a subject
which must be secret to myself, and on which I may be allowed to
shed tears,—if I am so weak. I will not trouble you on a matter
in which I have not your sympathy." Then she left him, standing in
the middle of the room, depressed by what had occurred,—but not
thinking of it as of a trouble which would do more than make him
uncomfortable for that day.</p>
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