<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>DOUBTS AND FEARS.</h3>
<p>The abruptness with which Edward Vernon
retired from the discussion with his partner and
agent had a singular effect upon both. Neither
accepted it as done in good faith. It surprised and
indeed startled them. What they had looked for
was a prolonged discussion, ending in all probability
in a victory for Edward, who was by far the most
tenacious of the three, and least likely to yield to
the others. So easy a conclusion of the subject
alarmed them more than the most obstinate maintenance
of his own views. They were so much
surprised indeed that they did not communicate
their astonishment to each other on the spot by
anything more than an interchange of looks, and
parted after a few bewildered remarks about nothing
in particular, neither of them venturing to begin
upon a subject so delicate. But when they next met
reflection had worked upon both. Neither had been
able to dismiss the matter from his thoughts. They<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</SPAN></span>
met indeed in a most inappropriate atmosphere for
any such grave discussion, at Ellen Merridew's house,
where they mutually contemplated each other from
opposite sides of the room, with an abstraction not
usual to either. It had a great effect upon both
of them, also, that neither Hester nor Edward
appeared. Roland had known beforehand and
reconciled himself as well as he could to the former
want: and Harry did not know it, and was full of
curious and jealous alarm on the subject, unable to
refrain from a suspicion that the two who were
absent must have somehow met and be spending
at least part of the time together free from all
inspection—a thing which was really happening,
though nothing could be more unlikely, more unprecedented
than that it should happen. Roland
did not think thus; he knew very well that Edward
had not attempted to hold any intercourse with
Hester, and felt that as far as this was concerned
there was no extra danger in the circumstances:
but Harry's alarm seemed to confirm all his own
ideas on the other matter. He missed Hester
greatly for his own part—not that he did not do his
best to make several of the Redborough young ladies
believe that to recall himself to her individual recollection
was the special object of his visit—but
that was a mere detail of ordinary existence. It
was Hester he had looked forward to as the charm
of the evening, and everything was insipid to him
without her, in the feminine society around him.
It was not till after supper, when the fun had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</SPAN></span>
become faster and more furious that he found himself
standing close to Harry whose countenance in the
midst of all this festivity was dull and lowering as a
wintry sky. Harry did not dance much; he was a
piece of still life more than anything else in his
sister's house: loyally present to stand by her, doing
everything she asked him, but otherwise enduring
rather than enjoying. This was not at all Roland's
<i>rôle</i>: but on this special evening when they got
together after midnight the one was not much more
lively and exhilarating in aspect than the other.
They stood up together in a doorway, the privileged
retreat of such observers, and made some gloomy
remarks to each other. "Gets to look a little absurd,
don't it, this sort of thing, when you have a deal on
your mind?" Harry said out of his moustache.
And "Yes. Gaiety does get depressing after a
while," Roland remarked. After which they relapsed
again into dead silence standing side by side.</p>
<p>"Mr. Ashton, what do you mean by it?" cried
Ellen. "I have given up Harry: but <i>you</i> usually
do your duty. Good gracious! I see <i>three</i> girls
not dancing, though I always have more men on
purpose. I don't know what you boys mean."</p>
<p>"Let us alone, Ashton and I, Nell—we've got
something to talk about," said Harry.</p>
<p>His sister looked up half alarmed in his face.</p>
<p>"I declare since you've gone so much into business
you're <i>insupportable</i>, Harry," she cried. It seemed
to bring the two men a little closer to each other
when she whisked off again into the crowd.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"It's quite true," said Harry, "let's go into the
hall, where there's a little quiet. I do want awfully
to talk to you. What do you think about Ned
giving up that business all at once, when we both
stood up to him about it? I was awfully grateful
to you for standing by me. I scarcely expected it;
but as for Ned giving in like that, I can scarcely
believe it even now."</p>
<p>"It was not much like him, it must be confessed,"
Roland said.</p>
<p>"Like him! he never did such a thing in his life
before; generally he doesn't even pay much attention
to what one says. He has a way of just facing you
down however you may argue, with a sort of a smile
which makes me fit to dance with rage sometimes.
But to-day he was as meek as Moses—What do you
think? I—don't half like it, for my part."</p>
<p>"You think after all he was in the right
perhaps?"</p>
<p>"No, I don't. I never could do that. To risk
other people in that way is what I never would
consent to. But a fellow who is so full of fight and
so obstinate, to give in—that's what I don't
understand."</p>
<p>"You think perhaps—he has not given in," Roland
said.</p>
<p>Harry gave him a bewildered look, half grateful,
half angry. "Now I wonder what I've said that
has made you think that!"</p>
<p>"Nothing that you have said—perhaps only an
uneasy feeling in my own mind that it isn't natural,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</SPAN></span>
and that I don't understand it any more than
you."</p>
<p>"Well," said Harry, with a long breath of relief,
"that is just what I think. I don't believe for a
moment, you understand, that Ned, who is a real
good fellow all through"—here he made a slight
pause, and glanced at Roland with a sort of defiance,
as if expecting a doubt, which however was not
expressed—"means anything underhand, you know.
Of <i>course</i> I don't mean that. But when a man
knows that he is cleverer than another fellow, he'll
just shut up sometimes and take his own way,
feeling it's no use to argue—I don't mean he thinks
himself cleverer than you, Ashton; that's a different
affair. But he hasn't much opinion of me. And
in most things no doubt he's right, and I've never
set up to have much of an opinion."</p>
<p>"There you are wrong, Vernon," said Roland,
"you have the better judgment of the two. Edward
may be cleverer as you say, but I'd rather throw in
my lot with you."</p>
<p>"Do you really say so?" cried Harry, lighting up;
"well, that is very kind of you anyhow. My only
principle is we've got others to consider besides
ourselves."</p>
<p>"Precisely so," said Roland, who had heard this
statement already, "and you were quite right to
stick to it: but I confess I am like you, not quite
comfortable about the other matter. Has he means
enough of his own to go in for it? If so, I should
think that was what he intended."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Harry shook his head. "We had none of us any
means," he said. "Aunt Catherine took us, as you
might say, off the streets. We were not even very
near relations. She's done everything for us: that's
why I say doubly, don't let us risk a penny of her
money or of what she prizes above money. You may
think we were not very grateful to her," Harry
continued, "but that's only Ellen's way of talking.
If there was anything to be done for Aunt Catherine
that little thing has got as true a heart as any one.
But we were not wanted, as you may say. Ned was
always the favourite, and so Nell set up a little in
opposition, but never meaning any harm."</p>
<p>"I feel sure of that," said Roland, with a warmer
impulse than perhaps Mrs. Ellen in her own person
would have moved him to. And then he added, after
a pause, "I think I'll open the subject again. If
Edward Vernon means to do anything rash, it's better
he should be in my hands than in some, perhaps,
that might be less scrupulous. I'll see him to-morrow
about it. There's no time lost, at least——"</p>
<p>"That's capital!" cried Harry, warmly; "that's
exactly what I wanted. I didn't like to ask you;
but that's acting like a true friend: and if, as a
private person, there's anything I could do to back
him up—only not to touch Vernon's, you know——"</p>
<p>Their privacy was broken in upon by the swarm
of dancers pouring into the coolness of the hall as
the dance ended; but up to the moment when the
assembly broke up Harry continued, by an occasional
meaning look now and then across the heads of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</SPAN></span>
others, to convey his cheerful confidence in Roland,
and assurance that now all would go well. Ashton,
too, had in himself a certain conviction that it must
be so. He was not quite so cheerful as Harry, for
the kind of operations into which Edward's proposal
might bring him were not to his fancy. But the
very solemn charge laid upon him by the old people
had never faded from his memory, and Catherine
Vernon in herself had made a warm impression upon
him. He had been received here as into a new home—he
who knew no home at all; everybody had been
kind to him. He had met here the one girl whom,
if he could ever make up his mind to marry (which
was doubtful), he would marry. Everything combined
to endear Redborough to him. He had an
inclination even (which is saying a great deal) to
sacrifice himself in some small degree in order to
save a heartbreak, a possible scandal in this cheerful
and peaceful place. Edward Vernon, indeed, in
himself was neither cheerful nor peaceable; but he
was important to the preservation of happiness and
comfort here. Therefore Roland's resolution was
taken. He had come on purpose to dissuade and
prevent; he made up his mind now to further, and
secure the management of this over-bold venture,
since no better might be. He knew nothing, nor did
any but the writer of it know anything, of the letter
which Catherine Vernon's butler had carefully
deposited in the postbag, and sent into Redborough
an hour or two before this conversation, to be despatched
by the night mail. The night express<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</SPAN></span>
from the north called at Redborough station about
midnight, and many people liked to travel by it,
arriving in town in the morning for their day's
business, not much the worse if they had good
nerves—for there was only one good train in
the day.</p>
<p>Next morning, accordingly, just after Hester had
returned with Emma from that guilty and agitated
walk, which she had taken with the hope of meeting
Edward, and hearing something from him about his
mysterious communication of the previous night—Roland
too set out with much the same purpose,
with a grave sense of embarking on an enterprise
he did not see the end of. He met the two girls
returning, and stopped to speak to them.</p>
<p>"Hester has been at Redborough this morning
already," Emma said. "I tell her she should have
been at Mrs. Merridew's last night, Roland. It was
a very nice dance—the very nicest of all, I think;
but perhaps that is because I am so soon going
away. A regular thing is so nice—always something
to look forward to; and you get to know
everybody, and who suits your steps best, and all
that. I have enjoyed it so very much. It is not
like town, to be sure, but it is so friendly and
homely. I shall miss it above everything when I
go away."</p>
<p>"It was unkind not to come last night, my only
chance," said Roland. He had no conception that
Hester could have the smallest share in the grave
business of which his mind was full, and, grave as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</SPAN></span>
it was, his mind was never too deeply engaged in
anything for this lighter play of eye and voice. She
seemed to wake up from a sort of abstraction, which
Emma's prattle had not disturbed, when he spoke,
and blushed with evident excitement under his
glance. There was in her, too, a sort of consciousness,
almost of guilt, which he could not understand.
"I hope you were sorry," he added, "and were not
more agreeably occupied: which would be an additional
unkindness."</p>
<p>"I am afraid I can't say I am sorry."</p>
<p>Her colour varied; her eyes fell. She was not
the same Hester she had been even last night;
something had happened to the girl. It flashed
across his mind for the moment that Edward had
been absent too, which gave a sting of pique and
jealousy to his thoughts: but reassured himself,
remembering that these two never met except at
the Merridews. Where could they meet? Edward,
who conformed to all Catherine Vernon's ways,
though with resentment and repugnance, and
Hester, who would conform to none of them. He
was glad to remind himself of this as he walked on,
disturbed by her look, in which there seemed so
much that had not been there before. She seemed
even to have some insight into his own meaning—some
sort of knowledge of his errand, which it was
simply impossible she could have. He told himself
that his imagination was too lively, that this little
society, so brimful of individual interests, with its
hidden motives and projects, was getting too much<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</SPAN></span>
for him. He had not been in the habit of pausing
to ask what So-and-So was thinking of, what that
look or this meant. In ordinary society it is enough
to know what people say and do; when you begin
to investigate their motives it is a sign that something
is going wrong. The next thing to do would
be to settle down among them, and become one of
the Redborough coterie, to which suggestion Roland,
with a slight shiver, said Heaven forbid! No, he
had not come to that point. Town and freedom
were more dear to him than anything he could find
here. Hester, indeed (if he was sure he could afford
it), might be a temptation; but Hester by no means
meant Redborough. She would not cling to the
place which had not been very gracious to her.
But he could not afford it, he said to himself,
peremptorily, as he went on. It was not a thing
to be thought of. A young man making his way in
the world, living, as yet a bachelor life, may have a
little house at Kilburn with his sister; but that
would not at all please him with a wife. And
Hester meant her mother as well. It was out of
the question; it was not to be thought of. But
why did she look so strangely conscious? why was
she so pale, so red, so full of abstraction and agitation
to-day? If anything connected with himself
could have caused that agitation, Roland could not
answer for it what he might be led to do.</p>
<p>This thought disturbed him considerably from the
other and graver thoughts with which he had started;
but he walked on steadily all the same to the bank,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</SPAN></span>
and knocked at the door of Edward's room. Edward
was seated at his table reading the morning's letters
with all the calm of a reasonable and moderate man
of business—a model banker, with the credit and
comfort of other men in his hands. He looked up
with a smile of sober friendliness, and held out his
hand to his visitor. He did not pretend to be
delighted to see him. The slightest, the very most
minute shadow of a consciousness that this was
not an hour for a visitor, was on his tranquil
countenance.</p>
<p>"You man of pleasure," he said, "after your late
hours and your dances, how do you manage to find
your way into the haunts of business at this time in
the morning!" and he glanced almost imperceptibly
at his letters as he spoke.</p>
<p>"I am in no hurry," said Roland. "Read
your letters. You know I have nothing particular
to do here. I can wait your leisure; but I have
something to say to you, Vernon, if you will let me."</p>
<p>"My letters are not important. Of course I will
let you. I am quite at your disposal," Edward said;
but there was still a shade of annoyance—weariness—as
at a person importunate who would not take
a hint and convey himself away.</p>
<p>"I wanted to speak to you about the subject of
our conversation yesterday."</p>
<p>"Yes, which was that?"</p>
<p>"It was important enough to have remained in
my memory," said Roland, with a little offence,
feeling himself put in the wrong from the beginning.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</SPAN></span>
"I mean the proposals we were discussing—your
ideas on the subject of the——"</p>
<p>"Oh <i>that</i>! but you put a stop to all my ideas,
Harry and you in your wisdom. I thought you
must have meant that little matter about Aunt
Catherine's books. Yes, it seemed to me, so far
as my lights went, that the proposals were very
promising: and I might have stood out against
Harry, who will never set the Thames on fire; till
you came down upon me with your heavy guns—you
whom I expected to be on my side."</p>
<p>"Then you have really given it up?" cried
Roland, with a sigh of relief.</p>
<p>"Didn't you mean me to do so? That is what
I thought, at all events. You were so determined
about it, that I really don't see what else I could
have done, unless," he said, with a smile, "I had
been a capitalist, and completely independent, as
you said."</p>
<p>"I am most thankful to hear it, Vernon. I had
not been able to divest myself of the idea that you
were still hankering after it," said Roland; "and
I came, intending to say to you, that if your heart
was really set upon it—rather than that you
should put yourself into hands, perhaps not so
scrupulous——"</p>
<p>"Ah! I see: rather than that a rival should get
the business—let us speak plainly," said Edward,
with a pale smile.</p>
<p>"That is not speaking plainly. It is altogether
different from my meaning; but take it so, if you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</SPAN></span>
please. I am glad to know that there is no necessity
for my intrusion anyhow," Roland said; and then
there was a little pause.</p>
<p>At last Edward got up, and came forward, holding
out his hand.</p>
<p>"Pardon the little spite that made me put so
false an interpretation on your motive, Ashton.
I know that was not what you meant. I was
annoyed, I confess, that you did thwart me yesterday
in a matter I had so much at heart."</p>
<p>"I felt that you were annoyed; but what could
I do? I can only advise according to my judgment.
Anyhow, Vernon, I came here intending to say,
'Let me do the best I can for you if you persist;
don't throw yourself among those who promote that
kind of speculation, for they are not to be trusted
to.' But I am above measure glad to find that you
have no hankering after it. That is far the best
solution. You take a weight off my mind," Roland
said.</p>
<p>Edward did not answer for the moment. He
went back and reseated himself at his table. When
he showed his face again, Roland saw he was
laughing.</p>
<p>"After all you said to me yesterday, and Harry!
think of Harry's grand argument coming down upon
me like a sledge-hammer, as potent, and alas, quite
as heavy—how could you think it possible that
I should persist? I am not such a determined
character. Besides, don't you know I have never
been trained to act for myself?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>His laugh, his look, were not very convincing, but
at all events they were conclusive. After another
pause, Roland rose.</p>
<p>"I am interfering with your work," he said. "I
thought it my duty to come at once; but now that
it's all over, I must not waste your time. Pardon
my officiousness."</p>
<p>"Nothing of the sort," said Edward, smiling cheerfully;
"the kindest feeling. I know it is. Are you
going to see Harry? He is in his room, I know."</p>
<p>"Yes, I think I'll just speak to him. There is
some football match that Emma wants to see."</p>
<p>"More pleasuring," said Edward, and laughed
again. There was in him such an air of having
found his visitor out, that Roland could not divest
himself of a certain embarrassment. Edward, he
felt, knew as well as he did, that he was going to
report his failure to Harry. It fretted him beyond
description to be thus seen through, he, who had
thought himself so much more than a match for any
provincial fellow of them all. "But you are quite
right to consult Harry about football; he is the
greatest possible authority upon that subject,"
Edward said.</p>
<p>"Oh, it is not of the slightest importance; it
is merely that Emma, who does not really care a
straw for football, and only wants something to
do, or see——"</p>
<p>"That is surely reason enough," said Edward, and
his complaisance went so far that he left his papers
again, and led the way to Harry's room, where he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</SPAN></span>
looked in, saying, "Here's Ashton come to inquire
about that match."</p>
<p>"Eh? Match?" cried Harry, in much surprise.
Then his faculties kindled at the sight of Roland's
face. "Will you play for us, Ashton? I didn't
know you went in for football. I just wanted a
man to be——"</p>
<p>"It was for Emma; your sister told her she must
go and see it."</p>
<p>"I'll leave you to your explanations," said Edward,
with a laugh of triumph. And indeed the two conspirators
looked at each other somewhat crestfallen,
when he had gone away.</p>
<p>"He takes it quite lightly," said Roland, with the
sense of talking under his breath, "as if he had
never thought of the matter again—does not conceal
that he was vexed, but says of course there was an end
when I came down upon him with my heavy guns."</p>
<p>Then they looked at each other guiltily—ashamed,
though there was nothing to be ashamed of, like
plotters found out.</p>
<p>"Well, that's something tided over," Harry said.</p>
<p>"I hope so: but I must not stay, to confirm his
suspicions. Tell me when the match is for Emma,
for she does want to go and see it, that's quite true."</p>
<p>"I don't care for girls about," said Harry; "they
never understand the game, and it makes fellows
nervous. It's on Saturday, if she wants to come."</p>
<p>"I'll tell her it makes fellows nervous," said
Roland, as he went away. He said it in a louder
tone than usual, that he might be heard in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</SPAN></span>
Edward's room, and then despised himself for
doing so. Altogether he had seldom felt more small
or more completely baffled and seen through than
when he retired from those doors which he had
entered with so kind a purpose. It is embarrassing
to have the tables turned upon you, even in the
smallest matters. He felt that he had been made
to appear officious, intrusive, deceitful, even to himself,
making up plots with one man against another,
prying into that other's purposes, attributing falsehood
to him. This was how his generous intention
was cast back upon his hands. He tried to smile
cynically, and to point out to himself the foolishness
of straining to do a good action; but he was not a
cynic by nature, and the effort was not successful.
In any way, however, in which it could be contemplated,
it was evident that all had been done
that it was possible to do. If Edward had made up
his mind to the risk, he could not stand between
him and ruin. The matter was taken entirely out
of his hands.</p>
<p>Edward, for his part, returned to his room, and
shut himself in with feelings much less victorious
than those he made apparent. The excitement of
the great decision had a little failed and gone off.
He was in the chill reactionary stage, wondering
what might befall, feeling the tugs of old prejudice,
of all the traditions of honour in which he had been
brought up, dragging at his heart. No man brought
up as Edward had been could be without prejudices
on the side of right. It alarmed and wounded him<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</SPAN></span>
to-day to think that he had last night considered
the property of the bank and its customers as a
foundation upon which to start his own venture.
The sophisms with which he had blinded himself
in his excitement failed him now—the daylight was
too clear for them. He perceived that it was other
people's goods, other people's money, which he was
risking; that even to take them out, to look at
them, to think of them as in his power, was a
transgression of the laws of honour. Those chill
drawings back of customary virtue, of the prejudices
of honour, from the quick march of passion which
had hurried him past every landmark in that haste
to be rich, which would see no obstacle in its way,
plunged Edward into painful discouragement. He
seemed to himself to have fallen down from a
height, at which he had been master of his fate,
to some deep-lying underground where he was its
slave, and could only wait till the iron car of necessity
rolled on and crushed him. He had set, he
felt, machinery in motion which he could not stop,
which might destroy him. He sat and looked out
affrighted upon all the uncomprehended forces which
seemed to have got into movement against him.
He, a poor adventurer, with nothing that was his
own, to thrust himself into the midst of the commercial
movements in London, which nobody out
of them could understand fully; he to risk thousands
who had nothing; he to "go in to win" who had
nothing to stand upon! He saw all round him, not
only destruction, not only ruin, but contempt and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</SPAN></span>
outrage. He had once seen a miserable "welsher"
hunted from a racecourse, and the spectacle, so cruel,
so barbarous, yet not unjust, came back to his mind
with a horrible fascination. He remembered the
poor wretch's hat battered down upon his head,
blinding him—the clothes torn from his back, the
cruelty with which he was pursued, and still more,
the mud and dirt, that meant not only punishment
but unutterable contempt. Under that recollection
Edward sat shivering. What was he better than
the welsher? Though he sat there, to all appearance,
spruce and cool, reading his morning's letters, he
was already in this state of miserable depression and
terror when Roland came in. The post that morning
had brought him no fresh alarm, no new excitement.
He was safe for that day; nothing could yet have
been done in his affairs that was not remediable.
It was possible even that by telegraphing now he
could stop all those horrible wheels of destiny, and
undo the decision of last night. As a matter of
fact, no intention of doing so was in his mind; but
the idea came uppermost now and then in the
boiling up and ferment within him: to stop everything
still, to relapse into the Edward of three
months ago—submissive, respectable, keeping every
punctilio of the domestic laws, as well as those of
recognised honesty and prudence. But he never
meant it; he was alarmed at himself, shaken out of
all that ease which excitement gives, that possibility
of believing what we wish; but though everything
that last night pointed to success seemed now to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</SPAN></span>
point to despair, he felt himself clinging on to the
chance with desperation commensurate with the
gloomy prospect. Whatever it was to lead to, he
must yet go on. After all, prudence itself sometimes
fared as badly as hardihood. An investment that
had been calculated upon as the surest and safest
would sometimes turn out disastrous. Who could
tell? The chances of money were beyond all calculation.
And, after all, no one could say that the
ruin of the bank would be for his good. It would
be ruin to himself. It was not a thing that anybody
could suppose he would risk without deliberation.</p>
<p>He was in this condition, surging and seething,
when Roland visited him, and brought him suddenly
to himself with the force which an encounter with
the world outside so often gives to a struggling
spirit. He felt, with a wonderful sense of self-satisfaction,
that he was equal to the emergency,
and confronted it with a sudden gain of calm and
strength which seemed to him almost miraculous,
like what men engaged in holy work are justified
in considering help from above. It could not be
help from above which supplied Edward with self-possession
and strength for his first steps in the
career of evil, but still the relief was great. He got
the better of Roland, he extinguished the little
virtuous plot which he divined between him and
Harry, and he returned to his room with a smile
on his face. But once back again there he did not
feel triumphant. He felt that he was not trusted—that
already they suspected him of having broken<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</SPAN></span>
loose from their society and acting for himself. He
said to himself angrily that but for this he would
probably have telegraphed to contradict that momentous
letter of last night. But how could he do
it now? it would be pandering to their prejudices,
owning that he had taken an unjustifiable step.
And how was it unjustifiable? Was it not he who
was the virtual head, upon whose judgment and
insight everything depended? Supposing Catherine
to be consulted, as had ceased to be the case for
some time, partly with, partly against, her own will—but
supposing her to be consulted now, would
not she certainly give her adherence to Edward's
judgment rather than Harry's? It was not a question
there could be a moment's doubt about. She
would shake her head, and say, "You are far more
venturesome than ever I was, but if Edward really
thinks——" Was not that always what she had
said? And ten years of experience had given him a
right to be trusted. He was acting for the best; he
looked for nothing but success. It was nerves, mere
nerves that had affected him—a reaction from the
excitement of last night.</p>
<p>And thus everything settled down. When he had
got over it, Edward was the most serene of all the
doubtful group which surrounded him, not knowing
what to make of him. Harry, who took a matter-of-fact
view, came next. He now thought it highly
probable, on the whole, that his cousin had thought
better of it. How could he do anything else?—he
had not means of his own to risk to such an extent,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</SPAN></span>
which was a thought very satisfactory to Harry.
Roland Ashton was as much dissatisfied as men
usually are who endeavour in vain to see into the
minds of their neighbours, and offer good offices
which are not wanted. But the most uneasy of
all was Hester, who that day, for the first time,
took upon her the most painful burden of women—the
half knowledge which is torture, which the
imagination endeavours to supplement in a thousand
unreal ways, knowing them to be unreal, and dismissing
them as quickly as they are formed—and
the bitter suspense, the sensation that at any moment
things may be happening, news coming which will
bring triumph or misery, but which you cannot foresee
or accelerate, or do anything but wait for. She
did her best to pray, poor girl! breathing broken
petitions for she knew not what, as she went about
her little occupations all that lingering day. Surely
he would try to see her again, to satisfy her, and tell
what it was he had done, and how it could be possible,
winning or losing, to fly, as he had suggested,
from everything here. To fly—how could it be?
Why should it be? All the other mysteries came in
that to wonder unspeakable and dismay.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</SPAN></span></p>
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