<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>ALARMS.</h3>
<p>Edward was about a week away from home. He
had often been away before, and his absence had
caused no particular commotion: but now it affected
a good many people. To Catherine, if it were
possible, it might be said to have been a certain
relief. He and she had got over that explanation
when she had intended to say so many things to him,
and had found the words taken out of her mouth.
All things had gone on again in their usual way. But
the suspicion which he had supposed to exist so long
without any reason now had actually arisen in her
mind. She showed it less than he had supposed her
to show it when she had no such feeling. She was
on her guard. She did not worry him any longer by
her old affectionate way of going to the window to
watch him when he went out; that had been simple
love, admiration of his orderly, regular ways, pleasure
in the sight of him: but somehow instinctively since
she had begun to doubt she came to perceive the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</SPAN></span>
interpretation he had put upon it, and she did it no
longer. But at night when all was still in the house
and Edward down stairs at work in his room, or
supposed to be at work, if any sound of the door
closing echoed upwards, Catherine would steal behind
the curtains and watch if it was he who was going
out, and which way he took. She believed him, of
course; but yet there was always in her soul a wish
to ask—was he really, really sure that he was true?
Doubts like these are beyond the power of any but
the sternest self-command to crush, and Catherine
was capable of that in his presence. She would not
betray her anxiety to him: but when he was not
there no such effort was necessary, and she betrayed
it freely, to the silence, to the night, when there was
nobody to see.</p>
<p>And her thoughts had travelled fast and far since
that evening. She had no longer any doubt that he
loved somebody, and she had made up her mind that
it was Hester who was the object of his love. This
had caused her perhaps the greatest mental conflict
she had ever known in her life—for her life had this
good thing in it, that it had been wonderfully free
from struggle. She had been the arbiter of all
things in her little world, and nobody had made any
actual stand against her will. Many pretences had
surrounded her, feigned assents and furtive oppositions,
but nobody had stood out against her. It was
a great wonder to her that he or any one should do
so now (though he did not: he had opposed her
in nothing, nor ever said a word from which it could<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</SPAN></span>
be inferred that he rejected or questioned Catherine's
sway), but with all her natural strength of mind she
set herself to reconsider the question. If she disliked
Hester before, if for all these years the bright-eyed,
all-observant girl, mutely defiant of her, had been a
sort of Mordecai to Catherine, it is not to be supposed
that she could easily receive her into favour now.
Her parentage, her looks, her mind, her daring setting
up of her own personality as a child, as if she were
something important, had all exasperated Catherine.
Even the consciousness of her own prejudice, of the
folly of remembering against a girl the follies of
her childhood, helped to aggravate this sentiment;
nor was it likely that the fact that this girl was
Edward's chosen love should make her heart softer.
She said to herself that she could not endure Hester;
but yet she prepared herself for the inevitable from
the first day. Perhaps she thought it well to propitiate
fate by going to the very furthest length at
once, and forecasting all that the most evil fortune
could bring her.</p>
<p>It cost her a sharp and painful struggle. No one
knew what was going on in her mind in those wintry
days of the early year: her preoccupation was
attributed to other things: afterwards, when events
seemed to account for it, her wonderful prevision was
admired and wondered at. But in reality the previsions
in Catherine's mind were all of one kind. She
saw a series of events happen in succession, as to
which she was as confident as if they were past
already; and in her imagination she did the only<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</SPAN></span>
thing that nobody expected of her, the thing which
fate did not demand of her—she made up her mind
that she would make no stand against this hateful
thing. What was the use of it? If the young but
held out, even the most unwise and the most cruel,
they must win in the end. It would not be for her
dignity, she said to herself, to stand out. She would
make no opposition to Edward's choice. The separation
that must ensue she would bear as she could—with
dignity at least if nothing else. The elevation
of her enemy and her enemy's house she must submit
to. She would withdraw, she would have no hand in
it; but at least she would not oppose. This, by dint
of a hard fight, Catherine obtained of herself. She
would say nothing, forestall nothing, but at the same
time oppose nothing. All the long hours which a
lonely woman must spend by herself she appropriated
to this. She must lose Edward; had she not lost
him now? He had been her sole weakness, her one
delusion; and it was not, she said to herself, a delusion—the
boy had loved her and been true to her. He
had made her happy like a mother with a true son.
But when that vagrant sentiment comes in which is
called love (the fools! as if the appropriation of the
name to one kind of affection, and that the most
selfish of all, was not a scorn to love, the real, the
all-enduring!) what was previous virtue, what was
truth, and gratitude, and everything else in life, in
comparison? Of course they must all give place to
the fascination of a pair of shining eyes. Father
and mother, and home and duty, what were they in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</SPAN></span>
comparison? Everybody was aware of that, and the
old people struggled often enough as was well known.
Sometimes they appealed to heaven and earth, sometimes
were hysterical and made vows and uttered
curses. But in the long run the battle was to the
young ones. They had time and passion, and
universal human sympathy, on their side, whereas
the old people had none of all these, neither time to
wait, nor passion to inspire, nor sympathy anywhere
in heaven or earth. Catherine said to herself proudly
that she would not expose herself to the pity which
attends the vanquished. She would retire from the
fray. She would clothe herself in double armour of
stoicism, and teach herself to see the humour in this
as in so many things. Was not seeing the humour
of it the last thing that remained to the noble soul
amid the wonder of life?</p>
<p>Her sense, however, of this great downfall which
was approaching, and in which she meant to enact
so proud and magnanimous a part, was so strong and
bitter that Edward's absence was a relief to her.
She expected every day that he would present
himself before her, and burst forth into some agitated
statement—a statement which she would not
help out with a word, but which she would receive,
not as he would expect her to receive it, with opposition
and wrath, but with the calm of one who knew
all about it, and had made up her mind to it long
ago. But when he was absent she felt that here
was a respite. She was freed from the eager desire
she had, against her will, to know what he was doing,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</SPAN></span>
where he went, who he was with, which tormented
her, but which she could not subdue. All this
ferment of feeling was stilled when he was away.
She did not ask why he should go away so often,
what the business was that called him to London.
For the first time in her life she was overmastered
by a conflict of individual feeling; and she was glad
when there came a lull in it, and when the evil day
was postponed. She went on seeing her friends,
visiting and being visited, keeping a fair face to the
world all the time. But it began to be whispered
in Redborough that Catherine Vernon was beginning
to fail, that there were signs in her of breaking up,
that she began to show her age. People began to
ask each other about her. "Have you seen Catherine
Vernon lately? How did you think she was
looking?" and to shake their heads. Some said she
had been so strong a woman always, and had taken
so much out of herself, that probably the break-up
would be speedy if it was true that she was beginning
to break up; while others held more hopefully
that with her wonderful constitution she might yet
rally, and see twenty-years of comfort yet. The fact
was that she was not ill at all. It seemed to herself
that she was more keenly alive, more highly strung
to every use of existence than ever. She saw better,
heard more quickly, having every sense on the alert.
Nothing had so quickened her and stimulated her
powers for years. She was eager for every new day
which might carry some new crisis in it. She did
not even feel the deadly chill of Edward's desertion<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</SPAN></span>
for the intense occupation which the whole matter
brought her. And then, though she said to herself
it was certain, yet it was not so certain after all.
It might turn out that she was mistaken yet.
There was still an outlet for a secret hope. Sometimes
indeed a flattering unction was laid to her
heart, a feeling that if it is only the unforeseen that
happens, the so carefully thought out, so elaborately
calculated upon, might not happen. But this Catherine
only permitted herself by rare moments. For
the most part she felt very sure of the facts, and
almost solemnly cognisant of what was to come.</p>
<p>In this way the spring went on. It had appeared
to Edward himself as certain that some great <i>coup</i>
must have settled his fate long before. It was his
inexperience, perhaps, and the excitement of his
determination to act for himself, which had made
everything appear so imminent; but after all it did
not turn out so. The course of events went on in
that leisurely current which is far more deadly in its
sweep than any sudden cataract. He did not lose or
gain anything in a moment, his ventures either did
not turn out so vast as he imagined, or they were
partial failures, partial successes. Step by step he
went on, sacrificing, jeopardising, gradually, slowly,
without being himself aware of what he was doing,
the funds he had under his control. He had been
ready in the first passion of his desire for wealth to
risk everything and finish the whole matter at one
swoop; but that passed over, and he was not really
aware how one by one his counters were being swept<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</SPAN></span>
out of his hands. It went on through all the
awakening time of the year, as it might have gone
on for half a life time, and he was impatient of the
delay. Besides, this new accompaniment, this love
which he would not have suffered himself to indulge
had he not believed everything on the eve of a crisis,
became a great addition to his difficulties when the
crisis did not come. The habit of resorting to
Hester was one which grew upon him. But the
opportunities of indulging in it were few, for he was
as anxious not to betray himself nor to let Catherine
suspect what was going on, as at the beginning, when
he believed that all would be over in a week or two.
And Hester herself was not a girl with whom it was
easy to carry on a clandestine intercourse. The
situation chafed her beyond endurance. She had
almost ceased now to think of the mystery in which
he hid his proceedings, or to rebel against the interest
and sympathy which he demanded from her blindly,
out of the keen humiliation and distress which it
cost her to feel that she was deceiving her friends
and the world, conspiring with him to deceive
Catherine. This consciousness made Hester disagreeable
to live with, an angry, resentful, impatient
woman, absorbed in her own affairs, little accessible
to the world. Her mother could not understand
what had come to her, and still less could the old
Morgans, who loved and had understood her so
completely, understand. She avoided them now, she
cared for nobody. Week by week with a joyless
regularity she went to Ellen Merridew's dances, where<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</SPAN></span>
half the evening at least was spent with Edward in
a curious duel of mingled love and dislike—yes,
sometimes hatred almost. It seemed to her that her
distaste for everything that was going on was more
than her love could balance, that she so hated the
expedients he drove her to, that he himself took
another aspect in her eyes. Sometimes she felt that
she must make the crisis which he had so often
anticipated, and instead of consenting to fly with
him must fly by herself, and cut the tie between
them with a sharp stroke. It was all pain, trouble,
misery—and what was worse, falsehood, wherever
she turned. As the year slid round into sunshine,
and the days grew longer, everything became intolerable
to Hester. His absence was no relief to her.
She had his secret to keep whether he was there
or away, or rather her secret: for nothing she felt
could be so dreadful to her as the secresy in which
her own life was wrapped, and which he was terrified
she should betray.</p>
<p>And though it was now nearly six months after
Christmas, Emma Ashton still lived with the old
Morgans, and pursued her adventures with her bow
and spear in the dances and entertainments of the
neighbourhood. Reginald Merridew so far from
"speaking" had been sent off by his father to
America, professedly on business, but, as was well
known in the family, to put a stop to the nonsense
which at his age was so utterly out of the question;
and though other expectations had stirred her from
time to time, nothing had given certainty to her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</SPAN></span>
hopes of being settled. She was going home at last,
to Roland, in the beginning of June, and the old
people were looking forward to their deliverance with
no small impatience. Emma never failed at the
<i>Thés Dansantes</i>. The old fly with the white horse
rumbled along in the dusk of the early summer
nights and mornings, carrying these two young
women to and fro almost as regularly as the Thursday
came—Hester reluctant, angry, and pale, obeying
a necessity which she resented to the very depths of
her being; Emma placid, always with a certain sense
of pleasure animating her business-like arrangements.
Catherine, who did not sleep very well on these
nights, got to recognise the sound, and would sometimes
look out from her window and wonder bitterly
whether <i>that girl</i> too was glancing out, perhaps with
triumph in her eyes as she passed the shut-up house,
thinking of the day when it would be her own. It
gave her a little pleasure on the first of June when
she heard the slow vehicle creeping by to think that
Edward had been called away that afternoon, and
that if Hester had expected to meet him she would
be disappointed. That was a little consolation to
her. She heard it creeping back again about one in
the morning, earlier than usual, with a satisfied smile.
There had been no billing and cooing that evening,
no advance made towards the final triumph. She
thought there was a sound of disappointment even
in the rumble of the fly; and so indeed there might
have been, for Emma was sobbing, and discoursing
among her tears upon the sadness of her prospects.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</SPAN></span>
It was the last <i>Thé Dansante</i> to which Emma could
hope to go. "And here I'm going just as I came,"
Emma said, "though I had such a good opening, and
everybody has been so kind to me. I can't say here
that it has been for want of having my chance. I
have been introduced to the best people, and grandmamma
has given me two new dresses, and you have
never grudged me the best partners, I will say that
for you, Hester; and yet it has come to nothing! I
am sure I sha'n't be able to answer Roland a word
if he says after this that balls are an unnecessary
expense—for it is not much I have made by them.
To think that not one single gentleman in all
Redborough——! Oh, Hester, either Elinor and
Bee tell awful stories of what happened to them, or
things have changed dreadfully, quite dreadfully,
since their day!"</p>
<p>Hester could find no words in which to console
this victim of the times. She listened indeed somewhat
sternly, refusing compassion. "To be sure,
there was poor Reginald, it was not his fault," Emma
sobbed. "If I should live to be a hundred I never
should believe it was his fault. But, after all, he
was very young, and he could have had no money to
speak of, and what should I have done with him?
So perhaps that was for the best. But then there
was Dr. Morris, whom I could have got on with; that
was his mother's doing:—ladies are always jealous,
don't you think?—and I should not have minded
that Captain Sedgely, that volunteer captain. But
it is of no use talking, for this is my last Thursday.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</SPAN></span>
Oh, you don't mind; you have a good home, and a
mother, and everything you can desire. There is no
hurry about you."</p>
<p>Hester made no reply. It seemed to her that she
would be willing to change lives even with Emma, to
fall to her petty level, and estimate the chances of
being settled, and count the men whom she could
have managed to get on with, rather than carry on
such an existence as hers. It was no glance of
triumph, but one of humiliation, that she had cast, as
they passed, upon the shuttered windows and close-drawn
white draperies at the Grange. In her imagination
she stole into the very bedchamber where
Catherine had smiled to think of her disappointment,
and delivered her soul of her secret. "I am not
ashamed that we love each other: but I am ashamed
that we have concealed it," she imagined herself
saying. She was very unhappy; there seemed no
consolation for her anywhere. Edward had warned
her in a hurried note that he was called to town. "I
think it is coming at last," he said. "I think we
have made the grand <i>coup</i> at last." He had said it
so often that she had no faith in him; and how long
was it to go on like this—how long?</p>
<p>Meanwhile the house of the young Merridews was
still ringing with mirth and music. There was no
restraint, or reserve, or prudence or care-taking, from
garret to basement. Algernon, the young husband
who was now a father as well, had perhaps taken a
little more champagne than usual in honour of his
wife's first re-appearance after that arrival. She was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</SPAN></span>
so brave, so "plucky," they all said, so unconventional,
that she had insisted on the <i>Thés Dansantes</i> going on
all the same, though she was unable to preside over
them, and was still up, a little pale but radiant with
smiles, at the last supper-table when every one was
gone. Harry had been looking very grave all the
evening. He had even attempted a little lecture
over that final family supper. "If I were you, Algy
and Nell," he said, "I'd draw in a little now. You've
got your baby to think of—save up something for
that little beggar, don't spend it all on a pack of
fools that eat you up."</p>
<p>"Oh, you old Truepenny," Ellen said, without
knowing what she meant, "you are always preaching.
Hold your tongue, Algy, you have had too
much wine; you ought to go to bed. If I can't
stand up for myself it's strange to me. Who are
you calling a pack of fools, Harry? It's the only
thing I call society in Redborough. All the other
houses are as stiff as Spaniards. There is nobody
but me to put a little life into them. They were all
dead-alive before. If there's a little going on now I
think it's all owing to me."</p>
<p>"She is a wonderful little person is Nell," cried
her husband, putting a half-tipsy arm round her.
"She has pluck for anything. To think she should
carry on just the same, to let the rest have their
pleasure when she was up stairs. I am proud of her,
that is what I am. I am proud——"</p>
<p>"Oh, go to bed, Algy! If you ever do this again
I will divorce you. I won't put up with you. Harry,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</SPAN></span>
shut up," said the young mistress of the house,
who was fond of slang. "I can look after my own
affairs."</p>
<p>"And as for the money," said Algy, with a jovial
laugh, "I don't care a —— for the money. Ned's
put me up to a good thing or two. Ned's not very
much on the outside, but he's a famous good fellow.
He's put me up," he said, with a nod and broad smile
of good humour, "to two—three capital things."</p>
<p>"Ned!" cried Harry, almost with a roar of terror
and annoyance, like the cry of a lion. "Do you mean
to say you've put yourself in Ned's hands?"</p>
<p>Upon which Ellen jumped up, red with anger, and
pushed her husband away. "Oh, go to bed, you
stupid!" she cried.</p>
<p>Harry had lost all his colour; his fair hair and
large light moustache looked like shadows upon his
whiteness. "For God's sake, Ellen!" he said; "did
you know of this?"</p>
<p>"Know of what?—it's nothing," she cried. "Yes,
of course I know about it. I pushed him into it—he
knows I did. What have you got to do with
where we place our money? You may be sure we
sha'n't want you to pay anything for us," she said.</p>
<p>Harry had never resented her little impertinences;
he had always been submissive to her. He shook
his head now more in sorrow than in anger. "Let's
hope you won't want anybody to pay for you," he
said, and kissed his sister and went away.</p>
<p>Harry had never been in so solemn a mood before.
The foolish young couple were a little awed by it,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</SPAN></span>
but at last Ellen found an explanation. "It's ever
since he was godfather to baby. He thinks he will
have to leave all his money to him," she said; and
the incident ended in one of Algy's usual bursts of
laughter over his wife's <i>bons mots</i>.</p>
<p>Harry, however, took the matter a great deal more
seriously; he got little or no sleep that night. In
the morning he examined the letters with an alarmed
interest. Edward was to be back that evening, it
was expected, and there was a mass of his letters on
his desk with which his cousin did not venture to
interfere. Edward had a confidential clerk, who
guarded them closely. "Mr. Edward did not think
there would be anything urgent, anything to trouble
you about," he said, following Harry into the room
with unnecessary anxiety. "I can find that out for
myself," Harry said, sharply, turning upon this furtive
personage. But he did not meddle with any of the
heap, though it was his right to do so. They frightened
him, as though there had been infernal
machines inside, as indeed he felt sure enough
there were—not of the kind which tear the flesh
and fibre, but the mind and soul. When he went
back to his room he received a visit very unexpectedly
from the old clerk, Mr. Rule, with whom
Hester had held so long a conversation on the
night of the Christmas party. It was his habit to
come now and then, to patronise everybody, from the
youngest clerks to the young principals, shaking his
white head and describing how things used to be "in
John Vernon's time." Usually nobody could be more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</SPAN></span>
genial and approving than old Rule. He liked to
tell his story of the great crisis, and to assure them
that, thanks to Miss Catherine, such dangers were no
longer possible. "A woman in the business just
once in a way, in five or six generations," he thought
an admirable institution. "She looks after all the
little things that you young gentlemen don't think
worth your while," he said. But to-day Mr. Rule
was not in this easy way of thinking. He wanted to
know how long Edward had been gone, and where he
was, and when he was expected back? He told
Harry that things were being said that he could not
bear to hear. "What is he doing away so often?
Is it pleasure? is it horse-racing, or that sort of
thing? Forgive me, Mr. Harry, but I'm so anxious
I don't know what I'm saying. You have always
taken it easy, I know, and left the chief management
to Mr. Edward. But you must act, sir, you must act,"
the old clerk said.</p>
<p>Harry's face had a sort of tragic helplessness in it.
"He's coming back to-night—one day can't matter
so much. Oh, no, it's not horse-racing, it's business.
Edward isn't the sort of fellow——"</p>
<p>"One day may make all the difference," cried the
old man, but the more fussy and restless he was, the
more profound became Harry's passive solemnity.
When he had got rid of the old clerk he sat for a
long time doing nothing, leaning his head in his
hands: and at last he jumped up and got his hat,
and declared that he was going out for an hour.
"Several gentlemen have been here asking for Mr.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</SPAN></span>
Edward," he was told as he passed through the outer
office. "Mr. Merridew, sir, the old gentleman: Mr.
Pounceby: and Mr. Fish has just been to know for
certain when he will be back." Harry answered
impatiently what they all knew, that his cousin
would be at the bank to-morrow morning, and that
he himself would return within the hour. There
were some anxious looks cast after him as he went
away, the elder clerks making their comments. "If
Mr. Edward's headpiece, sir, could be put on Mr.
Harry's shoulders," one of them said. They had no
fear that <i>he</i> would be absent when there was any
need for him, but then, when he was present, what
could he do?</p>
<p>Harry went on with long strides past the Grange
to the Heronry; it was a curious place to go for
counsel. He passed Catherine sitting at her window,
she who once had been appealed to in a crisis and
had saved the bank. He did not suppose that things
were so urgent now, but had they been so he would
not have gone to Catherine. He thought it would
break her heart. She had never been very kind to
him, beyond the mere fact of having selected him
from among his kindred for advancement; but Harry
had a tender regard for Catherine, a sort of stolid
immovable force of gratitude. His heart melted as
he saw her seated in the tranquillity of the summer
morning in the window, looking out upon everything
with, he thought, a peaceful interest, the contemplative
pleasure of age. It was not so, but he thought
so—and it seemed to him that if he could but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</SPAN></span>
preserve her from annoyance and disturbance, from
all invasion of rumour or possibility of doubt as to the
stability of Vernon's, that there was nothing he would
not endure. He made himself as small as he could,
and got under the shadow of the trees that she might
not observe him as he passed, and wonder what
brought him that way, and possibly divine the
anxiety that was in him. He might have spared
himself the trouble. Catherine saw him very well,
and the feeling that sprang up in her mind was
bitter derision, mixed with a kind of unkindly
pleasure. "If you think that <i>you</i> will get a look
from her, when she has <i>him</i> at her feet?" Catherine
said to herself, and though the idea that Hester had
<i>him</i> at her feet was bitter to her, there was a pleasure
in the contempt with which she felt Harry's
chances to be hopeless indeed. She was very ungrateful
for his kindness, thinking of other things,
quite unsuspicious of his real object. She smiled
contemptuously to see him pass in full midday when
he ought to have been at his work, but laughed, with
a little aside, thinking, poor Harry, he would never
set the Thames on fire, it did not matter very much
after all whether he was there or not. The master
head was absent, too often absent, but Edward had
everything so well in hand that it mattered the less.
"When he is settled he will not go away so often,"
she said to herself. What a change it would have
made in all her thoughts had she known the gloomy
doubts and terrors in Harry's mind, his alarmed sense
that he must step into a breach which he knew not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</SPAN></span>
how to fill, his bewildered questionings with himself.
If Edward did not turn up that night there would be
nothing else for it, and what was he to do? He
understood the common course of business, and how
to judge in certain easy cases, but what to do in an
emergency he did not know. He went on to the
Heronry at a great rate, making more noise than any
one else would with the gate, and catching full in his
face the gaze of those watchful observers who belonged
to the place, Mr. Mildmay Vernon in the
summer-house with his newspaper, and the Miss
Vernon-Ridgways at their open window. He
thought they all rose at him like so many serpent-heads
erecting themselves with a dart and hiss.
Harry was so little fanciful that only an excited
imagination could have brought him to this.</p>
<p>Mrs. John was in the verandah, gardening—arranging
the pots in which her pelargoniums were
beginning to bloom. She would have had him stay
and help her, asking many questions about Ellen and
her baby which Harry was unable to answer.</p>
<p>"Might I speak to Hester?" he said. "I have
no time to stay; I would like to see her for a
moment."</p>
<p>"What is it?" cried Mrs. John. Harry's embarrassment,
she thought, could only mean one thing—a
sudden impulse to renew the suit which Hester
had been so foolish as to reject. She looked at him
kindly and shook her head. "She is in the parlour;
but I wouldn't if I were you," she said, her eyes
moist with sympathy. It was hard upon poor Harry<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</SPAN></span>
to be compelled thus to take upon himself the credit
of a second humiliation.</p>
<p>"I should like to see her, please," he answered,
looking steadfastly into Mrs. John's kind, humid eyes,
as she shook her head in warning.</p>
<p>"Well, my dear boy; she is in the parlour. I
wish—I wish—— But, alas! there is no change
in her, and I wouldn't if I were you."</p>
<p>"Never mind, a man can but have his chance,"
said magnanimous Harry. He knew that few men
would have done as much, and the sense of the
sacrifice he was making made his heart swell. His
pride was to go too; he was to be supposed to be
bringing upon himself a second rejection; but
"Never mind, it is all in the day's work," he said
to himself, as he went through the dim passages and
knocked at the parlour door.</p>
<p>Hester was sitting alone over a little writing-desk
on the table. She was writing hurriedly, and he
could see her nervous movement to gather together
some sheets of paper, and shut them up in her little
desk, when she found herself interrupted. She gave
a great start when she perceived who it was, and
sprang up, saying, "Harry!" breathlessly, as if she
expected something to follow. But at first Harry
was scarcely master of himself to speak. The girl
he loved, the one woman who had moved his dull,
good, tenacious heart—she whom, he thought, he
should be faithful to all his life, and never care for
another; but he knew that her start, her breathless
look, the colour that flooded her face, coming and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</SPAN></span>
going, were not for him, but for some one else, and
that his question would plunge her into trouble too;
that he would be to her henceforth as an emissary of
evil, perhaps an enemy. All this ran through his
mind as he stood looking at her and kept him silent.
And when he had gathered himself together his
mission suddenly appeared to him so extraordinary,
so presumptuous, that he did not know how to
explain it.</p>
<p>"You must be surprised to see me," he said,
hesitating. "I don't know what you will think.
You will understand I don't mean any impertinence,
Hester—or prying, or that sort of thing."</p>
<p>"I am sure you will mean to be kind, Harry; but
tell me quick—what is it?" she cried.</p>
<p>He sat down opposite, looking at her across the
table. "It is only from myself—nobody's idea but
mine; so you need not mind. It is just this, Hester,
in confidence. Do you know where Edward is? It
sounds impertinent, I know, but I don't mean it.
He's wanted so badly at the bank. If you could
give me an address where I could telegraph to him?
Don't be vexed; it is only that I am so stupid about
business. I can do nothing out of my own head."</p>
<p>"Is anything going wrong?" she cried, her lips
quivering, her whole frame vibrating, she thought,
with the beating, which was almost visible, of her
heart.</p>
<p>"Well, things are not very right, Hester. I don't
know how wrong they are. I've been kept out of it.
Oh, I suppose that was quite natural, for I am not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</SPAN></span>
much good. But if I could but telegraph to him at
once, and make sure of getting him back——"</p>
<p>"I think, Harry—I have heard—oh, I can't tell
you how! he is coming back to-night."</p>
<p>"Are you quite sure? I know he's expected, but
then—— So many things might happen. But if
he knew how serious it was all looking——"</p>
<p>Her look as she sat gazing at him was so terrible
that he never forgot it. He did not understand it
then, nor did he ever after fully understand it. The
colour had gone entirely out of her face; her eyes
stared at him as out of two deep, wide caves. It
was a look of wonder, of dismay, of guilt. "Is he
wanted—so much?" she said. Her voice was no
more than a whisper, and she gave a furtive glance
at the door behind her as if she were afraid some one
might hear.</p>
<p>"Oh, wanted—yes! but not enough to make you
look like that. Hester, if I had thought you'd
have felt it so! Good Lord, what can I do? I
thought you might have told me his address. Don't
mind, dear," cried the tender-hearted young man.
"I've no right to call you dear, but I can't help it.
If it's come to this, I'd do anything for him, Hester,
for your sake."</p>
<p>"Oh, never mind me, Harry—it is—nothing. I
have got no address: but I know—he's coming
to-night."</p>
<p>"Then that's all right," Harry said. "I wanted to
make sure of that. I don't suppose there is anything
to be frightened about so long as he is on the spot<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</SPAN></span>
you know—he that is the headpiece of the establishment.
He is such a clear-headed fellow, he sees
everything in a moment, and he has got everything
on his shoulders. It's not fair, I know. I must try
and shake myself up a little and take my share, and
not feel so helpless the moment Ned's away—that's
all," he said, getting up again restlessly. "I have
only given you a fright and made you unhappy; but
there's no reason for it, I assure you, Hester, so long
as Ned is to be here."</p>
<p>What he said did not comfort her at all, he could
see. Her face did not relax nor her eyes lose their
look of horror. He went away quite humbly, not
saying a word to Mrs. John, who on her part gave
him a silent, too significant, pathetic grasp of her
hand. Harry was half tempted to laugh, but a great
deal more to weep, as he went back again to Redborough.
He reflected that it was hard upon a fellow
to have to allow it to be supposed that he had offered
himself to a girl a second time when he was doing
nothing of the kind. But then he thought of Hester's
horrified look with a wonder and pain unspeakable,
not having the remotest idea what such a look might
mean. Anyhow, he concluded, Edward was coming
home. That was the one essential circumstance
after all.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</SPAN></span></p>
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