<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>A NIGHT'S VIGIL.</h3>
<p>They had been sitting through all the night,
examining everything. Catherine was not a woman
to be the slave of passion, even when that was the
one delusion of her life. She got over it with a stern
and fierce struggle before they reached the gate of
the Grange, whither Hester followed her, trembling
and half stupefied, unable either to resist or to think
of any course of action for herself. Catherine paused
at the gate, and looked round her with a curious
quivering smile. "Here is where I saw him going
away," she said; "here is where I heard the last
words from him." She laughed; her heart was
throbbing with the wildest suffering. She dashed
her hands together with a violence of which she was
unaware. "Such words!" she cried. It was scarcely
one o'clock, but in summer there is little night, and
already the air had begun to whiten with some premonition
of day. She held up her face to the sky—an
old face, with so many lines in it, suddenly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</SPAN></span>
smitten as with a death-blow. Her eyes, under the
curve of pain, which makes the eyelids quiver, looked
up to the pale skies with what is the last appeal of
humanity. For why?—for why?—an honest life, an
honourable career, a soul that had shrunk from no
labour or pain, a hand that never had been closed to
human distress—and repaid with misery at the end!
Is there no reason in it when God's creature lifts a
face of anguish to His throne, and asks why? She
paused on the threshold of her house, which was
desolate, and made that mute appeal. It was beyond
all words or crying, as it was beyond all reply. The
other, who was the companion of her misfortune,
stood beside her, looking, not at heaven, but at her.
Hester had got far beyond thinking of her own share
in it. Fatigue and excitement had brought sensation
almost to an end. She was not angry with Catherine,
who had thrown her off. Everything was blurred to
her in a sense of calamity common and universal, of
which Catherine seemed the sign and emblem. She
made no interruption in the silence. And it was
only when Catherine turned to go in that she was
recalled to a recollection of Hester by her side.</p>
<p>"I think—I had better go home—to my mother,"
the girl said, looking along the road with a dreamy
terror. She was afraid of the dark, the solitude, the
distance—and yet what was there left to her but to
go home, which she seemed to have quitted, to have
fled from, with the idea of never returning, years ago.
Catherine put out her hand and grasped her. She
was far the more vigorous of the two. She could<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</SPAN></span>
have carried the girl into the house, where she now
half led, half dragged her. They found Harry
already waiting for them in great bewilderment and
distress. He could not account for the entrance of
these two together, or for their apparent union—but
Catherine gave him no explanation. She made him
sit down and tell her at once everything he knew of
the state of affairs: and when this was made plain
to her, she flew out upon him with a wrath that
made Harry shrink.</p>
<p>"Why did you leave everything in one person's
hands? Is it not a partner's business to look after
his own interests? You have piled all upon one
man's shoulders. He has had everything to do. It
has been too much for his mind—it has turned his
head. If it had been yours, what would have
happened to you?"</p>
<p>"I have been saying all that to myself, Aunt
Catherine," Harry said, humbly; "but you know I
am not clever, and poor Ned——"</p>
<p>She stamped her foot on the floor. "Let me have
none of your commiserations," she cried. "There is
nothing poor about it at least."</p>
<p>She put Hester down at the table with pen and
ink to write for her. She had not said a word of
compassion to her; this had been the way she had
chosen to express her feeling, whatever it was.
When Harry had interposed, begging to be allowed
to do it, she had stopped him summarily; and had
gone on thus, collecting information, dictating to
Hester, examining papers with Harry, asking a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</SPAN></span>
hundred questions, till morning was blue in the skies.
When she saw by that strange light stealing in, how
wan and wretched her two companions looked,
Catherine rose from her chair. She was not tired—her
colour was as fresh and her eyes as bright as ever,
her mind full of impatient energy; but the powers of
the others had flagged.</p>
<p>"Go home and rest," she said to Harry. "Have
old Rule there to-morrow morning to meet me. I
will come to the bank to-morrow—I mean to-day—at
eight, before you open. Go home and go to bed."</p>
<p>"Not if I can be of any use to you, Aunt Catherine—or
to poor Ned."</p>
<p>Her foot made the same impatient movement upon
the carpet. "You can be of no use," she said, "dropping
asleep as you are: go and rest; at your age few
can do without sleep. And Hester, go too, you can do
no more." It was not without a half contempt that she
saw the overpowering of their young faculties by that
which to her was nothing. There are so many things
in which youth has the best of it, that age has a right
to its dolorous triumph when that comes. She went
down with Harry to the door to let him out, glad of
the movement, and stood in the early light for a
moment breathing in the fresh air. The birds were
all twittering, making their morning thanksgiving,
expressing their joy in the new day. Catherine
looked out sternly upon the light and gladness in
which she had no share. She thought again—should
she ever think of anything else?—of the last words
she had heard, and of his figure hurrying away in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</SPAN></span>
darkness, deaf to her cry. It was a relief to go in
again, even to see the poor little lamp flickering, and
the light bursting in at every crevice of the ineffectual
shutters. When she reached the room in
which they had been at work, Hester, who had
answered as far as her faculties could to every call
upon her, had dropped back into the great chair in
which she had been sitting, and had fallen asleep in
utter exhaustion. It was a curious scene. The
windows were all closed, and candles upon the table
still burning: but the light swept in from above, over
the top of the shutters, which were not so high as the
glass, and lighted up the room in a strange abstract
way like a studio or a prison. In the midst of this
pale and colourless illumination Hester's white face,
with the blue veins showing in it, in an attitude of
utter abandonment and exhaustion, pillowed upon
the dark cushions of the chair, was the central point;
her hand with the pen in it was still on the table, the
candles flickering with a yellow uncertain blaze.
Catherine went and stood by her for a moment and
looked at her. Tears were upon the girl's long eyelashes,
her mouth seemed still quivering, the faint
sound of a sob came out of her sleep. She looked
younger even than she was, like a child that had
cried itself asleep. Catherine looked at her with
many a thought. John Vernon's daughter, who had
all but ruined her father's house, and had wounded
her own pride, if not her heart, in the way women
feel most—and bitterer still, Edward's love, she, for
whom he had planned to betray her own better<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</SPAN></span>
claims, for whom he would have deserted her, for
whom he had ruined her, this time perhaps without
remedy. With a strange bitterness she looked at the
young creature thus fatally connected with all the
miseries of her life. It was not Hester's fault. The
table was covered with proofs of her submission and
obedience. If it was true that but for her perhaps
Catherine's power would never have been disturbed,
it was also true that but for her Catherine might
have been ruined irretrievably, she and all she prized
most. But this argument did not tell in the mind of
the woman who stood gazing at her, so much as the
look of utter infantile weariness, the broken sound of
the sleeping sob, the glitter upon her eyelashes. She
stood for a long time, and Hester never moved.
Then she took a shawl and covered the sleeper as
tenderly as her mother could have done it, and
began to pace softly up and down in that weird
clearness. She did not even extinguish the candles,
but left them there amid all the disarray of the table,
the scattered papers, covered with notes and figures.
The young can sleep, but not the old. The romantic
interest would be with Hester worn out with
wretchedness and weariness; but the heavier burden
was her own.</p>
<p>Perhaps had the truth been pursued to its depths
it gave a certain satisfaction to Catherine to find
herself at last left to contemplate alone that uttermost
and profoundest loss which was hers. The girl
slept though her heart might be broken; the woman
whose last hope he was, whose faith in human nature<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</SPAN></span>
was wound up in him, who believed in Edward, but
on earth in no one else, slept not, rested not, could
not forget. She walked from end to end of the room,
her hands clasped, her face in all its comely age
paled in a moment to the pallor of an old woman.
People had said that her colour was like a girl's still:
her eye was not dim nor her natural force abated.
But over her there had come this chill in a moment.
And where was he, the cause of it all? Flying fast
across the country somewhere, directing his way, no
doubt, to some port where he could get out of England.
For what, oh Heaven, for what? Was there
any sacrifice she would not have made for him? He
might have had his Hester, his own house like the
others, if that was what he wanted. There was
nothing, nothing she would have grudged him! She
would have asked no gratitude, made no conditions.
He should have had his freedom, and his love—whatever
he wanted. All this swept through her
mind as she went to and fro in that blue clearness of
the morning which swept down upon her from the
skies over all the weariness and disarray of the night.
Catherine did not ask herself what she would have
said, all things being well, if she had been asked to
consent to the effacing of herself, which now it seemed
would have been so easy a solution of the problem.
It seemed to her now that in love she would have
granted all he could ask for, and in pride she certainly
would have done it, scorning to ask how he
could resign her so easily. Love and pride combined
wrung her heart between them now. Up and down,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</SPAN></span>
up and down with a soft monotonous motion she
walked unsubdued while the others sank. Her old
frame felt no weariness, her old heart was yet high.
She could no more sink down and acknowledge
herself beaten, than she could drop her head and
sleep like Hester. With impatience and an energy
unbroken she waited for the day.</p>
<p>Catherine's carriage stood outside the bank at
eight o'clock in the morning, to the wonder yet
admiration of the town. "Old as she is, she's an
example to the young ones," the people said: though
there were darker rumours, too, that one of the
young men had gone wrong, and that it was a sharp
and speedy inquiry into this that had brought
Catherine into the town without delay. The still
closed door was opened to her by Harry, who was
pale with his sleepless night and with the anxiety
from which he could now find no escape. Behind
Harry was old Rule, who came forward with a face
like a mute at a funeral, his hands held up, his
countenance distorted with grief and sympathy. "Oh,
my dear lady!" he cried; "oh, Miss Catherine, has
it come to this? Who could suppose that you and I
should meet together a second time in this way?"</p>
<p>Catherine made a sudden gesture of impatience.
"How do you know what the way is until you
hear?" she said. She sat down at the table where
she had sat so often. Her old look of command, the
energy and life of old, seemed in her face; if it was
paled and jaded, the others, who were more shaken
still than she, had no eyes to see it. The three were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</SPAN></span>
deep in their work before the clerks appeared, one
by one, all those who were of any weight in the
place, or cared for Vernon's, asking anxiously if
anything was known of Mr. Edward. When they
were met by the astonishing statement "Miss Vernon
is here," the announcement was received in different
ways, but with great excitement. "Then all is right,"
said one; but another shook his head. "All must
be very wrong," he said, "or Catherine Vernon would
not be here." It was the cashier who uttered these
words. He was an old servant of the bank, and had
been a junior at the time when old Rule was head
clerk and Catherine the soul of everything. After a
while he was sent for into the mysterious room
towards which the attention of every one was now
directed. There old Mr. Merridew was shown in
with solemnity on his brows, and various others of
the fathers of the town. Even outside there seemed
a little excitement about to the anxious spectators
within. If it had been market-day there might
have been a run on the bank. As it was, there
were one or two little groups about, anxiously
noting the grave faces of the visitors. All day long
they came and went; the great books were all
spread about upon the table within, and when the
door opened sometimes one anxious face would be
seen, sometimes another. One of the younger men
passing the door saw Catherine herself explaining
and urging something upon the chief of the Bank
of England in Redborough, who had joined the
conclave. It was clearly then, they all felt, a matter<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</SPAN></span>
of life and death. Some wine and biscuits were
taken in in the middle of the day, but no one went
away for luncheon, no one had time or leisure for
any such thought. Mr. Pounceby, who was Catherine's
solicitor, stayed by her all day long, while
the others went and came. The clerks, when their
day's work was done, left this secret conclave still
sitting. The cashier and the head clerk were
detained after the others. The younger men went
away with an alarmed sense that Vernon's might
never open again.</p>
<p>And this impression was so far justified that the
councillors, almost without exception, thought so too.
There had been found in Edward's room at the
Grange a bundle of papers, securities taken by him
from the safe at the bank. The greater part had
been abstracted, but the few that were left showed
too clearly what methods he had adopted. The
bank itself was worth aiding. Its prestige as yet
was scarcely touched; but how were these deficiencies
to be made up, how was it to be worked
without money, and how was its credit to be restored?
Catherine had not now the independent
fortune which on the former occasion she had thrown
into the common stock with proud confidence in
Vernon's. It had all been repaid her, but it had
remained in the business, and if Vernon's now were
to be made an end of, was gone. That did not
affect the mind of the proud old woman. She
thought nothing of herself or her fortune. She sat
unwearied, meeting one man after another, who a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</SPAN></span>
week or two ago had been obsequious to her, without
wincing, ready to hear all their doubts, to bear the
shakings of their heads, their blame of the culpable
negligence that had left everything in one man's
hand—their denunciations of Edward, the eager
advantage they took of that right to find fault and
reproach which is put into the hands of every man
who is asked to help. Catherine faltered at first,
when she found that to save Edward's character,
to smooth away his guilt, and make excuses for him
was impossible. These angry men would not hear a
word of apology. He was a swindler to them and
nothing more. "Pardon me, my dear Miss Vernon,
but I always thought the confidence you showed in
that young fellow excessive." "He should not have
been permitted a tithe of the power he had. It
was not just to others who were far more deserving."
"If you mean me, I was no more to be matched with
Edward than a tortoise is with a hare," said Harry.
Catherine put out her hand to him under the table
and gave his hand such a pressure, delicate as hers
was, as almost made the strong young fellow cry out;
but at the same time she silenced him with a look,
and bore it all. She bore everything—the long
hours of contention, of explanation, of censure, of
excuse, of anxious pointing out again and again of
the strong points in her case. She argued it all out
with every individual, and again with every combination
of them, when two or three together would
return to the old objections, the difficulties they had
originally started, and which again and again had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</SPAN></span>
been argued away, with no doubt the natural special
pleading of all who speak in their own defence.
During this continually repeated process Harry would
stand behind her with his face of trouble, watching
the countenances of the speakers, now and then
blurting out something (the reverse of judicious in
most cases), shuffling with uneasy feet upon the
floor; sometimes, poor fellow, there being nothing
else in his power, holding her elbow with the idea
of supporting her, kneeling down to put her footstool
straight; while old Mr. Rule, sitting at a little
distance, equally anxious, equally eager, not of
importance enough to speak, would come in with
a quavering "Miss Vernon explained all that, sir—"
"As Miss Vernon has already said, sir——"</p>
<p>She alone showed little anxiety and no distress.
She was as dignified as if she had been entertaining
them at her table, as she had done so often. She
bore those repetitions of the old objections with
composure. She did not get impatient, twisting and
turning in her chair like Mr. Rule, or crushing her
impatience under foot like Harry. She was like an
Indian at the stake: or rather like a prime minister
in his place in Parliament. The hundred times
repeated argument, the old doubt brought up again,
all afresh with shakings of the head, the stolid little
compliments to her as a woman so much superior to
her sex, her masculine understanding (good lack!
wonderful, though not equal to those whom she had
convinced over and over again, yet who began again
next moment where they had left off), all this she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</SPAN></span>
put up with without shrinking. Oh, the dulness of
them, the unconvinceableness, the opaque vision, the
impotent hearts! But she made no sign that she
perceived. She sat still and held her own. She had
the best of the argument in logic, but not, alas, in
power. Ten mortal hours had struck by the time
the last of her visitors hastened away to his dinner,
promising to think of it, yet shaking his head.
Catherine leant her head upon the back of her high
chair and closed her eyes; the tears came to them in
the relief of having no more to say. She was so
pallid and so worn now that they both rushed to
her in silent terror. She opened her eyes with an
astonished look. "I hope you do not think I am
going to faint; I never faint," she said.</p>
<p>Ten hours! She walked to her carriage with a
foot lighter and firmer than that of Harry, upon
whose fine physique and troubled soul this day had
wrought more havoc than the severest football. She
would not allow her old friend and servant to come
to the door with her.</p>
<p>"Don't tire yourself," she said. "You have so
much to do for us yet. I think we shall pull
through."</p>
<p>"God bless you, Miss Catherine," said the old
man; "if we pull through it will be your doing."</p>
<p>"What merit is that?" she said quickly. "Why
should God bless me for that? It is for myself."</p>
<p>"Oh, my dear lady," cried the old clerk. "I know
you better than you do yourself. It is for Vernon's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</SPAN></span>
and not for you. And Vernon's means the honest
living of many a family. It means——"</p>
<p>"Don't tell me what it means," she cried, putting
up her hands. "It means downfall and shame now.
It means a broken heart, Mr. Rule."</p>
<p>"No, no," he cried. "No, no, we'll get through.
I'll come back if you'll let me, and Mr. Harry will
work like a hero."</p>
<p>She gave Harry a strange glance. There was in
it a gleam of repugnance, an air of asking pardon.
She could not endure the contrast which it was not
possible to refrain from making. He, standing by
her, so dutiful, so kind, while the other who had
ruined her, fled away. She could have struck him
with her nervous hand, which now was trembling;
she could have made a humble confession to him of
the injuries she had done him in her heart. She
could bear the old town dignitaries, the men of
money, better than this.</p>
<p>"May I go with you?" he said, supporting her
with his arm, bending over her with his fair countenance
full of trouble and sympathy.</p>
<p>She could have struck him for being so good and
true. Why was he true, and the other— Better,
better if they had both been alike, both traitors, and
left her to bear it by herself.</p>
<p>"No, Harry," she said; "no, Harry, let me be
alone."</p>
<p>He kissed her hand, poor boy, with a piteous look,
and she felt it wet with a tear. Nor did she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</SPAN></span>
misunderstand him. She knew it was for her he was
sorry. She knew even that he was the one alone
who would stand up for the absent, and excuse him
and pity him. All this she knew, and it was intolerable
to her, and yet the best and sweetest thing
that was in her lot.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</SPAN></span></p>
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