<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>AFTERWARDS.</h3>
<p>Hester woke next morning in an unfamiliar room
with a consciousness of something strange and terrible
that had happened, she could not tell what, that
first sensation before memory awakens which is one
of the most bitter indications of having entered upon
the world of evil. So the guilty pair in Paradise, in
the morning of the world, must have woke out of
their sleep, and felt, before remembrance came, the
sense of ill. She scarcely remembered how she had
been transported to that bed. She had slept for
sorrow, calamity crushing all her unused faculties,
and her first waking sensation was one of trouble
and wonder what it was. She had not long to wait
before the whole came rushing back upon her mind.
She gave a low cry, and all her wounds began to
bleed anew—nay, she felt them as for the first time,
for last night's terror and commotion and misery
were like a dream to her. When she uttered that
cry, there was a soft stir in the room, and a little,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</SPAN></span>
noiseless figure, and anxious face appeared at her
bedside.</p>
<p>"Mother!" Hester cried, with a voice of dismay.</p>
<p>"Yes, my darling, I am here. Catherine was so
good as to send for me. She said you had received
a great shock. She went out herself very early, so
that you need not be afraid of being disturbed,
Hester. And what is it, my dear? She would not
give me any satisfaction. She said you had behaved
very well, and had been the means of giving her
valuable information. I am very glad of that anyhow,
Hester. I always told you she was kind in the
main. If you and she should be better friends after
this it would be a great pleasure to me."</p>
<p>There was anxiety in Mrs. John's plaintive face,
but it was confined to the fear lest her daughter's
health should be affected, and to a little uncertainty
whether the relations with Catherine might be
improved or injured by this mysterious event,
whatever it was.</p>
<p>"She has been very kind, mamma."</p>
<p>"I was sure of it, my dear. Catherine has a way
with her that is not very—<i>nice</i>—sometimes. But
then we all have some fault. I was to ring for tea
as soon as you were awake. That maid, after all,
though I have always had a prejudice against her, is
kind too, in her way. She has made me most comfortable.
I have always observed in my life, Hester,
that when you get to know people you so often think
better of them than when— That has been my
experience. Do you feel able to take some breakfast,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</SPAN></span>
dear? or will you get up first? You are to do
exactly as you please."</p>
<p>Hester lay still with a little moan, and made no
reply. She would have liked to turn her face to the
wall, to beg that the light of day might be shut
out, that she might be left to make acquaintance
with her trouble. But none of these things were
possible. Her mother's gentle face shining upon her
with so much easy anxiety, and so little conception
of anything under the surface, brought her to herself
as nothing else could have done. Why should she
be troubled with these anguishes that were beyond
her? The girl raised herself with that heroism of
necessity which is more effectual than mere will.
Mrs. John would weep with her, and make up to her
with a thousand caresses for the loss of her lover,
when she came to understand it; but she would
never understand the burden that was on Hester's
soul. The girl said to herself that it must be borne
silently, that there must be no further betrayal.
She begged her mother to leave her a little, while
she got up.</p>
<p>"I have had a long sleep. I am quite myself
again," she said.</p>
<p>"You look pale," said Mrs. John, kissing her. "You
have had a shock, and you have never told me yet
what it was. But perhaps, on the whole, the best
thing you can do is to get up; breakfast in bed is not
very comfortable. I will go and have a good look at
Catherine's pretty things in the drawing-room—she
has some nice china—and come back in half an hour<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</SPAN></span>
or so. Don't hurry, my darling, but it is such a
lovely morning; it will do you good to have some
fresh air."</p>
<p>When Hester was left alone she tried to think,
but could not. Scenes came back to her as in a
theatre—the meeting at the gate, and all that passed
there; Catherine's appearance, and the force with
which Edward flung her away from him, and set out
into the dark, into the unknown. Why—why had
he done it? Was it in a sudden fit of passion, which
he had repented of? Was it in the terror of being
discovered—and out of that suspicion and opposition,
and gloomy distrust which had always been in his
mind towards Catherine? And then the railway
would rise before her mind—the crowd and noise,
and wild unnaturalness of everything, the disappointment
which to her at heart was a relief. Had he
not gone after all? What if a better thought had
struck him? What if, when they all went to the
bank, thinking him a traitor, they should find him
there, throwing light on everything, putting the
wrong right? Hester raised her head again when
this thought came into her mind. Was it not after
all the most likely, the most natural thought? A
man does wrong by temptation, by evil companions,
by the leading on of one wrong thing after another;
but when he is brought to a pause, when there is a
distinct call upon him, when he is made to see
beyond dispute what his duty is, is it not natural,
certain, that he must do it? So she said to herself.
For a moment all the clouds flew away, a warm<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</SPAN></span>
exhilaration took possession of her. Then there
floated up before her eyes another scene—the table
round which they had sat in the dead of night;
Harry with his troubled face opposite to her; Catherine
paramount in her energy and rapidity; she
herself putting down upon paper, so quickly that her
fingers alone moved and her mind had no share but
the most broken and imperfect one, what she was
told to write. If he had come back, if he was
working now at the re-establishment of everything,
could Edward ever forgive them? What matter,
what matter, she cried, so long as he set himself
right, so long as Vernon's stood by his help and did
not fall? From all this it will be seen that nothing
of the despair which in reality and in reflection had
overwhelmed all the other chief actors in the drama,
had touched Hester. To her everything was still
possible, and Edward's vindication, Edward's repentance,
the chief, the most natural event of all.</p>
<p>"Well, my dear, are you ready?" said Mrs. John.
"There is quite a nice breakfast waiting for you down
stairs. Catherine's maid (whom I really was unjust
to, Hester, for she is a very nice woman when you
come to know her) insisted upon making you some
chocolate instead of tea: for it would be more
sustaining, she said, in case you should not be disposed
to eat. I don't know why she should think
you would not be disposed to eat. I told her you
always liked your breakfast. But come, my dear,
come, I am sure you must want something. Did
you find the clean things I brought you? Oh I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</SPAN></span>
thought you would be better in a nice clean print,
instead of that dark thing; but you have put on the
old one all the same."</p>
<p>"It is best for me to-day," Hester said.</p>
<p>She thought to herself if it all turned out as she
hoped, with what joy she would return to her summer
garments in the evening, even if it might be that
Edward had broken with her for ever. She thought
this almost certain, for had she not turned against
him? but this was not the question paramount in her
mind. There was but one thing all important, that
he should have returned to his post. Mrs. John was
greatly surprised at the wisdom of that prevision
on the part of Catherine's maid. How could she
have foreseen that Hester, a healthy girl, with generally
a healthy appetite, would turn away almost
with loathing from the dainty food, the pretty tray,
the careful provision made for her? She swallowed
the chocolate hastily at her mother's entreaty: the
very air of the house, those stairs and passages, all
flooded with light, which had painted themselves on
her recollection in the darkness, filled Hester with a
sense of the intolerable. She made haste to get out,
to get away, to take her mother home.</p>
<p>"Don't you think it will only be polite to wait till
Catherine comes back?" Mrs. John said. "You must
remember, dear, that she has been very kind to you;
and nothing could be kinder than her note, and
sending the carriage for me this morning, and all. I
think we ought to wait and thank her for her kindness.
She will think it strange that we should go<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</SPAN></span>
away without a word. Well, if you think it really will
be better to come back in the afternoon, Hester—Has
Catherine gone out to spend the day? That is quite
unusual, surely for her—but however, of course it is
not our business. Lean on my arm, my dear. I am
sure, as you say, the air will do you good."</p>
<p>The air did not do Hester good: the shade of the
holly-tree lying motionless upon the road, the half
open gate at which Catherine had appeared in the darkness,
the strange intelligence that seemed to be in
every bush, as if these inanimate things knew and
remembered what had been done and said in secret,
seemed to bring conviction, and force back upon her
all the scenes she had gone through of which her
innocent mother knew nothing. And every inch of
the way recalled her own proud, eager thoughts of
the night before, the desperation with which she had
gone to that meeting, determined upon her protest
and refusal, yet never sure that she would ever retrace
these steps again. To retrace them now as she was
doing, with her mother's gentle talk in her ears, the
occasional mild question which it was so easy to
elude, the praises of Catherine which her supposed
kindness called forth so easily, seemed an incredible
thing. Mrs. John enjoyed the walk. It was seldom
she went out in the morning, and the excitement of
her daughter's absence all night, of Catherine's
explanations, of the drawing together of some new
and closer bond between Hester and the head of the
Vernon society—the most important person of all
the kindred—gave her a secret exhilaration. There<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</SPAN></span>
had not been such a sensation in the Vernonry for
months as that which had been caused that morning
by the sight of Catherine's well-known brougham,
sent for Mrs. John! It might be that in future this
would be no rare sight: it might be—but the poor
lady scarcely knew how to contain the satisfaction
with which she saw the vista opening up before her
of Hester's promotion and favour with Catherine.
Valuable information! She was proud of what
seemed to her like the highest praise. She always
knew that her Hester, so much superior as she was to
other girls——if Catherine but knew her as she
deserved to be known. And then she asked with
pleasant expectation—</p>
<p>"What was the information, Hester, that you gave
Catherine? I am so glad that you were able to tell
her something she didn't know. I was quite in a
flutter when I got her note last night; but of course
it was perfectly right for you to stay when she wished
it. I shall tell her I am so much obliged to her for
having taken such good care of you. It gave me
quite a fright for the moment, but I soon got over
it. And Emma, you know, went away at last by the
night train."</p>
<p>Thus Mrs. John diverted her own attention and
never pressed a question. But it is impossible to
tell how deserted, how silent, how far out of the
world and life the little rooms at the Vernonry looked
after the agitation of the night. Hester could not
rest in them: the summer forenoon seemed a twelve-month
long. She could not take up any of her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</SPAN></span>
usual occupations. She was afraid to meet any one,
to be questioned perhaps more closely than her
mother had questioned her. Her heart was away, it
was not in this place. In the pauses of Mrs. John's
gentle talk she felt her own thoughts thronging upon
her almost audibly. It seemed impossible that other
people, that even her mother, unsuspicious as she
was, should not find her out. And how slow, how
slow were those sunshiny minutes, sixty of them in
an hour! The time of the early dinner came, and
again Hester turned from the food. Mrs. John began
to be alarmed. "If it goes on like this I shall have
to send for the doctor," she said.</p>
<p>Hester hastened out as soon as the meal was over
to escape from her mother's comments. It seemed
to her that she recognised some new knowledge in
the keen glances of the sisters, and in Mr. Mildmay
Vernon's grin as he sat over his newspaper in the
summer-house. And she was afraid of the old Morgans,
who had more insight. The surroundings of the
house altogether were odious to her—unnecessary
things that had nothing to do with those real affairs
and mysteries of living which were being solved
elsewhere. She asked herself wistfully, whether it
was not time for her to go back: though if Catherine
had not returned, what could she do but cause
suspicion if she went to the empty house? To be
even in the empty house would be something—it
would be so much nearer the scene in which everything
was going on. While she stood with her hand
curved over her forehead looking out upon the road,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</SPAN></span>
with her eyes "busy in the distance shaping things
that made her heart beat quick," the old captain came
up to her. She thought he was paler than usual, and
his eyes were troubled. He had laid his hand on
her shoulder before she heard his approach, so
absorbed was she in her own thoughts. He took her
by the arm in his fatherly way—</p>
<p>"Come with me, Hester, and talk to my old
woman," he said.</p>
<p>It was with a great start that she turned to him,
trembling with nervousness all unknown to the
Hester of yesterday.</p>
<p>"Is she ill?" she cried, scarcely knowing what she
said; and then with a vague smile, "I forgot. Emma
is gone, and she is missing—"</p>
<p>"It is not Emma we are thinking of. Hester, tell
me," said the old man, leading her away with her arm
in his, "what is this about Catherine? What has
happened? Your mother told us you were there all
night, and now to-day——"</p>
<p>"What do they say has happened?" cried Hester
with a gasp of suspense.</p>
<p>"I cannot make head nor tail of it. I hear that
one of the young men has gone wrong; that Catherine
is at the bank; that there are great defalcations;
that he went off last night——I can testify," cried
Captain Morgan, querulously, "that he did not go
away last night, for I was there."</p>
<p>Hester looked up at him with a face from which
all colour had fled.</p>
<p>"Is it known who it is? are you sure he has not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</SPAN></span>
come back? Oh, I have a feeling," she cried, "a
feeling in my heart that he has come back!"</p>
<p>"My child," said the old captain, "you may trust
her and me. Whatever it is, it is safe with her and
me."</p>
<p>Mrs. Morgan was sitting at the window in her
summer place; her placid brow had a cloud upon
it, but was not agitated like her husband's.</p>
<p>"Have you come back to us, Hester?" she said.
"We thought we had lost you. If you can satisfy
his mind with anything you can say, do it, my
dear."</p>
<p>"What can I say?" Hester cried. "We are all in
great trouble. I don't know which is the greatest,
but I cannot tell you secrets that are not mine. Dear
Mrs. Morgan, tell the captain so. Whatever I know
it is by accident. I think I shall die with anxiety
and suspense, but there is nothing I can say."</p>
<p>"My dear, you will not die, you will live to be
anxious many another day. Rowley, my old man,
you hear the child. We must not ask her another
question. Wait, as you have waited many a time
before. It is all in the Lord's hands."</p>
<p>The old man was wiping the moisture from his
forehead: he had seated himself as soon as he came
in, his old limbs were shaking under him. His large,
colourless hands shook, holding his handkerchief.</p>
<p>"Mary," he said, "if it is my flesh and blood that
has brought this disturbance into the place, that has
seduced her boy, and brought down ruin on her
house, how am I ever to lift my head again?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The old lady looked at him with pathetic eyes, in
which there was a suffering as acute as his own,
softened and made almost bright by the patience and
calm that were habitual to her.</p>
<p>"Rowley, we are not thinking of Catherine, we are
thinking of ourselves," she said.</p>
<p>And then there was a pause. It seemed to Hester
that her own brokenheartedness was a sort of child's
passion in comparison. She said humbly—</p>
<p>"Will you tell me what you are afraid of? There
is nobody blamed but one. There is not a name
spoken of but one. I don't know if that is any comfort
to you, Captain Morgan."</p>
<p>"And the one is her boy, the apple of her eye, the
only one that she has trusted, her choice out of all
the world," the old lady said. "Oh be silent, be
silent, my old man! What is your pride to that? I
would rather I had a share of the burden—I would
like to be suffering with her." The tears stood in
the deep wells of those old eyes, which had wept so
much. She was past weeping now. "The Lord
forgive him and bring him back," she said.</p>
<p>"You mean punish him, you mean give him over
to the powers of darkness that he belongs to! What
does he deserve, a man that has used a woman like
that?"</p>
<p>"I am not asking what he deserves. I will tell
you what he would get if he would come back.
Pardon!" said the old woman with a sob, instinctively
putting out her old soft hands.</p>
<p>"I am not for pardon," said the captain vehemently,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</SPAN></span>
his head moving in his agitation, his hands
shaking. "I am for every soul bearing its own
burden. Here is a woman that has spread prosperity
around her. She has been kind, even when she has
not been merciful. The grateful and the ungrateful,
she has been good to them all. She has been like
the sun shining and the rain raining upon both just
and unjust. And here is the end of her, stung to
her heart by the child of her bosom. For it will be
the end of her. She is a grand woman. She won't
bear being deceived."</p>
<p>"Do not say that," said Hester; "she is so strong,
stronger than any of us—if you had seen her last
night!"</p>
<p>"Where could I have seen her last night?" he
said quickly; then, with a smile, "that is all you
know, you children. Yes, stronger than any one of
you, able to do everything. Do you remember the
French boy in Browning's ballad, Hester, that could
not bear it when his Emperor asked if he were
wounded? 'I'm killed, sire!' That is like Catherine.
She stands like a tower. I can see her in my
mind's eye. She needs no sleep, no rest: but she is
killed for all that."</p>
<p>Hester rose to her feet as he spoke in an excitement
she could not control.</p>
<p>"I must go," she said. "I must go—I might be
wanted."</p>
<p>The old man rose and hobbled out after her. He
followed her to the gate.</p>
<p>"I will wait while you get your hat. I am coming<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</SPAN></span>
with you," he said. "We cannot rest, Hester,
neither you nor I."</p>
<p>Mrs. John was dozing in her chair as she generally
did in the afternoon. She opened her eyes and said,
"Are you going for a walk, dear?" then closed them
tranquilly again. The very atmosphere in the brown
wainscotted parlour breathed of peace and quiet
uncongenial with any such throbbings as those in
Hester's heart. She joined the old man, who was
waiting for her at the door, and they went on together,
saying little. The great window in the
Grange where Catherine usually sat commanding
the road was vacant. There was a certain deserted
air about the place. They knew without a word
that Catherine was still out of it.</p>
<p>"It is too far for you to go," Hester said.</p>
<p>Though they had not spoken for a long time they
understood each other <i>à demi-mot</i>.</p>
<p>"It is too far for me," said he, "but what does
that matter? everything will soon be too far for me.
Let me go on while I can."</p>
<p>They walked as far as the bank, where their
anxious eyes made out the people lingering about,
the air of curiosity and excitement. Old Captain
Morgan hobbled up to Mr. Merridew, who was making
his way out with a serious face. "You will excuse me
for my anxiety, sir," he said, "but will you tell me if
Miss Vernon is there, and what is going on?"</p>
<p>"That is an easy question you are asking me,"
said Mr. Merridew, eying him closely; "certainly
Miss Vernon is there."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I am her near relation," said the old man, "and
you are connected with her by marriage."</p>
<p>"I know very well who you are, Captain Morgan:
a distinguished officer, though people have not found
it out here. If you can lend Miss Vernon substantial
help I advise you to do it at once."</p>
<p>Captain Morgan drew back a little: he gave
Hester a pathetic glance. They retired slowly with
lingering steps from the vicinity of Vernon's. They
understood all without knowing anything.</p>
<p>"There is the bitterness of having nothing," said
the old captain, "and that man knew it, Hester. I
would coin myself if I could, for her, and yet I
cannot help her." Neither of them knew about
business, nor how men like Mr. Merridew, who had
been listening all day long to Catherine's explanations
and arguments without being moved, could save
the bank still if they would. But they felt in their
hearts the dull opposition of his face, the shake of his
head, the nature of his advice to one whom he knew
to be a poor man, to help her now. "Money is a
wonderful thing," said Captain Morgan; "it can do
so much and yet so little. If you or I were rich as
we are poor, we could make Catherine think for half
an hour that she had surmounted everything."</p>
<p>"Why for half an hour, Captain Morgan?" said
Hester.</p>
<p>"Because, my dear, at the end of that time
Vernon's being safe, there would come back upon
her that from which neither heaven nor earth can
deliver her."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Oh, Captain Morgan, do not say so. Cannot
Heaven, cannot God, deliver from everything?"
cried Hester, with a sense of horror.</p>
<p>"Ay, in a way that He uses always at the end—by
death. At least we think death will do that for
us; but it is only a guess even then. How otherwise?"
said the old man, raising his dim old eyes
beneath their heavy lids. "What is done cannot
be undone. If the boy were to be touched with
compunction too late and come back, even that
would not restore the past."</p>
<p>"Why not?" she said, "why not? We could
forgive him." It was the first acknowledgment she
had made of any share in the catastrophe.</p>
<p>"Forgive him! You speak as if that could change
anything! What is your forgiveness? You seem to
think it is a thing, not so many words." Then after
they had gone a little while in silence the old man
burst forth again. "You could forgive him! A man
wants not forgiveness, but to make up for his sins.
You think it is like giving him a fortune to give him
your pardon, as if he could set up again, and make a
new beginning upon that. Forgiveness may save a
man's soul, but it does not save his honour or his
life. You could have him back and let him live
upon you, and eat out your hearts with his baseness
trying to make it show like virtue. But Catherine
is too noble a creature for that," cried the old captain.
"Thank God she has never been broken down
to that."</p>
<p>This torrent of words overwhelmed Hester; they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</SPAN></span>
had turned into the quiet road again, and the girl
fell into a low sobbing and weeping as she went.
She was too much overstrained to be able to
control herself. Yet her heart struggled against this
sentence.</p>
<p>"If you love any one is it only while he is good?"
she said. "Is it noble to cast him from you because
he has gone wrong? Then what is love or faithfulness?
Are they nothing—nothing?"</p>
<p>She knew now that he had not come back. Honour
had not moved him, nor love, nor any nobler impulse.
She could have flung herself upon the earth in her
misery. She felt that a touch now would be too
much—that she could bear nothing further. And
her companion saw that she was beyond the reach of
any argument. He was silent, and they moved
slowly along together, he tottering on his aged
limbs, scarcely able to get along.</p>
<p>"Soon everything will be too far for me," he said
with a half-pleased, almost satisfied nodding of his
head. It took them a long time to get home, and
the old captain was so worn out that he could not
rise from his chair again that evening. He and his
old wife sat sadly, saying something to each other
once in half an hour. They could think of nothing
but Catherine. They kept up their broken musing
discussion upon her and her fate as the slow summer
evening again crept silently by.</p>
<p>But Hester could not rest. She satisfied her
mother easily that it was right she should go back
to the Grange and find out if she could be of use.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"It is what I was going to suggest, my dear," said
Mrs. John. "If Edward Vernon is away, as you say,
and nobody with her, she must be lonely. And if
there is any trouble besides—though you have never
rightly explained to me what it was. No no, dear, I
don't mean to say it is your fault. No doubt you
have told me, and I have not taken it up. To be
sure, Hester, you must go; and though I cannot bear
to be without you, yet if Catherine wants you, and
she is in trouble, stay. I am sure she would do as
much for me," said the simple soul, without any cold
breathings of doubt. She went to the gate with
Hester, and when she came back could not help
giving her neighbours a little sketch of the state of
affairs. "My Hester has gone back to the Grange,"
she said, "she will probably stay there all night.
Catherine Vernon wrote me the nicest note to tell
me my child had been of so much use to her; that
is always gratifying to a mother."</p>
<p>"Of use!" cried the ladies both together.
"Gracious goodness, what can be going to happen?
Hester of use!" cried one sister. "And to
Catherine!" said the other. "Dear Catherine,
she tells you so to please you—when probably she
is thinking you the greatest bore—"</p>
<p>"She likes something new to experiment upon,"
said Mr. Mildmay Vernon with a snarl. Mrs. John
was much discouraged by this reception of her news.
She said—</p>
<p>"You little know my child if you think she will
be experimented upon," holding her head high; but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</SPAN></span>
when she got indoors she cried a little over their
ill-nature. If it had been one of them who had
been chosen how different would have been their
tone. Had the brougham been sent express for Miss
Matilda or Miss Martha, what airs they would have
given themselves! and Mrs. John knew that she
had given herself no airs: she had not said a word.
But she could not be silent about the promotion of
her child.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</SPAN></span></p>
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