<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>AN INTERRUPTION.</h3>
<p>Catherine was in her usual chair in the familiar
room where she had lived for so many years. These
walls had witnessed most of the pleasantnesses and
disappointments of her life; within them she had
grown into that amused spectatorship of all the
pranks of human creatures which it had pleased her
to think was her characteristic attitude, indulgent to
everybody, seeing through everybody. They had
never seen her in the aspect which she bore now,
beaten down under the stroke of fate. She was too
far gone even to be conscious of the extraordinary
irony of life which had made of the one only creature
to whom she had been consciously unjust, whom she
had considered from her childhood as an enemy, her
sole ministrant and sympathiser now. But she was not
conscious even of Hester's presence, who, overpowered
by a great awe of the suffering which she shared, kept
herself in the background, recognising, as so few
watchers do, that she was there for the sake of the
sorrowful woman whom she watched, and not at all<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</SPAN></span>
for her own. Catherine lay back in her chair, her
head thrown back, her eyelids half closed. She did
not move, except now and then to put up her hand
and dry the moisture which collected slowly under her
eyelids. It could not be called tears. It was that
extorted dew of pain which comes when the heart
seems pressed and crushed in some giant grasp. She
was not thinking, any more than it is inevitable to
think as long as life remains. She was only suffering,
nothing more. She could not make any head
against it. Her last stronghold had fallen. This it
is which makes calamity so terrible to the old. She
could not get beyond it. There was nothing, nothing
in her path but this, blocking it across with a darkness
that would never be dispersed. If he had died
she would have known she could not remain long
behind him, and the gloom would have been but a
mist between; but he had not died. The thought of
searching for him through the world, of holding out
succour to him when he came to need, of forgiving,
that last prerogative of love, was scarcely in her
nature. It was hers rather to feel that deep impossibility
of re-beginning, the misery and pain of any
struggle to make the base seem noble, which is as
true a sentiment as the other. She could not have
done it. To many women it is the highest form of
self-abnegation as it is the bitterest lot that can be
borne on earth; but to Catherine it would not have
been possible. The blow to her was final. There
was but one thing—to fight for Vernon's to the last
gasp, to ward off disgrace and failure from the name,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</SPAN></span>
to keep the ground it had occupied so long, against
possibility, against hope; but after that no more—no
more. She had borne herself bravely as long as any
eye was upon her, betraying nothing; and had sat
down to table and tried to eat, with that utter self-mastery
which will sustain the life it loathes with
sedulous care so long as it is necessary—talking to
Hester at intervals, giving Marshall directions as if
nothing had happened. She had been first impatient,
then satisfied to find the girl there. Her presence
was a help in that needful struggle.</p>
<p>Catherine went up stairs after dinner as usual.
Nothing was changed; but when she had attained to
that shelter, she could do no more. She put back
her head and closed her eyes, and gave herself up to
the endurance of her death-blow. At the other end
of the room Hester sat motionless. A keen-sighted
spectator would have seen the outline of her figure
in her dark dress, but nothing more. She was
watching, forgetting her own share, intent upon the
other. Her mind was full of what the old captain
had said, "I'm killed, sire." Hester watched with a
great awe, wondering if even thus, in the silence,
without any more demonstration, a woman might die.
She thought in her heart it would be well; but being
so young she was afraid. And the silence was so
deep, more deep than life could tolerate. She
watched eagerly for that sole movement, the lifting
of Catherine's hand to dry away the moisture from
her eyes.</p>
<p>This stillness was broken suddenly by a loud<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</SPAN></span>
knocking at the door—a continued volley of knocks,
accompanied by the sound of voices outside. Then
this sound surged inwards, and hasty steps were
heard rushing up stairs. Hester's heart leaped to
her mouth. It could not be that <i>he</i> would come
back with such a noise and outcry; but yet a sort of
frantic hope took possession of her as she rose to her
feet. Catherine had raised herself too, and sat with
her eyes widely open fixed upon the door. They
had not long to wait. The door was flung open,
dashing against a cabinet which stood near, with a
superfluity of noise and emphasis; and, sweeping
away the silence before her, and every possibility of
calm, Ellen Merridew burst into the room, her eyes
inflamed with crying, her fair countenance streaked
with red, her light locks standing up round her face.
She was followed by her husband, trying to hold her
back, and by Marshall in the rear, eager—under a
respectable semblance of attending the hasty visitors—to
give accuracy to the floating suspicions of the
servants' hall, and find out what it was all about.
Ellen rushed in, and gazed about her wildly.</p>
<p>"Where is he?" she cried. "Oh, Aunt Catherine,
where is he? You are hiding him, I said you
would hide him, whatever he did. Oh, is it nothing
to you if he goes and ruins people that never did him
any harm?—young people like us that have all our
life before us, and a dear baby to be turned out upon
the world. Oh, Aunt Catherine, if you have any
heart at all, where is he, where is he? I'll have him
to justice!" cried Ellen. "I'll not sit under it. I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</SPAN></span>
won't—not if he should kill me! I want Edward.
Where is Edward? I sha'n't go out of this till you
give him up to me. He has ruined us, he has ruined
us!" cried the excited creature, bursting into a
transport of passionate tears.</p>
<p>There had been a moment of bewildered struggle
in Catherine's face; then she rose up with what
seemed to the excited new comers her usual composure.</p>
<p>"What does all this mean?" she said, in her quiet
voice.</p>
<p>Hester had shut the door upon the servant's
curiosity; Ellen crying violently, and poor Algernon,
endeavouring vainly to console her, stood between
the two, in the centre of the room. It was all that
poor young Merridew could do not to weep too.</p>
<p>"I am sure you will forgive her, Miss Vernon," he
said, in faltering tones. "We are nearly out of our
senses. Oh, don't cry, my dearest; whatever they
do they can't part us, and I'll work for you and baby.
I'll work till I drop. Miss Vernon, if Edward's here—she
doesn't mean any harm. She is just off her
head, poor girl! and baby not a month old yet.
If you will only let us see him, I'll pledge my
word——"</p>
<p>"Algy, hold your tongue!" cried Ellen amidst
her sobs, stamping her foot. "Hold your tongue,
I tell you. She'll never, never give him up—never
till she's forced, I know that. She has always liked
that fellow better than the whole of us put together.
And we've every one kotoued to him for her sake.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</SPAN></span>
He's been the head of everything, though he was
nothing but a poor—— And as frightened of her
as a dog, and hated her all the time. Oh yes, Aunt
Catherine, you may believe me or not, but whenever
there was a word about you, Edward was always
the worst. Of course we all had our remarks to
make, I don't say anything different; but he was
always the worst. And now he's gone, and led
Algy to his ruin," she cried, with another wild outburst.
"We have lost every penny. Do you hear
me, Aunt Catherine, do you hear me? We're
ruined, with a dear baby not a month old, and I
that have never got up my strength. Oh yes, Algy,
yes, dear. I know you'll work till you drop. But
what good will that do to me, to have you work
yourself to death, and to be left a widow at my age,
with a baby to support? And, Aunt Catherine, it
will all be your fault," cried Ellen. "Yes, it will be
your fault. If you hadn't made such a fuss about
him, who would have ever trusted him? It was
because of you I gave my consent. I said Aunt
Catherine will never let him come to harm. And
now here it has all come to smash, and me and Algy
are ruined. Oh, how can you have the heart? and
a dear innocent baby without a word to say for
himself! And me at my age—and poor Algy that
thought he was making so good a marriage when he
got one of the Vernons——"</p>
<p>"Nelly, Nelly, darling!" cried the poor young
fellow, "I married you because I loved you, not
because you were one of the Vernons."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"And he had a good right to think so," said Ellen
pushing away his caressing arm. "And they all
thought so—every one; and now they've turned
against me, and say I'm extravagant, and that I've
ruined him. Oh! me to have ruined him that
thought I was making a man of him! Aunt
Catherine! Will you let us all be sacrificed, every
one, only to keep Edward from harm?"</p>
<p>Catherine Vernon had sunk into her chair, but
there was something of the old look of the spectator
at a comedy again upon her face. The evening was
beginning to fall, and they did not see the almost
ghastly colour which had replaced the wonderful
complexion of which everybody once spoke.</p>
<p>"Make her sit down, Algernon, and stop this
raving," she said. "What has happened? I know
nothing of it. If you have any claims upon Vernon's
you will be paid with the rest—if we stand, till the
last penny, if we fall, to the utmost that can be paid.
I cannot say any more."</p>
<p>They both sat down and gazed at her with consternation
on their faces; even Ellen's tears dried
up as by magic. After she had stopped, they sat
staring as if stupefied. Then Ellen got up, and threw
herself at Catherine's feet with a cry of wild dismay.</p>
<p>"Aunt Catherine! you don't mean to say that you
cannot help us, that you cannot save us? Oh, Aunt
Catherine! don't be angry with me. I did not mean
to make you angry. I was always silly, you know.
You will help us, you will save Algy, you will pay
the money, won't you?" She crept close to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</SPAN></span>
Catherine, and took her hand and kissed it, looking
up piteously, with tears streaming down her face.
"You'll do it for me, Aunt Catherine? Oh, though
I am silly I am fond of my husband. And he's so
good; he's never said it was my fault. And I always
knew you would put it right. Aunt Catherine! you
will put it right?"</p>
<p>Her voice rose into a shrill, despairing cry; then
she dropped down helpless, sobbing and moaning,
but still holding by Catherine's hand and her
dress, whatever she could grasp at, in a passion of
incredulity and despair.</p>
<p>Then Catherine, who had been so stately, sank
back into her chair.</p>
<p>"I can't bear any more," she said, "I can't bear
any more. For the love of God take her away!"</p>
<p>But it was only the sudden appearance of Harry
which put an end to this painful scene. He gathered
his sister up in his arms, while her husband was
ineffectually intreating and reasoning with her, and
carried her out of the room, with a severity and
sternness which silenced the young pair.</p>
<p>"Look here," he said, taking them into the
deserted library which had been Edward's room,
"we are all in the same box. He has ruined her
and us all. You, out of your own confounded folly,
the rest of us—I can't tell you how. He has ruined
<i>her</i>. God—forgive him!" cried Harry, with a long
pause, bringing out the last words with a violent
effort. "But, look here! The only hope we have
of pulling through is in her. They can't let Catherine<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</SPAN></span>
Vernon be ruined in Redborough. I don't think it's
in the heart of man to do it; but if we drive her
into her grave, as you've been trying to do——"</p>
<p>"Oh, Harry, how dare you say so! I only went
to her—where should I go?—and I thought it
would be all right. I thought it was dreadful, but
I never believed it, for I know Aunt Catherine——"</p>
<p>"Ellen, hold your tongue, for God's sake! If we
kill her, it's all up with us. Hasn't she got enough
to bear? I brought a cab when I knew you were
here. Take her home, Algy, and keep her quiet,
and let's meet and talk over it like men," Harry
said, severely.</p>
<p>He had never so asserted himself in all his life
before. They hurried her out between them to the
cab, much against Ellen's will, who wanted explanations,
and to know if it was true that Aunt Catherine
couldn't, couldn't if she would; and then told them,
sobbing, that if it was so, none of them could afford
to pay for a cab, and why, why should ruined people
spend a shilling when they had not got it? The
cabman heard part of these protestations, and
Marshall another part. But on the whole both
Algernon and Harry were more occupied with her
in her transport, more anxious for its consequences,
more tender of her, than if she had been the most
self-commanded and heroic woman in the world.</p>
<p>When this tempest of interruption swept away,
Catherine was still for a few minutes more. Then
she called Hester to her in a voice of exhaustion.</p>
<p>"I think," she said, "it has done me no harm.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</SPAN></span>
Anything is better than that which—is always
behind. And I must do nothing to hurt myself
before to-morrow. Was not Harry there? He may
have something to tell me. Let him come and say
it to you. You are quick witted, and you will
understand; and if it is worth writing, write it
down. I will not take any part. I will keep still
here. If it rouses me, so much the better. If not,
you will listen for me with your young ears, and
forget nothing. I must save myself, you see, for
to-morrow."</p>
<p>"I will forget nothing," Hester said.</p>
<p>Catherine smiled faintly, with her eyes closed.</p>
<p>"I had thought of making you bring me some
wine. There is some Tokay in the cellar; but one
always pays for a strong stimulant, and this is the
better way. You are young, and you are a Vernon
too. Bend your mind to it. Think of nothing but
the business in hand."</p>
<p>"I will," said Hester, with solemnity, as if she
were pronouncing the words before a judge.</p>
<p>Catherine took hold of her dress when she was
going away.</p>
<p>"One thing," she said. "I think you and I have
hated each other because we were meant to love
each other, child."</p>
<p>"I think I have always done both," said Hester.</p>
<p>The faint sound that broke through the stillness
was not like Catherine's laugh. She patted the
girl's arm softly with her hand. Their amity was
too new to bear caresses.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Now go and do your work, for your honour and
mine," she said.</p>
<p>It appeared that Harry had much to say. It was
strange to have to say it all to the young and eager
listener, her eyes glowing with interest and anxiety,
who was not content with any one statement, but
questioned and investigated till she had brought out
every point of meaning, while the real authority sat
by silent, her eyes closed, her hands clasped, like an
image of repose. Both the young people kept their
eyes upon her. There was not a movement which
Hester did not watch, while she exerted her faculties
to comprehend everything that Harry told her, and
put down everything that seemed at all important.
The impulse carried her over her own share of the
individual misery. Everything else disappeared
before the paramount importance of this. When
all that Harry had to say was said, there arose a
silence between them which had the effect which
nothing before had of rousing Catherine. She
opened her eyes and looked at them kindly.</p>
<p>"Everything has been done as I wished," she
said. "I have gleaned something, and the rest you
will tell me, Hester, to-morrow. It has been a rest
to me to hear your voices. You can expect me,
Harry, at the same hour."</p>
<p>"Is it not too much for you, Aunt Catherine? It
is everything for us that you should come."</p>
<p>"I will come," she said. "It is easier than staying
at home. Fatigue is salvation. Now I am going to
bed, to sleep. Oh, I mean it. I cannot do my work<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</SPAN></span>
without it. You will come too in the morning,
Hester, when I send for you? Then, good-night."</p>
<p>They watched her go away with her step still
stately. Her faithful maid, whom Mrs. John had
found so kind, but who had not always been kind, was
waiting for her. The two young people stood and
looked after her with eyes of tender respect and awe.</p>
<p>"I thought once," said Hester, in a hush of subdued
feeling, "that she might have died sitting in her
chair."</p>
<p>"Ah," said Harry, who had a little more experience,
"it is seldom that people get out of it so easily
as that. I want to tell you something more if it will
not—upset you more."</p>
<p>Hester smiled.</p>
<p>"Is there anything that can upset me more?" she
said.</p>
<p>He looked at her wistfully. He did not know
what her individual part in this trouble had been;
whether Edward was more to her than another, or
what the position was in which they stood to each
other.</p>
<p>"I don't know how to take it," he said, "or how
to understand it. There are news of—Edward."</p>
<p>The last gleam of hope shot across Hester's
mind.</p>
<p>"He is coming back?" she said, clasping her
hands.</p>
<p>Harry shook his head.</p>
<p>"Will you come with me to the door? It is such
a lovely night."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She had not the courage or the presence of mind
to say no. She went down stairs with him, where the
lamps were lighted again, and out to the gate—the
same hour, the same atmosphere as last night. Was
it only last night that all had happened? She could
have turned and fled in the tremor, the horror of the
recollection. Just there she lay at Catherine's feet.
Just there Catherine had stood and listened.</p>
<p>Hester stood her ground like a martyr. She knew
she must learn to do so, and that it would not be
possible to avoid the place made so bitter by recollection.
Harry did not know how to speak. He
shifted uneasily from one foot to another. "He has
been traced to town; he got in at the junction, not
here. He reached London this morning, very early—with
a lady."</p>
<p>"With a lady!"</p>
<p>Hester had expected a great shock, but the
astonishment of this took its sting away.</p>
<p>"They left this afternoon, it is supposed to go
abroad," Harry said.</p>
<p>"Still with the lady? That is very strange," said
Hester, with a little quiver in her lips.</p>
<p>"There is reason now to suppose that he—married
her in the meantime."</p>
<p>Hester had grasped by accident the post of the
gate. She was glad she had done so. It was a
support to her, at least. Married her! It gave her
no immediate pain in her astonishment, which was
unspeakable. In the dusk Harry did not see her
face. He had no conception of the real state of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</SPAN></span>
case. The fact that Edward had been discovered
with another woman had confused Harry and diverted
the natural suspicions which had risen in his mind
when he had found Hester so linked with Catherine
after the discovery of Edward's flight. He watched
her with a little alarm, wondering and anxious. But
the only sign of any emotion was the tightening of
her hand upon the iron gate.</p>
<p>"You will know," he said, "whether it will be
best to say anything of this. If it will hurt her more,
let it alone till the crisis is past."</p>
<p>"If it will hurt her—more? I do not think
anything—can hurt her more."</p>
<p>"And you are nearly over-worn," he said, with a
tender and pitying cadence in his voice. "I can't
say spare yourself, Hester. You are the only one she
deserves nothing from. She ought to feel that: if
he is gone who owes her everything, yet you are
standing by her, who never owed her anything."</p>
<p>Hester could not bear it any longer. She waved
her hand to him and went in—into the house that
was not hers, where there was no one who had a
thought to bestow upon her. Where was there any
one? Her mother loved her with all her heart, but
had nothing to say to her in this rending asunder of
her being. She thought she was glad that it was all
happening in a house which was not her home, which
after, as Harry said, the crisis was past, she might
never need to enter again. She went up stairs, to
the unfamiliar room in which she had spent the
previous night. There she sat down in the dark on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</SPAN></span>
the bed, and looked at it all, passing before her eyes,
like a panorama. For this was the only description
that could be given. The conversation just recorded
occurred over again, as if it had been in a book.
"With a lady!" "They left this afternoon."
"Reason to suppose that in the meantime—" And
then this talk, suspended in the air as it seemed,
came to a pause. And Hester, through the interval,
saw all her own long stormy wooing, its sudden
climax with so much that was taken for granted—"My
only love!—and I am your only love." That
was all true. Those agitated scenes, the dances that
were nothing but a love duel from beginning to end, the
snatches of talk in the midst of the music and tumult,
the one strange blessed moment in the verandah at
home, the meeting so tragical and terrible of last
night. That was a sort of interlude that faded again,
giving place to Harry's steady subdued voice—</p>
<p>"Married her in the meantime! Married her!"</p>
<p>Hester said these words aloud, with a laugh of
incredulous dismay and mockery. The sound terrified
herself when she heard it. It was Catherine's laugh
made terrible with a sort of tragic wonder. Married
her! Had there been no place for Hester at all,
nothing but delusion from beginning to end?</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />