<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXVIII.</h3>
<p> </p>
<p>I will not confuse the reader with a description of
all Elinor's thoughts during the slow progress of that
afternoon and evening, which were as the slow passing
of a year to her impatient spirit. She took the usual
afternoon walk with her mother soberly, as became
Mrs. Dennistoun's increasing years, and then she made
a pretext of some errands in the village to occupy her
until dark, or rather to leave her free to twist the
thread of her own thoughts as she went along the silent
country road. Her thoughts varied in the afternoon
from those which had seized upon her with such vulture's
claws in the morning; but they were not less
overwhelming in that respect. Her mother's suggestion
that <i>she</i> and not Elinor should be the witness of
that date, and then her ponderings as to that date, her
slow certainty that she could make it out, or puzzle it
out, as Elinor in her impatience said, which was the
last of all things to be desired—had stung the daughter
into a new and miserable realization of what it was that
was demanded of her, which nobody could do but she.
What was it that would be demanded of her? To
stand up in the face of God and man and swear to tell
the truth, and tell—a lie: or else let the man who had
been her husband, the love of her youth, the father of
her boy, sink into an abyss of shame. She thought
rapidly, knowing nothing, that surely there could be no
punishment for him, even if it were proved, at the long
interval of twenty years. But, shame—there would be
shame. Nothing could save him from that. Shame
which would descend more or less to his son. And
then Elinor reflected, with hot moisture coming out
upon her forehead against the cold breeze of the
spring night, on what would be asked of her. Oh, no
doubt, it would be cleverly done! She would be
asked if she remembered his visit, and why she remembered
it. She would be led on carefully to tell the
story of the calendar in the hall, and of how it was but
ten days before her marriage—the last hurried, unexpected
visit of the lover before he came as a bridegroom
to take her away. It would be all true, every word,
and yet it would be a lie. And standing up there in
that public place, she would be made to repeat it, as
she had done in the flowery garden, in the sunshine,
twenty years ago—then dazed and bewildered, not
knowing what she did, and with something of the
blind confidence of youth and love in saying what she
was told to say; but now with clearer insight, with a
horrible certainty of the falsehood of that true story,
and the object with which it was required of her.
Happily for herself, Elinor did not think of the ordeal
of cross-examination through which witnesses have to
pass. She would not, I think, have feared that if the
instinct of combativeness had been roused in her:
her quick wit and ready spirit would not have failed in
defending herself, and in maintaining the accuracy
of the fact to which she had to bear witness. It was
herself, and not an opposing counsel, that was alarming
to Elinor. But I have promised that the reader
should not be compelled to go through all the trouble
and torment of her thoughts.</p>
<p>Dinner, with the respect which is necessary for the
servant who waits, whether that may be a solemn butler
with his myrmidons, or a little maid—always makes
a pause in household communications; but when the
ladies were established afterwards by the pleasant fireside
which had been their centre of life for so many
years, and with the cheerful lamp on the table between
them which had lighted so many cheerful talks, readings,
discussions, and consultations, the new subject of
anxiety and interest immediately came forth again. It
was Mrs. Dennistoun who spoke first. She had grown
older, as we all do; she wore spectacles as she worked,
and often a white shawl on her shoulders, and was—as
sometimes her daughter felt, with shame of herself to
remark it—a little slower in speech, a little more pertinacious
and insistent, not perhaps perceiving with
such quick sympathy the changes and fluctuations of
other minds, and whether it was advisable or not to
follow a subject to the bitter end. She said, looking
up from her knitting, with a little rhetorical movement
of her hand which Elinor feared, and which showed
that she felt herself on assured and certain ground:</p>
<p>"My dear, I have been thinking. I have made it
out day by day. God knows there were plenty of landmarks
in it to keep any one from forgetting. I can
now make out certainly the day—of which we were
speaking; and if you will give me your attention for a
minute or two, Elinor, you will see that whatever the
calendar said—which I never noticed, for it was as
often wrong as right—you are making a mis<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"Oh, for Heaven's sake, mother," cried Elinor, "don't
let us talk of that any more!"</p>
<p>"I have no desire to talk of it, my dear child; but
for what you said I should never<span class="norewrap">——</span> But of course we
must take some action about this thing—this paper you
have got. And it seems to me that the best thing
would be to write to John, and see whether he could
not manage to get it transferred from you to me. I
can't see what difficulty there could be about that."</p>
<p>"I would not have it for the world, mother! And
what good would it do? The great thing in it, the
dreadful thing, would be unchanged. Whether you
appear or me, Pippo would be made to know, all the
same, what it has been our joint object to conceal from
him all his life."</p>
<p>Mrs. Dennistoun did not say anything, but she would
not have been mortal if she had not, very slightly, but
yet very visibly to keen eyes, shaken her head.</p>
<p>"I know what you mean," said Elinor, vehemently,
"that it has been I, and not we, whose object has been
to conceal it from him. Oh, yes, I know you are right;
but at least you consented to it, you have helped in it,
it is your doing as well as mine."</p>
<p>"Elinor, Elinor!" cried her mother, who, having
always protested, was not prepared for this accusation.</p>
<p>"Is there any advantage to be got," said Elinor, like
an injured and indignant champion of the right, "in
opening up the whole question over again now?"</p>
<p>What could poor Mrs. Dennistoun do? She was
confounded, as she often had been before, by those
swift and sudden tactics. She gave a glance up at her
daughter over her spectacles, but she said nothing.
Argument, she knew by long experience, was difficult
to keep up with such an opponent.</p>
<p>"But John is an idea," said Elinor. "I don't know
why I should not have thought of him. He may suggest
something that could be done."</p>
<p>"I thought of him, of course, at once," said Mrs.
Dennistoun, not able to refrain from that small piece
of self-assertion. "It is not a time that it would be
easy for him to leave town; but at least you could
write and lay your difficulties before him, and suggest<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"Oh, you may be sure, mother," cried Elinor, "I
know what I have to say."</p>
<p>"I never doubted it, my dear," said Mrs. Dennistoun,
gently.</p>
<p>And then there was a little pause. They sat and
worked, the elder lady stumbling a little over her knitting,
her thoughts being so much engaged; the
younger one plying a flying needle, the passion and
impetus of her thoughts lending only additional swiftness
and vigour to everything she did. And for ten
minutes or more there was nothing to be heard in the
room but the little drop of ashes from the fire, the sudden
burst of a little gas-flame from the coals, the rustle
of Elinor's arm as it moved. The cat sat with her tail
curled round her before the fire, the image of dignified
repose, winking at the flames. The two human inhabitants,
save for the movements of their hands, might
have been in wax, they were so still. Suddenly, however,
the quietness was broken by an energetic movement.
Elinor threw her work down on the table and
rose from her chair. She went to the window and
drew the curtain aside, and looked out upon the night.
She shut it carefully again, and going to the writing-table,
struck a match and lighted the candles there,
and sat down and began, or appeared to begin, to
write. Then she rose quickly again and returned to
the table at which Mrs. Dennistoun was still seated,
knitting on, but watching every movement of her restless
companion. "Mother," she said, "I can't write, I
have far too much to say. I will run up to town to-morrow
myself and see John."</p>
<p>"To town, Elinor, by yourself? My dear, you forget
it is not an hour's journey, as it was to Windyhill."</p>
<p>"I know that very well, mother. But even the journey
will be an advantage. The movement will do me
good, and I can tell John much better than I could
write. Who could write about a complicated business
like this? He will understand me when he sees me at
half a word; whereas in writing one can never explain.
Don't oppose me, please, mother! I feel that to do
something, to get myself in motion, is the only thing
for me now."</p>
<p>"I will not oppose you, Elinor. I have done so,
perhaps, too little, my dear; but we will not speak of
that. No doubt, as you say, you will understand each
other better if you tell him the circumstances face to
face. But, oh, my dear child, do nothing rash! Be
guided by John; he is a prudent adviser. The only
thing is that he, no more than I, has ever been able to
resist you, Elinor, if you had set your heart upon any
course. Oh, my dear, don't go to John with a foregone
conclusion. Hear first what he has to say!"</p>
<p>Elinor came behind her mother with one of those
quick returns of affectionate impulse which were natural
to her, and put her arms suddenly round Mrs.
Dennistoun. "You have always been far too good to
me, mamma," she said, kissing her tenderly, "both
John and you."</p>
<p>And next morning she carried out her swiftly conceived
intention and went to town, as the reader is
aware. A long railway journey is sometimes soothing
to one distracted with agitation and trouble. The
quiet and the noise, which serves as a kind of accompaniment,
half silencing, half promoting too active
thought; the forced abstraction and silence, and semi-imprisonment
of mind and body, which are equally
restless, but which in that enclosure are bound to
self-restraint, exercise, in spite of all struggles of the
subject, a subduing effect. And it was a strange thing
that in the seclusion of the railway compartment in
which she travelled alone there came for the first time
to Elinor a softening thought, the sudden sensation of
a feeling, of which she had not been sensible for years,
towards the man whose name she bore. It occurred
to her quite suddenly, she could not tell how, as if
some one invisible had thrown that reflection into her
mind (and I confess that I am of opinion they do:
those who are around us, who are unseen, darting into
our souls thoughts which do not originate with us,
thoughts not always of good, blasphemies as well as
blessings)—it occurred to her, I say, coming into her
mind like an arrow, that after all she had not been so
well hidden as she thought all these years, seeing that
she had been found at once without difficulty, it appeared,
when she was wanted. Did this mean that he
had known where she was all the time—known, but
never made any attempt to disturb her quiet? The
thought startled her very much, revealing to her a
momentary glimpse of something that looked like magnanimity,
like consideration and generous self-restraint.
Could these things be? He could have hurt her very
much had he pleased, even during the time she had
remained at Windyhill, when certainly he knew where
she was: and he had not done so. He might have
taken her child from her: at least he might have made
her life miserable with fears of losing her child: and
he had not done so. If indeed it was true that he had
known where she was all the time and had never done
anything to disturb her, what did that mean? This
thought gave Elinor perhaps the first sense of self-reproach
and guilt that she had ever known towards this
man, who was her husband, yet whom she had not seen
for more than eighteen years.</p>
<p>And then there was another thing. After that
interval he was not afraid to put himself into her
hands—to trust to her loyalty for his salvation. He
knew that she could betray him—and he knew equally
well that she would not do so, notwithstanding the
eighteen years of estrangement and mutual wrong that
lay between. It did not matter that the loyalty he
felt sure of would be a false loyalty, an upholding of
what was not true. He would think little of that, as
likely as not he had forgotten all about that. He
would know that her testimony would clear him, and
he would not think of anything else; and even did he
think of it the fact of a woman making a little mis-statement
like that would never have affected Philip.
But the strange thing was that he had no fear she
would revenge herself by standing up against him—no
doubt of her response to his appeal; he was as ready
to put his fate in her hands as if she had been the most
devoted of wives—his constant companion and champion.
This had the most curious effect upon her mind,
almost greater than the other. She had shown no
faith in him, but he had faith in her. Reckless and
guilty as he was, he had not doubted her. He had put
it in her power to convict him not only of the worst
accusation that was brought against him, but of a
monstrous trick to prove his <i>alibi</i>, and a cruel wrong to
her compelling her to uphold that as true. She was
able to expose him, if she chose, as no one else could
do; but he had not been afraid of that. This second
thought, which burst upon Elinor without any volition
of her own, had the most curious effect upon her.
She abstained carefully, anxiously, from allowing
herself to be drawn into making any conclusion
from these darts of unintended thoughts. But they
moved her in spite of herself. They made her think
of him, which she had for a long time abstained from
doing. She had shut her heart for years from any
recollection of her husband, trying to ignore his existence
in thought as well as in fact. And she had succeeded
for a long time in doing this. But now in a
moment all her precautions were thrown to the winds.
He came into her memory with a sudden rush for
which she was no way responsible, breaking all the
barriers she had put up against him: that he should
have known where she was all this time, and never disturbed
her, respected her solitude all these years—that
when the moment of need came he should, without a
word to conciliate her, without an explanation or an
apology, have put his fate into her hands<span class="norewrap">——</span> To the
reader who understands I need not say more of the
effect upon the mind of Elinor, hasty, generous, impatient
as she was of these two strange facts. There
are many in the world who would have given quite a
different explanation—who would have made out of
the fact that he had not disturbed her only the explanation
that Phil Compton was tired of his wife and
glad to get rid of her at any price: and who would
have seen in his appeal to her now only audacity combined
with the conviction that she would not compromise
herself by saying anything more than she
could help about him. I need not say which of these
interpretations would have been the true one. But the
first will understand and not the other what it was that
for the first time for eighteen years awakened a struggle
and controversy which she could not ignore, and vainly
endeavoured to overcome, in Elinor's heart.</p>
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