<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XLVI" id="CHAPTER_XLVI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XLVI.</h3>
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<p>It cannot be said that Uncle John was very happy
with Philip, but that was a thing the others did not
take into account. John Tatham was doing for the boy
as much as a man could do. A great debate was expected
that evening, in which many eminent persons
were to speak, and Mr. Tatham gave Philip a hasty
dinner in the House so that he should lose nothing, and
he found him a corner in the distinguished strangers'
gallery, telling him with a smile that he expected him
hereafter to prove his title to such a place. But Philip's
smile in return was very unlike the flush of pleasure
that would have lighted it up only yesterday. John felt
that the boy was not at all the delightful young companion,
full of interest in everything, that he had been. Perhaps
he was on his good behaviour, on his dignity, bent
upon showing how much of a man he was and how little
influenced by passing sentiments, as some boys do.
Anyhow it was certain that he was much less agreeable
in his self-subdued condition. But John was fortunately
much interested in the discussion, in which, indeed, he
took himself a slight part, and, save for a passing
wonder and the disappointment of the moment, did not
occupy himself so very much with Pippo. When he
looked into the corner, however, in a lull of the debate,
when one of those fools who rush in at unguarded
moments, when the Speaker chances to look their way,
had managed to get upon his foolish feet to the despair
of all around, the experienced man of the world
received a curious shock from the sight of young
Philip's intense gravity, and the self-absorbed, unconscious
look he wore. The boy had the look of hearing
nothing, seeing nothing that was around him, of being
lost in thoughts of his own, thoughts far too serious
and troubled for his age. Had he discovered something?
What did he know? This was the instinctive
question that rose in John's mind, and not an amused
anticipation of Pippo's original boyish view of the
question and the speakers, such as had delighted him
on the boy's previous visits to the House. And indeed
Philip's attention was little fixed upon the debate. He
tried hard to bring it back, to keep it there, to get the
question into his mind, but in spite of himself his
thoughts flew back to the other public assembly in
which he had sat unnoticed that day: till gradually the
aspect of things changed to him, the Speaker became
the judge, the wigged secretaries the pleaders, and he
almost expected to see that sudden apparition, that
sight that had plucked him out of his careless life of
boyhood and trust, the sight of his mother standing
before the world on trial for her life. Oh, no, no, not
on trial at all! he was aware of that: a harmless witness,
doing only good. The judge could have nothing but
polite regard for her, the jury admiration and thanks for
the clear testimony which took a weight from their shoulders.
But before her son she was on her trial, her trial
for more than life—and he who said with so much assurance
that his mother had no secrets from him! until the
moment arrived, without any warning, in the midst of
his security, which proved that everything had been
secret, and that all was mystery—all mystery! and
nothing sure in life.</p>
<p>It crossed Philip's mind more than once to question
John Tatham upon this dreadful discovery of his—John,
who was a relation, who had been the universal referee
of the household as long as he could remember, Uncle
John must know. But there were two things which
held him back: first, the recollection of his own disdainful
offence at the suggestion that Uncle John, an
outsider, could know more than he did of the family
concerns; and partly from the proud determination to
ask no questions, to seek no information that was not
freely given to him. He made up his mind to this
while he looked out from his corner upon the lighted
House, seeing men move up and down, and voices
going on, and the sound of restless members coming
and going, while the business of the country went on.
It was far more important than any private affairs that
could be passing in an individual brain, and Philip
knew with what high-handed certainty he would have
put down the idea that to himself at his age there could
be anything private half so exciting, half so full of interest,
as a debate on the policy of the country which
might carry with it the highest issues. But conviction
comes readily on such subjects when the personal interest
comes which carries every other away. It was
while a minister was speaking, and everything hanging
on his words, that the boy made up his mind finally
that he would ask no questions. He would ignore
that scene in the Law Courts, as if it had not been. He
would say nothing, try to look as if nothing had passed,
and wait to see if any explanation would come.</p>
<p>It was not, perhaps, then to be wondered at if John
found him a much less interesting companion than ever
before, as they walked home together in the small
hours of the night. Mr. Tatham's own speech had been
short, but he had the agreeable consciousness that it
had been an effective one, and he was prepared to find
the boy excited by it, and full of applause and satisfaction.
But Philip did not say a word about the
speech. He was only a boy, and it may be supposed
that any applause from him would have had little importance
for the famous lawyer—the highly-esteemed
member who kept his independence, and whose
speeches always secured the attention of the House,
and carried weight as among the few utterances which
concerned the real import of a question and not its
mere party meaning. But John was hurt more than
he could have thought possible by Philip's silence. He
even tried to lead the conversation artfully to that
point in the debate, thinking perhaps the boy was shy
of speaking on the subject—but with no effect. It was
exceedingly strange. Had he been deceived in Philip?
had the boy really no interest in subjects of an elevated
description? or was he ill? or what was the matter
with him? It troubled John to let him go on alone
from Halkin Street to his lodging, with a vague sense
that something might happen. But that was, of course,
too absurd. "Tell your mother I'll come round in the
afternoon to-morrow, as soon as I am free," he said,
holding Philip's hand. And then he added, paternally,
still holding that hand, "Go to bed at once, boy.
You've had a tiring day."</p>
<p>"Yes—I suppose so," said Philip, drawing his hand
away.</p>
<p>"I hope you haven't done too much," said John, still
lingering. "You're too young for politics—and to sit
up so late. I was wrong to keep you out of bed."</p>
<p>"I hope I'm not such a child as that," said Philip, with
a half-smile: and then he went away, and John Tatham,
with an anxious heart, closed behind him his own door.
If it were not for Elinor and her boy what a life free of
anxiety John would have had! Never any need to
think with solicitude of anything outside that peaceful
door, no trouble with other people's feelings, with investigations
what this or that look or word meant.
But perhaps it was Elinor and her boy, after all (none
of his! thinking of him as an outsider, having nothing
to do with their most intimate circle of confidence and
natural defence), who, by means of that very anxiety,
kept alive the higher principles of humanity in John
Tatham's heart.</p>
<p>Philip went home, walking quickly through the silent
streets. They were very silent at that advanced hour,
yet not so completely but that there was a woman who
came up to the boy at the corner. Philip neither knew
nor desired to know what she said. He thought nothing
about her one way or another. He took a shilling
out of his pocket and threw it to her as he passed—walking
on with the quick, elastic step which the sudden
acquaintance he had made with care had not been
able to subdue. He saw that there was still a faint
light in his mother's window when he reached the
house, but he would not disturb her. How little
would he have thought of disturbing her on any other
occasion! "Are you asleep, mother?" he would have
said, looking in; and the time had never been when
Elinor was asleep. She had always heard him, always
replied, always been delighted to hear the account of
what he had been doing, and how he had enjoyed himself.
But not to-night. With a heart full of longing,
yet of a sick revolt against the sight of her, he went
past her door to his room. He did not want to see
her, and yet—oh, if she had only called to him, if she
had but said a word!</p>
<p>Elinor for her part was not asleep. She had slept a
little while she was sure that Philip was safely disposed
of and herself secured from all interruption; but when
the time came for his return she slept no longer, and
had been lying for a long time holding her breath,
listening to every sound, when she heard his key in the
latch and his foot on the stair. Would he come in as
he always did? or would he remember her complaint
of being tired, a complaint she so seldom made? It
was as a blow to Elinor when she heard his step go on
past her door: and yet she was glad. Had he come in
there was a desperate thought in her mind that she
would call him to her bedside and in the dark, with his
hand in hers, tell him—all that there was to tell. But
it was again a relief when he passed on, and she felt
that she was spared for an hour or two, spared for the
new day, which perhaps would give her courage. It
was an endless night, long hours of dark, and then
longer hours of morning light, too early for anything,
while still nobody in the house was stirring. She had
scarcely slept at all during that long age of weary and
terrible thought. For it was not as if she had but one
thing to think of. When her mind turned, like her
restless body, from one side to another, it was only to
a change of pain. What was it she had said, standing
up before earth and heaven, and calling God to witness
that what she said was true? It had been true, and yet
she knew that it was not, and that she had saved her
husband's honour at the cost of her own. Oh, not in
those serious and awful watches of the night can such a
defence be accepted as that the letter of her testimony
was true! She did not attempt to defend herself. She
only tried to turn to another thought that might be less
bitter: and then she was confronted by the confession
that she must make to her boy. She must tell him that
she had deceived him all his life, hid from him what he
ought to have known, separated him from his father and
his family, kept him in ignorance, despite all that had
been said to her, despite every argument. And when
Elinor in her misery fled from that thought, what was
there else to think of? There was her husband, Pippo's
father, from whom he could no longer be kept. If she
had thought herself justified in stealing her child away
out of fear of the influence that father might have upon
him, how would it be now when they must be restored
to each other, at an age much more dangerous for the
boy than in childhood, and with all the attractions of
mystery and novelty and the sense that his father had
been wronged! When she escaped from that, the most
terrible thought of all, feeling her brain whirl and her
heart burn as she imagined her child turning from the
mother who had deceived him to the father who had been
deprived of him, her mind went off to that father himself,
from whom she had fled, whom she had judged and
condemned, but who had repaid her by no persecution,
no interference, no pursuit, but an acceptance of her
verdict, never molesting her, leaving her safe in the
possession of her boy. Perhaps there were other ways
in which Phil Compton's magnanimity have been looked
at, in which it would have shown in less favourable
colours. But Elinor was not ready to take that view.
Her tower of justice and truth and honour had crumbled
over her head. She was standing among her ruins,
feeling that nothing was left to her, nothing upon which
she could build herself a structure of self-defence. All
was wrong; a series of mistakes and failures, to say no
worse. She had driven on ever wilful all through,
escaping from every pang she could avoid, throwing off
every yoke that she did not choose to bear: until now
here she stood to face all that she had fled from, unable
to elude them more, meeting them as so many ghosts
in her way. Oh, how true it was what John had said
to her so long, so long ago—that she was not one who
would bear, who if she were disappointed and wronged
could endure and surmount her trouble by patience!
Oh, no, no! She had been one who had put up with
nothing, who had taken her own way. And now she
was surrounded on every side by the difficulties she had
thrust away from her, but which now could be thrust
away no more.</p>
<p>It may be imagined what the night was which Elinor
spent sleepless, struggling one after another with these
thoughts, finding no comfort anywhere wherever she
turned. She had not been without many a struggle
even in the most quiet of the years that had passed—in
one long dream of peace as it seemed now; but never
as now had she been met wherever she turned by another
and another lion in the way. She got up very
early, with a feeling that movement had something lulling
and soothing in it, and that to lie there a prey to all
these thoughts was like lying on the rack—to the great
surprise of the kind landlady, who came stealing into
her room with the inevitable cup of tea, and whose inquiry
how the poor lady was, was taken out of her
mouth by the unexpected apparition of the supposed
invalid, fully dressed, moving about the room, with all
the air of having been up for hours. Elinor asked, with
a sudden precaution, that the newspapers might be
brought up to her, not so much for her own satisfaction—for
it made her heart sick to think of reading
over in dreadful print, as would be done that morning
at millions of breakfast-tables, her own words: perhaps
with comments on herself and her history, which might
fall into Pippo's hands, and be read by him before he
knew: which was a sudden spur to herself and evidence
of the dread necessity of letting him know that story
from her own lips, which had not occurred to her before.
She glanced over the report with a sickening
sense that all the privacy of sheltered life and honourable
silence was torn off from her, and that she was exposed
as on a pillory to the stare and the remarks of
the world, and crushed the paper away like a noxious
thing into a drawer where the boy at least would never
find it. Vain thought! as if there was but one paper
in the world, as if he could not find it at every street
corner, thrust into his hand even as he walked along;
but at all events for the moment he would not see it,
and she would have time—time to tell him before that
revelation could come in his way. She went down-stairs,
with what a tremor in her and sinking of her heart it
would be impossible to say. To have to condemn herself
to her only child; to humble herself before him,
her boy, who thought there was no one like his mother;
to let him know that he had been deceived all his life,
he who thought she had always told him everything.
Oh, poor mother! and oh, poor boy!</p>
<p>She was still sitting by the breakfast-table, waiting,
in a chill fever, if such a thing can be, for Philip, when
a thing occurred which no one could have thought of,
and yet which was the most natural thing in the world—which
came upon Elinor like a thunderbolt, shattering
all her plans again just at the moment when, after
so much shrinking and delay, she had at last made up
her mind to the one thing that must be done at once.
The sound of the driving up of a cab to the door made
her go to the window to look out, without producing
any expectation in her mind: for people were coming
and going in Ebury Street all day long. She saw, however,
a box which she recognised upon the cab, and then
the door was opened and Mrs. Dennistoun stepped out.
Her mother! the wonder was not that she came now,
but that she had not come much sooner. No letters for
several days, her child and her child's child in town,
and trouble in the air! Mrs. Dennistoun had borne it
as long as she could, but there had come a moment
when she could bear it no longer, and she too had followed
Pippo's example and taken the night mail. Elinor
stood motionless at the window, and saw her mother
arrive, and did not feel capable of going to meet her,
or of telling whether it was some dreadful aggravation
of evil, or an interposition of Providence to save her
for another hour at least from the ordeal before her.</p>
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