<p><SPAN name="c11" id="c11"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XI.</h3>
<h4>MR. WESTERN HEARS THE STORY.<br/> </h4>
<p>It was the custom for Mr. Western to come down into the library
before breakfast, and there to receive his letters. On the morning
after Miss Altifiorla's departure he got one by which it may be said
that he was indeed astonished. It can seldom be the case that a man
shall receive a letter by which he is so absolutely lifted out of his
own world of ordinary contentment into another absolutely different.
And the world into which he was lifted was one black with
unintelligible storms and clouds. It was as though everything were
suddenly changed for him. The change was of a nature which altogether
unmanned him. Had he been ruined that would have been as nothing in
comparison. The death of no friend,—so he told himself in the first
moment of his misery,—could have so afflicted him. He read the
letter through twice and thrice, and then sat silent with it in his
hand thinking of it. There could be but one relief, but that relief
must surely be forthcoming. The letter could not be true. How to
account for its falsehood, how to explain to himself that such a
letter should have been written to him without any foundation for it,
without any basis on which such a story could be constructed, he
could not imagine to himself. But he resolved not to believe it. He
saw that were he to believe it, and to have believed it wrongly, the
offence given would be ineffable. He should never dare to look his
wife in the face again. It was at any rate infinitely safer for him
to disbelieve it. He sat there mute, immovable, without a change of
countenance, without even a frown on his brow, for a quarter of an
hour; and at the end of that time he got up and shook himself. It was
not true. Whatever might be the explanation, it could not be true.
There was some foul plot against his happiness; but whatever the
nature of the plot might be, he was sure that the story as told to
him in that letter was not true. And yet it was with a very heavy
heart that he rose and walked off to his wife's room.</p>
<p>The letter ran as follows:—<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p><span class="smallcaps">My dear Mr.
Western</span>,—I think it is necessary that I
should allude to a former little incident in my past
life,—one that took place in the course of the last year
only,—to account for the visit which I made to your house
the other day, and which was not, I think, very well
taken. I have no reason to doubt but that you are
acquainted with all the circumstances. Indeed I look upon
it as impossible that you should not be so. But, taking
that for granted, I have to explain my own conduct.</p>
<p>It seems but the other day that Cecilia Holt and I were
engaged to be married.<br/> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>Mr. Western, when he
came to this passage, felt for a moment as
though he had received a bullet in his heart.<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p>All Exeter knew of the engagement, and all Exeter
seemed to be well pleased. I was staying with my brother-in-law,
the Dean, and had found Miss Holt very intimate at the
Deanery. It is not for me now to explain the way in which
our engagement was broken through, but your wife, I do not
doubt, in telling you of the affair, will have stated that
she did not consider herself to have been ill-used. I am
quite certain that she can never have said so even to
yourself. I do not wish to go into the matter in all its
details, but I am confident that she cannot have
complained of me.</p>
<p>Under these circumstances, when I found myself living
close to you, and to her also, I thought it better to call
and to offer such courtesies as are generally held to be
pleasant in a neighbourhood. It would, I thought, be much
pleasanter to meet in that frank way than to go on cutting
each other, especially as there was no ground for a
quarrel on either side. I have, however, learned since
that something has been taken amiss. What is it? If it be
that I was before you, that is too late to be mended. You,
at any rate, have won the prize, and ought to be
contented. You also were engaged about the same time, and
my cousin has got your young lady. It is I that am left
out in the cold, and I really do not see that you have any
reason to be angry. I have no wish to force myself upon
you, and if you do not wish to be gracious down at Ascot,
then let there be an end of it.</p>
<p class="ind10">Yours truly,</p>
<p class="ind15"><span class="smallcaps">Francis
Geraldine</span>.<br/> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>He arose and went slowly up-stairs to his wife's bedroom. It was just
the time when she would come down to breakfast, and as his hand was
on the lock of the door she opened it to come out. The moment she saw
him she knew that her secret had been divulged. She knew that he knew
it, and yet he had endeavoured to eradicate all show of anger from
his face, as all reality of it from his heart. He was sure,—was
sure,—that the story was an infamous falsehood! His wife, his chosen
one, his Cecilia to have been engaged, a year ago, to such a one as
Sir Francis Geraldine,—to so base, so mean a creature,—and then to
have married him without telling a word of it all! To have kept him
wilfully, carefully, in the dark, with studied premeditation so as to
be sure of effecting her own marriage before he should learn it, and
that too when he had told her everything as to himself! It certainly
could not be, and was not true!</p>
<p>She stood still holding the door open when she saw him there with the
letter in his hand. There was an instant certainty that the blow had
come and must be borne even should it kill her. It was as though she
were already crushed by the weight of it. Her own conduct appeared to
her black with all its enormity. Though there had been so little done
by her which was really amiss, yet she felt that she had been guilty
beyond the reach of pardon. Twelve months since she could have
declared that she knew herself so well as to be sure that she could
never tremble before anyone. But all that was changed with her. Her
very nature was changed. She felt as though she were a guilty,
discovered, and disgraced criminal. She stood perfectly still,
looking him in the face, but without a word.</p>
<p>And he! His perceptions were not quick as hers, and he still was
determined to disbelieve. "Cecilia!" he said, "I have got a letter."
And he passed on into the room. She followed him and stood with her
hand resting on the shoulder of the sofa. "I have got a letter from
Sir Francis Geraldine."</p>
<p>"What does Sir Francis Geraldine say of me?" she replied.</p>
<p>Had he been a man possessed of quick wit, he would have perceived now
that the letter was true. There was confession in the very tone of
her voice. But he had come there determined that it was not true,
determined at any rate to act as though it were not true; and it was
necessary that he should go through the game as he had arranged to
play it. "It is a base letter," he said. "A foul, lying letter. But
there is some plot in it of which I know nothing. You can perhaps
explain the plot."</p>
<p>"Maybe the letter is true," she said standing there, not submissive
before him, but still utterly miserable in her guilt.</p>
<p>"It is untrue. It cannot possibly be true. It contains a damnable
lie. He says that twelve months since you were engaged to him as his
wife. Why does he lie like that?" She stood before him quite quiet
without the change of a muscle of her face. "Do you understand the
meaning of it all?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes."</p>
<p>"What is the meaning? Speak to me and explain it."</p>
<p>"I was engaged to marry Sir Francis Geraldine just before I knew you.
It was broken off and then we went upon the Continent. There I met
you. Oh, George, I have loved you so well! I do love you so truly."
As she spoke she endeavoured to take his hand in hers. She made that
one effort to be tender in obedience to her conscience, but as she
made it she knew that it would be in vain.</p>
<p>He rejected her hand, without violence indeed but still with an
assured purpose, and walked away from her to the further side of the
chamber. "It is true then?"</p>
<p>"Yes; it is true. Why should it not be true?"</p>
<p>"God in Heaven! And I to hear about it for the first time in such a
fashion as this! He comes to see you, and because something does not
go as he would have it, he turns round and tells me his story. But
that he has quarrelled with you now, I should never have heard a
syllable." He had come up to her room determined not to believe a
word of it. And now, suddenly, there was no fault of which in his
mind he was not ready to accuse her. He had been deceived, and she
was to him a thing altogether different from that which he had
believed her.</p>
<p>But she, too, was stung to wrath by the insinuation which his words
contained. She knew herself to be absolutely innocent in every
respect, except that of reticence to her husband. Though she was
prepared to bear the weight of the punishment to which her silence
had condemned her, yet she was sure of the purity of her own conduct.
Knowing his disposition, she did not care to make light of her great
fault, but now something was added, she hardly knew what, of which
she knew herself to be innocent. Something was hinted as to the
friendship remaining between her and this man, of which her husband,
in his pride, should not have accused her. What! Did he think that
she had willingly received her late lover as her friend in his house
and without his knowledge? If he thought that, then, indeed, must all
be over between them. "I do not know what it is that you suspect. You
had better say it out at once."</p>
<p>"Is this letter true?" and he held the letter up in his hand.</p>
<p>"I suppose it to be true. I do not know what it contains, but I
presume it to be true."</p>
<p>"You can read it," and he threw the letter on the table before her.</p>
<p>She took it up and slowly passed her eyes over the words,
endeavouring, as she did so, to come to some determination as to what
her conduct should be. The purport of the words she did not fully
comprehend, so fully was her mind occupied with thinking of the
condition of her husband's mind; but they left upon her an impression
that in the main Sir Francis Geraldine had told his story truly.
"Yes," she said, "it is true. Before I had met you I was engaged to
marry this other man. Our engagement was broken off, and then mamma
and I travelled abroad together. We there met you, and then you know
the rest."</p>
<p>"And you thought it proper that I should be kept in the dark!" She
remained silent. She could not apologise to him after hearing the
accusation which rankled in his bosom. She could not go about to
explain that the moment fittest for an explanation had never come.
She could not endeavour even to make him understand that because her
story was so like his own, hers had not been told. She knew the
comparative insignificance of her own fault, and yet circumstances
had brought it about that she must stand oppressed with this weight
of guilt in his eyes. As he should be just or unjust, or rather
merciful or unmerciful, so must she endure or be unable to endure her
doom. "I do not understand it," he said, with affected calm. "It is
the case, then, that you have brought me into this position with
premeditated falsehood, and have wilfully deceived me as to your
previous engagement?"</p>
<p>"No!"</p>
<p>"How then?"</p>
<p>"There has been no wilful deceit,—no cause for deceit whatsoever.
You were engaged to marry the lady who is now Mrs. Geraldine. I was
engaged to marry Sir Francis."</p>
<p>"But I told you all."</p>
<p>"You did."</p>
<p>"It would have been impossible that I should have asked you to be
mine without telling you the whole story." She could not answer him.
She knew it to be true,—that he had told her and must have told her.
But for herself it had been so improbable that he had not known of
her engagement! And then there had been no opportunity,—no fitting
opportunity. She knew that she had been wrong, foolish, ill-judging;
but there had been nothing of that premeditated secrecy,—that
secrecy with a cause, of which he had hinted that she was guilty. "I
suppose that I may take it as proved that I have been altogether
mistaken?" This he said in the severest tone which he knew how to
assume.</p>
<p>"How mistaken?"</p>
<p>"I have believed you to be sweet, and pure, and innocent, and
true;—one in whom my spirit might refresh itself as a man bathes his
heated limbs in the cool water. You were to have been to me the joy
of my life,—my great treasure kept at home, open to no eyes but my
own; a thing perfect in beauty, to think of when absent and to be
conscious of when present, without even the need of expression. 'Let
the wind come and the storm,' I said to myself, 'I cannot be unhappy,
because my wife is my own.' There is an external grace about you
which was to my thinking only the culture of the woman within."</p>
<p>"Well;—well."</p>
<p>"It was a dream. I had better have married that little girl. She was
silly, and soon loved some one better. But she did not deceive me."</p>
<p>"And I,—have I deceived you?"</p>
<p>He paused before he answered her, and then spoke as though with much
thought, "Yes," he said; "yes."</p>
<p>"Where? How?"</p>
<p>"I do not know. I cannot pretend even to guess. I shall probably
never know. I shall not strive to know. But I do know that you have
deceived me. There has been, nay, there is, a secret between you and
one whom I regard as among the basest of men, of which I have been
kept purposely in ignorance."</p>
<p>"There is no such secret."</p>
<p>"You were engaged to be his wife. That at any rate has been kept from
me. He has been here as your friend, and when he came,—into my
house,—the purport of his visit was kept from me. He asked for
something, which was refused, and consequently he has written to me.
For what did he ask?"</p>
<p>"Ask! For nothing! What was there for him to ask?"</p>
<p>"I do not know. I cannot even pretend to guess. As I read his letter
there must have been something. But it does not matter. While you
have seemed to me to be one thing, you have been another. You have
been acting a part from the first moment in which we met, and have
kept it up all through with admirable consistency. You are not that
sweetly innocent creature which I have believed you to be."</p>
<p>She knew that she was all that he had fancied her, but she could not
say so. She had understood him thoroughly when he had told her that
she had been to him the cool water in which the heated man might
bathe his limbs; that she was the treasure to be kept at home. Even
in her misery, something of delight had come to her senses as she
heard him say that. The position described to her had been exactly
that which it had been her ambition to fill. She knew that in spite
of all that had come and gone she was still fit to fill it. There had
been nothing,—not a thought to mar her innocence, her purity, her
woman's tenderness. She was all his, and he was certain to know every
thought of her mind and every throb of her heart. She did believe
that if he could read them all, he would be perfectly satisfied. But
she could not tell him that it was so. Words so spoken will be the
sweetest that can fall into a man's ear,—if they be believed. But
let there come but the shadow of a doubt over the man's mind, let him
question the sincerity of a tone, and the words will become untrue,
mawkish and distasteful. A thing perfect in beauty! How was she to
say that she would be that to him? And yet, understanding her error
as she had done with a full intelligence, she could have sworn that
it should be so. The beauty he had spoken of was not simply the sheen
of her loveliness, nor the grace of her form. It was the entirety of
her feminine attraction, including the purity of her soul, which was
in truth still there in all its perfection. But she could not tell
him that he was mistaken in doubting her. Now he had told her that
she was not that innocent creature which he had believed her to be.
What was she to do? How was she to restore herself to his favour? But
through it all there was present to her an idea that she would not
humble herself too far. To the extent of the sin which she had
committed she would humble herself if she knew how to do that without
going beyond it. But further than that in justice both to him and to
herself she would not go. "If you have condemned me," she said,
"there must be an end of it,—for the present."</p>
<p>"Condemned you! Do you not condemn yourself? Have you attempted any
word of excuse? Have you given any reason why I should have been kept
in the dark? Your friend Miss Altifiorla knew it all I presume?"</p>
<p>"Yes, she knew it all."</p>
<p>"And you would not have had her here if you could have avoided it
lest she should tell me?"</p>
<p>"That is true. I wished to be the first to tell you myself."</p>
<p>"And yet you had never whispered a word of it. Miss Altifiorla and
Sir Francis it seems are friends." Cecilia only shook her head. "I
heard yesterday at the station that they had gone to London together.
I presume they are friends."</p>
<p>Quickly the idea passed through Mrs. Western's mind that Miss
Altifiorla had been untrue to her. She had kept her word to the
letter in not having told the secret to her husband but she had
discussed the whole matter with Sir Francis, and the letter which Sir
Francis had written was the result. "I do not know," she said. "If
they be more to each other than chance acquaintance I do not know it.
From week to week and from day to day before our marriage the thing
went on and the opportunity never came. Something would always fall
from you which made me afraid to speak at that moment. Then we were
married, and I found how wrong I had been. I still resolved to tell
you, but put it off like a coward from day to day. Your sister had
heard of my first engagement."</p>
<p>"Did Bertha know it?"</p>
<p>"Yes; and like myself she was surprised that you should be so
ignorant."</p>
<p>"She might well be surprised."</p>
<p>"Then I resolved to tell you. I would not do it till that other woman
had left the house. I would not have her by to see your anger."</p>
<p>"And now this is the way in which the history of your former life has
reached my ears!" As he said this he held out in his hand the fatal
letter. "This is the manner in which you have left me to be informed
of a subject so interesting! I first hear from Sir Francis Geraldine
that he and you a twelvemonth since were engaged together as man and
wife." Here she stood quite silent. She did not care to tell him that
it was more than twelve months since. "That you think to be
becoming."</p>
<p>"I do not think so."</p>
<p>"That you feel to be compatible with my happiness!" Here, again,
there was a pause, during which she looked full into his face. "Such
is not my idea. My happiness is wrecked. It is gone." Here he made a
motion with his hand, as though to show that all his bliss had flown
away from him.</p>
<p>"Oh, George, if you love me, do not speak like that!"</p>
<p>"Love you! Yes I love you. I do not suppose that love can be made to
go at once, as I find that esteem may do, and respect, and
veneration."</p>
<p>"Oh, George, those are hard words!"</p>
<p>"Is it not so? This morning you were to me of all God's creatures the
brightest and the best. When I entered your room just now it was so
that I regarded you. Can you now be the brightest and the best? Has
not all that romance been changed at a moment's notice? But, alas!
love does not go after the same fashion." Then he turned shortly
round and left the room.</p>
<p>She remained confounded and awe-stricken. There had been that about
him which seemed to declare a settled purpose—as though he had
intended to leave her for ever. She sat perfectly still, thinking of
it, thinking of the injustice of the sentence that had been
pronounced upon her. Though she had deserved much, she had not
deserved this. Though she had expected punishment, she had not
expected punishment so severe. In about twenty minutes her maid came
up to her, and with a grave face asked whether she would wish that
breakfast should be sent to her in her own room. Mr. Western had sent
to ask the question. "Yes," said she,—"if he pleases." There could
be no good in attempting to conceal from the servants a misery so
deep and so lasting as this.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />