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<h2> 7—The Night of the Sixth of November </h2>
<p>Having resolved on flight Eustacia at times seemed anxious that something
should happen to thwart her own intention. The only event that could
really change her position was the appearance of Clym. The glory which had
encircled him as her lover was departed now; yet some good simple quality
of his would occasionally return to her memory and stir a momentary throb
of hope that he would again present himself before her. But calmly
considered it was not likely that such a severance as now existed would
ever close up—she would have to live on as a painful object,
isolated, and out of place. She had used to think of the heath alone as an
uncongenial spot to be in; she felt it now of the whole world.</p>
<p>Towards evening on the sixth her determination to go away again revived.
About four o'clock she packed up anew the few small articles she had
brought in her flight from Alderworth, and also some belonging to her
which had been left here; the whole formed a bundle not too large to be
carried in her hand for a distance of a mile or two. The scene without
grew darker; mud-coloured clouds bellied downwards from the sky like vast
hammocks slung across it, and with the increase of night a stormy wind
arose; but as yet there was no rain.</p>
<p>Eustacia could not rest indoors, having nothing more to do, and she
wandered to and fro on the hill, not far from the house she was soon to
leave. In these desultory ramblings she passed the cottage of Susan
Nunsuch, a little lower down than her grandfather's. The door was ajar,
and a riband of bright firelight fell over the ground without. As Eustacia
crossed the firebeams she appeared for an instant as distinct as a figure
in a phantasmagoria—a creature of light surrounded by an area of
darkness; the moment passed, and she was absorbed in night again.</p>
<p>A woman who was sitting inside the cottage had seen and recognized her in
that momentary irradiation. This was Susan herself, occupied in preparing
a posset for her little boy, who, often ailing, was now seriously unwell.
Susan dropped the spoon, shook her fist at the vanished figure, and then
proceeded with her work in a musing, absent way.</p>
<p>At eight o'clock, the hour at which Eustacia had promised to signal
Wildeve if ever she signalled at all, she looked around the premises to
learn if the coast was clear, went to the furze-rick, and pulled thence a
long-stemmed bough of that fuel. This she carried to the corner of the
bank, and, glancing behind to see if the shutters were all closed, she
struck a light, and kindled the furze. When it was thoroughly ablaze
Eustacia took it by the stem and waved it in the air above her head till
it had burned itself out.</p>
<p>She was gratified, if gratification were possible to such a mood, by
seeing a similar light in the vicinity of Wildeve's residence a minute or
two later. Having agreed to keep watch at this hour every night, in case
she should require assistance, this promptness proved how strictly he had
held to his word. Four hours after the present time, that is, at midnight,
he was to be ready to drive her to Budmouth, as prearranged.</p>
<p>Eustacia returned to the house. Supper having been got over she retired
early, and sat in her bedroom waiting for the time to go by. The night
being dark and threatening, Captain Vye had not strolled out to gossip in
any cottage or to call at the inn, as was sometimes his custom on these
long autumn nights; and he sat sipping grog alone downstairs. About ten
o'clock there was a knock at the door. When the servant opened it the rays
of the candle fell upon the form of Fairway.</p>
<p>"I was a-forced to go to Lower Mistover tonight," he said, "and Mr.
Yeobright asked me to leave this here on my way; but, faith, I put it in
the lining of my hat, and thought no more about it till I got back and was
hasping my gate before going to bed. So I have run back with it at once."</p>
<p>He handed in a letter and went his way. The girl brought it to the
captain, who found that it was directed to Eustacia. He turned it over and
over, and fancied that the writing was her husband's, though he could not
be sure. However, he decided to let her have it at once if possible, and
took it upstairs for that purpose; but on reaching the door of her room
and looking in at the keyhole he found there was no light within, the fact
being that Eustacia, without undressing, had flung herself upon the bed,
to rest and gather a little strength for her coming journey. Her
grandfather concluded from what he saw that he ought not to disturb her;
and descending again to the parlour he placed the letter on the
mantelpiece to give it to her in the morning.</p>
<p>At eleven o'clock he went to bed himself, smoked for some time in his
bedroom, put out his light at half-past eleven, and then, as was his
invariable custom, pulled up the blind before getting into bed, that he
might see which way the wind blew on opening his eyes in the morning, his
bedroom window commanding a view of the flagstaff and vane. Just as he had
lain down he was surprised to observe the white pole of the staff flash
into existence like a streak of phosphorus drawn downwards across the
shade of night without. Only one explanation met this—a light had
been suddenly thrown upon the pole from the direction of the house. As
everybody had retired to rest the old man felt it necessary to get out of
bed, open the window softly, and look to the right and left. Eustacia's
bedroom was lighted up, and it was the shine from her window which had
lighted the pole. Wondering what had aroused her, he remained undecided at
the window, and was thinking of fetching the letter to slip it under her
door, when he heard a slight brushing of garments on the partition
dividing his room from the passage.</p>
<p>The captain concluded that Eustacia, feeling wakeful, had gone for a book,
and would have dismissed the matter as unimportant if he had not also
heard her distinctly weeping as she passed.</p>
<p>"She is thinking of that husband of hers," he said to himself. "Ah, the
silly goose! she had no business to marry him. I wonder if that letter is
really his?"</p>
<p>He arose, threw his boat-cloak round him, opened the door, and said,
"Eustacia!" There was no answer. "Eustacia!" he repeated louder, "there is
a letter on the mantelpiece for you."</p>
<p>But no response was made to this statement save an imaginary one from the
wind, which seemed to gnaw at the corners of the house, and the stroke of
a few drops of rain upon the windows.</p>
<p>He went on to the landing, and stood waiting nearly five minutes. Still
she did not return. He went back for a light, and prepared to follow her;
but first he looked into her bedroom. There, on the outside of the quilt,
was the impression of her form, showing that the bed had not been opened;
and, what was more significant, she had not taken her candlestick
downstairs. He was now thoroughly alarmed; and hastily putting on his
clothes he descended to the front door, which he himself had bolted and
locked. It was now unfastened. There was no longer any doubt that Eustacia
had left the house at this midnight hour; and whither could she have gone?
To follow her was almost impossible. Had the dwelling stood in an ordinary
road, two persons setting out, one in each direction, might have made sure
of overtaking her; but it was a hopeless task to seek for anybody on a
heath in the dark, the practicable directions for flight across it from
any point being as numerous as the meridians radiating from the pole.
Perplexed what to do, he looked into the parlour, and was vexed to find
that the letter still lay there untouched.</p>
<p>At half-past eleven, finding that the house was silent, Eustacia had
lighted her candle, put on some warm outer wrappings, taken her bag in her
hand, and, extinguishing the light again, descended the staircase. When
she got into the outer air she found that it had begun to rain, and as she
stood pausing at the door it increased, threatening to come on heavily.
But having committed herself to this line of action there was no
retreating for bad weather. Even the receipt of Clym's letter would not
have stopped her now. The gloom of the night was funereal; all nature
seemed clothed in crape. The spiky points of the fir trees behind the
house rose into the sky like the turrets and pinnacles of an abbey.
Nothing below the horizon was visible save a light which was still burning
in the cottage of Susan Nunsuch.</p>
<p>Eustacia opened her umbrella and went out from the enclosure by the steps
over the bank, after which she was beyond all danger of being perceived.
Skirting the pool, she followed the path towards Rainbarrow, occasionally
stumbling over twisted furze roots, tufts of rushes, or oozing lumps of
fleshy fungi, which at this season lay scattered about the heath like the
rotten liver and lungs of some colossal animal. The moon and stars were
closed up by cloud and rain to the degree of extinction. It was a night
which led the traveller's thoughts instinctively to dwell on nocturnal
scenes of disaster in the chronicles of the world, on all that is terrible
and dark in history and legend—the last plague of Egypt, the
destruction of Sennacherib's host, the agony in Gethsemane.</p>
<p>Eustacia at length reached Rainbarrow, and stood still there to think.
Never was harmony more perfect than that between the chaos of her mind and
the chaos of the world without. A sudden recollection had flashed on her
this moment—she had not money enough for undertaking a long journey.
Amid the fluctuating sentiments of the day her unpractical mind had not
dwelt on the necessity of being well-provided, and now that she thoroughly
realized the conditions she sighed bitterly and ceased to stand erect,
gradually crouching down under the umbrella as if she were drawn into the
Barrow by a hand from beneath. Could it be that she was to remain a
captive still? Money—she had never felt its value before. Even to
efface herself from the country means were required. To ask Wildeve for
pecuniary aid without allowing him to accompany her was impossible to a
woman with a shadow of pride left in her; to fly as his mistress—and
she knew that he loved her—was of the nature of humiliation.</p>
<p>Anyone who had stood by now would have pitied her, not so much on account
of her exposure to weather, and isolation from all of humanity except the
mouldered remains inside the tumulus; but for that other form of misery
which was denoted by the slightly rocking movement that her feelings
imparted to her person. Extreme unhappiness weighed visibly upon her.
Between the drippings of the rain from her umbrella to her mantle, from
her mantle to the heather, from the heather to the earth, very similar
sounds could be heard coming from her lips; and the tearfulness of the
outer scene was repeated upon her face. The wings of her soul were broken
by the cruel obstructiveness of all about her; and even had she seen
herself in a promising way of getting to Budmouth, entering a steamer, and
sailing to some opposite port, she would have been but little more
buoyant, so fearfully malignant were other things. She uttered words
aloud. When a woman in such a situation, neither old, deaf, crazed, nor
whimsical, takes upon herself to sob and soliloquize aloud there is
something grievous the matter.</p>
<p>"Can I go, can I go?" she moaned. "He's not GREAT enough for me to give
myself to—he does not suffice for my desire!... If he had been a
Saul or a Bonaparte—ah! But to break my marriage vow for him—it
is too poor a luxury!... And I have no money to go alone! And if I could,
what comfort to me? I must drag on next year, as I have dragged on this
year, and the year after that as before. How I have tried and tried to be
a splendid woman, and how destiny has been against me!... I do not deserve
my lot!" she cried in a frenzy of bitter revolt. "O, the cruelty of
putting me into this ill-conceived world! I was capable of much; but I
have been injured and blighted and crushed by things beyond my control! O,
how hard it is of Heaven to devise such tortures for me, who have done no
harm to Heaven at all!"</p>
<p>The distant light which Eustacia had cursorily observed in leaving the
house came, as she had divined, from the cottage window of Susan Nunsuch.
What Eustacia did not divine was the occupation of the woman within at
that moment. Susan's sight of her passing figure earlier in the evening,
not five minutes after the sick boy's exclamation, "Mother, I do feel so
bad!" persuaded the matron that an evil influence was certainly exercised
by Eustacia's propinquity.</p>
<p>On this account Susan did not go to bed as soon as the evening's work was
over, as she would have done at ordinary times. To counteract the malign
spell which she imagined poor Eustacia to be working, the boy's mother
busied herself with a ghastly invention of superstition, calculated to
bring powerlessness, atrophy, and annihilation on any human being against
whom it was directed. It was a practice well known on Egdon at that date,
and one that is not quite extinct at the present day.</p>
<p>She passed with her candle into an inner room, where, among other
utensils, were two large brown pans, containing together perhaps a
hundredweight of liquid honey, the produce of the bees during the
foregoing summer. On a shelf over the pans was a smooth and solid yellow
mass of a hemispherical form, consisting of beeswax from the same take of
honey. Susan took down the lump, and cutting off several thin slices,
heaped them in an iron ladle, with which she returned to the living-room,
and placed the vessel in the hot ashes of the fireplace. As soon as the
wax had softened to the plasticity of dough she kneaded the pieces
together. And now her face became more intent. She began moulding the wax;
and it was evident from her manner of manipulation that she was
endeavouring to give it some preconceived form. The form was human.</p>
<p>By warming and kneading, cutting and twisting, dismembering and re-joining
the incipient image she had in about a quarter of an hour produced a shape
which tolerably well resembled a woman, and was about six inches high. She
laid it on the table to get cold and hard. Meanwhile she took the candle
and went upstairs to where the little boy was lying.</p>
<p>"Did you notice, my dear, what Mrs. Eustacia wore this afternoon besides
the dark dress?"</p>
<p>"A red ribbon round her neck."</p>
<p>"Anything else?"</p>
<p>"No—except sandal-shoes."</p>
<p>"A red ribbon and sandal-shoes," she said to herself.</p>
<p>Mrs. Nunsuch went and searched till she found a fragment of the narrowest
red ribbon, which she took downstairs and tied round the neck of the
image. Then fetching ink and a quilt from the rickety bureau by the
window, she blackened the feet of the image to the extent presumably
covered by shoes; and on the instep of each foot marked cross-lines in the
shape taken by the sandalstrings of those days. Finally she tied a bit of
black thread round the upper part of the head, in faint resemblance to a
snood worn for confining the hair.</p>
<p>Susan held the object at arm's length and contemplated it with a
satisfaction in which there was no smile. To anybody acquainted with the
inhabitants of Egdon Heath the image would have suggested Eustacia
Yeobright.</p>
<p>From her workbasket in the window-seat the woman took a paper of pins, of
the old long and yellow sort, whose heads were disposed to come off at
their first usage. These she began to thrust into the image in all
directions, with apparently excruciating energy. Probably as many as fifty
were thus inserted, some into the head of the wax model, some into the
shoulders, some into the trunk, some upwards through the soles of the
feet, till the figure was completely permeated with pins.</p>
<p>She turned to the fire. It had been of turf; and though the high heap of
ashes which turf fires produce was somewhat dark and dead on the outside,
upon raking it abroad with the shovel the inside of the mass showed a glow
of red heat. She took a few pieces of fresh turf from the chimney-corner
and built them together over the glow, upon which the fire brightened.
Seizing with the tongs the image that she had made of Eustacia, she held
it in the heat, and watched it as it began to waste slowly away. And while
she stood thus engaged there came from between her lips a murmur of words.</p>
<p>It was a strange jargon—the Lord's Prayer repeated backwards—the
incantation usual in proceedings for obtaining unhallowed assistance
against an enemy. Susan uttered the lugubrious discourse three times
slowly, and when it was completed the image had considerably diminished.
As the wax dropped into the fire a long flame arose from the spot, and
curling its tongue round the figure ate still further into its substance.
A pin occasionally dropped with the wax, and the embers heated it red as
it lay.</p>
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