<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXIX.</h2>
<p class="chapterhead">REBELLION.</p>
<p><span class="firstwords">Lady George</span> never forgot that slow journey home in the cab,—for
in truth it was very slow. It seemed to her that she would
never reach her own house. "Mary," he said, as soon as they were
seated, "you have made me a miserable man." The cab rumbled and<!-- Page 255 -->
growled frightfully, and he felt himself unable to attack her with
dignity while they were progressing. "But I will postpone what I
have to say till we have reached home."</p>
<p>"I have done nothing wrong," said Mary, very stoutly.</p>
<p>"You had better say nothing more till we are at home." After that
not a word more was said, but the journey was very long.</p>
<p>At the door of the house Lord George gave his hand to help her out
of the cab, and then marched before her through the passage into the
dining-room. It was evident that he was determined to make his
harangue on that night. But she was the first to speak. "George,"
she said, "I have suffered very much, and am very tired. If you
please, I will go to bed."</p>
<p>"You have disgraced me," he said.</p>
<p>"No; it is you that have disgraced me and put me to shame before
everybody,—for nothing, for nothing. I have done nothing of which
I am ashamed." She looked up into his face, and he could see that
she was full of passion, and by no means in a mood to submit to his
reproaches. She, too, could frown, and was frowning now. Her
nostrils were dilated, and her eyes were bright with anger. He could
see how it was with her; and though he was determined to be master,
he hardly knew how he was to make good his masterdom.</p>
<p>"You had better listen to me," he said.</p>
<p>"Not to-night. I am too ill, too thoroughly wretched. Anything
you have got to say of course I will listen to,—but not now." Then
she walked to the door.</p>
<p>"Mary!" She paused with her hand on the lock. "I trust that
you do not wish to contest the authority which I have over you?"</p>
<p>"I do not know; I cannot say. If your authority calls upon me
to own that I have done anything wrong, I shall certainly contest it.
And if I have not, I think—I think you will express your sorrow for
the injury you have done me to-night." Then she left the room
before he had made up his mind how he would continue his address.
He was quite sure that he was right. Had he not desired her not to
waltz? At that moment he quite forgot the casual permission he had
barely given at Lady Brabazon's, and which had been intended to
apply to that night only. Had he not specially warned her against
this Captain De Baron, and told her that his name and hers were
suffering from her intimacy with the man? And then, had she not
deceived him directly by naming another person as her partner in
that odious dance? The very fact that she had so deceived him was
proof to him that she had known that she ought not to dance with
Captain De Baron, and that she had a vicious pleasure in doing so
which she had been determined to gratify even in opposition to his
express orders. As he stalked up and down the room in his wrath, he
forgot as much as he remembered. It had been represented to him
that this odious romp had been no more than a minuet; but he did<!-- Page 256 -->
not bear in mind that his wife had been no party to that misrepresentation.
And he forgot, too, that he himself had been present as a
spectator at her express request. And when his wrath was at the
fullest he almost forgot those letters from Adelaide Houghton! But
he did not forget that all Mrs. Montacute Jones' world had seen him
as in his offended marital majesty he took his wife out from amidst
the crowd, declaring his indignation and his jealousy to all who were
there assembled. He might have been wrong there. As he thought
of it all he confessed to himself as much as that. But the injury done
had been done to himself rather than to her. Of course they must
leave London now, and leave it for ever. She must go with him
whither he might choose to take her. Perhaps Manor Cross might
serve for their lives' seclusion, as the Marquis would not live there.
But Manor Cross was near the deanery, and he must sever his wife
from her father. He was now very hostile to the Dean, who had
looked on and seen his abasement, and had smiled. But, through it
all, there never came to him for a moment any idea of a permanent
quarrel with his wife. It might, he thought, be long before there was
permanent comfort between them. Obedience, absolute obedience,
must come before that could be reached. But of the bond which
bound them together he was far too sensible to dream of separation.
Nor, in his heart, did he think her guilty of anything but foolish,
headstrong indiscretion,—of that and latterly of dissimulation. It was
not that Cæsar had been wronged, but that his wife had enabled idle
tongues to suggest a wrong to Cæsar.</p>
<p>He did not see her again that night, betaking himself at a very late
hour to his own dressing-room. On the next morning at an early hour
he was awake thinking. He must not allow her to suppose for a
moment that he was afraid of her. He went into her room a few
minutes before their usual breakfast hour, and found her, nearly
dressed, with her maid. "I shall be down directly, George," she
said in her usual voice. As he could not bid the woman go away, he
descended and waited for her in the parlour. When she entered the
room she instantly rang the bell and contrived to keep the man in the
room while she was making the tea. But he would not sit down.
How is a man to scold his wife properly with toast and butter on a
plate before him? "Will you not have your tea?" she asked—oh,
so gently.</p>
<p>"Put it down," he said. According to her custom, she got up and
brought it round to his place. When they were alone she would kiss
his forehead as she did so; but now the servant was just closing the
door, and there was no kiss.</p>
<p>"Do come to your breakfast, George," she said.</p>
<p>"I cannot eat my breakfast while all this is on my mind. I must
speak of it. We must leave London at once."</p>
<p>"In a week or two."<!-- Page 257 --></p>
<p>"At once. After last night, there must be no more going to parties."
She lifted her cup to her lips and sat quite silent. She would hear a little
more before she answered him. "You must feel yourself that for some
time to come, perhaps for some years, privacy will be the best for us."</p>
<p>"I feel nothing of the kind, George."</p>
<p>"Could you go and face those people after what happened last
night?"</p>
<p>"Certainly I could, and should think it my duty to do so to-night,
if it were possible. No doubt you have made it difficult, but I would
do it."</p>
<p>"I was forced to make it difficult. There was nothing for me to do
but to take you away."</p>
<p>"Because you were angry, you were satisfied to disgrace me before
all the people there. What has been done cannot be helped. I must
bear it. I cannot stop people from talking and thinking evil. But I
will never say that I think evil of myself by hiding myself. I don't
know what you mean by privacy. I want no privacy."</p>
<p>"Why did you dance with that man?"</p>
<p>"Because it was so arranged."</p>
<p>"You had told me it was some one else?"</p>
<p>"Do you mean to accuse me of a falsehood, George? First one
arrangement had been made, and then another."</p>
<p>"I had been told before how it was to be."</p>
<p>"Who told you? I can only answer for myself."</p>
<p>"And why did you waltz?"</p>
<p>"Because you had withdrawn your foolish objection. Why should
I not dance like other people? Papa does not think it wrong?"</p>
<p>"Your father has nothing to do with it."</p>
<p>"If you ill-treat me, George, papa must have something to do with
it. Do you think he will see me disgraced before a room full of
people, as you did yesterday, and hold his tongue? Of course you are
my husband, but he is still my father; and if I want protection he
will protect me."</p>
<p>"I will protect you," said Lord George, stamping his foot upon the
floor.</p>
<p>"Yes; by burying me somewhere. That is what you say you mean
to do. And why? Because you get some silly nonsense into your
head, and then make yourself and me ridiculous in public. If you
think I am what you seem to suspect, you had better let papa have
me back again,—though that is so horrible that I can hardly bring
myself to think of it. If you do not think so, surely you should beg
my pardon for the affront you put on me last night."</p>
<p>This was a way in which he had certainly not looked at the matter.
Beg her pardon! He, as a husband, beg a wife's pardon under any
circumstances! And beg her pardon for having carried her away from
a house in which she had manifestly disobeyed him. No, indeed.<!-- Page 258 -->
But then he was quite as strongly opposed to that other idea of
sending her back to her father, as a man might send a wife who had
disgraced herself. Anything would be better than that. If she would
only acknowledge that she had been indiscreet, they would go down
together into Brothershire, and all might be comfortable. Though
she was angry with him, obstinate and rebellious, yet his heart was
softened to her because she did not throw the woman's love-letter in
his teeth. He had felt that here would be his great difficulty, but his
difficulty now arose rather from the generosity which kept her silent on
the subject. "What I did," he said, "I did to protect you."</p>
<p>"Such protection was an insult." Then she left the room before
he had tasted his tea or his toast. She had heard her father's knock,
and knew that she would find him in the drawing-room. She had
made up her mind how she would tell the story to him; but when she
was with him he would have no story told at all. He declared that
he knew everything, and spoke as though there could be no doubt as
to the heinousness, or rather, absurdity, of Lord George's conduct.
"It is very sad,—very sad, indeed," he said; "one hardly knows
what one ought to do."</p>
<p>"He wants to go down—to Cross Hall."</p>
<p>"That is out of the question. You must stay out your time here
and then come to me, as you arranged. He must get out of it by
saying that he was frightened by thinking that you had fallen."</p>
<p>"It was not that, papa."</p>
<p>"Of course it was not; but how else is he to escape from his own
folly?"</p>
<p>"You do not think that I have been—wrong—with Captain De
Baron?"</p>
<p>"I! God bless you, my child. I think that you have been wrong!
He cannot think so either. Has he accused you?"</p>
<p>Then she told him, as nearly as she could, all that had passed between
them, including the expression of his desire that she should not
waltz, and his subsequent permission given at Lady Brabazon's.
"Pish!" he ejaculated. "I hate these attempted restrictions. It is
like a woman telling her husband not to smoke. What a fool a man
must be not to see that he is preparing misery for himself by laying
embargoes on the recreations of his nearest companion!" Then he
spoke of what he himself would do. "I must see him, and if he will
not hear reason you must go with me to the Deanery without him."</p>
<p><SPAN name="tn_pg_267"></SPAN><!-- TN: original reads "Dont"-->"Don't separate us, papa."</p>
<p>"God forbid that there should be any permanent separation. If he
be obstinate, it may be well that you should be away from him for a
week or two. Why can't a man wash his dirty linen at home, if he
has any to wash. His, at any rate, did not come to him with you."</p>
<p>Then there was a very stormy scene in the dining-room between the
two men. The Dean, whose words were infinitely more ready and<!-- Page 259 -->
available than those of his opponent, said very much the most, and by
the fierce indignation of his disclaimers, almost prevented the husband
from dwelling on the wife's indiscretion. "I did not think it possible
that such a man as you could have behaved so cruelly to such a
girl."</p>
<p>"I was not cruel; I acted for the best."</p>
<p>"You degraded yourself, and her too."</p>
<p>"I degraded no one," said Lord George.</p>
<p>"It is hard to think what may now best be done to cure the wound
which she has been made to suffer. I must insist on this,—that she
must not be taken from town before the day fixed for her departure."</p>
<p>"I think of going to-morrow," said Lord George, gloomily.</p>
<p>"Then you must go alone, and I must remain with her."</p>
<p>"Certainly not;—certainly not."</p>
<p>"She will not go. She shall not be made to run away. Though
everything have to be told in the public prints, I will not submit to
that. I suppose you do not dare to tell me that you suspect her of
any evil?"</p>
<p>"She has been indiscreet."</p>
<p>"Suppose I granted that,—which I don't,—is she to be ground into
dust in this way for indiscretion? Have not you been indiscreet?"
Lord George made no direct answer to this question, fearing that the
Dean had heard the story of the love-letter; but of that matter the
Dean had heard nothing. "In all your dealings with her, can you tax
yourself with no deviation from wisdom?"</p>
<p>"What a man does is different. No conduct of mine can blemish
her name."</p>
<p>"But it may destroy her happiness,—and if you go on in this way
it will do so."</p>
<p>During the whole of that day the matter was discussed. Lord
George obstinately insisted on taking his wife down to Cross Hall, if
not on the next day, then on the day after. But the Dean, and with
the Dean the young wife, positively refused to accede to this arrangement.
The Dean had his things brought from the inn to the house
in Munster Court, and though he did not absolutely declare that he
had come there for his daughter's protection, it was clear that this was
intended. In such an emergency Lord George knew not what to do.
Though the quarrel was already very bitter, he could not quite tell his
father-in-law to leave the house; and then there was always present
to his mind a feeling that the Dean had a right to be there in accordance
with the pecuniary arrangement made. The Dean would have
been welcome to the use of the house and all that was in it, if only
Mary would have consented to be taken at once down to Cross Hall.
But being under her father's wing, she would not consent. She
pleaded that by going at once, or running away as she called it, she
would own that she had done something wrong, and she was earnest<!-- Page 260 -->
in declaring that nothing should wring such a confession from her.
Everybody, she said, knew that she was to stay in London to the end
of June. Everybody knew that she was then to go to the Deanery.
It was not to be borne that people should say that her plans had been
altered because she had danced the Kappa-kappa with Captain De
Baron. She must see her friends before she went, or else her friends
would know that she had been carried into banishment. In answer
to this, Lord George declared that he, as husband, was paramount.
This Mary did not deny, but, paramount as the authority was, she
would not, in this instance, be governed by it.</p>
<p>It was a miserable day to them all. Many callers came, asking after
Lady George, presuming that her speedy departure from the ball had
been caused by her accident. No one was admitted, and all were told
that she had not been much hurt. There were two or three stormy
scenes between the Dean and his son-in-law, in one of which Lord
George asked the Dean whether he conceived it to be compatible with
his duty as a clergyman of the Church of England to induce a wife to
disobey her husband. In answer to this, the Dean said that in such a
matter the duty of a Church dignitary was the same as that of any
other gentleman, and that he, as a gentleman, and also as a dignitary,
meant to stand by his daughter. She refused to pack up, or to have
her things packed. When he came to look into himself, he found that
he had not power to bid the servants do it in opposition to their
mistress. That the power of a husband was paramount he was well
aware, but he did not exactly see his way to the exercise of it. At
last he decided that he, at any rate, would go down to Cross Hall. If
the Dean chose to create a separation between his daughter and her
husband, he must bear the responsibility.</p>
<p>On the following day he did go down to Cross Hall, leaving his wife
and her father in Munster Court without any definite plans.</p>
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