<h2><SPAN name="chap25"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXV.<br/> ELIZABETH SHOWS HER TEETH</h2>
<p>Hard had been Beatrice’s hours since that grey morning of separation. She
must bear all the inner wretchedness of her lot; she must conceal her grief,
must suffer the slings and arrows of Elizabeth’s sharp tongue, and strive
to keep Owen Davies at a distance. Indeed, as the days went on, this last task
grew more and more portentous. The man was quite unmanageable; his passion,
which was humiliating and hateful to Beatrice, became the talk of the place.
Everybody knew of it, except her father, and even his eyes began to be opened.</p>
<p>One night—it was the same upon which Geoffrey and Honoria respectively
had posted their letters to Beatrice—anybody looking into the little room
at Bryngelly Castle, which served its owner for all purposes except that of
sleeping, would have witnessed a very strange sight. Owen Davies was walking to
and fro—walking rapidly with wild eyes and dishevelled hair. At the turn
of each length of the apartment he would halt, and throwing his arms into the
air ejaculate:</p>
<p>“Oh, God, hear me, and give me my desire! Oh, God, answer me!”</p>
<p>For two long hours thus he walked and thus cried aloud, till at length he sank
panting and exhausted into a chair. Suddenly he raised his head, and appeared
to listen intently.</p>
<p>“The Voice,” he said aloud; “the Voice again. What does it
say? To-morrow, to-morrow I must speak; and I shall win her.”</p>
<p>He sprang up with a shout, and once more began his wild march. “Oh,
Beatrice!” he said, “to-morrow you will promise to marry me; the
Voice says so, and soon, soon, perhaps in one short month, you will be my
own—mine only! Geoffrey Bingham shall not come between us then, for I
will watch you day and night. You shall be my very, very own—my own
beautiful Beatrice,” and he stretched out his arms and clasped at the
empty air—a crazy and unpleasant sight to see.</p>
<p>And so he walked and spoke till the dawn was grey in the east. This occurred on
the Friday night. It was on the following morning that Beatrice, the
unfortunate and innocent object of these amorous invocations, received the two
letters. She had gone to the post-office on her way to the school, on the
chance of there being a note from Geoffrey. Poor woman, his letters were the
one bright thing in her life. From motives of prudence they were written in the
usual semi-formal style, but she was quick to read between the lines, and,
moreover, they came from his dear hand.</p>
<p>There was the letter sure enough, and another in a woman’s writing. She
recognised the hand as that of Lady Honoria, which she had often seen on
envelopes directed to Geoffrey, and a thrill of fear shot through her. She took
the letters, and walking as quickly as she could to the school, locked herself
in her own little room, for it was not yet nine o’clock, and looked at
them with a gathering terror. What was in them? Why did Lady Honoria write to
her? Which should she read first? In a moment Beatrice had made up her mind.
She would face the worst at once. With a set face she opened Lady
Honoria’s letter, unfolded it, and read. We already know its contents. As
her mind grasped them her lips grew ashy white, and by the time that the
horrible thing was done she was nigh to fainting.</p>
<p>Anonymous letters! oh, who could have done this cruel thing? Elizabeth, it must
be Elizabeth, who saw everything, and thus stabbed her in the back. Was it
possible that her own sister could treat her so? She knew that Elizabeth
disliked her; she could never fathom the cause, still she knew the fact. But if
this were her doing, then she must hate her, and most bitterly; and what had
she done to earn such hate? And now Geoffrey was in danger on her account,
danger of ruin, and how could she prevent it? This was her first idea. Most
people might have turned to their own position and been content to leave their
lover to fight his own battle. But Beatrice thought little of herself. He was
in danger, and how could she protect him? Why here in the letter was the
answer! “If you care for him sever all connection with him utterly, and
for ever. Otherwise, he will live to curse and hate you.” No, no!
Geoffrey would never do that. But Lady Honoria was quite right; in his
interest, for his sake, she must sever all connection with him—sever it
utterly and for ever. But how—how?</p>
<p>She thrust the letter into her dress—a viper would have been a more
welcome guest—and opened Geoffrey’s.</p>
<p>It told the same tale, but offered a different solution. The tears started to
her eyes as she read his offer to take her to him for good and all, and go away
with her to begin life afresh. It seemed a wonderful thing to Beatrice that he
should be willing to sacrifice so much upon such a worthless altar as her
love—a wonderful and most generous thing. She pressed the senseless paper
to her heart, then kissed it again and again. But she never thought of yielding
to this great temptation, never for one second. He prayed her to come, but that
she would not do while her will remained. What, <i>she</i> bring Geoffrey to
ruin? No, she had rather starve in the streets or perish by slow torture. How
could he ever think that she would consent to such a scheme? Indeed she never
would; she had brought enough trouble on him already. But oh, she blessed him
for that letter. How deeply must he love her when he could offer to do this for
her sake!</p>
<p>Hark! the children were waiting; she must go and teach. The letter,
Geoffrey’s dear letter, could be answered in the afternoon. So she thrust
it in her breast with the other, but closer to her heart, and went.</p>
<p class="p2">
That afternoon as Mr. Granger, in a happy frame of mind—for were not his
debts paid, and had he not found a most convenient way of providing against
future embarrassment?—was engaged peaceably in contemplating his stock
over the gate of his little farm buildings, he was much astonished suddenly to
discover Owen Davies at his elbow.</p>
<p>“How do you do, Mr. Davies?” he said; “how quietly you must
have come.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered Owen absently. “The fact is, I have followed
you because I want to speak to you alone—quite alone.”</p>
<p>“Indeed, Mr. Davies—well, I am at your service. What is wrong? You
don’t look very well.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I am quite well, thank you. I never was better; and there’s
nothing wrong, nothing at all. Everything is going to be bright now, I know
that full surely.”</p>
<p>“Indeed,” said Mr. Granger, again looking at him with a puzzled
air, “and what may you want to see me about? Not but what I am always at
your service, as you know,” he added apologetically.</p>
<p>“This,” he answered, suddenly seizing the clergyman by the coat in
a way that made him start.</p>
<p>“What—my coat, do you mean?”</p>
<p>“Don’t be so foolish, Mr. Granger. No, about Beatrice.”</p>
<p>“Oh. indeed, Mr. Davies. Nothing wrong at the school, I hope? I think
that she does her duties to the satisfaction of the committee, though I admit
that the arithmetic——”</p>
<p>“No! no, no! It is not about the school. I don’t wish her to go to
the school any more. I love her, Mr. Granger, I love her dearly, and I want to
marry her.”</p>
<p>The old man flushed with pleasure. Was it possible? Did he hear aright? Owen
Davies, the richest man in that part of Wales, wanted to marry his daughter,
who had nothing but her beauty. It must be too good to be true!</p>
<p>“I am indeed flattered,” he said. “It is more than she could
expect—not but what Beatrice is very good-looking and very clever,”
he added hastily, fearing lest he was detracting from his daughter’s
market value.</p>
<p>“Good-looking—clever; she is an angel,” murmured Owen.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, of course she is,” said her father, “that is, if a
woman—yes, of course—and what is more, I think she’s very
fond of you. I think she is pining for you. I’ve thought so for a long
time.”</p>
<p>“Is she?” said Owen anxiously. “Then all I have to say is
that she takes a very curious way of showing it. She won’t say a word to
me; she puts me off on every occasion. But it will be all right now—all
right now.”</p>
<p>“Oh, there, there, Mr. Davies, maids will be maids until they are wives.
We know about all that,” said Mr. Granger sententiously.</p>
<p>His would-be son-in-law looked as though he knew very little about it indeed,
although the inference was sufficiently obvious.</p>
<p>“Mr. Granger,” he said, seizing his hand, “I want to make
Beatrice my wife—I do indeed.”</p>
<p>“Well, I did not suppose otherwise, Mr. Davies.”</p>
<p>“If you help me in this I will do whatever you like as to money matters
and that sort of thing, you know. She shall have as fine a settlement as any
woman in Wales. I know that goes a long way with a father, and I shall raise no
difficulties.”</p>
<p>“Very right and proper, I am sure,” said Mr. Granger, adopting a
loftier tone as he discovered the advantages of his position. “But of
course on such matters I shall take the advice of a lawyer. I daresay that Mr.
Bingham would advise me,” he added, “as a friend of the family, you
know. He is a very clever lawyer, and, besides, he wouldn’t charge
anything.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, not Mr. Bingham,” answered Owen anxiously. “I will
do anything you like, or if you wish to have a lawyer I’ll pay the bill
myself. But never mind about that now. Let us settle it with Beatrice first.
Come along at once.”</p>
<p>“Eh, but hadn’t you better arrange that part of the business
privately?”</p>
<p>“No, no. She always snubs me when I try to speak to her alone. You had
better be there, and Miss Elizabeth too, if she likes. I won’t speak to
her again alone. I will speak to her in the face of God and man, as God
directed me to do, and then it will be all right—I know it will.”</p>
<p>Mr. Granger stared at him. He was a clergyman of a very practical sort, and did
not quite see what the Power above had to do with Owen Davies’s
matrimonial intentions.</p>
<p>“Ah, well,” he said, “I see what you mean; marriages are made
in heaven; yes, of course. Well, if you want to get on with the matter, I
daresay that we shall find Beatrice in.”</p>
<p>So they walked back to the Vicarage, Mr. Granger exultant and yet perplexed,
for it struck him that there was something a little odd about the proceeding,
and Owen Davies in silence or muttering occasionally to himself.</p>
<p>In the sitting-room they found Elizabeth.</p>
<p>“Where is Beatrice?” asked her father.</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” she answered, and at that moment Beatrice,
pale and troubled, walked into the room, like a lamb to the slaughter.</p>
<p>“Ah, Beatrice,” said her father, “we were just asking for
you.”</p>
<p>She glanced round, and with the quick wit of a human animal, instantly
perceived that some new danger threatened her.</p>
<p>“Indeed,” she said, sinking into a chair in an access of feebleness
born of fear. “What is it, father?”</p>
<p>Mr. Granger looked at Owen Davies and then took a step towards the door. It
struck him forcibly that this scene should be private to the two persons
principally concerned.</p>
<p>“Don’t go,” said Owen Davies excitedly, “don’t
go, either of you; what I have to say had better be said before you both. I
should like to say it before the whole world; to cry it from the mountain
tops.”</p>
<p>Elizabeth glared at him fiercely—glared first at him and then at the
innocent Beatrice. Could he be going to propose to her, then? Ah, why had she
hesitated? Why had she not told him the whole truth before? But the heart of
Beatrice, who sat momentarily expecting to be publicly denounced, grew ever
fainter. The waters of desolation were closing in over her soul.</p>
<p>Mr. Granger sat down firmly and worked himself into the seat of his chair, as
though to secure an additional fixedness of tenure. Elizabeth set her teeth,
and leaned her elbow on the table, holding her hand so as to shade her face.
Beatrice drooped upon her seat like a fading lily, or a prisoner in the dock.
She was opposite to them, and Owen Davies, his face alight with wild
enthusiasm, stood up and addressed them all like the counsel for the
prosecution.</p>
<p>“Last autumn,” he began, speaking to Mr. Granger, who might have
been a judge uncertain as to the merits of the case, “I asked your
daughter Beatrice to marry me.”</p>
<p>Beatrice gave a sigh, and collected her scattered energies. The storm had burst
at last, and she must face it.</p>
<p>“I asked her to marry me, and she told me to wait a year. I have waited
as long as I could, but I could not wait the whole year. I have prayed a great
deal, and I am bidden to speak.”</p>
<p>Elizabeth made a gesture of impatience. She was a person of strong common
sense, and this mixture of religion and eroticism disgusted her. She also know
that the storm had burst, and that <i>she</i> must face it.</p>
<p>“So I come to tell you that I love your daughter Beatrice, and want to
make her my wife. I have never loved anybody else, but I have loved her for
years; and I ask your consent.”</p>
<p>“Very flattering, very flattering, I am sure, especially in these hard
times,” said Mr. Granger apologetically, shaking his thin hair down over
his forehead, and then rumpling it up again. “But you see, Mr. Davies,
you don’t want to marry me” (here Beatrice smiled
faintly)—“you want to marry my daughter, so you had better ask her
direct—at least I suppose so.”</p>
<p>Elizabeth made a movement as though to speak, then changed her mind and
listened.</p>
<p>“Beatrice,” said Owen Davies, “you hear. I ask you to marry
me.”</p>
<p>There was a pause. Beatrice, who had sat quite silent, was gathering up her
strength to answer. Elizabeth, watching her from beneath her hand, thought that
she read upon her face irresolution, softening into consent. What she really
saw was but doubt as to the fittest and most certain manner of refusal. Like
lightning it flashed into Elizabeth’s mind that she must strike now, or
hold her hand for ever. If once Beatrice spoke that fatal “yes,”
her revelations might be of no avail. And Beatrice would speak it; she was sure
she would. It was a golden road out of her troubles.</p>
<p>“Stop!” said Elizabeth in a shrill, hard voice. “Stop! I must
speak; it is my duty as a Christian. I must tell the truth. I cannot allow an
honest man to be deceived.”</p>
<p>There was an awful pause. Beatrice broke it. Now she saw all the truth, and
knew what was at hand. She placed her hand upon her heart to still its beating.</p>
<p>“Oh, Elizabeth,” she said, “in our dead mother’s
name——” and she stopped.</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered her sister, “in our dead mother’s name,
which you have dishonoured, I will do it. Listen, Owen Davies, and father:
Beatrice, who sits there”—and she pointed at her with her thin
hand—“<i>Beatrice is a scarlet woman!</i>”</p>
<p>“I really don’t understand,” gasped Mr. Granger, while Owen
looked round wildly, and Beatrice sunk her head upon her breast.</p>
<p>“Then I will explain,” said Elizabeth, still pointing at her
sister. “She is Geoffrey Bingham’s <i>mistress</i>. On the night of
Whit-Sunday last she rose from bed and went into his room at one in the
morning. I saw her with my own eyes. Afterwards she was brought back to her bed
in his arms—I saw it with my own eyes, and I heard him kiss her.”
(This was a piece of embroidery on Elizabeth’s part.) “She is his
lover, and has been in love with him for months. I tell you this, Owen Davies,
because, though I cannot bear to bring disgrace upon our name and to defile my
lips with such a tale, neither can I bear that you should marry a girl,
believing her to be good, when she is what Beatrice is.”</p>
<p>“Then I wish to God that you had held your wicked tongue,” said Mr.
Granger fiercely.</p>
<p>“No, father. I have a duty to perform, and I will perform it at any cost,
and however much it pains me. You know that what I say is true. You heard the
noise on the night of Whit-Sunday, and got up to see what it was. You saw the
white figure in the passage—it was Geoffrey Bingham with Beatrice in his
arms. Ah! well may she hang her head. Let her deny it if she can. Let her deny
that she loves him to her shame, and that she was alone in his room on that
night.”</p>
<p>Then Beatrice rose and spoke. She was pale as death and more beautiful in her
shame and her despair than ever she had been before; her glorious eyes shone,
and there were deep black lines beneath them.</p>
<p>“My heart is my own,” she said, “and I will make no answer to
you about it. Think what you will. For the rest, it is not true. I am not what
Elizabeth tells you that I am. I am <i>not</i> Geoffrey Bingham’s
mistress. It is true that I was in his room that night, and it is true that he
carried me back to my own. But it was in my sleep that I went there, not of my
own free will. I awoke there, and fainted when I woke, and then at once he bore
me back.”</p>
<p>Elizabeth laughed shrill and loud—it sounded like the cackle of a fiend.</p>
<p>“In her sleep,” she said; “oh, she went there in her
sleep!”</p>
<p>“Yes, Elizabeth, in my sleep. You do not believe me, but it is true. You
do not wish to believe me. You wish to bring the sister whom you should love,
who has never offended against you by act or word, to utter disgrace and ruin.
In your cowardly spite you have written anonymous letters to Lady Honoria
Bingham, to prevail upon her to strike the blow that should destroy her husband
and myself, and when you fear that this has failed, you come forward and openly
accuse us. You do this in the name of Christian duty; in the name of love and
charity, you believe the worst, and seek to ruin us. Shame on you, Elizabeth!
shame on you! and may the same measure that you have meted out to me never be
paid back to you. We are no longer sisters. Whatever happens, I have done with
you. Go your ways.”</p>
<p>Elizabeth shrank and quailed beneath her sister’s scorn. Even her
venomous hatred could not bear up against the flash of those royal eyes, and
the majesty of that outraged innocence. She gasped and bit her lip till the
blood started, but she said nothing.</p>
<p>Then Beatrice turned to her father, and spoke in another and a pleading voice,
stretching out her arms towards him.</p>
<p>“Oh, father,” she said, “at least tell me that <i>you</i>
believe me. Though you may think that I might love to all extremes, surely,
having known me so many years, you cannot think that I would lie even for my
love’s sake.”</p>
<p>The old man looked wildly round, and shook his head.</p>
<p>“In his room and in his arms,” he said. “I saw it, it seems.
You, too, who have never been known to walk in your sleep from a child; and you
will not say that you do not love him—the scoundrel. It is wicked of
Elizabeth—jealousy bitter as the grave. It is wicked of her to tell the
tale; but as it is told, how can I say that I do not believe it?”</p>
<p>Then Beatrice, her cup being full, once more dropped her head, and turned to
go.</p>
<p>“Stop,” said Owen Davies in a hoarse voice, and speaking for the
first time. “Hear what <i>I</i> have to say.”</p>
<p>She lifted her eyes. “With you, Mr. Davies, I have nothing to do; I am
not answerable to you. Go and help your accomplice,” and she pointed to
Elizabeth, “to cry this scandal over the whole world.”</p>
<p>“Stop,” he said again. “I will speak. I believe that it is
true. I believe that you are Geoffrey Bingham’s mistress, curse him! but
I do not care. I am still willing to marry you.”</p>
<p>Elizabeth gasped. Was this to be the end of her scheming? Would the blind
passion of this madman prevail over her revelations, and Beatrice still become
his rich and honoured wife, while she was left poor and disgraced? Oh, it was
monstrous! Oh, she had never dreamed of this!</p>
<p>“Noble, noble!” murmured Mr. Granger; “noble! God bless
you!”</p>
<p>So the position was not altogether beyond recovery. His erring daughter might
still be splendidly married; he might still look forward to peace and wealth in
his old age.</p>
<p>Only Beatrice smiled faintly.</p>
<p>“I thank you,” she said. “I am much honoured, but I could
never have married you because I do not love you. You must understand me very
little if you think that I should be the more ready to do so on account of the
danger in which I stand,” and she ceased.</p>
<p>“Listen, Beatrice,” Owen went on, an evil light shining on his
heavy face, while Elizabeth sat astounded, scarcely able to believe her ears.
“I want you, and I mean to marry you; you are more to me than all the
world. I can give you everything, and you had better yield to me, and you shall
hear no more of this. But if you won’t, then this is what I will do. I
will be revenged upon you—terribly revenged.”</p>
<p>Beatrice shook her head and smiled again, as though to bid him do his worst.</p>
<p>“And look, Beatrice,” he went on, waxing almost eloquent in his
jealous despair, “I have another argument to urge on you. I will not only
be revenged on you, I will be revenged upon your lover—on this Geoffrey
Bingham.”</p>
<p>“<i>Oh!</i>” said Beatrice sharply, like one in pain. He had found
the way to move her now, and with the cunning of semi-madness he drove the
point home.</p>
<p>“Yes, you may start—I will. I tell you that I will never rest till
I have ruined him, and I am rich and can do it. I have a hundred thousand
pounds, that I will spend on doing it. I have nothing to fear, except an action
for libel. Oh, I am not a fool, though you think I am, I know. Well, I can pay
for a dozen actions. There are papers in London that will be glad to publish
all this—yes, the whole story—with plans and pictures too. Just
think, Beatrice, what it will be when all England—yes, and all the
world—is gloating over your shame, and half-a-dozen prints are using the
thing for party purposes, clamouring for the disgrace of the man who ruined
you, and whom you will ruin. He has a fine career; it shall be utterly
destroyed. By God! I will hunt him to his grave, unless you promise to marry
me, Beatrice. Do that, and not a word of this shall be said. Now answer.”</p>
<p>Mr. Granger sank back in his chair; this savage play of human passions was
altogether beyond his experience—it overwhelmed him. As for Elizabeth,
she bit her thin fingers, and glared from one to the other. “He reckons
without me,” she thought. “He reckons without me—I will marry
him yet.”</p>
<p>But Beatrice leant for a moment against the wall and shut her eyes to think.
Oh, she saw it all—the great posters with her name and Geoffrey’s
on them, the shameless pictures of her in his arms, the sickening details, the
letters of the outraged matrons, the “Mothers of ten,” and the
moral-minded colonels—all, all! She heard the prurient scream of every
male Elizabeth in England; the allusions in the House—the jeers, the
bitter attacks of enemies and rivals. Then Lady Honoria would begin her suit,
and it would all be dragged up afresh, and Geoffrey’s fault would be on
every lip, till he was <i>ruined</i>. For herself she did not care; but could
she bring this on one whose only crime was that she had learned to love him?
No, no; but neither could she marry this hateful man. And yet what escape was
there? She flung herself upon her woman’s wit, and it did not fail her.
In a few seconds she had thought it all out and made up her mind.</p>
<p>“How can I answer you at a moment’s notice, Mr. Davies?” she
said. “I must have time to think it over. To threaten such revenge upon
me is not manly, but I know that you love me, and therefore I excuse it. Still,
I must have time. I am confused.”</p>
<p>“What, another year? No, no,” he said. “You must
answer.”</p>
<p>“I do not ask a year or a month. I only ask for one week. If you will not
give me that, then I will defy you, and you may do your worst. I cannot answer
now.”</p>
<p>This was a bold stroke, but it told. Mr. Davies hesitated.</p>
<p>“Give the girl a week,” said her father to him. “She is not
herself.”</p>
<p>“Very well; one week, no more,” said he.</p>
<p>“I have another stipulation to make,” said Beatrice, “You are
all to swear to me that for that week no word of this will pass your mouths;
that for that week I shall not be annoyed or interfered with, or spoken to on
the subject, not by one of you. If at the end of it I still refuse to accept
your terms, you can do your worst, but till then you must hold your
hand.”</p>
<p>Owen Davies hesitated; he was suspicious.</p>
<p>“Remember,” Beatrice went on, raising her voice, “I am a
desperate woman. I may turn at bay, and do something which you do not expect,
and that will be very little to the advantage of any of you. Do you
swear?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Owen Davies.</p>
<p>Then Beatrice looked at Elizabeth, and Elizabeth looked at her. She saw that
the matter had taken a new form. She saw what her jealous folly had hitherto
hidden from her—that Beatrice did not mean to marry Owen Davies, that she
was merely gaining time to execute some purpose of her own. What this might be
Elizabeth cared little so that it did not utterly extinguish chances that at
the moment seemed faint enough. She did not want to push matters against her
sister, or her lover Geoffrey, beyond the boundary of her own interests.
Beatrice should have her week, and be free from all interference so far as she
was concerned. She realised now that it was too late how great had been her
error. Oh, if only she had sought Beatrice’s confidence at first! But it
had seemed to her impossible that she would really throw away such an
opportunity in life.</p>
<p>“Certainly I promise, Beatrice,” she said mildly. “I do not
swear, for ‘swear not at all,’ you know. I only did what I thought
my duty in warning Mr. Davies. If he chooses to go on with the matter, it is no
affair of mine. I had no wish to hurt you, or Mr. Bingham. I acted solely from
my religious convictions.”</p>
<p>“Oh, stop talking religion, Elizabeth, and practise it a little
more!” said her father, for once in his life stirred out of his feeble
selfishness. “We have all undertaken to keep our mouths sealed for this
week.”</p>
<p>Then Beatrice left the room, and after her went Owen Davies without another
word.</p>
<p>“Elizabeth,” said her father, rising, “you are a wicked
woman! What did you do this for?”</p>
<p>“Do you want to know, father?” she said coolly; “then I will
tell you. Because I mean to marry Owen Davies myself. We must all look after
ourselves in this world, you know; and that is a maxim which you never forget,
for one. I mean to marry him; and though I seem to have failed, marry him I
will, yet! And now you know all about it; and if you are not a fool, you will
hold your tongue and let me be!” and she went also, leaving him alone.</p>
<p>Mr. Granger held up his hands in astonishment. He was a selfish, money-seeking
old man, but he felt that he did not deserve to have such a daughter as this.</p>
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