<h2>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
<p>Those were four miserable months, alternating between intense
anxiety, despair, and indignation, pity for him and pity for
myself. And yet, through all, I was not wholly comfortless:
I had my darling, sinless, inoffensive little one to console me;
but even this consolation was embittered by the
constantly-recurring thought, ‘How shall I teach him
hereafter to respect his father, and yet to avoid his
example?’</p>
<p>But I remembered that I had brought all these afflictions, in
a manner wilfully, upon myself; and I determined to bear them
without a murmur. At the same time I resolved not to give
myself up to misery for the transgressions of another, and
endeavoured to divert myself as much as I could; and besides the
companionship of my child, and my dear, faithful Rachel, who
evidently guessed my sorrows and felt for them, though she was
too discreet to allude to them, I had my books and pencil, my
domestic affairs, and the welfare and comfort of Arthur’s
poor tenants and labourers to attend to: and I sometimes sought
and obtained amusement in the company of my young friend Esther
Hargrave: occasionally I rode over to see her, and once or twice
I had her to spend the day with me at the Manor. Mrs.
Hargrave did not visit London that season: having no daughter to
marry, she thought it as well to stay at home and economise; and,
for a wonder, Walter came down to join her in the beginning of
June, and stayed till near the close of August.</p>
<p>The first time I saw him was on a sweet, warm evening, when I
was sauntering in the park with little Arthur and Rachel, who is
head-nurse and lady’s-maid in one—for, with my
secluded life and tolerably active habits, I require but little
attendance, and as she had nursed me and coveted to nurse my
child, and was moreover so very trustworthy, I preferred
committing the important charge to her, with a young nursery-maid
under her directions, to engaging any one else: besides, it saves
money; and since I have made acquaintance with Arthur’s
affairs, I have learnt to regard that as no trifling
recommendation; for, by my own desire, nearly the whole of the
income of my fortune is devoted, for years to come, to the paying
off of his debts, and the money he contrives to squander away in
London is incomprehensible. But to return to Mr.
Hargrave. I was standing with Rachel beside the water,
amusing the laughing baby in her arms with a twig of willow laden
with golden catkins, when, greatly to my surprise, he entered the
park, mounted on his costly black hunter, and crossed over the
grass to meet me. He saluted me with a very fine
compliment, delicately worded, and modestly delivered withal,
which he had doubtless concocted as he rode along. He told
me he had brought a message from his mother, who, as he was
riding that way, had desired him to call at the Manor and beg the
pleasure of my company to a friendly family dinner to-morrow.</p>
<p>‘There is no one to meet but ourselves,’ said he;
‘but Esther is very anxious to see you; and my mother fears
you will feel solitary in this great house so much alone, and
wishes she could persuade you to give her the pleasure of your
company more frequently, and make yourself at home in our more
humble dwelling, till Mr. Huntingdon’s return shall render
this a little more conducive to your comfort.’</p>
<p>‘She is very kind,’ I answered, ‘but I am
not alone, you see;—and those whose time is fully occupied
seldom complain of solitude.’</p>
<p>‘Will you not come to-morrow, then? She will be
sadly disappointed if you refuse.’</p>
<p>I did not relish being thus compassionated for my loneliness;
but, however, I promised to come.</p>
<p>‘What a sweet evening this is!’ observed he,
looking round upon the sunny park, with its imposing swell and
slope, its placid water, and majestic clumps of trees.
‘And what a paradise you live in!’</p>
<p>‘It is a lovely evening,’ answered I; and I sighed
to think how little I had felt its loveliness, and how little of
a paradise sweet Grassdale was to me—how still less to the
voluntary exile from its scenes. Whether Mr. Hargrave
divined my thoughts, I cannot tell, but, with a half-hesitating,
sympathising seriousness of tone and manner, he asked if I had
lately heard from Mr. Huntingdon.</p>
<p>‘Not lately,’ I replied.</p>
<p>‘I thought not,’ he muttered, as if to himself,
looking thoughtfully on the ground.</p>
<p>‘Are you not lately returned from London?’ I
asked.</p>
<p>‘Only yesterday.’</p>
<p>‘And did you see him there?’</p>
<p>‘Yes—I saw him.’</p>
<p>‘Was he well?’</p>
<p>‘Yes—that is,’ said he, with increasing
hesitation and an appearance of suppressed indignation, ‘he
was as well as—as he deserved to be, but under
circumstances I should have deemed incredible for a man so
favoured as he is.’ He here looked up and pointed the
sentence with a serious bow to me. I suppose my face was
crimson.</p>
<p>‘Pardon me, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ he continued,
‘but I cannot suppress my indignation when I behold such
infatuated blindness and perversion of taste;—but, perhaps,
you are not aware—‘ He paused.</p>
<p>‘I am aware of nothing, sir—except that he delays
his coming longer than I expected; and if, at present, he prefers
the society of his friends to that of his wife, and the
dissipations of the town to the quiet of country life, I suppose
I have those friends to thank for it. Their tastes and
occupations are similar to his, and I don’t see why his
conduct should awaken either their indignation or
surprise.’</p>
<p>‘You wrong me cruelly,’ answered he.
‘I have shared but little of Mr. Huntingdon’s society
for the last few weeks; and as for his tastes and occupations,
they are quite beyond me—lonely wanderer as I am.
Where I have but sipped and tasted, he drains the cup to the
dregs; and if ever for a moment I have sought to drown the voice
of reflection in madness and folly, or if I have wasted too much
of my time and talents among reckless and dissipated companions,
God knows I would gladly renounce them entirely and for ever, if
I had but half the blessings that man so thanklessly casts behind
his back—but half the inducements to virtue and domestic,
orderly habits that he despises—but such a home, and such a
partner to share it! It is infamous!’ he muttered,
between his teeth. ‘And don’t think, Mrs.
Huntingdon,’ he added aloud, ‘that I could be guilty
of inciting him to persevere in his present pursuits: on the
contrary, I have remonstrated with him again and again; I have
frequently expressed my surprise at his conduct, and reminded him
of his duties and his privileges—but to no purpose; he
only—’</p>
<p>‘Enough, Mr. Hargrave; you ought to be aware that
whatever my husband’s faults may be, it can only aggravate
the evil for me to hear them from a stranger’s
lips.’</p>
<p>‘Am I then a stranger?’ said he in a sorrowful
tone. ‘I am your nearest neighbour, your son’s
godfather, and your husband’s friend; may I not be yours
also?’</p>
<p>‘Intimate acquaintance must precede real friendship; I
know but little of you, Mr. Hargrave, except from
report.’</p>
<p>‘Have you then forgotten the six or seven weeks I spent
under your roof last autumn? I have not forgotten
them. And I know enough of you, Mrs. Huntingdon, to think
that your husband is the most enviable man in the world, and I
should be the next if you would deem me worthy of your
friendship.’</p>
<p>‘If you knew more of me, you would not think it, or if
you did you would not say it, and expect me to be flattered by
the compliment.’</p>
<p>I stepped backward as I spoke. He saw that I wished the
conversation to end; and immediately taking the hint, he gravely
bowed, wished me good-evening, and turned his horse towards the
road. He appeared grieved and hurt at my unkind reception
of his sympathising overtures. I was not sure that I had
done right in speaking so harshly to him; but, at the time, I had
felt irritated—almost insulted by his conduct; it seemed as
if he was presuming upon the absence and neglect of my husband,
and insinuating even more than the truth against him.</p>
<p>Rachel had moved on, during our conversation, to some
yards’ distance. He rode up to her, and asked to see
the child. He took it carefully into his arms, looked upon
it with an almost paternal smile, and I heard him say, as I
approached,—</p>
<p>‘And this, too, he has forsaken!’</p>
<p>He then tenderly kissed it, and restored it to the gratified
nurse.</p>
<p>‘Are you fond of children, Mr. Hargrave?’ said I,
a little softened towards him.</p>
<p>‘Not in general,’ he replied, ‘but that is
such a sweet child, and so like its mother,’ he added in a
lower tone.</p>
<p>‘You are mistaken there; it is its father it
resembles.’</p>
<p>‘Am I not right, nurse?’ said he, appealing to
Rachel.</p>
<p>‘I think, sir, there’s a bit of both,’ she
replied.</p>
<p>He departed; and Rachel pronounced him a very nice
gentleman. I had still my doubts on the subject.</p>
<p>In the course of the following six weeks I met him several
times, but always, save once, in company with his mother, or his
sister, or both. When I called on them, he always happened
to be at home, and, when they called on me, it was always he that
drove them over in the phaeton. His mother, evidently, was
quite delighted with his dutiful attentions and newly-acquired
domestic habits.</p>
<p>The time that I met him alone was on a bright, but not
oppressively hot day, in the beginning of July: I had taken
little Arthur into the wood that skirts the park, and there
seated him on the moss-cushioned roots of an old oak; and, having
gathered a handful of bluebells and wild-roses, I was kneeling
before him, and presenting them, one by one, to the grasp of his
tiny fingers; enjoying the heavenly beauty of the flowers,
through the medium of his smiling eyes: forgetting, for the
moment, all my cares, laughing at his gleeful laughter, and
delighting myself with his delight,—when a shadow suddenly
eclipsed the little space of sunshine on the grass before us; and
looking up, I beheld Walter Hargrave standing and gazing upon
us.</p>
<p>‘Excuse me, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said he, ‘but
I was spell-bound; I had neither the power to come forward and
interrupt you, nor to withdraw from the contemplation of such a
scene. How vigorous my little godson grows! and how merry
he is this morning!’ He approached the child, and
stooped to take his hand; but, on seeing that his caresses were
likely to produce tears and lamentations, instead of a
reciprocation of friendly demonstrations, he prudently drew
back.</p>
<p>‘What a pleasure and comfort that little creature must
be to you, Mrs. Huntingdon!’ he observed, with a touch of
sadness in his intonation, as he admiringly contemplated the
infant.</p>
<p>‘It is,’ replied I; and then I asked after his
mother and sister.</p>
<p>He politely answered my inquiries, and then returned again to
the subject I wished to avoid; though with a degree of timidity
that witnessed his fear to offend.</p>
<p>‘You have not heard from Huntingdon lately?’ he
said.</p>
<p>‘Not this week,’ I replied. Not these three
weeks, I might have said.</p>
<p>‘I had a letter from him this morning. I wish it
were such a one as I could show to his lady.’ He half
drew from his waistcoat-pocket a letter with Arthur’s still
beloved hand on the address, scowled at it, and put it back
again, adding—‘But he tells me he is about to return
next week.’</p>
<p>‘He tells me so every time he writes.’</p>
<p>‘Indeed! well, it is like him. But to me he always
avowed it his intention to stay till the present
month.’</p>
<p>It struck me like a blow, this proof of premeditated
transgression and systematic disregard of truth.</p>
<p>‘It is only of a piece with the rest of his
conduct,’ observed Mr. Hargrave, thoughtfully regarding me,
and reading, I suppose, my feelings in my face.</p>
<p>‘Then he is really coming next week?’ said I,
after a pause.</p>
<p>‘You may rely upon it, if the assurance can give you any
pleasure. And is it possible, Mrs. Huntingdon, that you can
rejoice at his return?’ he exclaimed, attentively perusing
my features again.</p>
<p>‘Of course, Mr. Hargrave; is he not my
husband?’</p>
<p>‘Oh, Huntingdon; you know not what you slight!’ he
passionately murmured.</p>
<p>I took up my baby, and, wishing him good-morning, departed, to
indulge my thoughts unscrutinized, within the sanctum of my
home.</p>
<p>And was I glad? Yes, delighted; though I was angered by
Arthur’s conduct, and though I felt that he had wronged me,
and was determined he should feel it too.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />