<h2> CHAPTER LV </h2>
<p>
He had told her, the first evening she ever spent at Gardencourt, that if
she should live to suffer enough she might some day see the ghost with
which the old house was duly provided. She apparently had fulfilled the
necessary condition; for the next morning, in the cold, faint dawn, she
knew that a spirit was standing by her bed. She had lain down without
undressing, it being her belief that Ralph would not outlast the night.
She had no inclination to sleep; she was waiting, and such waiting was
wakeful. But she closed her eyes; she believed that as the night wore on
she should hear a knock at her door. She heard no knock, but at the time
the darkness began vaguely to grow grey she started up from her pillow as
abruptly as if she had received a summons. It seemed to her for an instant
that he was standing there—a vague, hovering figure in the vagueness
of the room. She stared a moment; she saw his white face—his kind
eyes; then she saw there was nothing. She was not afraid; she was only
sure. She quitted the place and in her certainty passed through dark
corridors and down a flight of oaken steps that shone in the vague light
of a hall-window. Outside Ralph’s door she stopped a moment, listening,
but she seemed to hear only the hush that filled it. She opened the door
with a hand as gentle as if she were lifting a veil from the face of the
dead, and saw Mrs. Touchett sitting motionless and upright beside the
couch of her son, with one of his hands in her own. The doctor was on the
other side, with poor Ralph’s further wrist resting in his professional
fingers. The two nurses were at the foot between them. Mrs. Touchett took
no notice of Isabel, but the doctor looked at her very hard; then he
gently placed Ralph’s hand in a proper position, close beside him. The
nurse looked at her very hard too, and no one said a word; but Isabel only
looked at what she had come to see. It was fairer than Ralph had ever been
in life, and there was a strange resemblance to the face of his father,
which, six years before, she had seen lying on the same pillow. She went
to her aunt and put her arm around her; and Mrs. Touchett, who as a
general thing neither invited nor enjoyed caresses, submitted for a moment
to this one, rising, as might be, to take it. But she was stiff and
dry-eyed; her acute white face was terrible.
</p>
<p>
“Dear Aunt Lydia,” Isabel murmured.
</p>
<p>
“Go and thank God you’ve no child,” said Mrs. Touchett, disengaging
herself.
</p>
<p>
Three days after this a considerable number of people found time, at the
height of the London “season,” to take a morning train down to a quiet
station in Berkshire and spend half an hour in a small grey church which
stood within an easy walk. It was in the green burial-place of this
edifice that Mrs. Touchett consigned her son to earth. She stood herself
at the edge of the grave, and Isabel stood beside her; the sexton himself
had not a more practical interest in the scene than Mrs. Touchett. It was
a solemn occasion, but neither a harsh nor a heavy one; there was a
certain geniality in the appearance of things. The weather had changed to
fair; the day, one of the last of the treacherous May-time, was warm and
windless, and the air had the brightness of the hawthorn and the
blackbird. If it was sad to think of poor Touchett, it was not too sad,
since death, for him, had had no violence. He had been dying so long; he
was so ready; everything had been so expected and prepared. There were
tears in Isabel’s eyes, but they were not tears that blinded. She looked
through them at the beauty of the day, the splendour of nature, the
sweetness of the old English churchyard, the bowed heads of good friends.
Lord Warburton was there, and a group of gentlemen all unknown to her,
several of whom, as she afterwards learned, were connected with the bank;
and there were others whom she knew. Miss Stackpole was among the first,
with honest Mr. Bantling beside her; and Caspar Goodwood, lifting his head
higher than the rest—bowing it rather less. During much of the time
Isabel was conscious of Mr. Goodwood’s gaze; he looked at her somewhat
harder than he usually looked in public, while the others had fixed their
eyes upon the churchyard turf. But she never let him see that she saw him;
she thought of him only to wonder that he was still in England. She found
she had taken for granted that after accompanying Ralph to Gardencourt he
had gone away; she remembered how little it was a country that pleased
him. He was there, however, very distinctly there; and something in his
attitude seemed to say that he was there with a complex intention. She
wouldn’t meet his eyes, though there was doubtless sympathy in them; he
made her rather uneasy. With the dispersal of the little group he
disappeared, and the only person who came to speak to her—though
several spoke to Mrs. Touchett—was Henrietta Stackpole. Henrietta
had been crying.
</p>
<p>
Ralph had said to Isabel that he hoped she would remain at Gardencourt,
and she made no immediate motion to leave the place. She said to herself
that it was but common charity to stay a little with her aunt. It was
fortunate she had so good a formula; otherwise she might have been greatly
in want of one. Her errand was over; she had done what she had left her
husband to do. She had a husband in a foreign city, counting the hours of
her absence; in such a case one needed an excellent motive. He was not one
of the best husbands, but that didn’t alter the case. Certain obligations
were involved in the very fact of marriage, and were quite independent of
the quantity of enjoyment extracted from it. Isabel thought of her husband
as little as might be; but now that she was at a distance, beyond its
spell, she thought with a kind of spiritual shudder of Rome. There was a
penetrating chill in the image, and she drew back into the deepest shade
of Gardencourt. She lived from day to day, postponing, closing her eyes,
trying not to think. She knew she must decide, but she decided nothing;
her coming itself had not been a decision. On that occasion she had simply
started. Osmond gave no sound and now evidently would give none; he would
leave it all to her. From Pansy she heard nothing, but that was very
simple: her father had told her not to write.
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Touchett accepted Isabel’s company, but offered her no assistance;
she appeared to be absorbed in considering, without enthusiasm but with
perfect lucidity, the new conveniences of her own situation. Mrs. Touchett
was not an optimist, but even from painful occurrences she managed to
extract a certain utility. This consisted in the reflexion that, after
all, such things happened to other people and not to herself. Death was
disagreeable, but in this case it was her son’s death, not her own; she
had never flattered herself that her own would be disagreeable to any one
but Mrs. Touchett. She was better off than poor Ralph, who had left all
the commodities of life behind him, and indeed all the security; since the
worst of dying was, to Mrs. Touchett’s mind, that it exposed one to be
taken advantage of. For herself she was on the spot; there was nothing so
good as that. She made known to Isabel very punctually—it was the
evening her son was buried—several of Ralph’s testamentary
arrangements. He had told her everything, had consulted her about
everything. He left her no money; of course she had no need of money. He
left her the furniture of Gardencourt, exclusive of the pictures and books
and the use of the place for a year; after which it was to be sold. The
money produced by the sale was to constitute an endowment for a hospital
for poor persons suffering from the malady of which he died; and of this
portion of the will Lord Warburton was appointed executor. The rest of his
property, which was to be withdrawn from the bank, was disposed of in
various bequests, several of them to those cousins in Vermont to whom his
father had already been so bountiful. Then there were a number of small
legacies.
</p>
<p>
“Some of them are extremely peculiar,” said Mrs. Touchett; “he has left
considerable sums to persons I never heard of. He gave me a list, and I
asked then who some of them were, and he told me they were people who at
various times had seemed to like him. Apparently he thought you didn’t
like him, for he hasn’t left you a penny. It was his opinion that you had
been handsomely treated by his father, which I’m bound to say I think you
were—though I don’t mean that I ever heard him complain of it. The
pictures are to be dispersed; he has distributed them about, one by one,
as little keepsakes. The most valuable of the collection goes to Lord
Warburton. And what do you think he has done with his library? It sounds
like a practical joke. He has left it to your friend Miss Stackpole—‘in
recognition of her services to literature.’ Does he mean her following him
up from Rome? Was that a service to literature? It contains a great many
rare and valuable books, and as she can’t carry it about the world in her
trunk he recommends her to sell it at auction. She will sell it of course
at Christie’s, and with the proceeds she’ll set up a newspaper. Will that
be a service to literature?”
</p>
<p>
This question Isabel forbore to answer, as it exceeded the little
interrogatory to which she had deemed it necessary to submit on her
arrival. Besides, she had never been less interested in literature than
to-day, as she found when she occasionally took down from the shelf one of
the rare and valuable volumes of which Mrs. Touchett had spoken. She was
quite unable to read; her attention had never been so little at her
command. One afternoon, in the library, about a week after the ceremony in
the churchyard, she was trying to fix it for an hour; but her eyes often
wandered from the book in her hand to the open window, which looked down
the long avenue. It was in this way that she saw a modest vehicle approach
the door and perceived Lord Warburton sitting, in rather an uncomfortable
attitude, in a corner of it. He had always had a high standard of
courtesy, and it was therefore not remarkable, under the circumstances,
that he should have taken the trouble to come down from London to call on
Mrs. Touchett. It was of course Mrs. Touchett he had come to see, and not
Mrs. Osmond; and to prove to herself the validity of this thesis Isabel
presently stepped out of the house and wandered away into the park. Since
her arrival at Gardencourt she had been but little out of doors, the
weather being unfavourable for visiting the grounds. This evening,
however, was fine, and at first it struck her as a happy thought to have
come out. The theory I have just mentioned was plausible enough, but it
brought her little rest, and if you had seen her pacing about you would
have said she had a bad conscience. She was not pacified when at the end
of a quarter of an hour, finding herself in view of the house, she saw
Mrs. Touchett emerge from the portico accompanied by her visitor. Her aunt
had evidently proposed to Lord Warburton that they should come in search
of her. She was in no humour for visitors and, if she had had a chance,
would have drawn back behind one of the great trees. But she saw she had
been seen and that nothing was left her but to advance. As the lawn at
Gardencourt was a vast expanse this took some time; during which she
observed that, as he walked beside his hostess, Lord Warburton kept his
hands rather stiffly behind him and his eyes upon the ground. Both persons
apparently were silent; but Mrs. Touchett’s thin little glance, as she
directed it toward Isabel, had even at a distance an expression. It seemed
to say with cutting sharpness: “Here’s the eminently amenable nobleman you
might have married!” When Lord Warburton lifted his own eyes, however,
that was not what they said. They only said “This is rather awkward, you
know, and I depend upon you to help me.” He was very grave, very proper
and, for the first time since Isabel had known him, greeted her without a
smile. Even in his days of distress he had always begun with a smile. He
looked extremely selfconscious.
</p>
<p>
“Lord Warburton has been so good as to come out to see me,” said Mrs.
Touchett. “He tells me he didn’t know you were still here. I know he’s an
old friend of yours, and as I was told you were not in the house I brought
him out to see for himself.”
</p>
<p>
“Oh, I saw there was a good train at 6.40, that would get me back in time
for dinner,” Mrs. Touchett’s companion rather irrelevantly explained. “I’m
so glad to find you’ve not gone.”
</p>
<p>
“I’m not here for long, you know,” Isabel said with a certain eagerness.
</p>
<p>
“I suppose not; but I hope it’s for some weeks. You came to England sooner
than—a—than you thought?”
</p>
<p>
“Yes, I came very suddenly.”
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Touchett turned away as if she were looking at the condition of the
grounds, which indeed was not what it should be, while Lord Warburton
hesitated a little. Isabel fancied he had been on the point of asking
about her husband—rather confusedly—and then had checked
himself. He continued immitigably grave, either because he thought it
becoming in a place over which death had just passed, or for more personal
reasons. If he was conscious of personal reasons it was very fortunate
that he had the cover of the former motive; he could make the most of
that. Isabel thought of all this. It was not that his face was sad, for
that was another matter; but it was strangely inexpressive.
</p>
<p>
“My sisters would have been so glad to come if they had known you were
still here—if they had thought you would see them,” Lord Warburton
went on. “Do kindly let them see you before you leave England.”
</p>
<p>
“It would give me great pleasure; I have such a friendly recollection of
them.”
</p>
<p>
“I don’t know whether you would come to Lockleigh for a day or two? You
know there’s always that old promise.” And his lordship coloured a little
as he made this suggestion, which gave his face a somewhat more familiar
air. “Perhaps I’m not right in saying that just now; of course you’re not
thinking of visiting. But I meant what would hardly be a visit. My sisters
are to be at Lockleigh at Whitsuntide for five days; and if you could come
then—as you say you’re not to be very long in England—I would
see that there should be literally no one else.”
</p>
<p>
Isabel wondered if not even the young lady he was to marry would be there
with her mamma; but she did not express this idea.
</p>
<p>
“Thank you extremely,” she contented herself with saying; “I’m afraid I
hardly know about Whitsuntide.”
</p>
<p>
“But I have your promise—haven’t I?—for some other time.”
</p>
<p>
There was an interrogation in this; but Isabel let it pass. She looked at
her interlocutor a moment, and the result of her observation was that—as
had happened before—she felt sorry for him. “Take care you don’t
miss your train,” she said. And then she added: “I wish you every
happiness.”
</p>
<p>
He blushed again, more than before, and he looked at his watch. “Ah yes,
6.40; I haven’t much time, but I’ve a fly at the door. Thank you very
much.” It was not apparent whether the thanks applied to her having
reminded him of his train or to the more sentimental remark. “Good-bye,
Mrs. Osmond; good-bye.” He shook hands with her, without meeting her eyes,
and then he turned to Mrs. Touchett, who had wandered back to them. With
her his parting was equally brief; and in a moment the two ladies saw him
move with long steps across the lawn.
</p>
<p>
“Are you very sure he’s to be married?” Isabel asked of her aunt.
</p>
<p>
“I can’t be surer than he; but he seems sure. I congratulated him, and he
accepted it.”
</p>
<p>
“Ah,” said Isabel, “I give it up!”—while her aunt returned to the
house and to those avocations which the visitor had interrupted.
</p>
<p>
She gave it up, but she still thought of it—thought of it while she
strolled again under the great oaks whose shadows were long upon the acres
of turf. At the end of a few minutes she found herself near a rustic
bench, which, a moment after she had looked at it, struck her as an object
recognised. It was not simply that she had seen it before, nor even that
she had sat upon it; it was that on this spot something important had
happened to her—that the place had an air of association. Then she
remembered that she had been sitting there, six years before, when a
servant brought her from the house the letter in which Caspar Goodwood
informed her that he had followed her to Europe; and that when she had
read the letter she looked up to hear Lord Warburton announcing that he
should like to marry her. It was indeed an historical, an interesting,
bench; she stood and looked at it as if it might have something to say to
her. She wouldn’t sit down on it now—she felt rather afraid of it.
She only stood before it, and while she stood the past came back to her in
one of those rushing waves of emotion by which persons of sensibility are
visited at odd hours. The effect of this agitation was a sudden sense of
being very tired, under the influence of which she overcame her scruples
and sank into the rustic seat. I have said that she was restless and
unable to occupy herself; and whether or no, if you had seen her there,
you would have admired the justice of the former epithet, you would at
least have allowed that at this moment she was the image of a victim of
idleness. Her attitude had a singular absence of purpose; her hands,
hanging at her sides, lost themselves in the folds of her black dress; her
eyes gazed vaguely before her. There was nothing to recall her to the
house; the two ladies, in their seclusion, dined early and had tea at an
indefinite hour. How long she had sat in this position she could not have
told you; but the twilight had grown thick when she became aware that she
was not alone. She quickly straightened herself, glancing about, and then
saw what had become of her solitude. She was sharing it with Caspar
Goodwood, who stood looking at her, a few yards off, and whose footfall on
the unresonant turf, as he came near, she had not heard. It occurred to
her in the midst of this that it was just so Lord Warburton had surprised
her of old.
</p>
<p>
She instantly rose, and as soon as Goodwood saw he was seen he started
forward. She had had time only to rise when, with a motion that looked
like violence, but felt like—she knew not what, he grasped her by
the wrist and made her sink again into the seat. She closed her eyes; he
had not hurt her; it was only a touch, which she had obeyed. But there was
something in his face that she wished not to see. That was the way he had
looked at her the other day in the churchyard; only at present it was
worse. He said nothing at first; she only felt him close to her—beside
her on the bench and pressingly turned to her. It almost seemed to her
that no one had ever been so close to her as that. All this, however, took
but an instant, at the end of which she had disengaged her wrist, turning
her eyes upon her visitant. “You’ve frightened me,” she said.
</p>
<p>
“I didn’t mean to,” he answered, “but if I did a little, no matter. I came
from London a while ago by the train, but I couldn’t come here directly.
There was a man at the station who got ahead of me. He took a fly that was
there, and I heard him give the order to drive here. I don’t know who he
was, but I didn’t want to come with him; I wanted to see you alone. So
I’ve been waiting and walking about. I’ve walked all over, and I was just
coming to the house when I saw you here. There was a keeper, or someone,
who met me; but that was all right, because I had made his acquaintance
when I came here with your cousin. Is that gentleman gone? Are you really
alone? I want to speak to you.” Goodwood spoke very fast; he was as
excited as when they had parted in Rome. Isabel had hoped that condition
would subside; and she shrank into herself as she perceived that, on the
contrary, he had only let out sail. She had a new sensation; he had never
produced it before; it was a feeling of danger. There was indeed something
really formidable in his resolution. She gazed straight before her; he,
with a hand on each knee, leaned forward, looking deeply into her face.
The twilight seemed to darken round them. “I want to speak to you,” he
repeated; “I’ve something particular to say. I don’t want to trouble you—as
I did the other day in Rome. That was of no use; it only distressed you. I
couldn’t help it; I knew I was wrong. But I’m not wrong now; please don’t
think I am,” he went on with his hard, deep voice melting a moment into
entreaty. “I came here to-day for a purpose. It’s very different. It was
vain for me to speak to you then; but now I can help you.”
</p>
<p>
She couldn’t have told you whether it was because she was afraid, or
because such a voice in the darkness seemed of necessity a boon; but she
listened to him as she had never listened before; his words dropped deep
into her soul. They produced a sort of stillness in all her being; and it
was with an effort, in a moment, that she answered him. “How can you help
me?” she asked in a low tone, as if she were taking what he had said
seriously enough to make the enquiry in confidence.
</p>
<p>
“By inducing you to trust me. Now I know—to-day I know. Do you
remember what I asked you in Rome? Then I was quite in the dark. But
to-day I know on good authority; everything’s clear to me to-day. It was a
good thing when you made me come away with your cousin. He was a good man,
a fine man, one of the best; he told me how the case stands for you. He
explained everything; he guessed my sentiments. He was a member of your
family and he left you—so long as you should be in England—to
my care,” said Goodwood as if he were making a great point. “Do you know
what he said to me the last time I saw him—as he lay there where he
died? He said: ‘Do everything you can for her; do everything she’ll let
you.’”
</p>
<p>
Isabel suddenly got up. “You had no business to talk about me!”
</p>
<p>
“Why not—why not, when we talked in that way?” he demanded,
following her fast. “And he was dying—when a man’s dying it’s
different.” She checked the movement she had made to leave him; she was
listening more than ever; it was true that he was not the same as that
last time. That had been aimless, fruitless passion, but at present he had
an idea, which she scented in all her being. “But it doesn’t matter!” he
exclaimed, pressing her still harder, though now without touching a hem of
her garment. “If Touchett had never opened his mouth I should have known
all the same. I had only to look at you at your cousin’s funeral to see
what’s the matter with you. You can’t deceive me any more; for God’s sake
be honest with a man who’s so honest with you. You’re the most unhappy of
women, and your husband’s the deadliest of fiends.”
</p>
<p>
She turned on him as if he had struck her. “Are you mad?” she cried.
</p>
<p>
“I’ve never been so sane; I see the whole thing. Don’t think it’s
necessary to defend him. But I won’t say another word against him; I’ll
speak only of you,” Goodwood added quickly. “How can you pretend you’re
not heart-broken? You don’t know what to do—you don’t know where to
turn. It’s too late to play a part; didn’t you leave all that behind you
in Rome? Touchett knew all about it, and I knew it too—what it would
cost you to come here. It will have cost you your life? Say it will”—and
he flared almost into anger: “give me one word of truth! When I know such
a horror as that, how can I keep myself from wishing to save you? What
would you think of me if I should stand still and see you go back to your
reward? ‘It’s awful, what she’ll have to pay for it!’—that’s what
Touchett said to me. I may tell you that, mayn’t I? He was such a near
relation!” cried Goodwood, making his queer grim point again. “I’d sooner
have been shot than let another man say those things to me; but he was
different; he seemed to me to have the right. It was after he got home—when
he saw he was dying, and when I saw it too. I understand all about it:
you’re afraid to go back. You’re perfectly alone; you don’t know where to
turn. You can’t turn anywhere; you know that perfectly. Now it is
therefore that I want you to think of <i>me</i>.”
</p>
<p>
“To think of ‘you’?” Isabel said, standing before him in the dusk. The
idea of which she had caught a glimpse a few moments before now loomed
large. She threw back her head a little; she stared at it as if it had
been a comet in the sky.
</p>
<p>
“You don’t know where to turn. Turn straight to me. I want to persuade you
to trust me,” Goodwood repeated. And then he paused with his shining eyes.
“Why should you go back—why should you go through that ghastly
form?”
</p>
<p>
“To get away from you!” she answered. But this expressed only a little of
what she felt. The rest was that she had never been loved before. She had
believed it, but this was different; this was the hot wind of the desert,
at the approach of which the others dropped dead, like mere sweet airs of
the garden. It wrapped her about; it lifted her off her feet, while the
very taste of it, as of something potent, acrid and strange, forced open
her set teeth.
</p>
<p>
At first, in rejoinder to what she had said, it seemed to her that he
would break out into greater violence. But after an instant he was
perfectly quiet; he wished to prove he was sane, that he had reasoned it
all out. “I want to prevent that, and I think I may, if you’ll only for
once listen to me. It’s too monstrous of you to think of sinking back into
that misery, of going to open your mouth to that poisoned air. It’s you
that are out of your mind. Trust me as if I had the care of you. Why
shouldn’t we be happy—when it’s here before us, when it’s so easy?
I’m yours for ever—for ever and ever. Here I stand; I’m as firm as a
rock. What have you to care about? You’ve no children; that perhaps would
be an obstacle. As it is you’ve nothing to consider. You must save what
you can of your life; you mustn’t lose it all simply because you’ve lost a
part. It would be an insult to you to assume that you care for the look of
the thing, for what people will say, for the bottomless idiocy of the
world. We’ve nothing to do with all that; we’re quite out of it; we look
at things as they are. You took the great step in coming away; the next is
nothing; it’s the natural one. I swear, as I stand here, that a woman
deliberately made to suffer is justified in anything in life—in
going down into the streets if that will help her! I know how you suffer,
and that’s why I’m here. We can do absolutely as we please; to whom under
the sun do we owe anything? What is it that holds us, what is it that has
the smallest right to interfere in such a question as this? Such a
question is between ourselves—and to say that is to settle it! Were
we born to rot in our misery—were we born to be afraid? I never knew
<i>you</i> afraid! If you’ll only trust me, how little you will be
disappointed! The world’s all before us—and the world’s very big. I
know something about that.”
</p>
<p>
Isabel gave a long murmur, like a creature in pain; it was as if he were
pressing something that hurt her.
</p>
<p>
“The world’s very small,” she said at random; she had an immense desire to
appear to resist. She said it at random, to hear herself say something;
but it was not what she meant. The world, in truth, had never seemed so
large; it seemed to open out, all round her, to take the form of a mighty
sea, where she floated in fathomless waters. She had wanted help, and here
was help; it had come in a rushing torrent. I know not whether she
believed everything he said; but she believed just then that to let him
take her in his arms would be the next best thing to her dying. This
belief, for a moment, was a kind of rapture, in which she felt herself
sink and sink. In the movement she seemed to beat with her feet, in order
to catch herself, to feel something to rest on.
</p>
<p>
“Ah, be mine as I’m yours!” she heard her companion cry. He had suddenly
given up argument, and his voice seemed to come, harsh and terrible,
through a confusion of vaguer sounds.
</p>
<p>
This however, of course, was but a subjective fact, as the metaphysicians
say; the confusion, the noise of waters, all the rest of it, were in her
own swimming head. In an instant she became aware of this. “Do me the
greatest kindness of all,” she panted. “I beseech you to go away!”
</p>
<p>
“Ah, don’t say that. Don’t kill me!” he cried.
</p>
<p>
She clasped her hands; her eyes were streaming with tears. “As you love
me, as you pity me, leave me alone!”
</p>
<p>
He glared at her a moment through the dusk, and the next instant she felt
his arms about her and his lips on her own lips. His kiss was like white
lightning, a flash that spread, and spread again, and stayed; and it was
extraordinarily as if, while she took it, she felt each thing in his hard
manhood that had least pleased her, each aggressive fact of his face, his
figure, his presence, justified of its intense identity and made one with
this act of possession. So had she heard of those wrecked and under water
following a train of images before they sink. But when darkness returned
she was free. She never looked about her; she only darted from the spot.
There were lights in the windows of the house; they shone far across the
lawn. In an extraordinarily short time—for the distance was
considerable—she had moved through the darkness (for she saw
nothing) and reached the door. Here only she paused. She looked all about
her; she listened a little; then she put her hand on the latch. She had
not known where to turn; but she knew now. There was a very straight path.
</p>
<p>
Two days afterwards Caspar Goodwood knocked at the door of the house in
Wimpole Street in which Henrietta Stackpole occupied furnished lodgings.
He had hardly removed his hand from the knocker when the door was opened
and Miss Stackpole herself stood before him. She had on her hat and
jacket; she was on the point of going out. “Oh, good-morning,” he said, “I
was in hopes I should find Mrs. Osmond.”
</p>
<p>
Henrietta kept him waiting a moment for her reply; but there was a good
deal of expression about Miss Stackpole even when she was silent. “Pray
what led you to suppose she was here?”
</p>
<p>
“I went down to Gardencourt this morning, and the servant told me she had
come to London. He believed she was to come to you.”
</p>
<p>
Again Miss Stackpole held him—with an intention of perfect kindness—in
suspense. “She came here yesterday, and spent the night. But this morning
she started for Rome.”
</p>
<p>
Caspar Goodwood was not looking at her; his eyes were fastened on the
doorstep. “Oh, she started—?” he stammered. And without finishing
his phrase or looking up he stiffly averted himself. But he couldn’t
otherwise move.
</p>
<p>
Henrietta had come out, closing the door behind her, and now she put out
her hand and grasped his arm. “Look here, Mr. Goodwood,” she said; “just
you wait!”
</p>
<p>
On which he looked up at her—but only to guess, from her face, with
a revulsion, that she simply meant he was young. She stood shining at him
with that cheap comfort, and it added, on the spot, thirty years to his
life. She walked him away with her, however, as if she had given him now
the key to patience.
</p>
<p>
<br /><br />
</p>
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