<SPAN name="chap27"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XXVII </h3>
<h3> THE REASCENT </h3>
<p>Whilst the rain pelted, and it did so until afternoon, Rhoda sat in her
little parlour, no whit less miserable than Barfoot imagined. She could
not be sure whether Everard had gone to London; at the last moment
reflection or emotion might have detained him. Early in the morning she
had sent to post a letter for Miss Barfoot, written last night—a
letter which made no revelation of her feelings, but merely expressed a
cold curiosity to hear anything that might become known as to the
course of Mr. Widdowson's domestic troubles. 'You may still write to
this address; if I leave, letters shall be forwarded.'</p>
<p>When the sky cleared she went out. In the evening she again rambled
about the shore. Evidently Barfoot had gone; if still here, he would
have watched and joined her.</p>
<p>Her solitude now grew insufferable, yet she could not decide whither to
betake herself. The temptation to return to London was very strong, but
pride prevailed against it. Everard might perhaps go to see his cousin,
and relate all that had happened at Seascale, justifying himself as he
had here done. Whether Miss Barfoot became aware of the story or not,
Rhoda could not reconcile it with her self-respect to curtail the
stipulated three weeks of holiday. Rather she would strain her nerves
to the last point of endurance—and if she were not suffering, then
never did woman suffer.</p>
<p>Another cheerless day helped her to make up her mind. She cared nothing
now for lake and mountain; human companionship was her supreme need. By
the earliest train next day she started, not for London, but for her
brother's home in Somerset, and there she remained until it was time to
return to work. Miss Barfoot wrote twice in the interval, saying that
she had heard nothing more of Monica. Of Everard she made no mention.</p>
<p>Rhoda got back again to Chelsea on the appointed Saturday afternoon.
Miss Barfoot knew when she would arrive, but was not at home to meet
her, and did not return till a couple of hours had passed. They met at
length as if nothing remarkable had occurred during the three weeks.
Mary, if she felt any solicitude, effectually concealed it; Rhoda
talked as if very glad to be at home again, explaining her desertion of
the lake country by the bad weather that prevailed there. It was not
till after dinner that the inevitable subject came up between them.</p>
<p>'Have you seen Everard since you went away?' Miss Barfoot began by
asking.</p>
<p>So he had not been here to tell his story and plead his cause—or it
seemed not.</p>
<p>'Yes, I saw him at Seascale,' Rhoda replied, without sign of emotion.</p>
<p>'Before or after that news came?'</p>
<p>'Both before and after. I showed him your letter, and all he had to say
was that he knew nothing of the affair.'</p>
<p>'That's all he has to say to me. I haven't seen him. A letter I sent to
his address was answered, after a week, from a place I never heard
of—Arromanches, in Normandy. The shortest and rudest letter I ever had
from him. Practically he told me to mind my own business. And there
things stand.'</p>
<p>Rhoda smiled a little, conscious of the extreme curiosity her friend
must be feeling, and determined not to gratify it. For by this time,
though her sunken cheeks were hard to reconcile with the enjoyment of a
summer holiday, she had matured a resolve to betray nothing of what she
had gone through. Her state of mind resembled that of the ascetic who
has arrived at a morbid delight in self-torture. She regarded the world
with an intense bitterness, and persuaded herself not only that the
thought of Everard Barfoot was hateful to her soul, but that sexual
love had become, and would ever be, to her an impure idea, a vice of
blood.</p>
<p>'I suppose,' she said carelessly, 'Mr. Widdowson will try to divorce
his wife.'</p>
<p>'I am in dread of that. But they may have made it up.'</p>
<p>'Of course you have no doubt of her guilt?'</p>
<p>Mary tried to understand the hard, austere face, with its touch of
cynicism. Conjecture as to its meaning was not difficult, but, in the
utter absence of information, certainty there could be none. Under any
circumstances, it was to be expected that Rhoda would think and speak
of Mrs. Widdowson no less severely than of the errant Bella Royston.</p>
<p>'I have <i>some</i> doubt,' was Miss Barfoot's answer. 'But I should be glad
of some one else's favourable opinion to help my charity.'</p>
<p>'Miss Madden hasn't been here, you see. She certainly would have come
if she had felt convinced that her sister was wronged.'</p>
<p>'Unless a day or two saw the end of the trouble—when naturally none of
them would say any more about it.'</p>
<p>This was the possibility which occupied Rhoda's reflections as long as
she lay awake that night.</p>
<p>Her feelings on entering the familiar bedroom were very strange. Even
before starting for her holiday she had bidden it good-bye, and at
Seascale, that night following upon the "perfect day," she had thought
of it as a part of her past life, a place abandoned for ever, already
infinitely remote. Her first sensation when she looked upon the white
bed was one of disgust; she thought it would be impossible to use this
room henceforth, and that she must ask Miss Barfoot to let her change
to another. Tonight she did not restore any of the ornaments which were
lying packed up. The scent of the room revived so many hours of
conflict, of hope, that it caused her a sick faintness. In frenzy of
detestation she cursed the man who had so disturbed and sullied the
swift, pure stream of her life.</p>
<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
<p>Arromanches, in Normandy—? On Sunday she sought the name on a map, but
it was not marked, being doubtless too insignificant. Improbable that
he had gone to such a place alone; he was enjoying himself with
friends, careless what became of her. Having allowed all this time to
go by he would never seek her again. He found that her will was the
equal of his own, and, as he could not rule her, she was numbered among
the women who had afforded him interesting experiences, to be thought
of seriously no more.</p>
<p>During the next week she threw herself with energy upon her work,
stifling the repugnance with which at first it affected her, and
seeming at length to recover the old enthusiasm. This was the only way
of salvation. Idleness and absence of purpose would soon degrade her in
a sense she had never dreamt of. She made a plan of daily occupation,
which by leaving not a vacant moment from early morning to late at
night, should give her the sleep of utter weariness. New studies were
begun in the hour or two before breakfast. She even restricted her
diet, and ate only just enough to support life, rejecting wine and
everything that was most agreeable to her palate.</p>
<p>She desired to speak privately with Mildred Vesper, and opportunity
might have been made, but, as part of her scheme of self-subdual, this
conversation was postponed until the second week. It took place one
evening when work was over.</p>
<p>'I have been wanting to ask you,' Rhoda began, 'whether you have any
news of Mrs. Widdowson.'</p>
<p>'I wrote to her not long ago, and she answered from a new address. She
said she had left her husband and would never go back to him.'</p>
<p>Rhoda nodded gravely.</p>
<p>'Then what I had heard was true. You haven't seen her?'</p>
<p>'She asked me not to come. She is living with her sister.'</p>
<p>'Did she give you any reason for the separation from her husband?'</p>
<p>'None,' answered Mildred. 'But she said it was no secret; that every
one knew. That's why I haven't spoken to you about it—as I should have
done otherwise after our last conversation.'</p>
<p>'The fact is no secret,' said Rhoda coldly. 'But why will she offer no
explanation?'</p>
<p>Mildred shook her head, signifying inability to make any satisfactory
reply, and there the dialogue ended; for Rhoda could not proceed in it
without appearing to encourage scandal. The hope of eliciting some
suggestive information had failed; but whether Mildred had really
disclosed all she knew seemed doubtful.</p>
<p>At the end of the week Miss Barfoot left home for her own holiday; she
was going to Scotland, and would be away for nearly the whole of
September. At this time of the year the work in Great Portland Street
was very light; not much employment offered for the typewriters, and
the pupils numbered only about half a dozen. Nevertheless, it pleased
Rhoda to have the establishment under her sole direction; she desired
authority, and by magnifying the importance of that which now fell into
her hands, she endeavoured to sustain herself under the secret misery
which, for all her efforts, weighed no less upon her as time went on.
It was a dreary make-believe. On the first night of solitude at Chelsea
she shed bitter tears; and not only wept, but agonized in mute frenzy,
the passions of her flesh torturing her until she thought of death as a
refuge. Now she whispered the name of her lover with every word and
phrase of endearment that her heart could suggest; the next moment she
cursed him with the fury of deadliest hatred. In the half-delirium of
sleeplessness, she revolved wild, impossible schemes for revenging
herself, or, as the mood changed, all but resolved to sacrifice
everything to her love, to accuse herself of ignoble jealousy and
entreat forgiveness. Of many woeful nights this was the worst she had
yet suffered.</p>
<p>It recalled to her with much vividness a memory of girlhood, or indeed
of childhood. She thought of that figure in the dim past, that rugged,
harsh-featured man, who had given her the first suggestion of
independence; thrice her own age, yet the inspirer of such tumultuous
emotion in her ignorant heart; her friend at Clevedon—Mr. Smithson. A
question from Mary Barfoot had caused her to glance back at him across
the years, but only for an instant, and with self-mockery. What she now
endured was the ripe intensity of a woe that fell upon her, at fifteen,
when Mr. Smithson passed from her sight and away for ever. Childish
folly! but the misery of it, the tossing at night, the blank outlook!
How contemptible to revive such sensations, with mature intellect,
after so long and stern a discipline!</p>
<p>Dreading the Sunday, so terrible in its depressing effect upon the
lonely and unhappy, she breakfasted as soon as possible, and left
home—simply to walk, to exert herself physically, that fatigue and
sleep might follow. There was a dull sky, but no immediate fear of
rain; the weather brightened a little towards noon. Careless of the
direction, she walked on and on until the last maddening church bell
had ceased its clangour; she was far out in the western suburbs, and
weariness began to check her quick pace. Then she turned back. Without
intending it, she passed by Mrs. Cosgrove's house, or rather would have
passed, when she saw Mrs. Cosgrove at the dining-room window making
signs to her. In a moment the door opened and she went in. She was glad
of this accident, for the social lady might have something to tell
about Mrs. Widdowson, who often visited her.</p>
<p>'In mercy, come and talk to me!' exclaimed Mrs. Cosgrove. 'I am quite
alone, and feel as if I could hang myself. Are you obliged to go
anywhere?'</p>
<p>'No. I was having a walk.'</p>
<p>'A walk? What astonishing energy! It never occurs to me to take a walk
in London. I came from the country last night and expected to find my
sister here, but she won't arrive till Tuesday. I have been standing at
the window for an hour, getting crazy with <i>ennui</i>.'</p>
<p>They went to the drawing-room. It was not long before Mrs. Cosgrove
made an allusion which enabled Rhoda to speak of Mrs. Widdowson. For a
month or more Mrs. Cosgrove had seen and heard nothing of her; she had
been out of town all the time. Rhoda hesitated, but could not keep
silence on the subject that had become a morbid preoccupation of her
mind. She told as much as she knew—excepting the suspicion against
Everard Barfoot.</p>
<p>'It doesn't in the least surprise me,' said the listener, with
interest. 'I saw they wouldn't be able to live together very well.
Without children the thing was impossible. Of course she has told you
all about it?'</p>
<p>'I haven't seen her since it happened.'</p>
<p>'Do you know, I always have a distinct feeling of pleasure when I hear
of married people parting. How horrible that would seem to some of our
good friends! But it isn't a malicious pleasure; there's nothing
personal in it. As I have told you before, I think, I led a very
contented life with my husband. But marriage in general is <i>such</i> a
humbug—you forgive the word.'</p>
<p>'Of course it is,' assented Rhoda, laughing with forced gaiety.</p>
<p>'I am glad of anything that seems to threaten it as an institution—in
its present form. A scandalous divorce case is a delight to
me—anything that makes it evident how much misery would be spared if
we could civilize ourselves in this respect. There are women whose
conduct I think personally detestable, and whom yet I can't help
thanking for their assault upon social laws. We shall have to go
through a stage of anarchy, you know, before reconstruction begins.
Yes, in that sense I am an anarchist. Seriously, I believe if a few men
and women in prominent position would contract marriage of the free
kind, without priest or lawyer, open and defiantly, they would do more
benefit to their kind than in any other possible way. I don't declare
this opinion to every one, but only because I am a coward. Whatever one
believes with heart and soul one ought to make known.'</p>
<p>Rhoda wore a look of anxious reflection.</p>
<p>'It needs a great deal of courage,' she said. 'To take that step, I
mean.'</p>
<p>'Of course. We need martyrs. And yet I doubt whether the martyrdom
would be very long, or very trying, to intellectual people. A woman of
brains who boldly acted upon her conviction would have no lack of
congenial society. The best people are getting more liberal than they
care to confess to each other. Wait until some one puts the matter to
the test and you will see.'</p>
<p>Rhoda became so busy with her tumultuous thoughts that she spoke only a
word now and then, allowing Mrs. Cosgrove to talk at large on this
engrossing theme.</p>
<p>'Where is Mrs. Widdowson living?' the revolutionist at length inquired.</p>
<p>'I don't know. But I can get you her address.'</p>
<p>'Pray do. I shall go and see her. We are quite friendly enough for me
to do so without impertinence.'</p>
<p>Having lunched with her acquaintance, Rhoda went in the afternoon to
Mildred Vesper's lodgings. Miss Vesper was at home, reading, in her
usual placid mood. She gave Rhoda the address that was on Mrs.
Widdowson's last brief note, and that evening Rhoda sent it to Mrs.
Cosgrove by letter.</p>
<p>In two days she received a reply. Mrs. Cosgrove had called upon Mrs.
Widdowson at her lodgings at Clapham. 'She is ill, wretched, and
unwilling to talk. I could only stay about a quarter of an hour, and to
ask questions was impossible. She mentioned your name, and appeared
very anxious to hear about you; but when I asked whether she would like
you to call she grew timid all at once, and said she hoped you wouldn't
unless you really desired to see her. Poor thing! Of course I don't
know what it all means, but I came away with maledictions on marriage
in my heart—one is always safe in indulging that feeling.'</p>
<p>A week or so after this there arrived for Miss Barfoot a letter from
Everard. The postmark was Ostend.</p>
<p>Never before had Rhoda been tempted to commit a break of confidence
such as in any one else she would have scorned beyond measure. She had
heard, of course, of people secretly opening letters with the help of
steam; whether it could be done with absolute security from detection
she did not feel sure, but her thoughts dwelt on the subject for
several hours. It was terrible to hold this letter of Everard's
writing, and yet be obliged to send it away without knowledge of the
contents, which perhaps gravely concerned her. She could not ask Miss
Barfoot to let her know what Everard had written. The information might
perhaps be voluntarily granted; but perhaps not.</p>
<p>To steam the back of the envelope—would it not leave marks, a rumpling
or discoloration? Even to be suspected of such dishonour would be more
bitter to her than death. Could she even think of it? How she was
degraded by this hateful passion, which wrought in her like a disease!</p>
<p>With two others which that day had arrived she put the letter into a
large envelope, and so dispatched it. But no satisfaction rewarded her;
her heart raged against the world, against every law of life.</p>
<p>When, in a few days, a letter came to her from Miss Barfoot, she tore
it Open, and there—yes, there was Everard's handwriting. Mary had sent
the communication for her to read.</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
'DEAR COUSIN MARY,—After all I was rather too grumpy In my last note
to you. But my patience had been desperately tried. I have gone through
a good deal; now at last I am recovering sanity, and can admit that you
had no choice but to ask those questions. I know and care nothing about
Mrs. Widdowson. By her eccentric behaviour she either did me a great
injury or a great service, I'm not quite sure which, but I incline to
the latter view. Here is a conundrum—not very difficult to solve, I
dare say.</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
'Do you know anything about Arromanches? A very quiet little spot on
the Normandy coast. You get to it by an hour's coach from Bayeux. Not
infested by English. I went there on an invitation from the
Brissendens; who discovered the place last year. Excellent people
these. I like them better the more I know of them. A great deal of
quiet liberality—even extreme liberality—in the two girls. They would
suit you, I am sure. Well instructed. Agnes, the younger, reads half a
dozen languages, and shames me by her knowledge of all sorts of things.
And yet delightfully feminine.</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
'As they were going to Ostend I thought I might as well follow them,
and we continue to see each other pretty frequently.</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
'By-the-bye, I shall have to find new quarters if I come back to
London. The engineer, back from Italy after a longer absence than he
anticipated, wants his flat, and of course must have it. But then I may
not come back at all, except to gather my traps. I shall not call on
you, unless I have heard that you don't doubt the assurance I have now
twice given.—Your profligate relative,
<br/><br/>
E. B.'</p>
<p>'I think,' wrote Mary, 'that we may safely believe him. Such a lie
would be too bad; he is incapable of it. Remember, I have never charged
him with falsehood. I shall write and tell him that I accept his word.
Has it, or has it not, occurred to you to see Mrs. Widdowson herself?
Or, if there are insuperable objections, why not see Miss Madden? We
talk to each other in a sort of cypher, dear Rhoda. Well, I desire
nothing but your good, as I think you know, and you must decide for
yourself where that good lies.'</p>
<p>Everard's letter put Rhoda beside herself with wrath. In writing it he
knew it would come into her hands; he hoped to sting her with jealousy.
So Mrs. Widdowson had done him a service. He was free to devote himself
to Agnes Brissenden, with her six languages, her extreme liberality,
her feminine charm.</p>
<p>If she could not crush out her love for this man she would poison
herself—as she had so often decided she would do if ever some hopeless
malady, such as cancer, took hold upon her—</p>
<p>And be content to feed his vanity? To give him the lifelong reflection
that, for love of him, a woman excelled by few in qualities of brain
and heart had died like a rat?</p>
<p>She walked about the rooms, here and there, upstairs and downstairs, in
a fever of unrest. After all, was he not behaving in the very way she
ought to desire? Was he not helping her to hate him? He struck at her
with unmanly blows, thinking, no doubt, to quell her pride, and bring
her to him in prostrate humility. Never! Even if it were proved in the
clearest way that she ought to have believed him she would make no
submission. If he loved her he must woo once more.</p>
<p>But the suggestion in Mary's letter was not fruitless. When she had
thought over it for a day or two she wrote to Virginia Madden, asking
her as a favour to come to Queen's Road on Saturday afternoon. Virginia
quickly replied with a promise to call, and punctually kept the
engagement. Though she was much better dressed than in the days
previous to Monica's marriage, she had lost something for which costume
could not compensate: her face had no longer that unmistakable
refinement which had been wont to make her attire a secondary
consideration. A disagreeable redness tinged her eyelids and the lower
part of her nose; her mouth was growing coarse and lax, the under-lip
hanging a little; she smiled with a shrinking, apologetic shyness only
seen in people who have done something to be ashamed of—smiled even
when she was endeavouring to look sorrowful; and her glance was
furtive. She sat down on the edge of a chair, like an anxious applicant
for work or charity, and a moistness of the eyes, which obliged her to
use her handkerchief frequently, strengthened this resemblance.</p>
<p>Rhoda could not play at smooth phrases with this poor, dispirited
woman, whose change during the last few years, and especially during
the last twelve months, had often occupied her thoughts in a very
unpleasant way. She came almost at once to the subject of their
interview.</p>
<p>'Why have you not been to see me before this?'</p>
<p>'I—really couldn't. The circumstances—everything is so very painful.
You know—of course you know what has happened?'</p>
<p>'Of course I do.'</p>
<p>'How,' asked Virginia timidly, 'did the news first of all reach you?'</p>
<p>'Mr. Widdowson came here and told Miss Barfoot everything.'</p>
<p>'He came? We didn't know that. Then you have heard the accusation he
makes?'</p>
<p>'Everything.'</p>
<p>'It is quite unfounded, I do assure you. Monica is not guilty. The poor
child has done nothing—it was an indiscretion—nothing more than
indiscretion—'</p>
<p>'I am very anxious to believe it. Can you give me certainty? Can you
explain Monica's behaviour—not only on that one occasion, but the
deceit she practised at other times? Her husband told Miss Barfoot that
she had frequently told him untruths—such as saying that she called
here when she certainly did not.'</p>
<p>'I can't explain that,' lamented Virginia. 'Monica won't tell me why
she concealed her movements.'</p>
<p>'Then how can you ask me to believe your assurance that she isn't
guilty?'</p>
<p>The sternness of this question caused Virginia to redden and become
utterly disconcerted. She dropped her handkerchief, fumbled for it,
breathed hard.</p>
<p>'Oh, Miss Nunn! How can you think Monica—? You know her better; I'm
sure you do!'</p>
<p>'Any human being may commit a crime,' said the other impatiently,
exasperated by what seemed to be merely new evidence against Barfoot.
'Who knows any one well enough to say that a charge <i>must</i> be
unfounded?'</p>
<p>Miss Madden began to sob.</p>
<p>'I'm afraid that is true. But my sister—my dear sister—'</p>
<p>'I didn't want to distress you. Do command yourself, and let us talk
about it calmly.'</p>
<p>'Yes—I will—I shall be so glad to talk about it with you. Oh, if I
could persuade her to return to her husband! He is willing to receive
her. I meet him very often on Clapham Common, and—We are living at his
expense. When Monica had been with me in my old lodgings for about a
week he took these new rooms for us, and Monica consented to remove.
But she won't hear of going back to live with him. He has offered to
let us have the house to ourselves, but it's no use. He writes to her,
but she won't reply. Do you know that he has taken a house at
Clevedon—a beautiful house? They were to go to it in a week or two,
and Alice and I would have gone to share it with them—then this
dreadful thing happened. And Mr. Widdowson doesn't even insist on her
telling him what she keeps secret. He is willing to take her back under
any circumstances. And she is so ill—'</p>
<p>Virginia broke off, as if there were something more that she did not
venture to impart. Her cheeks coloured, and she looked distressfully
about the room.</p>
<p>'Seriously ill, do you mean?' inquired Rhoda, with difficulty softening
her voice.</p>
<p>'She gets up each day, but I'm often afraid that—She has had fainting
fits—'</p>
<p>Rhoda gazed at the speaker with pitiless scrutiny.</p>
<p>'What can have caused this? Is it the result of her being falsely
accused?'</p>
<p>'Partly that. But—'</p>
<p>Suddenly Virginia rose, stepped to Rhoda's side, and whispered a word
or two. Rhoda turned pale; her eyes glared fiercely.</p>
<p>'And <i>still</i> you believe her innocent?'</p>
<p>'She has sworn to me that she is innocent. She says that she has a
proof of it which I shall see some day—and her husband also. A
presentiment has fixed itself in her mind that she can't live, and
before the end she will tell everything.'</p>
<p>'Her husband knows of this, of course—of what you have told me?'</p>
<p>'No. She has forbidden me to say anything—and how could I, Miss Nunn?
She has made me promise solemnly that he shall not be told. I haven't
even told Alice. But she will know very soon. At the end of September
she leaves her place, and will come to London to be with us—for a time
at all events. We do so hope that we shall succeed in persuading Monica
to go to the house at Clevedon. Mr. Widdowson is keeping it, and will
move the furniture from Herne Hill at any moment. Couldn't you help us,
dear Miss Nunn? Monica would listen to you; I am sure she would.'</p>
<p>'I'm afraid I can be of no use,' Rhoda answered coldly.</p>
<p>'She has been hoping to see you.'</p>
<p>'She has said so?'</p>
<p>'Not in so many words—but I am sure she wishes to see you. She has
asked about you several times, and when your note came she was very
pleased. It would be a great kindness to us—'</p>
<p>'Does she declare that she will never return to her husband?'</p>
<p>'Yes—I am sorry to say she does. But the poor child believes that she
has only a short time to live. Nothing will shake her presentiment. "I
shall die, and give no more trouble"—that's what she always says to
me. And a conviction of that kind is so likely to fulfil itself. She
never leaves the house, and of course that is very wrong; she ought to
go out every day. She won't see a medical man.'</p>
<p>'Has Mr. Widdowson given her any cause for disliking him?' Rhoda
inquired.</p>
<p>'He was dreadfully violent when he discovered—I'm afraid it was
natural—he thought the worst of her, and he has always been so devoted
to Monica. She says he seemed on the point of killing her. He is a man
of very severe nature, I have always thought. He never could bear that
Monica should go anywhere alone. They were very, very unhappy, I'm
afraid—so ill-matched in almost every respect. Still, under the
circumstances—surely she ought to return to him?'</p>
<p>'I can't say. I don't know.'</p>
<p>Rhoda's voice signified a conflict of feeling. Had she been
disinterested her opinion would not have wavered for a moment; she
would have declared that the wife's inclination must be the only law in
such a case. As it was, she could only regard Monica with profound
mistrust and repugnance. The story of decisive evidence kept back
seemed to her only a weak woman's falsehood—a fiction due to shame and
despair. Undoubtedly it would give some vague relief to her mind if
Monica were persuaded to go to Clevedon, but she could not bring
herself to think of visiting the suffering woman. Whatever the end
might be, she would have not part in bringing it about. Her dignity,
her pride, should remain unsullied by such hateful contact.</p>
<p>'I mustn't stay longer,' said Virginia, rising after a painful silence.
'I am always afraid to be away from her even for an hour; the fear of
dreadful things that might happen haunts me day and night. How glad I
shall be when Alice comes!'</p>
<p>Rhoda had no words of sympathy. Her commiseration for Virginia was only
such as she might have felt for any stranger involved in sordid
troubles; all the old friendliness had vanished. Nor would she have
been greatly shocked or astonished had she followed Miss Madden on the
way to the railway station and seen her, after a glance up and down the
street, turn quickly into a public-house, and come forth again holding
her handkerchief to her lips. A feeble, purposeless, hopeless woman;
type of a whole class; living only to deteriorate—</p>
<p>Will! Purpose! Was <i>she</i> not in danger of forgetting these watchwords,
which had guided her life out of youth into maturity? That poor
creature's unhappiness was doubtless in great measure due to the
conviction that in missing love and marriage she had missed everything.
So thought the average woman, and in her darkest hours she too had
fallen among those poor of spirit, the flesh prevailing. But the soul
in her had not finally succumbed. Passion had a new significance; her
conception of life was larger, more liberal; she made no vows to crush
the natural instincts. But her conscience, her sincerity should not
suffer. Wherever destiny might lead, she would still be the same proud
and independent woman, responsible only to herself, fulfilling the
nobler laws of her existence.</p>
<p>A day or two after this she had guests to dine with her—Mildred Vesper
and Winifred Haven. Among the girls whom she had helped to educate,
these two seemed by far the most self-reliant, the most courageous and
hopeful. In minor details of character they differed widely, and
intellectually Miss Haven was far in advance. Rhoda had a strong desire
to observe them as they talked about the most various subjects; she knew
them well, but hoped to find in them some new suggestion of womanly
force which would be of help to her in her own struggle for redemption.</p>
<p>It was seldom that either of them ailed anything. Mildred still showed
traces of her country breeding; she was the more robust, walked with a
heavier step, had less polish of manner. Under strain of any kind
Winifred's health would sooner give way, but her natural vivacity
promised long resistance to oppressing influences. Mildred had worked
harder, and amid privations of which the other girl knew nothing. She
would never distinguish herself, but it was difficult indeed to imagine
her repining so long as she had her strength and her congenial friends.
Twenty years hence, in all probability, she would keep the same clear,
steady eye, the same honest smile, and the same dry humour in her talk.
Winifred was more likely to traverse a latitude of storm. For one
thing, her social position brought her in the way of men who might fall
in love with her, whereas Mildred lived absolutely apart from the male
world; doubtless, too, her passions were stronger. She loved
literature, spent as much time as possible in study, and had set her
mind upon helping to establish that ideal woman's paper of which there
was often talk at Miss Barfoot's.</p>
<p>In this company Rhoda felt her old ambitions regaining their power over
her. To these girls she was an exemplar; it made her smile to think how
little they could dream of what she had experienced during the last few
weeks; if ever a moment of discontent assailed them, they must
naturally think of her, of the brave, encouraging words she had so
often spoken. For a moment she had deserted them, abandoning a course
which her reason steadily approved for one that was beset with perils
of indignity. It would shame her if they knew the whole truth—and yet
she wished it were possible for them to learn that she had been
passionately wooed. A contemptible impulse of vanity; away with it!</p>
<p>There was a chance, it seemed to her, that during Miss Barfoot's
absence Everard might come to the house. Mary had written to him; he
would know that she was away. What better opportunity, if he had not
dismissed her memory from his thoughts?</p>
<p>Every evening she made herself ready to receive a possible visitor. She
took thought for her appearance. But the weeks passed by, Miss Barfoot
returned, and Everard had given no sign.</p>
<p>She would set a date, a limit. If before Christmas he neither came nor
wrote all was at an end; after that she would not see him, whatever his
plea. And having persuaded herself that this decision was irrevocable,
she thought it as well to gratify Miss Barfoot's curiosity, for by now
she felt able to relate what had happened in Cumberland with a certain
satisfaction—the feeling she had foreseen when, in the beginning of
her acquaintance with Everard, it flattered her to observe his growing
interest. Her narrative, to which Mary listened with downcast eyes,
presented the outlines of the story veraciously; she told of Everard's
wish to dispense with the legal bond, of her own indecision, and of the
issue.</p>
<p>'When your letter came, could I very well have acted otherwise than I
did? It was not a flat refusal to believe him; all I asked was that
things should be cleared up before our marriage. For his own sake he
ought to have willingly agreed to that. He preferred to take my request
as an insult. His unreasonable anger made me angry too. And now I don't
think we shall ever meet again unless as mere acquaintances.'</p>
<p>'I think,' commented the listener, 'that he behaved with extraordinary
impudence.'</p>
<p>'In the first proposal? But I myself attach no importance to the
marriage ceremony.'</p>
<p>'Then why did you insist upon it?' asked Mary, with a smile that might
have become sarcastic but that her eye met Rhoda's.</p>
<p>'Would you have received us?'</p>
<p>'In the one case as readily as in the other.'</p>
<p>Rhoda was silent and darkly thoughtful.</p>
<p>'Perhaps I never felt entire confidence in him.'</p>
<p>Mary smiled and sighed.</p>
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