<h3>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
<p><span class = "dropcap">A</span><span class = "firstword">
word</span> of warning tends to great advantage when issued reverently
from the lips of the estimable. It serves to allay the danger pending on
reticence, and substantiates in a measure the confidence which has
hitherto existed between the parties concerned. Again, a judicious
advice, extended to the stubborn and self-willed, proves futile, and
incurs the further malice and fiery indignation of the regardless, the
reckless, and the uncharitable.</p>
<p>Lady Dunfern began now to grow both cross and careless, and seemed
not to interest herself so much (since her propositions were so
emphatically denounced by her husband) concerning the management of the
household staff. She grew daily more retired, and often has her conduct
been so preposterously strange as to cause alarm both to Sir John and
all over whom he had immediate control.</p>
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_61" id = "page_61">61</SPAN></span>
<p>Indeed, three months of married life scarcely elapsed until she cast
a glow of despair within the breast which too often heaved for her with
true piety and love. And what was meant by such strange conduct on her
part, her husband often wondered. Only the mighty cessation of
friendship caused by the flight of her beloved guardians, never
attributing such silence and stubbornness to any fault he justly
committed.</p>
<p>Yes, the duped husband, when being fished for with the rod of seeming
simplicity and concealed character, and quickly caught on the hook of
ingenuity, with deception for a bait, was altogether unable to fathom
its shallowest meaning. Was he not, therefore, to be sympathised with,
who so charitably extended the hand of honour and adoration to the
offspring of unknown parents, and placed her in position equal to any
lady of title and boasted parentage within the boundary of County Kent?
Should Sir John Dunfern not have been almost worshipped by a wife whose
binding duty it was to reverence her husband in all things pertaining to
good? No doubt this would have been so had he gained the affections he
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_62" id = "page_62">62</SPAN></span>
imagined he possessed, but later on he would inevitably be made aware of
matters which as yet only bordered on supposition.</p>
<p>Day after day Lady Dunfern pined like a prisoner in her boudoir, and
scarcely ever shared a word with the great and good Sir John, who many
times wished in former days that she had occupied his home and all its
joys. She formed an inward resolution that if prohibited from enjoying
life, to which she was accustomed at Dilworth Castle, she would make her
husband, whom she knew too well made her his idol, feel the smart, by
keeping herself aloof from his caresses as much as possible.</p>
<p>Often would he be found half asleep in deep thought, not having any
friend of immediate intimacy in whom he could confide or trust, or to
whom he could unbosom the conduct of his wife, whose actions now he was
beginning to detest.</p>
<p>The thoughts of disappointment and shame were building for themselves
a home of shelter within him—disappointment on account of
cherished hopes which unmistakably were crushed to atoms beneath the
feet of her who was the sole instigation of their origin; shame, in all
probability, lest the love he
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_63" id = "page_63">63</SPAN></span>
sought and bought with the price of self might not be his after all! and
may still be reserved against his right and kept for another much less
worthy! The little jealous spark again revived and prompted him to renew
its lustre, which had been hidden for a length of time behind the cloud
of dread so silently awaiting the liberty of covering the hill of
happiness.</p>
<p>Quietly ruminating over his wife’s manner before marriage, about
which he was compelled, through observation, to demand an explanation,
and pondering carefully her strange and silent habits since it, he
became resolved to probe the wound that had swollen so enormously as to
demand immediate relief. Ringing furiously for a maid, he handed her a
note, to be delivered without delay to Lady Dunfern, the nature of which
might well be suspected. Be that as it may, its contents were
instrumental in demanding immediate attention.</p>
<p>Soon after its delivery a slight tap was heard at the door of Sir
John’s study, this room being always his favourite haunt, where he sat
beside a bright and glowing fire, engaged in sullen thought; and with an
imperious “Come in!” he still remained in the same
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_64" id = "page_64">64</SPAN></span>
thinking posture; nor was he aware, for fully five minutes or so, that
his intruder was no other than she whom he so recently ordered into his
presence!</p>
<p>Gazing up in a manner which startled the cold-hearted woman not a
little, he requested her “to have a seat right opposite his,” to which
she instantly complied. At this moment the snow was wafting its flaky
handfuls thickly against the barred enclosures of Dunfern Mansion, and
chilly as nature appeared outside, it was similarly so indoors for the
fond and far-famed husband of Lord Dilworth’s charge.</p>
<p>Matters had appeared so unpleasant and altogether bewildering of late
that Sir John formed a resolution to bring them to a crisis. Looking
fully into the face that seemed so lovely just now, with the dainty
spots of blazing ire enlivening the pale cheeks of creeping sin, Sir
John began—</p>
<p>“Irene, if I may use such familiarity, I have summoned you hither, it
may be to undergo a stricter examination than your present condition
probably permits; but knowing, as you should, my life must be miserable
under this growing cloud of unfathomed dislike, I became resolved
to end, if within my power, such contentious and unladylike
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_65" id = "page_65">65</SPAN></span>
conduct as that practised by you towards me of late. It is now quite six
months—yea, weary months—since I shielded you from open
penury and insult, which were bound to follow you, as well as your
much-loved protectors, who sheltered you from the pangs of penniless
orphanage; and during these six months, which naturally should have been
the pet period of nuptial harmony, it has proved the hideous period of
howling dislike!</p>
<p>“I, as you see, am tinged with slightly snowy tufts, the result of
stifled sorrow and care concerning you alone; and on the memorable day
of our alliance, as you are well aware, the black and glossy locks of
glistening glory crowned my brow. There dwelt then, just six months this
day, no trace of sorrow or smothered woe—no variety of colour
where it is and shall be so long as I exist—no furrows of grief
could then be traced upon my visage. But, alas! now I feel so changed!
And why?</p>
<p>“Because I have dastardly and doggedly been made a tool of treason in
the hands of the traitoress and unworthy! I was enticed to believe
that an angel was always hovering around my footsteps, when moodily
engaged in resolving to acquaint you
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_66" id = "page_66">66</SPAN></span>
of my great love, and undying desire to place you upon the highest
pinnacle possible of praise and purity within my power to bestow!</p>
<p>“I was led to believe that your unbounded joy and happiness were
never at such a par as when sharing them with me. Was I falsely informed
of your ways and worth? Was I duped to ascend the ladder of liberty, the
hill of harmony, the tree of triumph, and the rock of regard, and when
wildly manifesting my act of ascension, was I to be informed of treading
still in the valley of defeat?</p>
<p>“Am I, who for nearly forty years was idolised by a mother of
untainted and great Christian bearing, to be treated now like a slave?
Why and for what am I thus dealt with?</p>
<p>“Am I to foster the opinion that you treat me thus on account of not
sharing so fully in your confidence as it may be, another?</p>
<p>“Or is it, can it be, imaginative that you have reluctantly shared,
only shared, with me that which I have bought and paid for fully?</p>
<p>“Can it be that your attention has ever been, or is still, attracted
by another, who, by some artifice or other, had the audacity to steal
your desire for me
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_67" id = "page_67">67</SPAN></span>
and hide it beneath his pillaged pillow of poverty, there to conceal it
until demanded with my ransom?</p>
<p>“Speak! Irene! Wife! Woman! Do not sit in silence and allow the blood
that now boils in my veins to ooze through cavities of unrestrained
passion and trickle down to drench me with its crimson hue!</p>
<p>“Speak, I implore you, for my sake, and act no more the deceitful
Duchess of Nanté, who, when taken to task by the great Napoleon for
refusing to dance with him at a State ball, replied, ‘You honoured me
too highly’—acting the hypocrite to his very face. Are you doing
likewise?” Here Sir John, whose flushed face, swollen temples, and fiery
looks were the image of indignation, restlessly awaited her reply.</p>
<p>Lady Dunfern began now to stare her position fully in the face. On
this interview, she thought, largely depended her future welfare, if
viewed properly. Should she make her husband cognisant of her inward
feelings, matters were sure to end very unsatisfactorily. These she kept
barred against his entrance in the past, and she was fully determined
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_68" id = "page_68">68</SPAN></span>
should remain so now, until forced from their home of refuge by spirited
action.</p>
<p>Let it be thoroughly understood that Lady Dunfern was forced into a
union she never honestly countenanced. She was almost compelled, through
the glittering polish Lady Dilworth put on matters, to silently resign
the hand of one whose adoration was amply returned, and enter into a
contract which she could never properly complete. All she could now do
was to plunge herself into the lake of evasion and answer him as best
she could.</p>
<p>“Sir and husband,” she said, with great nervousness at first, “you
have summoned me hither to lash your rebuke unmercifully upon me,
provoked, it may be, by underhand intercourse. You accordingly, in the
course of your remarks, fail not to tamper with a character which as yet
defies your scathing criticism. Only this week have I been made the
recipient of news concerning my deceased parents, of whom I never before
obtained the slightest clue, and armed with equality, I am in a
position fit to treat some of your stingy remarks with the scorn they
merit.</p>
<p>“You may not already be aware of the fact that I, whom you insinuate
you wrested from beggary,
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_69" id = "page_69">69</SPAN></span>
am the only child of the late Colonel Iddesleigh, who fell a victim to a
gunshot wound inflicted by the hand of his wife, who had fallen into the
pit of intemperance. Yes, Earl Peden’s daughter was his wife and my
mother, and only that this vice so actuated her movements, I might
still have lent to Society the object it dare not now claim, and thereby
would have shunned the iron rule of being bound down to exist for months
at a time within such a small space of the world’s great bed.</p>
<p>“If my manner <ins class = "mycorr" title = "text unchanged: ‘have’ may be correct">have</ins>
changed in any way since our union, of it I
am not aware, and fail to be persuaded of any existing difference, only
what might be attributed to Lady Dilworth’s sudden and unexpected
removal from our midst, which occasioned me grief indeed.</p>
<p>“It behoves elderly men like you to rule their wives with jealous
supervision, especially if the latter tread on the fields of youth. Such
is often fictitious and unfounded altogether, and should be treated with
marked silence.</p>
<p>“I may here say I was mistress, in a measure, of my movements whilst
under the meek rule of Lady Dilworth; nor was I ever thwarted in any way
from
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_70" id = "page_70">70</SPAN></span>
acting throughout her entire household as I best thought fit, and since
I have taken upon me to hold the reins of similarity within these walls,
I find they are much more difficult to manage. I, more than once,
have given orders which were completely prohibited from being executed.
By whom, might I ask, and why? Taking everything into consideration,
I am quite justified in acquainting you that, instead of being the
oppressor, I feel I am the oppressed.</p>
<p>“Relative to my affections, pray have those courted by me in the past
aught to do with the present existing state of affairs? I am fully
persuaded to answer, ‘Nothing whatever.’</p>
<p>“You speak of your snowy tufts appearing where once there dwelt locks
of glossy jet. Well, I am convinced they never originated through
me, and must surely have been threatening to appear before taking the
step which links me with their origin.</p>
<p>“I now wish to retire, feeling greatly fatigued, and trusting our
relations shall remain friendly and mutual, I bid thee
good-night.”</p>
<p>Lady Dunfern swept out of the room, and hurrying to her own
apartment, burst into an uncontrollable fit of grief.</p>
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_71" id = "page_71">71</SPAN></span>
<p>She had surely been awaked from her reverie by Sir John, and felt
sharply the sting of his remarks, which were truly applied, indeed. She
now resolved to let matters move along as quietly as possible until
after she should pass the most critical period of her existence. She was
prepared to manifest her innocence throughout, without detection if
possible. But amongst the household there moved a matron under whose
hawk-like eye Lady Dunfern was almost inclined to shrink. She felt when
in her presence to be facing an enemy of unbounded experience. She
abhorred her stealing tread, but not without cause. It was to this dame
she so often issued orders that never were carried out; and when
intimating to Sir John the necessity of instantly dismissing such a
tyrant, he quietly “rebelled,” adding “that she had been almost twenty
years in his service, and presently could not think of parting with such
a valued and much-trusted friend.”</p>
<p>This woman’s name was Rachel Hyde, and proved the secret channel of
intercourse between Sir John and Lady Dunfern, evidently paving the way
for her ladyship’s downfall; as Rachel, being mistress for such a period
over Dunfern Mansion, could never step
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_72" id = "page_72">72</SPAN></span>
the fence leading to abolition of power, which she so unwillingly tried
to mount since Sir John’s marriage, and failing totally in her attempt,
was lifted and thrown over by her mistress, an act she could never
forget, and consequently carried all news, trivial or serious,
concerning Lady Dunfern to her master, and delivered it in such an
exaggerated form as to incur his wrath, which already had been slightly
heated.</p>
<p>A few months elapsed again, during which time matters went on much as
usual, until an event happened that should have chased the darkest cloud
of doubt and infidelity from the noble brow of the mighty and revered
master of Dunfern Mansion.</p>
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