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'I ought to have done so. I am very sorry to have neglected it.'
He looked at her with surprise which was very like a sneer, and kept silence till they reached the house.
One of the ladies whom Adela had already met, and a gentleman styled Captain something, were guests at dinner. Alice received her sister-in-law with evident pleasure, though not perhaps that of pure hospitableness.
'I do hope it won't be too much for you,' she said. 'Pray leave as soon as you feel you ought to. I should never forgive myself if you took a cold or anything of the kind.'
Really, Alice had supplied herself with most becoming phrases. The novels had done much; and then she had been living in society. At dinner she laughed rather too loud, it might be, and was too much given to addressing her husband as 'Willis;' but her undeniable prettiness in low-necked evening dress condoned what was amiss in manner. Mr. Rodman looked too gentlemanly; he reminded one of a hero of polite melodrama on the English-French stage. The Captain talked stock-exchange, and was continually inquiring about some one or other, 'Did he drop much?'
Mutimer was staying at the house over-night. After dinner he spoke aside with Adela.
'I suppose you go back to-morrow?'
'Yes, I meant to.'
'We may as well go together, then. I'll call for you at two o'clock.'
He considered, and changed the hour.
'No, I'll come at ten. I want you to go with me to buy some things. Then we'll have lunch here.'
'And go back for my luggage?'
'We'll take it away at ten o'clock and leave it at the station. I suppose you can be ready?'
'Yes, I can be ready,' Adela answered mechanically.
He drove back with her to Avenue Road in the Rodmans' carriage, and left her at the door.
Mr. Westlake was expected home to-night, but had telegraphed to say that he would return in the morning. Stella had spent the evening alone; Adela found her in the boudoir with a single lamp, reading.
'Are you still feverish?' Stella asked, putting to her cheek the ungloved hand.
'I think not--I can't say.'
Stella waited to hear something about the evening, but Adela broke the silence to say:
'I must leave at ten in the morning. My husband will call for me.'
'So early?'
'Yes.'
There was silence again.
'Will you come and see me before long, Stella?'
'I will,' was the gentle reply.
'Thank you. I shall look forward to it very much.'
Then Adela said good-night, speaking more cheerfully.
In her bedroom she sat as before dinner. The fever had subsided during the past two hours, but now it crept into her blood again, insidious, tingling. And with it came so black a phantom of despair that Adela closed her eyes shudderingly, lay back as one lifeless, and wished that it were possible by the will alone to yield the breath and cease. The night pulsed about her, beat regularly like a great clock, and its pulsing smote upon her brain.
To-morrow she must follow her husband, who would come to lead her home.
Home? what home had she? What home would she ever have but a grave in the gra.s.sy churchyard of Wanley? Why did death spare her when it took the life which panted but for a moment on her bosom?
She must leave Stella and go back to her duties at the Manor; must teach the children of New Wanley; must love, honour, obey her husband.
Returning from Exmouth, she was glad to see her house again; now she had rather a thousand times die than go back. Horror shook her like a palsy; all that she had borne for eighteen months seemed acc.u.mulated upon her now, waited for her there at Wanley to be endured again. Oh! where was the maiden whiteness of her soul? What malignant fate had robbed her for ever of innocence and peace?
Was this fever or madness? She rose and flung her arms against a hideous form which was about to seize her. It would not vanish, it pressed upon her. She cried, fled to the door, escaped, and called Stella's name aloud.
A door near her own opened, and Stella appeared. Adela clung to her, and was drawn into the room. Those eyes of infinite pity gazing into her own availed to calm her.
'Shall I send for some one?' Stella asked anxiously, but with no weak bewilderment.
'No; it is not illness. But I dread to be alone; I am nervous.'
'Will you stay with me, dear?'
'Oh, Stella, let me, let me! I want to be near to you whilst I may!'
Stella's child slept peacefully in a crib; the voices were too low to wake it. Almost like another child, Adela allowed herself to be undressed.
'Shall I leave a light?' Stella asked.
'No, I can sleep. Only let me feel your arms.'
They lay in unbroken silence till both slept.
CHAPTER XXIII
In a character such as Mutimer's there will almost certainly be found a disposition to cruelty, for strong instincts of domination, even of the n.o.bler kind, only wait for circ.u.mstances to develop crude tyranny--the cruder, of course, in proportion to the lack of native or acquired refinement which distinguishes the man. We had a hint of such things in Mutimer's progressive feeling with regard to Emma Vine. The possibility of his becoming a tyrannous husband could not be doubted by any one who viewed him closely.
There needed only the occasion, and this at length presented itself in the form of jealousy. Of all possible incentives it was the one most calamitous, for it came just when a slow and secret growth of pa.s.sion was making demand for room and air. Mutimer had for some time been at a loss to understand his own sensations; he knew that his wife was becoming more and more a necessity to him, and that too when the progress of time would have led him to expect the very opposite. He knew it during her absence at Exmouth, more still now that she was away in London. It was with reluctance that he let her leave home, only his satisfaction in her intimacy with the Westlakes and his hopes for Alice induced him to acquiesce in her departure. Yet he could show nothing of this. A lack of self-confidence, a strange shyness, embarra.s.sed him as often as he would give play to his feelings. They were intensified by suppression, and goaded him to constant restlessness. When at most a day or two remained before Adela's return, he could no longer resist the desire to surprise her in London.
Not only did he find her in the company of the man whom he had formerly feared as a rival, but her behaviour seemed to him distinctly to betray consternation at his arrival. She was colourless, agitated, could not speak. From that moment his love was of the quality which in its manifestations is often indistinguishable from hatred. He resolved to keep her under his eye, to enforce to the uttermost his marital authority, to make her pay bitterly for the freedom she had stolen.
His exasperated egoism flew at once to the extreme of suspicion; he was ready to accuse her of completed perfidy. Mrs. Westlake became his enemy; the profound distrust of culture, which was inseparable from his mental narrowness, however ambition might lead him to disguise it, seized upon the occasion to declare itself; that woman was capable of conniving at his dishonour, even of plotting it. He would not allow Adela to remain in the house a minute longer than he could help. Even the casual absence of Mr. Westlake became a suspicious circ.u.mstance; Eldon of course chose the time for his visit.
Adela was once more safe in the Manor, under lock and key, as it were.
He had not spoken of Eldon, though several times on the point of doing so. It was obvious that the return home cost her suffering, that it was making her ill. He could not get her to converse; he saw that she did not study. It was impossible to keep watch on her at all moments of the day; yet how otherwise discover what letters she wrote or received? He pondered the practicability of bribing her maid to act as a spy upon her, but feared to attempt it. He found opportunities of secretly examining the blotter on her writing-desk, and it convinced him that she had written to Mrs. Westlake. It maddened him that he had not the courage to take a single open step, to forbid, for instance, all future correspondence with London. To do so would be to declare his suspicions.
He wished to declare them; it would have gratified him intensely to vomit impeachments, to terrify her with coa.r.s.eness and violence; but, on the other hand, by keeping quiet he might surprise positive evidence, and if only he did!
She was ill; he had a distinct pleasure in observing it. She longed for quiet and retirement; he neglected his business to force his company upon her, to laugh and talk loudly. She with difficulty read a page; he made her read aloud to him by the hour, or write translations for him from French and German. The pale anguish of her face was his joy; it fascinated him, fired his senses, made him a demon of vicious cruelty.