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It is September now; so far has the year advanced! We are well into the partridges. Their St. Bartholomew has begun. Roger is away among the thick green turnip-ridges and the short white stubble all the day. I wish to Heaven that I could shoot, too, and hunt. It would not matter if I never killed any thing--indeed, I think--of the two--I had rather not; I had rather have a course of empty bags and blank days than snuff out any poor, little, happy lives; but the occupation that these amus.e.m.e.nts would entail would displace and hinder the minute mental torments I now daily, in my listless, luxurious idleness, endure. I am thinking these thoughts one morning, as I turn over my unopened letters, and try, with the misplaced ingenuity and labor one is so apt to employ in such a case, to make out from the general air of their exteriors--from their superscriptions--from their post-marks, whom they are from. About one there is no doubt. It is from Barbara. I have not heard from Barbara for a fortnight or three weeks. It will be the usual thing, I suppose.
Father has got the gout in his right toe, or his left calf, or his wrist, or all his fingers, and is, consequently, fuller than usual of hatred and malice; mother's neuralgia is very bad, and she is sadly in want of change, but she cannot leave him. Algy has lost a lot of money at Goodwood, and they are afraid to tell father, etc., etc. Certainly, life is rather up-hill! I slowly tear the envelope open, and languidly throw my eyes along the lines. But, before I have read three words, my languor suddenly disappears. I sit upright in my chair, grasp the paper more firmly, bring it nearer my eyes, which begin greedily to gallop through its contents. They are not very long, and in two minutes I have mastered them.
"MY DEAREST NANCY:
"I have _such_ a piece of news for you! I cannot help laughing as I picture to myself your face of delight; I would make you guess it, only I cannot bear to keep you in suspense. _It has all come right!
I am going to marry Frank, after all!_ What _have_ I done to deserve such luck! How can I ever thank G.o.d enough for it? Do you know that my very first thought, when he asked me, was, '_How_ pleased Nancy will be!' You dear little soul! I think, when he went away that time from Tempest, that you took all the blame of it to yourself! O Nancy, do you think it is wrong to be so _dreadfully_ happy? Sometimes I am afraid that I love him _too_ much! it seems so hard to help it. I have no time for more now; he is waiting for me; how little I thought, a month ago, that I should be ending a letter to you for such a reason! When all is said and done, what a pleasant world it is! Do not think me quite mad. I know I _sound_ as if I were!
"Yours, BARBARA."
My hand, and the letter with it, fall together into my lap; my head sinks back on the cus.h.i.+on of my chair; my eyes peruse the ceiling.
"Engaged to Musgrave! engaged to Musgrave! engaged to Musgrave!"
The words ring with a dull monotony of repet.i.tion through my brain. Poor Barbara! I think she would be surprised if she were to see my "_face of delight!_"
CHAPTER XL.
My eyes are fixed on the mouldings of the ceiling, while a jumble of thoughts mix and muddle themselves in my head. Was Brindley Wood a dream? or is this a dream? Surely one or other must be, and, if this is not a dream, what is it? Is it reality, is it truth? And, if it is, how on earth did any thing so monstrous ever come about? How did he dare to approach her? How could he know that I had not told her? Is it possible that he cares for her really?--that he cared for her all along?--that he only went mad for one wicked moment? Is he sorry? how soon shall I have to meet him? On what terms shall we be? Will Roger be undeceived at last? Will he believe me? As my thoughts fall upon him, he opens the door and enters.
"Well, I am off, Nancy!" he says, speaking in his usual cool, friendly voice, to which I have now grown so accustomed that sometimes I could almost persuade myself that I had never known any lovinger terms; and standing with the door-handle in his hand.
He rarely kisses me now; never upon any of these little temporary absences. We always part with polite, cold, verbal salutations. Then, with a sudden change of tone, approaching me as he speaks.
"Is there any thing the matter? have you had bad news?"
My eyes drop at length from the scroll and pomegranate flower border of the ceiling. I sit up, and, with an involuntary movement, put my hand over the open letter that lies in my lap.
"I have had news," I answer, dubiously.
"If it is any thing that you had rather not tell me!" he says, hastily, observing my stupid and unintentional gesture, and, I suppose, afraid that I am about to drift into a second series of lies--"please do not. I would not for worlds thrust myself on your confidence!"
"It is no secret of mine," I answer, coldly, "everybody will know it immediately, I suppose: it is that Barbara--" I stop, as usual choked as I approach the abhorred theme. "Will you read the letter, please? that will be better!--yes--I had rather that you did--it will not take you long; yes, _all_ of it!" (seeing that he is holding the note in his hand and conscientiously looking away from it as if expecting limitation as to the amount he is to peruse).
He complies. There is silence--an expectant silence on my part. It is not of long duration. Before ten seconds have elapsed the note has fallen from his hand; and, with an exclamation of the profoundest astonishment, he is looking with an expression of the most keenly questioning wonder at me.
"To MUSGRAVE!"
I nod. I have judiciously placed myself with my back to the light, so that, if that exasperating flood of crimson bathe my face--and bathe it it surely will--is not it coming now?--do not I feel it creeping hotly up?--it may be as little perceptible as possible.
"It must be a great, great _surprise_ to you!" he says, interrogatively, and still with that sound of extreme and baffled wonder in his tone.
"Immense!" reply I.
I speak steadily if low; and I look determinedly back in his face.
Whatever color my cheeks are--I believe they are of the devil's own painting--I feel that my eyes are honest. He has picked up the note, and is reading it again.
"She seems to have no doubt"--(with rising wonder in face and voice)--"as to its greatly pleasing _you_!"
"So it would have done at one time," I answer, still speaking (though no one could guess with what difficulty), with resolute equanimity.
"And does not it now?" (very quickly, and sending the searching scrutiny of his eyes through me).
"I do not know," I answer hazily, putting up my hand to my forehead. "I cannot make up my mind, it all seems so sudden."
A pause. Roger has forgotten the partridges. He is sunk in reflection.
"Was there ever any talk of this before?" he says, presently, with a hesitating and doubtful accent, and an altogether staggered look. "Had you any reason--any ground for thinking that he cared about her?"
"Great ground," reply I, touching my cheeks with the tips of my fingers, and feeling, with a sense of self-gratulation, that their temperature is gradually, if slowly, lowering, "_every_ ground--at _one_ time!"
"At _what_ time!"
"In the autumn," say I, slowly; my mind reluctantly straying back to the season of my urgent invitations, of my pressing friendlinesses, "and at Christmas, and after Christmas."
"Yes?" (with a quick eagerness, as if expecting to hear more).
"The boys," continue I, speaking without any ease or fluency, for the subject is always one irksome and difficult to me, "the boys took it quite for granted--looked upon it as a certain thing that he meant seriously until--"
"Until what?" (almost s.n.a.t.c.hing the words out of my mouth).
"Until--well!" (with a short, forced laugh), "until they found that he did not."
"And--do you know?--but of course you do--can you tell me how they discovered that?"
He is looking at me with that same greedy anxiety in his eyes, which I remember in our last fatal conversation about Musgrave.
"He went away," reply I, unable any longer to keep watch and ward over my countenance and voice, rising and walking hastily to the window.
The moment I have done it, I repent. _However_ red I was, _however_ confused I looked, it would have been better to have remained and faced him. For several minutes there is silence. I look out at the stiff comeliness of the variously tinted asters, at the h.o.a.ry-colored dew that is like a film along the morning gra.s.s. I do not know what _he_ looks at, because I have my back to him, but I think he is looking at Barbara's note again. At least, I judge this by what he says next--"Poor little soul!" (in an accent of the honestest, tenderest pity), "how happy she seems!"
"Ah!" say I, with a bitter little laugh, "she will mend of _that_, will not she?"
He does not echo my mirth; indeed, I think I hear him sigh.
"'Romances paint at full length people's wooings, But only give a bust of marriages!'"
say I, in soft quotation, addressing rather myself and my thoughts than my companion.
He has joined me; he, too, is looking out at the serene aster-flowers, at the glittering glory of the dew.
"Since when you have learned to quote 'Don Juan?'" he asks, with a sort of surprise.
"Since _when_?" I reply, with the same tart playfulness--"oh! since I married! I date all my accomplishments from then!--it is my anno Domini."