Part 69 (2/2)
When she had signed it, he put it in his pocket-book, and his spirits went up to the cheery point. He adjusted his hat at the gla.s.s over the dining-room mantelpiece, lit a s.h.i.+lling cigar, and went off to his hospital jauntily. Beth was glad to have relieved him of his anxiety.
She half hoped he might give her something out of the cheque, if it were only a pound or two, she wanted some little things so badly; but he never offered her a penny. She thought of Aunt Grace Mary's two sovereigns, but the dread of having nothing in case of an emergency kept her from spending them.
There was one thing Dan did which Beth resented. He opened her letters.
”Husband and wife are one,” he said. ”They should have no secrets from each other. I should like you to open my letters, too, but they contain professional secrets, you see, and that wouldn't do.”
He spoke in what he called his cheery way, but Beth had begun to feel that there was another word which would express his manner better, and now it occurred to her.
”You have no right to open my letters,” she said; ”and being facetious on the subject does not give you any.”
”But if I chose to?” he asked.
”It will be a breach of good taste and good feeling,” she answered.
No more was said on the subject, and Dan did not open her letters for a little, but then he began again. He had always some excuse, however--either he hadn't looked at the address, or he had been impatient to see if there were any message for himself, and so on; but Beth was not mollified although she said nothing, and her annoyance made her secretive. She would watch for the postman, and take the letters from him herself, and conceal her own, so that Dan might not even know that she had received any.
She had a difficulty with him about another matter too. His lover-like caresses while they were engaged had not been distasteful to her; but after their marriage he kept up an incessant billing and cooing, and of a coa.r.s.er kind, which soon satiated her. She was a nicely balanced creature, with many interests in life, and love could be but one among the number in any case; but Dan almost seemed to expect it to be the only one.
”Oh dear! must I be embraced again?” she exclaimed one day, with quite comical dismay on being interrupted in the middle of a book that was interesting her at the moment.
Dan looked disconcerted. In his cheerful masculine egotism it had not occurred to him that Beth might find incessant demonstrations of affection monotonous. He would smile at pictures of the waning of the honeymoon, where the husband returns to his book and his dog, and the wife sits apart sad and neglected; it was inevitable that the man should tire, he had other things to think of; but that the wife should be the first to be bored was incredible, and worse: it was unwomanly.
Dan went to the mantelpiece, and stood looking down into the fire, and his grey-green eyes became suffused.
”Have I hurt you, Dan?” Beth exclaimed, jumping up and going to him.
”Hurt me!” he said, taking out his pocket-handkerchief, ”that is not the word for it. You have made me very unhappy.”
”Oh!” said Beth, her own inclinations disregarded at once, ”I _am_ sorry!”
But he had satiated her once for all, and she never recovered any zest for his caresses. She found no charm or freshness in them, especially after she perceived that they were for his own gratification, irrespective of hers. The privileges of love are not to be wrested from us with impunity. Habits of dutiful submission destroy the power to respond, and all that they leave to survive of the warm reality of love at last is a cold pretence. By degrees, as Beth felt forced to be dutiful, she ceased to be affectionate.
Although Dan dressed to go out with scrupulous care, he took no trouble to make himself nice in the house. Care in dress was not in him a necessary part and expression of a refined nature, but an attempt to win consideration. He never dressed for dinner when they were alone together. It was a trouble rather than a refreshment to him to get rid of the dust of the day and the a.s.sociations of his walking-dress. This was a twofold disappointment to Beth. She had expected him to have the common politeness to dress for her benefit, and she was not pleased to find that the punctiliousness he displayed in the matter on occasion was merely veneer. It was a defect of breeding that struck her unpleasantly. They had been poor enough at home, but Beth had been accustomed all her life to have delicate china about her, and pictures and books, to walk on soft carpets and sit in easy-chairs; possessions of a superior cla.s.s which, in her case, were symbols bespeaking refinement of taste and habits from which her soul had derived satisfaction even while her poor little fragile body starved. She dressed regularly and daintily herself, and Dan at the bottom of the table in his morning coat was an offence to her. She said nothing at first, however, so his manners still further deteriorated, until one night, after she had gone to her room, he walked in with his hat on, smoking a cigar. It was this last discourtesy that roused her to rebel.
”This is my bedroom,” she said significantly.
”I know,” he answered.
”You know--yet you keep your hat on, and you are smoking,” she proceeded.
”Why,” he rejoined, ”and if I do, what then? I know ladies who let their husbands smoke in bed.”
”Probably,” she said. ”I have heard of more singularly coa.r.s.e things than that even. But I am accustomed to pure air in my room, and I must have it.”
”And suppose I should choose to stay here and smoke?” he said.
”Of course I could not prevent you,” she answered; ”but I should go and sleep in another room.”
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