Part 71 (1/2)
”Please call at the schoolhouse and ask Mrs. Phillotson if she will be kind enough to come to the church for a few minutes.”
The child departed, and Jude heard him knock at the door of the dwelling. He himself went further into the church. Everything was new, except a few pieces of carving preserved from the wrecked old fabric, now fixed against the new walls. He stood by these: they seemed akin to the perished people of that place who were his ancestors and Sue's.
A light footstep, which might have been accounted no more than an added drip to the rainfall, sounded in the porch, and he looked round.
”Oh-I didn't think it was you! I didn't-Oh, Jude!” A hysterical catch in her breath ended in a succession of them. He advanced, but she quickly recovered and went back.
”Don't go-don't go!” he implored. ”This is my last time! I thought it would be less intrusive than to enter your house. And I shall never come again. Don't then be unmerciful. Sue, Sue! We are acting by the letter; and 'the letter killeth'!”
”I'll stay-I won't be unkind!” she said, her mouth quivering and her tears flowing as she allowed him to come closer. ”But why did you come, and do this wrong thing, after doing such a right thing as you have done?”
”What right thing?”
”Marrying Arabella again. It was in the Alfredston paper. She has never been other than yours, Jude-in a proper sense. And therefore you did so well-Oh so well!-in recognizing it-and taking her to you again.”
”G.o.d above-and is that all I've come to hear? If there is anything more degrading, immoral, unnatural, than another in my life, it is this meretricious contract with Arabella which has been called doing the right thing! And you too-you call yourself Phillotson's wife! His wife! You are mine.”
”Don't make me rush away from you-I can't bear much! But on this point I am decided.”
”I cannot understand how you did it-how you think it-I cannot!”
”Never mind that. He is a kind husband to me-And I-I've wrestled and struggled, and fasted, and prayed. I have nearly brought my body into complete subjection. And you mustn't-will you-wake-”
”Oh you darling little fool; where is your reason? You seem to have suffered the loss of your faculties! I would argue with you if I didn't know that a woman in your state of feeling is quite beyond all appeals to her brains. Or is it that you are humbugging yourself, as so many women do about these things; and don't actually believe what you pretend to, and only are indulging in the luxury of the emotion raised by an affected belief?”
”Luxury! How can you be so cruel!”
”You dear, sad, soft, most melancholy wreck of a promising human intellect that it has ever been my lot to behold! Where is your scorn of convention gone? I would have died game!”
”You crush, almost insult me, Jude! Go away from me!” She turned off quickly.
”I will. I would never come to see you again, even if I had the strength to come, which I shall not have any more. Sue, Sue, you are not worth a man's love!”
Her bosom began to go up and down. ”I can't endure you to say that!” she burst out, and her eye resting on him a moment, she turned back impulsively. ”Don't, don't scorn me! Kiss me, oh kiss me lots of times, and say I am not a coward and a contemptible humbug-I can't bear it!” She rushed up to him and, with her mouth on his, continued: ”I must tell you-oh I must-my darling Love! It has been-only a church marriage-an apparent marriage I mean! He suggested it at the very first!”
”How?”
”I mean it is a nominal marriage only. It hasn't been more than that at all since I came back to him!”
”Sue!” he said. Pressing her to him in his arms he bruised her lips with kisses: ”If misery can know happiness, I have a moment's happiness now! Now, in the name of all you hold holy, tell me the truth, and no lie. You do love me still?”
”I do! You know it too well! ... But I mustn't do this! I mustn't kiss you back as I would!”
”But do!”
”And yet you are so dear!-and you look so ill-”
”And so do you! There's one more, in memory of our dead little children-yours and mine!”