Part 38 (1/2)
”But mamma will be so glad to see you,” said Rachel.
”I think you ought to go, Dorothea,” said Mr. p.r.o.ng; and even Rachel could perceive that there was some slight touch of authority in his voice. It was the slightest possible intonation of a command; but, nevertheless, it struck Rachel's ears.
Mrs. Prime merely shook her head and sniffed. It was not for a supply of air that she used her nostrils on this occasion, but that she might indicate some grain of contempt for the authority which Mr.
p.r.o.ng had attempted to exercise. ”I think I'd rather not, Rachel, thank you;--not to dinner, that is. Perhaps I'll walk out in the evening after tea, when the work of the day is over. If I come then, perhaps my friend, Miss Pucker, may come with me.”
”And if your esteemed mamma will allow me to pay my respects,” said Mr. p.r.o.ng, ”I shall be most happy to accompany the ladies.”
It will be acknowledged that Rachel had no alternative left to her.
She said that her mother would be happy to see Mr. p.r.o.ng, and happy to see Miss Pucker also. As to herself, she made no such a.s.sertion, being in her present mood too full of her own thoughts to care much for the ordinary courtesies of life.
”I'm very sorry you won't come to dinner, Dolly,” she said; but she abstained from any word of asking the others to tea.
”If it had only been Mr. p.r.o.ng,” she said to her mother afterwards, ”I should have asked him; for I suppose he'll have to come to the house sooner or later. But I wouldn't tell that horrid, squinting woman that you wanted to see her, for I'm sure you don't.”
”But we must give them some cake and a gla.s.s of sweet wine,” said Mrs. Ray.
”She won't have to take her bonnet off for that as she would for tea, and it isn't so much like making herself at home here. I couldn't bear to have to ask her up to my room.”
On leaving the house in the High Street, which she did about eight o'clock, she took her way towards the churchyard,--not pa.s.sing down Brewery Lane, by Mr. Tappitt's house, but taking the main street which led from the High Street to the church. But at the corner, just as she was about to leave the High Street, she was arrested by a voice that was familiar to her, and, turning round, she saw Mrs.
Cornbury seated in a low carriage, and driving a pair of ponies.
”How are you, Rachel?” said Mrs. Cornbury, shaking hands with her friend, for Rachel had gone out into the street up to the side of the carriage, when she found that Mrs. Cornbury had stopped. ”I'm going by the cottage,--to papa's. I see you are turning the other way; but if you've not much delay, I'll stay for you and take you home.”
But Rachel had before her that other visit to make, and she was not minded either to omit it or postpone it. ”I should like it so much,”
said Rachel, ”only--”
”Ah! well; I see. You've got other fish to fry. But, Rachel, look here, dear.” And Mrs. Cornbury almost whispered into her ear across the side of the pony carriage. ”Don't you believe quite all you hear.
I'll find out the truth, and you shall know. Good-bye.”
”Good-bye, Mrs. Cornbury,” said Rachel, pressing her friend's hand as she parted from her. This allusion to her lover had called a blush up over her whole face, so that Mrs. Cornbury well knew that she had been understood. ”I'll see to it,” she said, driving away her ponies.
See to it! How could she see to it when that letter should have been written? And Rachel was well aware that another day must not pa.s.s without the writing of it.
She went down across the churchyard, leaving the path to the brewery on her left, and that leading out under the elm trees to her right, and went on straight to the stile at which she had stood with Luke Rowan, watching the reflection of the setting sun among the clouds.
This was the spot which she had determined to visit; and she had come hither hoping that she might again see some form in the heavens which might remind her of that which he had shown her. The stile, at any rate, was the same, and there were the trees beneath which they had stood. There were the rich fields, lying beneath her, over which they two had gazed together at the fading lights of the evening. There was no arm in the clouds now, and the perverse sun was retiring to his rest without any of that royal pageantry and illumination with which the heavens are wont to deck themselves when their king goes to his couch. But Rachel, though she had come thither to look for these things and had not found them, hardly marked their absence. Her mind became so full of him and of his words, that she required no outward signs to refresh her memory. She thought so much of his look on that evening, of the tones of his voice, and of every motion of his body, that she soon forgot to watch the clouds. She sat herself down upon the stile with her face turned away from the fields, telling herself that she would listen for the footsteps of strangers, so that she might move away if any came near her; but she soon forgot also to listen, and sat there thinking of him alone. The words that had been spoken between them on that occasion had been but trifling,--very few and of small moment; but now they seemed to her to have contained all her destiny. It was there that love for him had first come upon her--had come over her with broad outspread wings like an angel; but whether as an angel of darkness or of light, her heart had then been unable to perceive. How well she remembered it all; how he had taken her by the hand, claiming the right of doing so as an ordinary farewell greeting; and how he had held her, looking into her face, till she had been forced to speak some word of rebuke to him! ”I did not think you would behave like that,” she had said. But yet at that very moment her heart was going from her. The warm friendliness of his touch, the firm, clear brightness of his eye, and the eager tone of his voice, were even then subduing her coy unwillingness to part with her maiden love. She had declared to herself then that she was angry with him; but, since that, she had declared to herself that nothing could have been better, finer, sweeter than all that he had said and done on that evening. It had been his right to hold her, if he intended afterwards to claim her as his own. ”I like you so very much,” he had said; ”why should we not be friends?” She had gone away from him then, fleeing along the path, bewildered, ignorant as to her own feelings, conscious almost of a sin in having listened to him; but still filled with a wondrous delight that any one so good, so beautiful, so powerful as he, should have cared to ask for her friends.h.i.+p in such pressing words. During all her walk home she had been full of fear and wonder and mysterious delight. Then had come the ball, which in itself had hardly been so pleasant to her, because the eyes of many had watched her there. But she thought of the moment when he had first come to her in Mrs. Tappitt's drawing-room, just as she was resolving that he did not intend to notice her further. She thought of those repeated dances which had been so dear to her, but which, in their repet.i.tion, had frightened her so grievously. She thought of the supper, during which he had insisted on sitting by her; and of that meeting in the hall, during which he had, as it were, forced her to remain and listen to him,--forced her to stay with him till, in her agony of fear, she had escaped away to her friend and begged that she might be taken home! As she sat by Mrs.
Cornbury in the carriage, and afterwards as she had thought of it all while lying in her bed, she had declared to herself that he had been very wrong;--but since that, during those few days of her permitted love, she had sworn to herself as often that he had been very right.
And he had been right. She said so to herself now again, though the words which he had spoken and the things which he had done had brought upon her all this sorrow. He had been right. If he loved her it was only manly and proper in him to tell his love. And for herself,--seeing that she had loved, had it not been proper and womanly in her to declare her love? What had she done; when, at what point, had she gone astray, that she should be brought to such a pa.s.s as this? At the beginning, when he had held her hand on the spot where she was now sitting, and again when he had kept her prisoner in Mr. Tappitt's hall, she had been half conscious of some sin, half ashamed of her own conduct; but that undecided fear of sin and shame had been washed out, and everything had been made white as snow, as pure as running water, as bright as sunlight, by the permission to love this man which had been accorded to her. What had she since done that she should be brought to such a pa.s.s as that in which she now found herself?
As she thought of this she was bitter against all the world except him;--almost bitter against her own mother. She had said that she would obey in this matter of the letter, and she knew well that she would in truth do as her mother bade her. But, sitting there, on the churchyard stile, she hatched within her mind plans of disobedience,--dreadful plans! She would not submit to this usage.
She would go away from Baslehurst without knowledge of any one, and would seek him out in his London home. It would be unmaidenly;--but what cared she now for that;--unless, indeed, he should care? All her virgin modesty and young maiden fears,--was it not for him that she would guard them, for his delight and his pride? And if she were to see him no more, if she were to be forced to bid him go from her, of what avail would it be now to her to cherish and maintain the unsullied brightness of her woman's armour? If he were lost to her, everything was lost. She would go to him, and throwing herself at his feet would swear to him that life without his love was no longer possible for her. If he would then take her as his wife she would strive to bless him with all that the tenderness of a wife could give. If he should refuse her,--then she would go away and die. In such case what to her would be the judgment of any man or any woman?
What to her would be her sister's scorn and the malignant virtue of such as Miss Pucker and Mr. p.r.o.ng? What the upturned hands and amazement of Mr. Comfort? It would have been they who had driven her to this.
But how about her mother when she should have thus thrown herself overboard from the s.h.i.+p and cast herself away from the pilotage which had hitherto been the guide of her conduct? Why--why--why had her mother deserted her in her need? As she thought of her mother she knew that her plan of rebellion was nothing; but why--why had her mother deserted her?
As for him, and these new tidings which had come to the cottage respecting him, she would have cared for them not a jot. Mrs.
Cornbury had cautioned her not to believe all that she heard; but she had already declined,--had altogether declined to believe any of it.