In the Year of Jubilee Part 40
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'No, I'm afraid you couldn't,' Tarrant muttered cheerlessly.
'I wanted to tell you that Mary will be our friend. She was speechless with astonishment; at first I didn't know what she would say; she looked at me as she had never looked before--as if she were the mistress, and I the servant. But see what I have come to; all I felt was a dread lest she should think it her duty to cast me off. I haven't a bit of pride left. I could have fallen on my knees before her; I almost did. But she was very good and kind and gentle at last. She'll do everything she can for me.'
The fire in a blaze, Tarrant stood up and regarded it gloomily.
'Well, did she think it possible?' he asked at length.
'Yes, she did. She said it would be very difficult, but the secret might be kept--if I were strong enough. And I _am_ strong enough--I _will_ be--'
'It doesn't look like it,' said Tarrant, taking the edge off his words with a smile.
'I won't come again in this way. Where have you been tonight?'
'Oh, with friends.'
'Which friends? where?'
He moved impatiently.
'People you don't know, Nancy, and wouldn't care about if you did. Do you know what time it is?'
'Do tell me where you have been. It isn't prying into your affairs. Your friends ought to be mine; at least, I mean, I ought to know their names, and something about them. Suppose I were to tell you I had been spending the evening with friends--'
'My dear girl, I shouldn't ask a question, unless you invited it.
However, it's better to tell you that I have been making arrangements to sublet these chambers. I can't afford to keep them, even if there were any use in it. Harvey Munden has introduced me to a man who is likely to relieve me of the burden. I shall warehouse my books and furniture--'
'Then you are going? Really going to leave England?'
He affected astonishment; in truth, nothing now could surprise him.
'But wasn't it all decided between us? Didn't you repeat it in your letter?'
'Yes--I know--but I didn't think it would come so soon.'
'We won't talk about it to-night,' said Tarrant firmly. 'For one thing, there's no time. Come closer to the fire, and get warm through; then I must see you home.'
Nancy hung her head. When, in a few moments, she looked up again, it was to say drily:
'There's no need for you to see me home.'
'I'm going to, at all events.'
'Why? You don't care much about me. I might as well be run over--or anything--'
To this remark no sort of answer was vouchsafed. Nancy sat with her feet on the fender, and Tarrant kept up a great blaze with chips, which sputtered out their moisture before they began to crackle. He and she both seemed intent on this process of combustion.
'Now you're quite warm,' said the young man, as if speaking to a child, 'and it's time to go.'
Nancy rose obediently, gazed at him with dreaming eyes, and suffered herself to be led away by the arm. In Chancery Lane, Tarrant hailed a crawling hansom. When they were driving rapidly southward, Nancy began to question him about the date of his departure; she learnt that he might be gone in less than a week.
'If you could behave quietly and sensibly, we would have an evening to make final arrangements.'
'I can,' she answered, with a calm that surprised him. 'If you go without letting me see you again, I don't know what I might do. But I can be as sensible as you are, if I'm treated fairly.'
He grasped her hand.
'Remember, dear girl, that I have a good deal to worry me just now. Do you suppose I leave you with a light heart?'
'If you can persuade me that you care--'
'I care a good deal more than I can easily say. Your position is a very hard one,--harder than mine. But I'm going away to work for your future.
I see clearly that it's the best thing I could do. Whether Vawdrey's ideas come to anything or not, I shall make profit out of the journey; I mean to write,--I think it's all I can do to any purpose,--and the material I shall get together over there will give me a start. Don't think I am cold-hearted because I talk in this way; if I broke down, so much the worse for both of us. The time has come for serious work.'
'But we shan't lose my money. I've made up my mind we shan't.'
'It's impossible for you to guard against every danger. We must be prepared for the worst, and that responsibility rests on me. Try and keep your mind at ease; whatever happens, to protect you is my duty, and I shall not fail in it.'
Speaking thus, Tarrant felt the glow of virtue. His words were perfectly sincere, but had reference to a future which his thoughts left comfortably vague.
They were to meet again, probably for the definite parting, three days hence. Tarrant, whose desire for escape had now become incontrollable, used the intervening time in a rush of preparations. He did not debate with himself as to the length of his sojourn in the West Indies; that must be determined by circ.u.mstances. Explicitly he had avoided a promise on the subject. What money he possessed he would take with him; it might be to his interest, for Nancy's likewise, to exceed the term of absence provided for in his stipulations with Mr. Vawdrey. But all he deliberately thought of was the getting away. Impatient with Nancy, because of the vagaries resultant from her mental and physical state, he himself exhibited a flagrant triumph of instinct over reason. Once in enjoyment of liberty, he would reflect, like a practical man, on the details of his position, review and recognise his obligations, pay his debt to honour; but liberty first of all. Not his the nature to accept bondage; it demoralised him, made him do and say things of which he was ashamed. Only let him taste the breezes of ocean, and the healthful spirit which is one with rect.i.tude would again inspire him.
Much to his surprise, he neither saw nor heard from Nancy until the hour appointed. She came very punctually. On opening the door to her, with an air of resolute cheerfulness, he saw something in her face that removed the necessity for playing a part. It was the look which had so charmed him in their love-days, the indescribable look, characteristic of Nancy, and of her alone; a gleam between smile and laughter, a glance mingling pride with submission, a silent note of personality which thrilled the senses and touched the heart.
'What now?' he asked, holding her hand and gazing at her. 'Some good news?'
'None that I know of. How hot your room is! Why, you look glad to see me!'
'Was I ever anything else?'
She answered him with a smile.
'It's a very pleasant surprise,' he continued, watching her as she threw off her out-door things. 'I expected a doleful visage, eyes red with weeping.'
'Did you? See how much a man thinks of himself! If you choose to go away, I choose to think as little of you as possible. That's common sense--isn't it?'
'I don't want you to cry about it.'
'Oh yes, you do. It flatters you, and you like flattery. But I've been too obliging. I feel myself again, and there's no more flattery for you--till you come back. I don't ask you when that will be. I ask you nothing at all. I am independent of you.'
Tarrant grew uneasy. He feared that this mood of jest would change only too suddenly, and her collapse into feminine feebleness be the more complete.
'Be as independent as you like,' he said; 'only keep your love for me.'
'Oh, indeed! It's your experience, is it, that the two things can go together? That's the difference between man and woman, I suppose. I shall love you just as little as possible--and how little that will be, perhaps I had better not tell you.'
Still he stood gazing at her.
'You look very beautiful to-day.'
In the Year of Jubilee Part 40
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In the Year of Jubilee Part 40 summary
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