TESS
OF THE D’URBERVILLES
PART
23
Phase the Seventh: Fulfilment, LIII-LIX
LIII
It was
evening at Emminster Vicarage. The two customary candles were burning under
their green shades in the Vicar's study, but he had not been sitting there.
Occasionally he came in, stirred the small fire which sufficed for the
increasing mildness of the spring, and went out again; sometimes pausing at the
front door, going on to the drawing-room, then returning again to the front
door.
It faced
westward, and though gloom prevailed inside, there was still light enough
without to see with distinctness. Mrs Clare, who had been sitting in the
drawing-room, followed him hither.
"Plenty
of time yet," said the Vicar. "He doesn't reach Chalk-Newton till
six, even if the train should be punctual, and ten miles of country-road, five
of them in Crimmercrock Lane, are not jogged over in a hurry by our old
horse."
"But
he has done it in an hour with us, my dear."
"Years
ago."
Thus they
passed the minutes, each well knowing that this was only waste of breath, the
one essential being simply to wait.
At length
there was a slight noise in the lane, and the old pony-chaise appeared indeed
outside the railings. They saw alight therefrom a form which they affected to
recognize, but would actually have passed by in the street without identifying
had he not got out of their carriage at the particular moment when a particular
person was due.
Mrs Clare
rushed through the dark passage to the door, and her husband came more slowly
after her.
The new
arrival, who was just about to enter, saw their anxious faces in the doorway
and the gleam of the west in their spectacles because they confronted the last
rays of day; but they could only see his shape against the light.
"O,
my boy, my boy—home again at last!" cried Mrs Clare, who cared no more at
that moment for the stains of heterodoxy which had caused all this separation
than for the dust upon his clothes. What woman, indeed, among the most faithful
adherents of the truth, believes the promises and threats of the Word in the
sense in which she believes in her own children, or would not throw her theology
to the wind if weighed against their happiness? As soon as they reached the
room where the candles were lighted she looked at his face.
"O,
it is not Angel—not my son—the Angel who went away!" she cried in all the
irony of sorrow, as she turned herself aside.
His
father, too, was shocked to see him, so reduced was that figure from its former
contours by worry and the bad season that Clare had experienced, in the climate
to which he had so rashly hurried in his first aversion to the mockery of
events at home. You could see the skeleton behind the man, and almost the ghost
behind the skeleton. He matched Crivelli's dead Christus. His sunken
eye-pits were of morbid hue, and the light in his eyes had waned. The angular
hollows and lines of his aged ancestors had succeeded to their reign in his
face twenty years before their time.
"I
was ill over there, you know," he said. "I am all right now."
As if,
however, to falsify this assertion, his legs seemed to give way, and he
suddenly sat down to save himself from falling. It was only a slight attack of
faintness, resulting from the tedious day's journey, and the excitement of
arrival.
"Has
any letter come for me lately?" he asked. "I received the last you
sent on by the merest chance, and after considerable delay through being
inland; or I might have come sooner."
"It
was from your wife, we supposed?"
"It
was."
Only one
other had recently come. They had not sent it on to him, knowing he would start
for home so soon.
He hastily opened the letter produced, and was much
disturbed to read in Tess's handwriting the sentiments expressed in her last
hurried scrawl to him.
O why have
you treated me so monstrously, Angel! I do not deserve it. I have thought it
all over carefully, and I can never, never forgive you! You know that I did not
intend to wrong you—why have you so wronged me? You are cruel, cruel indeed! I
will try to forget you. It is all injustice I have received at your hands!
T.
T.
"It
is quite true!" said Angel, throwing down the letter. "Perhaps she
will never be reconciled to me!"
"Don't,
Angel, be so anxious about a mere child of the soil!" said his mother.
"Child
of the soil! Well, we all are children of the soil. I wish she were so in the
sense you mean; but let me now explain to you what I have never explained
before, that her father is a descendant in the male line of one of the oldest
Norman houses, like a good many others who lead obscure agricultural lives in
our villages, and are dubbed 'sons of the soil.'"
He soon
retired to bed; and the next morning, feeling exceedingly unwell, he remained
in his room pondering. The circumstances amid which he had left Tess were such
that though, while on the south of the Equator and just in receipt of her
loving epistle, it had seemed the easiest thing in the world to rush back into
her arms the moment he chose to forgive her, now that he had arrived it was not
so easy as it had seemed. She was passionate, and her present letter, showing
that her estimate of him had changed under his delay—too justly changed, he
sadly owned,—made him ask himself if it would be wise to confront her
unannounced in the presence of her parents. Supposing that her love had indeed
turned to dislike during the last weeks of separation, a sudden meeting might
lead to bitter words.
Clare therefore thought it would be best to prepare
Tess and her family by sending a line to Marlott announcing his return, and his
hope that she was still living with them there, as he had arranged for her to
do when he left England. He despatched the inquiry that very day, and before the
week was out there came a short reply from Mrs Durbeyfield which did not remove
his embarrassment, for it bore no address, though to his surprise it was not
written from Marlott.
Sir,
J write
these few lines to say that my Daughter is away from me at present, and J am
not sure when she will return, but J will let you know as Soon as she do. J do
not feel at liberty to tell you Where she is temperly biding. J should say that
me and my Family have left Marlott for some Time.—
Yours,
J. Durbeyfield
Yours,
J. Durbeyfield
It was
such a relief to Clare to learn that Tess was at least apparently well that her
mother's stiff reticence as to her whereabouts did not long distress him. They
were all angry with him, evidently. He would wait till Mrs Durbeyfield could
inform him of Tess's return, which her letter implied to be soon. He deserved
no more. His had been a love "which alters when it alteration finds".
He had undergone some strange experiences in his absence; he had seen the
virtual Faustina in the literal Cornelia, a spiritual Lucretia in a corporeal
Phryne; he had thought of the woman taken and set in the midst as one deserving
to be stoned, and of the wife of Uriah being made a queen; and he had asked
himself why he had not judged Tess constructively rather than biographically,
by the will rather than by the deed?
A day or two passed while he waited at his father's
house for the promised second note from Joan Durbeyfield, and indirectly to
recover a little more strength. The strength showed signs of coming back, but
there was no sign of Joan's letter. Then he hunted up the old letter sent on to
him in Brazil, which Tess had written from Flintcomb-Ash, and re-read it. The
sentences touched him now as much as when he had first perused them.
…I must cry to
you in my trouble—I have no one else! … I think I must die if you do not come
soon, or tell me to come to you… please, please, not to be just—only a little
kind to me … If you would come, I could die in your arms! I would be well
content to do that if so be you had forgiven me! … if you will send me one
little line, and say, "I am coming soon," I will bide on, Angel—O, so
cheerfully! … think how it do hurt my heart not to see you ever—ever! Ah, if I
could only make your dear heart ache one little minute of each day as mine does
every day and all day long, it might lead you to show pity to your poor lonely
one. … I would be content, ay, glad, to live with you as your servant, if I may
not as your wife; so that I could only be near you, and get glimpses of you,
and think of you as mine. … I long for only one thing in heaven or earth or
under the earth, to meet you, my own dear! Come to me—come to me, and save me
from what threatens me!
Clare
determined that he would no longer believe in her more recent and severer
regard of him, but would go and find her immediately. He asked his father if
she had applied for any money during his absence. His father returned a
negative, and then for the first time it occurred to Angel that her pride had
stood in her way, and that she had suffered privation. From his remarks his
parents now gathered the real reason of the separation; and their Christianity
was such that, reprobates being their especial care, the tenderness towards
Tess which her blood, her simplicity, even her poverty, had not engendered, was
instantly excited by her sin.
Whilst he
was hastily packing together a few articles for his journey he glanced over a
poor plain missive also lately come to hand—the one from Marian and Izz Huett,
beginning—
"Honour'd Sir, Look to your Wife if you do love
her as much as she do love you," and signed, "From Two
Well-Wishers."
LIV
In a
quarter of an hour Clare was leaving the house, whence his mother watched his
thin figure as it disappeared into the street. He had declined to borrow his
father's old mare, well knowing of its necessity to the household. He went to
the inn, where he hired a trap, and could hardly wait during the harnessing. In
a very few minutes after, he was driving up the hill out of the town which,
three or four months earlier in the year, Tess had descended with such hopes
and ascended with such shattered purposes.
Benvill
Lane soon stretched before him, its hedges and trees purple with buds; but he
was looking at other things, and only recalled himself to the scene
sufficiently to enable him to keep the way. In something less than an
hour-and-a-half he had skirted the south of the King's Hintock estates and
ascended to the untoward solitude of Cross-in-Hand, the unholy stone whereon
Tess had been compelled by Alec d'Urberville, in his whim of reformation, to
swear the strange oath that she would never wilfully tempt him again. The pale
and blasted nettle-stems of the preceding year even now lingered nakedly in the
banks, young green nettles of the present spring growing from their roots.
Thence he
went along the verge of the upland overhanging the other Hintocks, and, turning
to the right, plunged into the bracing calcareous region of Flintcomb-Ash, the
address from which she had written to him in one of the letters, and which he
supposed to be the place of sojourn referred to by her mother. Here, of course,
he did not find her; and what added to his depression was the discovery that no
"Mrs Clare" had ever been heard of by the cottagers or by the farmer
himself, though Tess was remembered well enough by her Christian name. His name
she had obviously never used during their separation, and her dignified sense
of their total severance was shown not much less by this abstention than by the
hardships she had chosen to undergo (of which he now learnt for the first time)
rather than apply to his father for more funds.
From this
place they told him Tess Durbeyfield had gone, without due notice, to the home
of her parents on the other side of Blackmoor, and it therefore became
necessary to find Mrs Durbeyfield. She had told him she was not now at Marlott,
but had been curiously reticent as to her actual address, and the only course was
to go to Marlott and inquire for it. The farmer who had been so churlish with
Tess was quite smooth-tongued to Clare, and lent him a horse and man to drive
him towards Marlott, the gig he had arrived in being sent back to Emminster;
for the limit of a day's journey with that horse was reached.
Clare
would not accept the loan of the farmer's vehicle for a further distance than
to the outskirts of the Vale, and, sending it back with the man who had driven
him, he put up at an inn, and next day entered on foot the region wherein was
the spot of his dear Tess's birth. It was as yet too early in the year for much
colour to appear in the gardens and foliage; the so-called spring was but
winter overlaid with a thin coat of greenness, and it was of a parcel with his
expectations.
The house
in which Tess had passed the years of her childhood was now inhabited by
another family who had never known her. The new residents were in the garden,
taking as much interest in their own doings as if the homestead had never passed
its primal time in conjunction with the histories of others, beside which the
histories of these were but as a tale told by an idiot. They walked about the
garden paths with thoughts of their own concerns entirely uppermost, bringing
their actions at every moment in jarring collision with the dim ghosts behind
them, talking as though the time when Tess lived there were not one whit
intenser in story than now. Even the spring birds sang over their heads as if
they thought there was nobody missing in particular.
On inquiry
of these precious innocents, to whom even the name of their predecessors was a
failing memory, Clare learned that John Durbeyfield was dead; that his widow
and children had left Marlott, declaring that they were going to live at
Kingsbere, but instead of doing so had gone on to another place they mentioned.
By this time Clare abhorred the house for ceasing to contain Tess, and hastened
away from its hated presence without once looking back.
His way was by the field in which he had first beheld
her at the dance. It was as bad as the house—even worse. He passed on through
the churchyard, where, amongst the new headstones, he saw one of a somewhat
superior design to the rest. The inscription ran thus:
In memory of John
Durbeyfield, rightly d'Urberville, of the once powerful family of that Name,
and Direct Descendant through an illustrious Line from Sir Pagan d'Urberville,
one of the Knights of the Conqueror. Died March 10th, 18—
How
Are the Mighty Fallen.
Some man,
apparently the sexton, had observed Clare standing there, and drew nigh.
"Ah, sir, now that's a man who didn't want to lie here, but wished to be
carried to Kingsbere, where his ancestors be."
"And
why didn't they respect his wish?"
"Oh—no
money. Bless your soul, sir, why—there, I wouldn't wish to say it everywhere,
but—even this headstone, for all the flourish wrote upon en, is not paid
for."
"Ah,
who put it up?"
The man
told the name of a mason in the village, and, on leaving the churchyard, Clare
called at the mason's house. He found that the statement was true, and paid the
bill. This done, he turned in the direction of the migrants.
The
distance was too long for a walk, but Clare felt such a strong desire for
isolation that at first he would neither hire a conveyance nor go to a
circuitous line of railway by which he might eventually reach the place. At
Shaston, however, he found he must hire; but the way was such that he did not
enter Joan's place till about seven o'clock in the evening, having traversed a
distance of over twenty miles since leaving Marlott.
The
village being small he had little difficulty in finding Mrs Durbeyfield's
tenement, which was a house in a walled garden, remote from the main road,
where she had stowed away her clumsy old furniture as best she could. It was
plain that for some reason or other she had not wished him to visit her, and he
felt his call to be somewhat of an intrusion. She came to the door herself, and
the light from the evening sky fell upon her face.
This was
the first time that Clare had ever met her, but he was too preoccupied to
observe more than that she was still a handsome woman, in the garb of a
respectable widow. He was obliged to explain that he was Tess's husband, and
his object in coming there, and he did it awkwardly enough. "I want to see
her at once," he added. "You said you would write to me again, but
you have not done so."
"Because
she've not come home," said Joan.
"Do
you know if she is well?"
"I
don't. But you ought to, sir," said she.
"I
admit it. Where is she staying?"
From the
beginning of the interview Joan had disclosed her embarrassment by keeping her
hand to the side of her cheek.
"I—don't
know exactly where she is staying," she answered. "She was—but—"
"Where
was she?"
"Well,
she is not there now."
In her
evasiveness she paused again, and the younger children had by this time crept
to the door, where, pulling at his mother's skirts, the youngest murmured—
"Is
this the gentleman who is going to marry Tess?"
"He
has married her," Joan whispered. "Go inside."
Clare saw
her efforts for reticence, and asked—
"Do
you think Tess would wish me to try and find her? If not, of course—"
"I
don't think she would."
"Are
you sure?"
"I am
sure she wouldn't."
He was
turning away; and then he thought of Tess's tender letter.
"I am
sure she would!" he retorted passionately. "I know her better than
you do."
"That's
very likely, sir; for I have never really known her."
"Please
tell me her address, Mrs Durbeyfield, in kindness to a lonely wretched
man!" Tess's mother again restlessly swept her cheek with her vertical
hand, and seeing that he suffered, she at last said, is a low voice—
"She
is at Sandbourne."
"Ah—where
there? Sandbourne has become a large place, they say."
"I
don't know more particularly than I have said—Sandbourne. For myself, I was
never there."
It was
apparent that Joan spoke the truth in this, and he pressed her no further.
"Are
you in want of anything?" he said gently.
"No,
sir," she replied. "We are fairly well provided for."
Without entering the house Clare turned away. There
was a station three miles ahead, and paying off his coachman, he walked
thither. The last train to Sandbourne left shortly after, and it bore Clare on
its wheels.
LV
At eleven
o'clock that night, having secured a bed at one of the hotels and telegraphed
his address to his father immediately on his arrival, he walked out into the
streets of Sandbourne. It was too late to call on or inquire for any one, and
he reluctantly postponed his purpose till the morning. But he could not retire
to rest just yet.
This
fashionable watering-place, with its eastern and its western stations, its
piers, its groves of pines, its promenades, and its covered gardens, was, to
Angel Clare, like a fairy place suddenly created by the stroke of a wand, and
allowed to get a little dusty. An outlying eastern tract of the enormous Egdon
Waste was close at hand, yet on the very verge of that tawny piece of antiquity
such a glittering novelty as this pleasure city had chosen to spring up. Within
the space of a mile from its outskirts every irregularity of the soil was
prehistoric, every channel an undisturbed British trackway; not a sod having
been turned there since the days of the Caesars. Yet the exotic had grown here,
suddenly as the prophet's gourd; and had drawn hither Tess.
By the
midnight lamps he went up and down the winding way of this new world in an old
one, and could discern between the trees and against the stars the lofty roofs,
chimneys, gazebos, and towers of the numerous fanciful residences of which the
place was composed. It was a city of detached mansions; a Mediterranean
lounging-place on the English Channel; and as seen now by night it seemed even
more imposing than it was.
The sea
was near at hand, but not intrusive; it murmured, and he thought it was the
pines; the pines murmured in precisely the same tones, and he thought they were
the sea.
Where
could Tess possibly be, a cottage-girl, his young wife, amidst all this wealth
and fashion? The more he pondered, the more was he puzzled. Were there any cows
to milk here? There certainly were no fields to till. She was most probably
engaged to do something in one of these large houses; and he sauntered along,
looking at the chamber-windows and their lights going out one by one, and
wondered which of them might be hers.
Conjecture
was useless, and just after twelve o'clock he entered and went to bed. Before
putting out his light he re-read Tess's impassioned letter. Sleep, however, he
could not—so near her, yet so far from her—and he continually lifted the
window-blind and regarded the backs of the opposite houses, and wondered behind
which of the sashes she reposed at that moment.
He might
almost as well have sat up all night. In the morning he arose at seven, and
shortly after went out, taking the direction of the chief post-office. At the
door he met an intelligent postman coming out with letters for the morning
delivery.
"Do
you know the address of a Mrs Clare?" asked Angel. The postman shook his
head.
Then,
remembering that she would have been likely to continue the use of her maiden
name, Clare said—
"Of a
Miss Durbeyfield?"
"Durbeyfield?"
This also
was strange to the postman addressed.
"There's
visitors coming and going every day, as you know, sir," he said; "and
without the name of the house 'tis impossible to find 'em."
One of his
comrades hastening out at that moment, the name was repeated to him.
"I
know no name of Durbeyfield; but there is the name of d'Urberville at The
Herons," said the second.
"That's
it!" cried Clare, pleased to think that she had reverted to the real
pronunciation. "What place is The Herons?"
"A
stylish lodging-house. 'Tis all lodging-houses here, bless 'ee."
Clare
received directions how to find the house, and hastened thither, arriving with
the milkman. The Herons, though an ordinary villa, stood in its own grounds,
and was certainly the last place in which one would have expected to find
lodgings, so private was its appearance. If poor Tess was a servant here, as he
feared, she would go to the back-door to that milkman, and he was inclined to
go thither also. However, in his doubts he turned to the front, and rang.
The hour
being early, the landlady herself opened the door. Clare inquired for Teresa
d'Urberville or Durbeyfield.
"Mrs
d'Urberville?"
"Yes."
Tess,
then, passed as a married woman, and he felt glad, even though she had not
adopted his name.
"Will
you kindly tell her that a relative is anxious to see her?"
"It
is rather early. What name shall I give, sir?"
"Angel."
"Mr
Angel?"
"No;
Angel. It is my Christian name. She'll understand."
"I'll
see if she is awake."
He was
shown into the front room—the dining-room—and looked out through the spring
curtains at the little lawn, and the rhododendrons and other shrubs upon it.
Obviously her position was by no means so bad as he had feared, and it crossed
his mind that she must somehow have claimed and sold the jewels to attain it.
He did not blame her for one moment. Soon his sharpened ear detected footsteps
upon the stairs, at which his heart thumped so painfully that he could hardly
stand firm. "Dear me! what will she think of me, so altered as I am!"
he said to himself; and the door opened.
Tess appeared
on the threshold—not at all as he had expected to see her—bewilderingly
otherwise, indeed. Her great natural beauty was, if not heightened, rendered
more obvious by her attire. She was loosely wrapped in a cashmere dressing-gown
of gray-white, embroidered in half-mourning tints, and she wore slippers of the
same hue. Her neck rose out of a frill of down, and her well-remembered cable
of dark-brown hair was partially coiled up in a mass at the back of her head
and partly hanging on her shoulder—the evident result of haste.
He had
held out his arms, but they had fallen again to his side; for she had not come
forward, remaining still in the opening of the doorway. Mere yellow skeleton
that he was now, he felt the contrast between them, and thought his appearance
distasteful to her.
"Tess!"
he said huskily, "can you forgive me for going away? Can't you—come to me?
How do you get to be—like this?"
"It
is too late," said she, her voice sounding hard through the room, her eyes
shining unnaturally.
"I
did not think rightly of you—I did not see you as you were!" he continued
to plead. "I have learnt to since, dearest Tessy mine!"
"Too
late, too late!" she said, waving her hand in the impatience of a person
whose tortures cause every instant to seem an hour. "Don't come close to
me, Angel! No—you must not. Keep away."
"But
don't you love me, my dear wife, because I have been so pulled down by illness?
You are not so fickle—I am come on purpose for you—my mother and father will
welcome you now!"
"Yes—O,
yes, yes! But I say, I say it is too late."
She seemed
to feel like a fugitive in a dream, who tries to move away, but cannot.
"Don't you know all—don't you know it? Yet how do you come here if you do
not know?"
"I
inquired here and there, and I found the way."
"I
waited and waited for you," she went on, her tones suddenly resuming their
old fluty pathos. "But you did not come! And I wrote to you, and you did
not come! He kept on saying you would never come any more, and that I was a
foolish woman. He was very kind to me, and to mother, and to all of us after
father's death. He—"
"I
don't understand."
"He
has won me back to him."
Clare
looked at her keenly, then, gathering her meaning, flagged like one
plague-stricken, and his glance sank; it fell on her hands, which, once rosy,
were now white and more delicate.
She
continued—
"He
is upstairs. I hate him now, because he told me a lie—that you would not come
again; and you have come! These clothes are what he's put upon me: I
didn't care what he did wi' me! But—will you go away, Angel, please, and never
come any more?"
They stood
fixed, their baffled hearts looking out of their eyes with a joylessness
pitiful to see. Both seemed to implore something to shelter them from reality.
"Ah—it
is my fault!" said Clare.
But he
could not get on. Speech was as inexpressive as silence. But he had a vague
consciousness of one thing, though it was not clear to him till later; that his
original Tess had spiritually ceased to recognize the body before him as
hers—allowing it to drift, like a corpse upon the current, in a direction
dissociated from its living will.
A few instants passed, and he found that Tess was
gone. His face grew colder and more shrunken as he stood concentrated on the
moment, and a minute or two after, he found himself in the street, walking
along he did not know whither.
LVI
Mrs
Brooks, the lady who was the householder at The Herons and owner of all the
handsome furniture, was not a person of an unusually curious turn of mind. She
was too deeply materialized, poor woman, by her long and enforced bondage to
that arithmetical demon Profit-and-Loss, to retain much curiousity for its own
sake, and apart from possible lodgers' pockets. Nevertheless, the visit of
Angel Clare to her well-paying tenants, Mr and Mrs d'Urberville, as she deemed
them, was sufficiently exceptional in point of time and manner to reinvigorate
the feminine proclivity which had been stifled down as useless save in its
bearings to the letting trade.
Tess had
spoken to her husband from the doorway, without entering the dining-room, and
Mrs Brooks, who stood within the partly-closed door of her own sitting-room at
the back of the passage, could hear fragments of the conversation—if
conversation it could be called—between those two wretched souls. She heard
Tess re-ascend the stairs to the first floor, and the departure of Clare, and
the closing of the front door behind him. Then the door of the room above was
shut, and Mrs Brooks knew that Tess had re-entered her apartment. As the young
lady was not fully dressed, Mrs Brooks knew that she would not emerge again for
some time.
She
accordingly ascended the stairs softly, and stood at the door of the front
room—a drawing-room, connected with the room immediately behind it (which was a
bedroom) by folding-doors in the common manner. This first floor, containing
Mrs Brooks's best apartments, had been taken by the week by the d'Urbervilles.
The back room was now in silence; but from the drawing-room there came sounds.
All that
she could at first distinguish of them was one syllable, continually repeated
in a low note of moaning, as if it came from a soul bound to some Ixionian
wheel—
"O—O—O!"
Then a
silence, then a heavy sigh, and again—
"O—O—O!"
The
landlady looked through the keyhole. Only a small space of the room inside was
visible, but within that space came a corner of the breakfast table, which was
already spread for the meal, and also a chair beside. Over the seat of the
chair Tess's face was bowed, her posture being a kneeling one in front of it;
her hands were clasped over her head, the skirts of her dressing-gown and the
embroidery of her night-gown flowed upon the floor behind her, and her
stockingless feet, from which the slippers had fallen, protruded upon the
carpet. It was from her lips that came the murmur of unspeakable despair.
Then a
man's voice from the adjoining bedroom—
"What's
the matter?"
She did
not answer, but went on, in a tone which was a soliloquy rather than an
exclamation, and a dirge rather than a soliloquy. Mrs Brooks could only catch a
portion:
"And
then my dear, dear husband came home to me … and I did not know it! … And you
had used your cruel persuasion upon me … you did not stop using it—no—you did
not stop! My little sisters and brothers and my mother's needs—they were the
things you moved me by … and you said my husband would never come back—never;
and you taunted me, and said what a simpleton I was to expect him! … And at
last I believed you and gave way! … And then he came back! Now he is gone. Gone
a second time, and I have lost him now for ever … and he will not love me the
littlest bit ever any more—only hate me! … O yes, I have lost him now—again
because of—you!" In writhing, with her head on the chair, she turned her face
towards the door, and Mrs Brooks could see the pain upon it, and that her lips
were bleeding from the clench of her teeth upon them, and that the long lashes
of her closed eyes stuck in wet tags to her cheeks. She continued: "And he
is dying—he looks as if he is dying! … And my sin will kill him and not kill
me! … O, you have torn my life all to pieces … made me be what I prayed you in
pity not to make me be again! … My own true husband will never, never—O God—I
can't bear this!—I cannot!"
There were
more and sharper words from the man; then a sudden rustle; she had sprung to
her feet. Mrs Brooks, thinking that the speaker was coming to rush out of the
door, hastily retreated down the stairs.
She need
not have done so, however, for the door of the sitting-room was not opened. But
Mrs Brooks felt it unsafe to watch on the landing again, and entered her own
parlour below.
She could
hear nothing through the floor, although she listened intently, and thereupon
went to the kitchen to finish her interrupted breakfast. Coming up presently to
the front room on the ground floor she took up some sewing, waiting for her
lodgers to ring that she might take away the breakfast, which she meant to do
herself, to discover what was the matter if possible. Overhead, as she sat, she
could now hear the floorboards slightly creak, as if some one were walking
about, and presently the movement was explained by the rustle of garments
against the banisters, the opening and the closing of the front door, and the
form of Tess passing to the gate on her way into the street. She was fully
dressed now in the walking costume of a well-to-do young lady in which she had
arrived, with the sole addition that over her hat and black feathers a veil was
drawn.
Mrs Brooks
had not been able to catch any word of farewell, temporary or otherwise,
between her tenants at the door above. They might have quarrelled, or Mr
d'Urberville might still be asleep, for he was not an early riser.
She went
into the back room, which was more especially her own apartment, and continued
her sewing there. The lady lodger did not return, nor did the gentleman ring
his bell. Mrs Brooks pondered on the delay, and on what probable relation the
visitor who had called so early bore to the couple upstairs. In reflecting she
leant back in her chair.
As she did
so her eyes glanced casually over the ceiling till they were arrested by a spot
in the middle of its white surface which she had never noticed there before. It
was about the size of a wafer when she first observed it, but it speedily grew
as large as the palm of her hand, and then she could perceive that it was red.
The oblong white ceiling, with this scarlet blot in the midst, had the
appearance of a gigantic ace of hearts.
Mrs Brooks
had strange qualms of misgiving. She got upon the table, and touched the spot
in the ceiling with her fingers. It was damp, and she fancied that it was a
blood stain.
Descending
from the table, she left the parlour, and went upstairs, intending to enter the
room overhead, which was the bedchamber at the back of the drawing-room. But,
nerveless woman as she had now become, she could not bring herself to attempt
the handle. She listened. The dead silence within was broken only by a regular
beat.
Drip,
drip, drip.
Mrs Brooks
hastened downstairs, opened the front door, and ran into the street. A man she
knew, one of the workmen employed at an adjoining villa, was passing by, and
she begged him to come in and go upstairs with her; she feared something had
happened to one of her lodgers. The workman assented, and followed her to the
landing.
She opened
the door of the drawing-room, and stood back for him to pass in, entering
herself behind him. The room was empty; the breakfast—a substantial repast of
coffee, eggs, and a cold ham—lay spread upon the table untouched, as when she
had taken it up, excepting that the carving-knife was missing. She asked the
man to go through the folding-doors into the adjoining room.
He opened
the doors, entered a step or two, and came back almost instantly with a rigid
face. "My good God, the gentleman in bed is dead! I think he has been hurt
with a knife—a lot of blood had run down upon the floor!"
The alarm was soon given, and the house which had
lately been so quiet resounded with the tramp of many footsteps, a surgeon
among the rest. The wound was small, but the point of the blade had touched the
heart of the victim, who lay on his back, pale, fixed, dead, as if he had
scarcely moved after the infliction of the blow. In a quarter of an hour the
news that a gentleman who was a temporary visitor to the town had been stabbed
in his bed, spread through every street and villa of the popular
watering-place.
To be continued