THE COMPLETION OF MISCHANCE
Upon Emily had fallen silence.
The tongue which for three months had incessantly
sounded in her ears, with its notes of wailing, of
upbraiding, of physical pain, of meaningless misery,
was at rest for ever. As she stood beside the
grave the grave whose earth had not had
time to harden since it received her father she
seemed still to hear that feeble, querulous voice,
with its perpetual iteration of her own name; the
casting of clay upon the coffin made a sound not half
so real. Returning home, she went up to the bedroom
with the same hurried step with which she had been
wont to enter after her brief absences. The bed
was vacant; the blind made the air dim; she saw her
breath rise before her.
There remained but a little servant-girl,
who, coming to the sitting-room to ask about meals,
stood crying with her apron held to her eyes.
Emily spoke to her almost with tender kindness.
Her own eyes had shed but few tears; she only wept
on hearing those passages read which, by their promise
of immortal life, were to her as mockery of her grief.
She did not venture to look into the grave’s
mouth she dreaded lest there might be visible some
portion of her father’s coffin.
Mrs. Baxendale, the Cartwrights, and
one or two other friends had attended the funeral.
At Emily’s request no one accompanied her home.
Mrs. Baxendale drove her to the door, and went on to
Dunfield.
The last link with the past was severed almost,
it seemed, the last link with the world. A sense
of loneliness grew about her heart; she lived in a
vast solitude, whither came faintest echoes of lamentation,
the dying resonance of things that had been. It
could hardly be called grief, this drawing off of
the affections, this desiccation of the familiar kindnesses
which for the time seemed all her being. She forced
herself to remember that the sap of life would flow
again, that love would come back to her when the hand
of death released her from its cruel grip; as yet
she could only be sensible of her isolation, her forlorn
oneness. It needs a long time before the heart
can companion only with memories. About its own
centre it wraps such warm folds of kindred life.
Tear these away, how the poor heart shivers in its
nakedness.
She was alone. It no longer mattered
where she lived, for her alliances henceforth were
only of the spirit. She must find some sphere
in which she could create for herself a new activity,
for to sit in idleness was to invite dread assaults.
The task of her life was an inward one, but her nature
was not adapted to quiescence, and something must replace
the task which had come to an end by her mother’s
death. Already she had shaped plans, and she
dared not allow needless time to intervene before
practically pursuing them.
In the evening of that day Mrs. Baxendale
again came to Banbrigg. She found Emily with
writing materials before her. Her object in coming
was to urge Emily to quit this lonely house.
‘Come and stay with me,’
she entreated. ’You shall be as unmolested
as here; no one but myself shall ever come near you.
Emily, I cannot go home and sleep with the thought
of you here alone.’
‘You forget,’ Emily replied,
’that I have in reality lived alone for a long
time; I do not feel it as you imagine. No, I must
stay here, but not for long. I shall at once
find a teacher’s place again.’
‘That is your intention?’
’Yes. I shall sell the
furniture, and ask the landlord to find another tenant
as soon as possible. But till I go away I wish
to live in this house.’
Mrs. Baxendale knew that Emily’s
projects were not to be combated like a girl’s
idle fancies. She did not persevere, but let sad
silence be her answer.
‘Would you in no case stay in Dunfield?’
’No; I must leave Dunfield.
I don’t think I shall find it difficult to get
employment.’
Mrs. Baxendale had never ventured
to ask for the girl’s confidence, nor even to
show that she desired it. Emily was more perplexing
to her now than even at the time of Wilfrid Athel’s
rejection. She consoled herself with the thought
that a period of active occupation was no doubt the
best means of restoring this complex nature to healthy
views of life; that at all events it was likely to
bring about an unravelling of the mysteries in which
her existence seemed to have become involved.
You could not deal with her as with other girls; the
sources of her strength and her weakness lay too deep;
counsel to her would be a useless, an impertinent,
interference with her grave self-guiding. Mrs.
Baxendale could but speak words of extreme tenderness,
and return whence she had come. On going away,
she felt that the darkest spot of night was over that
house.
Emily lived at Banbrigg for more than
three weeks. After the first few days she appeared
to grow lighter in mind; she talked more freely with
those who came to see her, and gladly accepted friendly
aid in little practical matters which had to be seen
to. Half-way between Banbrigg and Dunfield lay
the cemetery; there she passed a part of every morning,
sometimes in grief which opened all the old wounds,
more often in concentration of thought such as made
her unaware of the passage of time. The winter
weather was not severe; not seldom a thin gleam of
sunshine would pass from grave to grave, and give promise
of spring in the said reign of the year’s first
month. Emily was almost the only visitor at the
hour she chose. She had given directions for the
raising of a stone at the grave-head; as yet there
was only the newly-sodded hillock. Close at hand
was a grave on which friends placed hot-house flowers,
sheltering them beneath glass. Emily had no desire
to express her mourning in that way; the flower of
her love was planted where it would not die.
But she longed to bring her time of
waiting to an end. The steps she had as yet taken
had led to nothing. She had not requested Mrs.
Baxendale to make inquiries for her, and her friend,
thinking she understood the reason, did not volunteer
assistance, nor did she hear any particulars of the
correspondence that went on. Ultimately, Emily
communicated with her acquaintances in Liverpool,
who were at once anxious to serve her. She told
them that she would by preference find a place in a
school. And at length they drew her attention
to an advertisement which seemed promising; it was
for a teacher in a girls’ school near Liverpool.
A brief correspondence led to her being engaged.
She was in perfect readiness to depart.
For a day or two she had not seen Mrs. Baxendale,
and, on the afternoon before the day of her leaving
Banbrigg, she went to take leave of her friends.
It was her intention to visit Mrs. Baxendale first,
then to go on to the Cartwrights’. As it
rained, she walked to Pendal and took train for Dunfield.
At Dunfield station she was delayed
for some moments in leaving the carriage by travellers
who got out before her with complexities of baggage.
To reach the exit of the station she had to cross the
line by a bridge, and at the foot of this bridge stood
the porter who collected tickets. As she drew
near to him her eyes fell upon a figure moving before
her, that of a young man, wearing thick travelling
apparel and carrying a bag. She did not need
to see his face, yet, as he stopped to give up his
ticket, she caught a glimpse of it. The train
by which she had travelled had also brought Wilfrid
to Dunfield.
She turned and walked to a little
distance away from the foot of the stairs. There
was no room that she could enter on this platform.
She dropped her black veil, and seated herself on
a bench. In truth she had a difficulty in standing,
her body trembled so.
For five minutes she remained seated,
calming herself and determining what course to take.
She held it for certain that Wilfrid had come at Mrs.
Baxendale’s bidding. But would he go to
that house first, or straight to her own? With
the latter purpose he would probably have left the
train at Pendal. She would have time to get home
before he could come. At this moment a train
was entering the station on the other side. She
hurried over the bridge, and, without stopping to obtain
a ticket, entered a carriage.
It was not without dread lest Wilfrid
might have already arrived, and be waiting within
for her return that she approached the house door.
Her fears were groundless. The servant told her
that no one had called.
‘If anyone should call this
evening,’ she said, ’I cannot see them.
You will say that I shall not be able to see anyone anyone,
whoever it is till to-morrow morning.’...
At this same hour, Mrs. Baxendale,
entering a shop in Dunfield, found Dagworthy making
purchases.
‘I shall not see you again for
a long time,’ he said, as he was leaving.
‘I start to-morrow on a long journey.’
‘Out of England?’
He did not specify his route, merely
said that he was going far from England. They
shook hands, and Mrs. Baxendale was left with a musing
expression on her face. She turned her eyes to
the counter; the purchase for which Dagworthy had
just paid was a box of ladies’ gloves. The
shopman put them aside, to be made into a parcel and
sent away.
When, half an hour later, she reached
home, she was at once informed that Mr. Athel was
in the drawing-room. The intelligence caused her
to bite her lower lip, a way she had of expressing
the milder form of vexation. She went first to
remove her walking apparel, and did not hasten the
process. When she at length entered the drawing-room
Wilfrid was pacing about in his accustomed fashion.
‘You here?’ she exclaimed,
with a dubious shake of the head. ’Why so
soon?’
’So soon! The time has
gone more quickly with you than with me, Mrs. Baxendale.’
Clearly he had not spent the last
three months in ease of mind. His appearance
was too like that with which he had come from Oxford
on the occasion of his break-down.
‘I could bear it no longer,’
he continued. ’I cannot let her go away
without seeing her.’
‘You will go this evening?’
‘Yes, I must. You have nothing hopeful
to say to me?’
Mrs. Baxendale dropped her eyes, and
answered, ‘Nothing.’ Then she regarded
him as if in preface to some utterance of moment, but
after all kept silence.
‘Has she heard of anything yet?’
’I believe not. I have
not seen her since Tuesday, and then she told me of
nothing. But I don’t ask her.’
‘I know you explained. I think
you have done wisely. How is she?’
‘Well, seemingly.’
He let his feeling get the upper hand.
’I can’t leave her again
without an explanation. She must tell me
everything. Have I not a right to ask it of her?
I can’t live on like this; I do nothing.
The days pass in misery of idleness. If only in
pity she will tell me all.’
‘Don’t you think it possible,’
Mrs. Baxendale asked, ’that she has already
done so?’
He gazed at her blankly, despairingly.
’You have come to believe that?
Her words her manner seem to
prove that?’
’I cannot say certainly.
I only mean that you should be prepared to believe
if she repeated it.’
’Yes, if she repeats it.
I shall have no choice. Well, I wished to see
you first; I will go to Banbrigg at once.’
Mrs. Baxendale seemed reluctant to
let him go, yet at length she did. He was absent
an hour and a half. At his return Mrs. Baxendale
had friends with her in the drawing room. Wilfrid
ascertained it from the servant, and said that he
would go to the sitting-room he had formerly occupied,
and wait there till the lady was alone.
She came to him before very long,
and learnt that he had not been able to see Emily;
the servant had told him that she could see no one
till the next morning.
Mrs. Baxendale sighed.
‘Then you must wait.’
‘Yes, I must wait.’
He passed the night at the house.
Mr. Baxendale was in London, parliamentarily occupied.
At eleven next morning he went again to Banbrigg.
Again he was but a short time absent, and in his face,
as he entered the drawing-room, Mrs. Baxendale read
catastrophe.
‘She has gone!’ he said.
’She left very early this morning. The girl
has no idea where she has gone to, but says she won’t
return that she has left for good.
What does this mean?’
‘What does it mean?’ the
lady repeated musingly. ‘I wonder, I wonder.’
‘She knew I called yesterday;
I left my name. She has gone to avoid me.’
‘That may be. But all her
preparations were evidently made.’
’But it may not be true.
The girl of course would say whatever she was bidden
to. I don’t believe that she has really
gone.’
‘I do,’ said Mrs. Baxendale, with quiet
significance.
’On what grounds? You know
more than you will tell me. Is there no one with
common humanity? Why do you plot against me?
Why won’t you tell me what you know?’
’I will, if you sit down there
and endeavour to command yourself. That is, I
will tell you certain things that I have heard, and
something that I have seen. Then we will reason
about them.’
Wilfrid’s brow darkened. He prepared to
listen.
‘About six weeks ago,’
the lady began, ’I went to see a friend of mine,
a lady who was recovering from an illness, someone
who knows Emily, though not intimately. In her
illness she was nursed by the same woman who helped
poor Mrs. Hood when Emily was in her fever. This
woman, it appears, was induced to talk about Emily,
and gave it as a secret that Emily’s illness
had something to do with an attachment between her
and Mr. Dagworthy, her father’s employer.
Her grounds for believing this were, first of all,
the fact of Emily frequently uttering his name in
her delirium, with words which seemed to refer to some
mystery between them; then the circumstance of Mr.
Dagworthy’s having, shortly after, left a note
at the house, with special injunctions to the servant
that it should be given into Emily’s own hands.
This story, you may imagine, surprised me not a little.
A few days later Mr. Dagworthy dined with us, and
I took an opportunity of talking with him; it seemed
to me certain that Emily had some special place in
his thoughts. I know, too, that he was particularly
anxious throughout the time of her illness, and that
of her mother.’
The listener was paralysed.
‘Why have you kept this from
me?’ he asked, indignation blending with his
misery.
’Because it was no better than
gossip and speculation. I had no right to report
such things at all events, so it seemed
to me. Now I am going to add something which
may be the wildest error, but which cannot trouble
you much if you imagine that the story is true.
Yesterday, just before I came home to find you here,
I met Mr. Dagworthy by chance in a draper’s
shop, and he told me that he was going away to-day,
leaving England.’
‘To-day?’
‘Yes. And I saw that he had been buying
a box of ladies’ gloves.’
‘What do you mean?’ Wilfrid stammered
out.
’I know that he has no female
relatives except his wife’s, who live
in another part of England, and are on bad terms with
him.’
‘His wife you said?’
’His late wife; he is a widower.
Now we may be imagining in the silliest way, but ’
‘But why ’
Wilfrid checked himself. ’Do I understand
you? You think Emily has gone with him has
gone to be married to him?’
‘It is almost impossible seriously to think
it.’
‘And you think she would shrink from being married
here?’
‘For one or two reasons at all events,
so soon.’
’But is it possible to believe
that she deliberately deceived you made
a pretence of seeking employment?’
’I can’t say. She
never gave me any details of what she was doing.
Another thing she would not come to stay
with me after her mother’s funeral. Mr.
Dagworthy lives on the Heath, only just beyond Banbrigg.
You see to what things we can be led, if we begin interpreting
shadows; but Emily is a mystery to me, and, as I have
begun, I must gossip to you all I know.’
Mrs. Baxendale was certainly doing
more in the way of gossiping conjecture than perhaps
she had ever done before; the occasion excited her,
and that coincidence of Dagworthy’s purchase,
together with his departure this very day, struck
her with a force which unsettled her usual balance
of thought. Wilfrid was as ready to believe; to
him there was a certain strange relief in feeling
that he had at length reached the climax of his sufferings.
He had only to give credence to Emily’s own
words. She had said that a change had come in
her heart, in her life, and that she no longer loved
him. Understand it he of course could not, nor
ever would, unless he lost all faith in woman’s
honour.
‘But this can be either confirmed
or refuted speedily,’ he exclaimed. ’Can
you not make inquiries of this Mr. Dagworthy’s
friends? If they know nothing yet, they will
soon hear from him.’
’Yes, I can make such inquiries.
But he has a peculiar reputation in Dunfield; I think
he scarcely has an intimate friend.’
’Well, there is, at all events,
Emily herself. If this story is baseless, she
will be writing to you.’
’I think so. Again we must
wait. Poor Wilfrid! from my heart I feel for
you!’
It was decided that Wilfrid should
remain in Dunfield for a day or two, till news might
be obtained. News came, however, sooner than was
anticipated. In the afternoon a letter was delivered,
posted by Emily at Pendal in the morning. She
wrote to Mrs. Baxendale to say that she had left to
take a place in a school; then continued:
’I have a reason for leaving
suddenly. A reason you will understand. I
should have come to say good-bye to you yesterday,
but something happened to prevent me. The same
reason has decided me to keep secret even from you,
my dear and honoured friend, the place to which I am
going; in time you shall hear from me, for I know I
cannot have forfeited your love, though I fear I have
given you pain. Think of me with forbearance.
I do what I must do.’
That was all. No word for Wilfrid.
‘This proves it,’ Wilfrid
said, with bitter coldness. ’All she says
is false. She does what she is ashamed of, and
lies to conceal it for a few days or weeks.’
‘Do not let us even yet be sure,’
said Mrs. Baxendale, who was recovering her calmer
judgment.
’I am sure! Why
should she keep the place secret? She fears that
I should follow her? Could she not anywhere keep
me off by her mere bidding? Have I been brutally
importunate? What secret can exist that she might
not disclose to me that she was not bound
to disclose? I thought her incapable of a breath
of falsehood, and she must have deceived me from the
first, from the very first!’
’Wilfrid, that is impossible.
I cannot abandon my faith in Emily. New you speak
in this way, it convinces me that we are wrong, utterly
and foolishly mistaken. I believe what she says
here; she has not gone with him.’
Wilfrid laughed scornfully.
’It is too late; I can’t
twist my belief so quickly. I do not need that
kind of comfort; far easier to make up my mind that
I have always been fooled as I have!’
He was beyond the stage at which reasoning
is possible; reaction, in full flood, beat down the
nobler features of his mind and swamped him with the
raging waters of resentment.
So here was a myth well on its way
to establishment. For no one could afford Mrs.
Baxendale satisfactory news of Dagworthy. She
would not take the only step which remained, that
of openly avowing to his partner the information she
desired to obtain, and getting him to make inquiries
his partner appeared to be the only person in direct
communication with Dagworthy. It had to be remembered
that Emily’s own statement might be true; she
must not be spoken of lightly. It was said that
Mr. Legge, the partner, pooh-poohed the idea that
Dagworthy was secretly married. But Mr. Legge
might know as little as other people.
There were circles in Dunfield in
which another and quite a different myth grew up around
the name of Emily Hood. The Cartwrights originated
it. They too had received a mysterious note of
farewell, and their interpretation was this Emily,
they held, had gone to London, there to be happily
married to a certain Mr. Athel, a gentleman of aristocratic
appearance and enormously wealthy. Mrs. Baxendale
heard this story now and again; she neither affirmed
nor contradicted. Jessie Cartwright reflected
much on Emily’s slyness in keeping her affairs
so secret. She was not as envious as she would
have been but for a certain compact which she was
determined should not if it lay in her power
to prevent it be some day laughed away
as a mere joke. And had she not received, on
the very eve of Dagworthy’s departure, a box
of gloves, which could only come from one person?
The second myth holds its ground,
I believe, to the present day. The more mischievous
fable was refuted before very long, but only when it
had borne results for Wilfrid practically the same
as if it had been a truth.