The Eustace Diamonds (36 page)

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Authors: Anthony Trollope

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‘Do you mean by any personal interview?'

‘Certainly.'

‘I think you are wrong, Lizzie.'

‘Of course you do. Men have become so soft themselves, that they no longer dare to think even of punishing those who behave badly, and they expect women to be softer and more fainéant
5
than themselves. I have been ill-used.'

‘Certainly you have.'

‘And I will be revenged. Look here, Frank; if your view of these things is altogether different from mine, let us drop the subject. Of all living human beings you are the one that is most to me now. Perhaps you are more than any other ever was. But, even for you, I cannot alter my nature. Even for you I would not alter it if I could. That man has injured me, and all the world knows it. I will have my revenge, and all the world shall know that. I did wrong; – 1 am sensible enough of that.'

‘What wrong do you mean?'

‘I told a man whom I never loved that I would marry him. God knows that I have been punished.'

‘Perhaps, Lizzie, it is better as it is.'

‘A great deal better. I will tell you now that I could never induce myself to go into church with that man as his bride. With a man I didn't love, I might have done so, but not with a man I despised.'

‘You have been saved, then, from a greater evil.'

‘Yes; – but not the less is his injury to me. It is not because he despises me that he rejects me; – nor is it because he thought that I had taken property that was not my own.'

‘Why then?'

‘Because he was afraid the world would say that I had done so. Poor shallow creature! But he shall be punished.'

‘I do not know how you can punish him.'

‘Leave that to me. I have another thing to do much more difficult.' She paused, looking for a moment up in his face, and then turning her eyes upon the ground. As he said nothing, she went on. ‘I have to excuse myself to you for having accepted him.'

‘I have never blamed you.'

‘Not in words. How should you? But if you have not blamed me in your heart, I despise you. I know you have. I have seen it in your eyes when you have counselled me, either to take the poor creature or to leave him. Speak out, now, like a man. Is it not so?'

‘I never thought you loved him.'

‘Loved him! Is there anything in him or about him that a woman could love? Is he not a poor social stick; – a bit of half-dead wood, good to make a post of, if one wants a post? I did want a post so sorely then!'

‘I don't see why.'

‘You don't?'

‘No, indeed. It was natural that you should be inclined to marry again.'

‘Natural that I should be inclined to marry again! And is that all? It is hard sometimes to see whether men are thick-witted, or hypocrites so perfect that they seem to be so. I cannot bring myself to think you thick-witted, Frank.'

‘Then I must be the perfect hypocrite – of course.'

‘You believed I accepted Lord Fawn because it was natural that I should wish to marry again! Frank, you believed nothing of the kind. I accepted him in my anger, in my misery, in my despair, because I had expected you to come to me – and you had not come!' – She had thrown herself now into a chair, and sat looking at him. ‘You had told me that you would come, and you had stayed away. It was you, Frank, that I wanted to punish then; – but there was no punishment in it for you. When is it to be, Frank?'

‘When is what to be?' he asked, in a low voice, all but dumbfounded. How was he to put an end to this conversation, and what was he to say to her?

‘Your marriage with that little wizened thing who gave you the ring – that prim morsel of feminine propriety who has been clever enough to make you believe that her morality would suffice to make you happy.'

‘I will not hear Lucy Morris abused, Lizzie.'

‘Is that abuse? Is it abuse to say that she is moral and proper? But, sir, I shall abuse her. I know her for what she is, while your eyes are sealed. She is wise and moral, and decorous and prim; but she is a hypocrite, and has no touch of real heart in her composition. Not abuse her when she has robbed me of all – all – all that I have in the world! Go to her. You had better go at once. I did not mean to say all this, but it has been said, and you must leave me. I, at any rate, cannot play the hypocrite; – 1 wish I could.' He rose and came to her, and attempted to take her hand, but she flung away from him. ‘No!' she said – ‘never again; never, unless you will tell me that the promise you made me when we were down on the sea-shore was a true promise. Was that truth, sir, or was it a-lie?'

‘Lizzie, do not use such a word as that to me.'

‘I cannot stand picking my words when the whole world is going round with me, and my very brain is on fire. What is it to me what my words are? Say one syllable to me, and every word I utter again while breath is mine shall be spoken to do your pleasure. If you cannot say it, it is nothing to me what you or any one may think of my words. You know my secret, and I care not
who else knows it. At any rate, I can die!' Then she paused a moment, and after that stalked steadily out of the room.

That afternoon Frank took a long walk by himself over the mountains, nearly to the Cottage and back again; and on his return was informed that Lady Eustace was ill, and had gone to bed. At any rate, she was too unwell to come down to dinner. He, therefore, and Miss Macnulty sat down to dine, and passed the evening together without other companionship. Frank had resolved during his walk that he would leave Portray the next day; but had hardly resolved upon anything else. One thing, however, seemed certain to him. He was engaged to marry Lucy Morris, and to that engagement he must be true. His cousin was very charming – and had never looked so lovely in his eyes as when she had been confessing her love for him. And he had wondered at and admired her courage, her power of language, and her force. He could not quite forget how useful would be her income to him. And, added to this, there was present to him an unwholesome feeling – ideas absolutely at variance with those better ideas which had prompted him when he was writing his offer to Lucy Morris in his chambers – that a woman such as was his cousin Lizzie was fitter to be the wife of a man thrown, as he must be, into the world, than a dear, quiet, domestic little girl such as Lucy Morris. But to Lucy Morris he was engaged, and therefore there was an end of it.

The next morning he sent his love to his cousin, asking whether he should see her before he went. It was still necessary that he should know what attorneys to employ on her behalf if the threatened bill were filed by Messrs Camperdown. Then he suggested a firm in his note. Might he put the case into the hands of Mr Townsend, who was a friend of his own? There came back to him a scrap of paper, an old envelope, on which were written the names of Mowbray and Mopus; – Mowbray and Mopus in a large scrawling hand, and with pencil. He put the scrap of paper into his pocket, feeling that he could not remonstrate with her at this moment, and was prepared to depart; when there came a message to him. Lady Eustace was still unwell, but had risen; and if it were not giving him too much trouble, would see him before he went.
He followed the messenger to the same little room, looking out upon the sea, and then found her, dressed indeed, but with a white morning wrapper on, and with hair loose over her shoulders. Her eyes were red with weeping, and her face was pale, and thin, and woe-begone. ‘I am sorry that you are ill, Lizzie,' he said.

‘Yes; I am ill; – sometimes very ill; but what does it matter? I did not send for you, Frank, to speak of aught so trivial as that. I have a favour to ask.'

‘Of course I will grant it.'

‘It is your forgiveness for my conduct yesterday.'

‘Oh, Lizzie!'

‘Say that you forgive me. Say it!'

‘How can I forgive where there has been no fault?'

‘There has been fault. Say that you forgive me.' And she stamped her foot as she demanded his pardon.

‘I do forgive you,' he said.

‘And now, one farewell.' She then threw herself upon his breast and kissed him. ‘Now, go,' she said; ‘go, and come no more to me, unless you would see me mad. May God Almighty bless you, and make you happy!' As she uttered this prayer she held the door in her hand, and there was nothing for him but to leave her.

CHAPTER
32
Mr and Mrs Hittaway in Scotland

A
GREAT
many people go to Scotland in the autumn. When you have your autumn holiday in hand to dispose of it, there is nothing more aristocratic that you can do than to go to Scotland. Dukes are more plentiful there than in Pall Mall, and you will meet an earl or at least a lord on every mountain. Of course, if you merely travel about from inn to inn, and neither have a moor of your own nor stay with any great friend, you don't quite enjoy the cream of it; but to go to Scotland in August, and stay there, perhaps, till the end of September, is about the most certain step you can take towards autumnal fashion. Switzerland and the Tyrol, and even Italy, are all redolent of Mr Cook,
1
and in those beautiful lands you become subject at least to suspicion.

By no persons was the duty of adhering to the best side of society more clearly appreciated than by Mr and Mrs Hittaway of Warwick Square. Mr Hittaway was Chairman of the Board of Civil Appeals, and was a man who quite understood that there are chairmen – and chairmen. He could name to you three or four men holding responsible permanent official positions quite as good as that he filled in regard to salary – which, as he often said of his own, was a mere nothing, just a poor two thousand pounds a year, not as much as a grocer would make in a decent business – but they were simply head clerks and nothing more. Nobody knew anything of them. They had no names. You did not meet them anywhere. Cabinet ministers never heard of them; and nobody out of their own offices ever consulted them. But there are others, and Mr Hittaway felt greatly conscious that he was one of them, who move altogether in a different sphere. One minister of State would ask another whether Hittaway had been consulted on this or on that measure; – so at least the Hittawayites were in the habit of reporting. The names of Mr and Mrs Hittaway were constantly in the papers. They were invited to evening
gatherings at the houses of both the alternate Prime Ministers. They were to be seen at fashionable gatherings up the river. They attended concerts at Buckingham Palace. Once a year they gave a dinner-party which was inserted in the
Morning Post
.
2
On such occasions at least one Cabinet Minister always graced the board. In fact, Mr Hittaway, as Chairman of the Board of Civil Appeals, was somebody; and Mrs Hittaway, as his wife and as sister to a peer, was somebody also. The reader will remember that Mrs Hittaway had been a Fawn before she married.

There is this drawback upon the happy condition which Mr Hittaway had achieved – that it demands a certain expenditure. Let nobody dream that he can be somebody without having to pay for that honour; – unless, indeed, he be a clergyman. When you go to a concert at Buckingham Palace you pay nothing, it is true, for your ticket; and a Cabinet Minister dining with you does not eat or drink more than your old friend Jones the attorney. But in some insidious unforeseen manner – in a way that can only be understood after much experience – these luxuries of fashion do make a heavy pull on a modest income. Mrs Hittaway knew this thoroughly, having much experience, and did make her fight bravely. For Mr Hittaway's income was no more than modest. A few thousand pounds he had of his own when he married, and his Clara had brought to him the unpretending sum of fifteen hundred. But, beyond that, the poor official salary – which was less than what a decent grocer would make – was their all. The house in Warwick Square they had prudently purchased on their marriage – when houses in Warwick Square were cheaper than they are now – and there they carried on their battle, certainly with success. But two thousand a year does not go very far in Warwick Square, even though you sit rent free, if you have a family and absolutely must keep a carriage. It therefore resulted that when Mr and Mrs Hittaway went to Scotland, which they would endeavour to do every year, it was very important that they should accomplish their aristocratic holiday as visitors at the house of some aristocratic friend. So well had they played their cards in this respect, that they seldom failed altogether. In one year they had been the guests of a great marquis quite in the north, and that
had been a very glorious year. To talk of Stackallan was, indeed, a thing of beauty. But in that year Mr Hittaway had made himself very useful in London. Since that they had been at delicious shooting lodges in Ross and Inverness-shire, had visited a millionaire at his palace amidst the Argyle mountains, had been fêted in a western island, had been bored by a Dundee dowager, and put up with a Lothian laird. But the thing had been almost always done, and the Hittaways were known as people that went to Scotland. He could handle a gun, and was clever enough never to shoot a keeper. She could read aloud, could act a little, could talk or hold her tongue; and let her hosts be who they would and as mighty as you please, never caused them trouble by seeming to be out of their circle, and on that account requiring peculiar attention.

On this occasion Mr and Mrs Hittaway were the guests of old Lady Pierrepoint, in Dumfries. There was nothing special to recommend Lady Pierrepoint except that she had a large house and a good income, and that she liked to have people with her of whom everybody knew something. So far was Lady Pierrepoint from being high in the Hittaway world, that Mrs Hittaway felt called upon to explain to her friends that she was forced to go to Dumdum House by the duties of old friendship. Dear old Lady Pierrepoint had been insisting on it for the last ten years. And there was this advantage, that Dumfriesshire is next to Ayrshire, that Dumdum was not very far – some twenty or thirty miles – from Portray, and that she might learn something about Lizzie Eustace in her country house.

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