Man and Wife eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 882 pages of information about Man and Wife.

Man and Wife eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 882 pages of information about Man and Wife.
the cottage.  And, when the time came for the visit, she found him ready to fulfill the engagement which he had made.  At Holchester House, not the slightest interference had been attempted with her perfect liberty of action and speech.  Resolved to inform Sir Patrick that she had changed her room, she had described the alarm of fire and the events which had succeeded it, in the fullest detail—­and had not been once checked by Geoffrey from beginning to end.  She had spoken in confidence to Blanche, and had never been interrupted.  Walking round the conservatory, she had dropped behind the others with perfect impunity, to say a grateful word to Sir Patrick, and to ask if the interpretation that he placed on Geoffrey’s conduct was really the interpretation which had been hinted at by Blanche.  They had talked together for ten minutes or more.  Sir Patrick had assured her that Blanche had correctly represented his opinion.  He had declared his conviction that the rash way was, in her case, the right way; and that she would do well (with his assistance) to take the initiative, in the matter of the separation, on herself.  “As long as he can keep you under the same roof with him”—­Sir Patrick had said—­“so long he will speculate on our anxiety to release you from the oppression of living with him; and so long he will hold out with his brother (in the character of a penitent husband) for higher terms.  Put the signal in the window, and try the experiment to-night.  Once find your way to the garden door, and I answer for keeping you safely out of his reach until he has submitted to the separation, and has signed the deed.”  In those words he had urged Anne to prompt action.  He had received, in return, her promise to be guided by his advice.  She had gone back to the drawing-room; and Geoffrey had made no remark on her absence.  She had returned to Fulham, alone with him in his brother’s carriage; and he had asked no questions.  What was it natural, with her means of judging, to infer from all this?  Could she see into Sir Patrick’s mind and detect that he was deliberately concealing his own conviction, in the fear that he might paralyze her energies if he acknowledged the alarm for her that he really felt?  No.  She could only accept the false appearances that surrounded her in the disguise of truth.  She could only adopt, in good faith, Sir Patrick’s assumed point of view, and believe, on the evidence of her own observation, that Sir Patrick was right.

Toward dusk, Anne began to feel the exhaustion which was the necessary result of a night passed without sleep.  She rang her bell, and asked for some tea.

Hester Dethridge answered the bell.  Instead of making the usual sign, she stood considering—­and then wrote on her slate.  These were the words:  “I have all the work to do, now the girl has gone.  If you would have your tea in the drawing-room, you would save me another journey up stairs.”

Anne at once engaged to comply with the request.

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Project Gutenberg
Man and Wife from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.