The Law and the Lady
. "It is a coinciden
little doubtful how I might receive wha
n," I
hat your husband, being in London, should pay a visit to one of his friends. And it's equally natural that we
ed. "I say there is some motive at the bottom of his visit to Major Fitz-David
s in that? Very well, then. Show me you have confidence in the mutton; please eat. There's the wine, again. No mystery, Valeria, in that claret-I'll take
ne with love, with its certain miseries, its transient delights, its cruel losses, its bitterly doubtful gains? The last autumn flowers in the window basked brightly in the last of the autumn sunlight. Benjamin's little dog digested his dinn
came back. I was once more a doubting, disconten
nothing rash," said Benjamin,
o to Major Fitz-
w he may receive you. Let me try first, and pave the way, as the saying is. Trust my
as due to my good friend to
ust with him, where the end to be gained was such an end as I had in view. It was not easy to say this to Benjamin without the danger of mortifying him. I made an appointment with the old man to call on me
ear. In your own inter
s last words when we
s spirits seemed to have revived since I had seen him last. He adva
had expected," he began, gayly. "Are your purcha
lp me!) to distrust his fits
an free fo
h-and next year too, for all I know to the contrary," he answ
as a telegram to the sailing-master of the yacht, informing him that we had arranged to return to R
rn," said Eustace, "to send
s he spoke to ring th
n't go to Ramsgat
ddenly changing his ton
me. Even a mere passing caress from him stole away my heart, and softly tempted me to yield. But the ominous alteration in his tone made another woman of
impossible for me (as I told you at Ramsgate) to
at
hat he had put upon his wife in marrying her under a false name. Fearing that I should answer rashly, that I should say something which my better sense might regret, if I spo
repeated. "I ask y
mits, failed me. The rash reply flew out of
d, "to accustom myse
pped up to me w
mean by your
thought I was Mrs. Woodville. I have
d turned so deadly pale that I feared he was going to drop at my feet in a swoon. Oh, m
Eustace," I said. "I spoke
s were tangible things-ruffling, worrying things, lik
iscovered?" he asked,
ng, Eu
ed, speaking to himself, "or she would not be here." He paused once more, and looked at me searchingly. "Don't say again what you
ound out some other truth besides the truth about the name, would it have prevented me from ever returning to my husband? Was that what he meant? Did the sort of discovery that he contemplated mean something so dreadful that it w
at me, lost in his own thoughts. Then
changed." He tore up the telegram with an air of sullen resignation as he spoke. "You are evidently determined
pt. I was too depressed about myself
ct seems a hopeless one. As long as I am shut out from your confidence, it
thought I had married a woman who was superior to the vulgar failings of her sex. A good wif
d to bear this? H
osity because I cannot accept the unendurable position in which you have placed me. Your cruel silence is a blight on my happiness and a threat to my future. Your cruel silence is estranging us from each other at the beginning of our married life. And you
h a stern and p
our ow
in silence. He was tr
nd heavily on my shoulder, he
! through no fault of mine! Every day of your life you will feel some new distrust, some growing fear of me, and you will be doing me the vilest injustice all the time. On my faith as a Christian, on my honor as a man, if you stir a step further in this matter, there is an end to your happiness for the rest of your life! Think seriously of what
ke. So he
in my place. It is true of me, that my husband's terrible warning-all the more terrible in its mystery and its vagueness-produced no deterrent effect on my mind: it only stimulated my r
ever of excitement that it was impossible for me to sit
ession in my favor, looking as I looked at that moment? For all I knew to the contrary, my whole future might depend upon the effect which
ea of the disordered and desperate condition of my mind at that time than by owning that I actually consulted this perfect stranger on the question of my personal appearance. She was a middle-aged woman, with a large experience of the world
, in a confidential whisper. "Don't speak
," I said, "and I have
rstand,
you und
"There is a gentleman in the case. Don't mind me, ma'am. It's a way I have. I mean no harm." She stopped, an
d with lace. I could wear nothing which suited me better. My hair, however, stood in need of some skilled attention. The chambermaid rearranged it with a ready hand which showed that she was
ou keep it?
do you
you like that. A touch of color you must have. Where do you keep i
ing to check her. I saw, in the glass, my skin take a false fairness, my cheeks a false color, my eyes a false brightness-and I never shrank from it. No! I let the odious conceit go on; I even admired the extraordinary delicacy and dexteri
hed. The chambermaid pointed with her wicke
d just see for yourself how you look now. You're the prettiest woman (of your s