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<h2> CHAPTER XLIX </h2>
<p>MARGARET BRANDT had always held herself apart from Sevenbergen; and her
reserve had passed for pride; this had come to her ears, and she knew many
hearts were swelling with jealousy and malevolence. How would they triumph
over her when her condition could no longer be concealed! This thought
gnawed her night and day. For some time it had made her bury herself in
the house, and shun daylight even on those rare occasions when she went
abroad.</p>
<p>Not that in her secret heart and conscience she mistook her moral
situation, as my unlearned readers have done perhaps. Though not
acquainted with the nice distinctions of the contemporary law, she knew
that betrothal was a marriage contract, and could no more be legally
broken on either side than any other compact written and witnessed; and
that marriage with another party than the betrothed had been formerly
annulled both by Church and State and that betrothed couples often came
together without any further ceremony, and their children were legitimate.</p>
<p>But what weighed down her simple mediaeval mind was this: that very
contract of betrothal was not forthcoming. Instead of her keeping it,
Gerard had got it, and Gerard was far, far away. She hated and despised
herself for the miserable oversight which had placed her at the mercy of
false opinion.</p>
<p>For though she had never heard Horace's famous couplet, Segnius irritant,
etc., she was Horatian by the plain, hard, positive intelligence, which,
strange to say, characterizes the judgment of her sex, when feeling
happens not to blind it altogether. She gauged the understanding of the
world to a T. Her marriage lines being out of sight, and in Italy, would
never prevail to balance her visible pregnancy, and the sight of her child
when born. What sort of a tale was this to stop slanderous tongues? “I
have got my marriage lines, but I cannot show them you.” What woman would
believe her? or even pretend to believe her? And as she was in reality one
of the most modest girls in Holland, it was women's good opinion she
wanted, not men's.</p>
<p>Even barefaced slander attacks her sex at a great advantage; but here was
slander with a face of truth. “The strong-minded woman” had not yet been
invented; and Margaret, though by nature and by having been early made
mistress of a family, she was resolute in some respects, was weak as water
in others, and weakest of all in this. Like all the elite of her sex, she
was a poor little leaf, trembling at each gust of the world's opinion,
true or false. Much misery may be contained in few words. I doubt if pages
of description from any man's pen could make any human creature, except
virtuous women (and these need no such aid), realize the anguish of a
virtuous woman foreseeing herself paraded as a frail one. Had she been
frail at heart, she might have brazened it out. But she had not that
advantage. She was really pure as snow, and saw the pitch coming nearer
her and nearer. The poor girl sat listless hours at a time, and moaned
with inner anguish. And often, when her father was talking to her, and she
giving mechanical replies, suddenly her cheek would burn like fire, and
the old man would wonder what he had said to discompose her. Nothing. His
words were less than air to her. It was the ever-present dread sent the
colour of shame into her burning cheek, no matter what she seemed to be
talking and thinking about. But both shame and fear rose to a climax when
she came back that night from Margaret Van Eyck's. Her condition was
discovered, and by persons of her own sex. The old artist, secluded like
herself, might not betray her; but Catherine, a gossip in the centre of a
family, and a thick neighbourhood? One spark of hope remained. Catherine
had spoken kindly, even lovingly. The situation admitted no half course.
Gerard's mother thus roused must either be her best friend or worst enemy.
She waited then in racking anxiety to hear more. No word came. She gave up
hope. Catherine was not going to be her friend. Then she would expose her,
since she had no strong and kindly feeling to balance the natural love of
babbling.</p>
<p>Then it was the wish to fly from this neighbourhood began to grow and gnaw
upon her, till it became a wild and passionate desire. But how persuade
her father to this? Old people cling to places. He was very old and infirm
to change his abode. There was no course but to make him her confidant;
better so than to run away from him; and she felt that would be the
alternative. And now between her uncontrollable desire to fly and hide,
and her invincible aversion to speak out to a man, even to her father, she
vibrated in a suspense full of lively torture. And presently betwixt these
two came in one day the fatal thought, “end all!” Things foolishly worded
are not always foolish; one of poor Catherine's bugbears, these numerous
canals, did sorely tempt this poor fluctuating girl. She stood on the bank
one afternoon, and eyed the calm deep water. It seemed an image of repose,
and she was so harassed. No more trouble. No more fear of shame. If Gerard
had not loved her, I doubt she had ended there.</p>
<p>As it was, she kneeled by the water side, and prayed fervently to God to
keep such wicked thoughts from her. “Oh! selfish wretch,” said she, “to
leave thy father. Oh, wicked wretch, to kill thy child, and make thy poor
Gerard lose all his pain and peril undertaken for thy sight. I will tell
father all, ay, ere this sun shall set.” And she went home with eager
haste, lest her good resolution should ooze out ere she got there.</p>
<p>Now, in matters domestic the learned Peter was simple as a child, and
Margaret, from the age of sixteen, had governed the house gently but
absolutely. It was therefore a strange thing in this house, the faltering,
irresolute way in which its young but despotic mistress addressed that
person, who in a domestic sense was less important than Martin
Wittenhaagen, or even than the little girl who came in the morning and for
a pittance washed the vessels, etc., and went home at night.</p>
<p>“Father, I would speak to thee.”</p>
<p>“Speak on, girl.”</p>
<p>“Wilt listen to me? And—and—not—and try to excuse my
faults?”</p>
<p>“We have all our faults, Margaret, thou no more than the rest of us; but
fewer, unless parental feeling blinds me.”</p>
<p>“Alas, no, father: I am a poor foolish girl, that would fain do well, but
have done ill, most ill, most unwisely; and now must bear the shame. But,
father, I love you, with all my faults, and will not you forgive my folly,
and still love your motherless girl?”</p>
<p>“That ye may count on,” said Peter cheerfully.</p>
<p>“Oh, well, smile not. For then how can I speak and make you sad?”</p>
<p>“Why, what is the matter?”</p>
<p>“Father, disgrace is coming on this house: it is at the door. And I the
culprit. Oh, father, turn your head away. I—I—father, I have
let Gerard take away my marriage lines.”</p>
<p>“Is that all? 'Twas an oversight.”</p>
<p>“'Twas the deed of a mad woman. But woe is me! that is not the worst.”</p>
<p>Peter interrupted her. “The youth is honest, and loves you dear. You are
young. What is a year or two to you? Gerard will assuredly come back and
keep troth.”</p>
<p>“And meantime know you what is coming?”</p>
<p>“Not I, except that I shall be gone first for one.”</p>
<p>“Worse than that. There is worse pain than death. Nay, for pity's sake
turn away your head, father.”</p>
<p>“Foolish wench!” muttered Peter, but turned his head.</p>
<p>She trembled violently, and with her cheeks on fire began to falter out,
“I did look on Gerard as my husband—we being betrothed-and he was in
so sore danger, and I thought I had killed him, and I-oh, if you were but
my mother I might find courage: you would question me. But you say not a
word.”</p>
<p>“Why, Margaret, what is all this coil about? and why are thy cheeks
crimson, speaking to no stranger', but to thy old father?”</p>
<p>“Why are my cheeks on fire? Because—because—father kill me;
send me to heaven! bid Martin shoot me with his arrow! And then the
gossips will come and tell you why I blush so this day. And then, when I
am dead, I hope you will love your girl again for her mother's sake.”</p>
<p>“Give me thy hand, mistress,” said Peter, a little sternly.</p>
<p>She put it out to him trembling. He took it gently and began with some
anxiety in his face to feel her pulse.</p>
<p>“Alas, nay,” said she. “'Tis my soul that burns, not my body, with fever.
I cannot, will not, bide in Sevenbergen.” And she wrung her hands
impatiently.</p>
<p>“Be calm now,” said the old man soothingly, “nor torment thyself for
nought. Not bide in Sevenbergen? What need to bide a day, as it vexes
thee, and puts thee in a fever: for fevered thou art, deny it not.”</p>
<p>“What!” cried Margaret, “would you yield to go hence, and—and ask no
reason but my longing to be gone?” and suddenly throwing herself on her
knees beside him, in a fervour of supplication she clutched his sleeve,
and then his arm, and then his shoulder, while imploring him to quit this
place, and not ask her why. “Alas! what needs it? You will soon see it.
And I could never say it. I would liever die.”</p>
<p>“Foolish child, who seeks thy girlish secrets? Is it I, whose life hath
been spent in searching Nature's? And for leaving Sevenbergen, what is
there to keep me in it, thee unwilling? Is there respect for me here, or
gratitude? Am I not yclept quacksalver by those that come not near me, and
wizard by those I heal? And give they not the guerdon and the honour they
deny me to the empirics that slaughter them? Besides, what is't to me
where we sojourn? Choose thou that, as did thy mother before thee.”</p>
<p>Margaret embraced him tenderly, and wept upon his shoulder.</p>
<p>She was respited.</p>
<p>Yet as she wept, respited, she almost wished she had had the courage to
tell him.</p>
<p>After a while nothing would content him but her taking a medicament he
went and brought her. She took it submissively, to please him. It was the
least she could do. It was a composing draught, and though administered
under an error, and a common one, did her more good than harm: she awoke
calmed by a long sleep, and that very day began her preparations.</p>
<p>Next week they went to Rotterdam, bag and baggage, and lodged above a
tailor's shop in the Brede-Kirk Straet.</p>
<p>Only one person in Tergou knew whither they were gone.</p>
<p>The Burgomaster.</p>
<p>He locked the information in his own breast.</p>
<p>The use he made of it ere long, my reader will not easily divine: for he
did not divine it himself.</p>
<p>But time will show.</p>
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