<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVII.</h3>
<p> </p>
<p>Thus Elinor Dennistoun disappeared from Windyhill
and was no more seen. There are many ways in
which a marriage is almost like a death, especially when
the marriage is that of an only child. The young go
away, the old remain. There is all the dreary routine
of the solitary life unbrightened by that companionship
which is all the world to the one who is left behind.
So little—only the happy going away into brighter
scenes of one whose happiness was the whole thought
of that dreary survivor at the chimney corner—and yet
so much. And if that survivor is a woman she has to
smile and tell her neighbours of the bride's happiness,
and how great the comfort to herself that her Elinor's
life is assured, and her own ending is now of no particular
importance to her daughter; if it is a man, he is
allowed to lament, which is a curious paradox, but one
of the many current in this world. Mrs. Dennistoun
had to put a very brave face upon it all the more because
of the known unsatisfactoriness of Elinor's husband:
and she had to go on with her life, and sit down at her
solitary meals, and invent lonely occupations for herself,
and read and read, till her brains were often dazed
by the multiplicity of the words, which lost their
meaning as she turned over page by page. To sit
alone in the house, without a sound audible, except
perhaps the movement of the servants going up-stairs
or down to minister to the wants, about which she felt
she cared nothing whether they were ministered to or
not, of their solitary mistress, where a little while ago
there used to be the rhythm of the one quick step, the
sound of the one gay voice which made the world a
warm inhabited place to Mrs. Dennistoun—this was
more dismal than words could say. To be sure, there
were some extraordinary and delightful differences;
there were the almost daily letters, which afforded the
lonely mother all the pleasure that life could give; and
there was always the prospect, or at least possibility
and hope, of seeing her child again. Those two particulars,
it need scarcely be said, make a difference which
is practically infinite: but yet for Mrs. Dennistoun, sitting
alone all the day and night, walking alone, reading
alone, with little to do that was of the slightest
consequence, not even the reading—for what did it
matter to her dreary, lonely consciousness whether she
kept afloat of general literature or improved her mind
or not? this separation by marriage was dreadfully
like the dreary separation by death, and in one respect
it was almost worse; for death, if it reaches our very
hearts, takes away at least the gnawing pangs of anxiety.
He or she who is gone that way is well; never
more can trouble touch them, their feet cannot err nor
their hearts ache; while who can tell what troubles and
miseries may be befalling, out there in the unknown,
the child who has embarked upon the troubled sea of
mortal life?</p>
<p>And it may be imagined with what anxious eyes
those letters, which made all the difference, were read;
how the gradually changing tone in them was noted as
it came in, slowly but also surely. Sometimes they got
to be very hurried, and then Mrs. Dennistoun saw as in
a glass the impatient husband waiting, wondering what
she could constantly find to say to her mother; sometimes
they were long and detailed, and that meant, as
would appear perhaps by a phrase slurred over in the
postscript, that Phil had gone away somewhere. There
was never a complaint in them, never a word that could
be twisted into a complaint: but the anxious mother
read between the lines innumerable things, not half of
them true. There is perhaps never a half true of what
anxiety may imagine: but then the half that is true!</p>
<p>John Tatham was very faithful to her during that
winter. As soon as he came back from Switzerland, at
the end of the long vacation, he went down to see her,
feeling the difference in the house beyond anything he
had imagined, feeling as if he were stepping into some
darkened outer chamber of the grave: but with a
cheerful face and eager but confident interest in "the
news from Elinor." "Of course she is enjoying herself
immensely," he said, and Mrs. Dennistoun was able
to reply with a smile that was a little wistful, that yes,
Elinor was enjoying herself immensely. "She seems
very happy, and everything is new to her and bright,"
she said. They were both very glad that Elinor was
happy, and they were very cheerful themselves. Mrs.
Dennistoun truly cheered by his visit and by the necessity
for looking after everything that John might be
comfortable, and the pleasure of seeing his face opposite
to her at table. "You can't think what it is to
see you there; sitting down to dinner is the most horrible
farce when one is alone." "Poor aunt!" John
Tatham said: and nobody would believe how many Saturdays
and Sundays he gave up to her during the long
winter. Somehow he himself did not care to go anywhere
else. In Elinor's time he had gone about freely
enough, liking a little variety in his Saturday to
Mondays, though always happiest when he went to Windyhill:
but now somehow the other houses seemed to
pall upon him. He liked best to go down to that melancholy
house which his presence made more or less
bright, where there was an endless talk of Elinor,
where she was, what she was doing, and what was to
be her next move, and, at last, when she was coming to
town. Mrs. Dennistoun did not say, as she did at first,
"when she is coming home." That possibility seemed
to slip away somehow, and no one suggested it. When
she was coming to town, that was what they said between
themselves. She had spent the spring on the
Riviera, a great part of it at Monte Carlo, and her letters
were full of the beauty of the place; but she said
less and less about people, and more and more
about the sea and the mountains, and the glorious road
which gave at every turn a new and beautiful vision of
the hills and the sea. It was a little like a guide-book,
they sometimes felt, but neither said it; but at last it
became certain that in the month of May she was coming
to town.</p>
<p>More than that, oh, more than that! One evening
in May, when it was fine but a little chilly, when Mrs.
Dennistoun was walking wistfully in her garden, looking
at the moon shining in the west, and wondering if
her child had arrived in England, and whether she was
coming to a house of her own, or a lodging, or to be a
visitor in some one else's house, details which Elinor
had not given—her ear was suddenly caught by the distant
rumbling of wheels, heavy wheels, the fly from the
station certainly. Mrs. Dennistoun had no expectation
of what it could be, no sort of hope: and yet a
woman has always a sort of hope when her child lives
and everything is possible. The fly seemed to stop, not
coming up the little cottage drive; but by and by,
when she had almost given up hoping, there came a
rush of flying feet, and a cry of joy, and Elinor was in
her mother's arms. Elinor! yes, it was herself, no vision,
no shadow such as had many a time come into Mrs.
Dennistoun's dreams, but herself in flesh and blood,
the dear familiar figure, the face which, between the
twilight and those ridiculous tears which come when
one is too happy, could scarcely be seen at all. "Elinor,
Elinor! it is you, my darling!" "Yes, mother, it
is me, really me. I could not write, because I did not
know till the last minute whether I could get away."</p>
<p>It may be imagined what a coming home that was.
Mrs. Dennistoun, when she saw her daughter even by
the light of the lamp, was greatly comforted. Elinor
was looking well; she was changed in that indescribable
way in which marriage changes (though not always)
the happiest woman. And her appearance was
changed; she was no longer the country young lady
very well dressed and looking as well as any one could
in her carefully made clothes. She was now a fashionable
young woman, about whose dresses there was no
question, who wore everything as those do who are at
the fountain-head, no matter what it was she wore.
Mrs. Dennistoun's eyes caught this difference at once,
which is also indescribable to the uninitiated, and a
sensation of pride came into her mind. Elinor was improved,
too, in so many ways. Her mother had never
thought of calling her anything more, even in her inmost
thoughts, than very pretty, very sweet; but it
seemed to Mrs. Dennistoun now as if people might use
a stronger word, and call Elinor beautiful. Her face
had gained a great deal of expression, though it was
always an expressive face; her eyes looked deeper;
her manner had a wonderful youthful dignity. Altogether,
it was another Elinor, yet, God be praised, the
same.</p>
<p>It was but for one night, but that was a great deal, a
night subtracted from the blank, a night that seemed
to come out of the old times—those old times that had
not been known to be so very happy till they were over
and gone. Elinor had naturally a great deal to tell her
mother, but in the glory of seeing her, of hearing her
voice, of knowing that it was actually she who was
speaking, Mrs. Dennistoun did not observe, what she
remembered afterwards, that again it was much more
of places than of people that Elinor talked, and that
though she named Phil when there was any occasion
for doing so, she did not babble about him as brides
do, as if he were altogether the sun, and everything
revolved round him. It is not a good sign, perhaps,
when the husband comes down to his "proper place"
as the representative of the other half of the world too
soon. Elinor looked round upon her old home with a
mingled smile and sigh. Undoubtedly it had grown
smaller, perhaps even shabbier, since she went away:
but she did not say so to her mother. She cried out
how pretty it was, how delightful to come back to it!
and that was true too. How often it happens in this
life that there are two things quite opposed to each
other, and yet both of them true.</p>
<p>"John will be delighted to hear that you have come,
Elinor," her mother said.</p>
<p>"John, dear old John! I hope he is well and happy,
and all that; and he comes often to see you, mother?
How sweet of him! You must give him ever so much
love from his poor Nelly. I always keep that name
sacred to him."</p>
<p>"But why should I give him messages as if you were
not sure to meet? of course you will meet—often."</p>
<p>"Do you think so?" said Elinor. She opened her
eyes a little in surprise, and then shook her head. "I
am afraid not, mamma. We are in two different
worlds."</p>
<p>"I assure you," said Mrs. Dennistoun, "John is a
very rising man. He is invited everywhere."</p>
<p>"That I don't doubt at all."</p>
<p>"And why then shouldn't you meet?"</p>
<p>"I don't know. I don't fancy we shall go to the
same places. John has a profession; he has something
to do. Now you know we have nothing to do."</p>
<p>She laughed and laid a little emphasis on the <i>we</i>, by
way of taking off the weight of the words.</p>
<p>"I always thought it was a great pity, Elinor."</p>
<p>"It may be a pity or not," said Elinor, "but it is,
and it cannot be helped. We have got to make up our
minds to it. I would rather Phil did nothing than
mixed himself up with companies. Thank heaven, at
present he is free of anything of that kind."</p>
<p>"I hope he is free of that one at least, that he was
going to invest all your money in, Elinor. I hope you
found another investment that was quite steady and
safe."</p>
<p>"Oh, I suppose so," said Elinor, with some of her
old petulance: "don't let us spoil the little time I have
by talking about money, mamma!"</p>
<p>And then it was that Mrs. Dennistoun noticed that
what Elinor did talk of, hurrying away from this subject,
were things of not the least importance—the olive
woods on the Riviera, the wealth of flowers, the strange
little old towns upon the hills. Surely even the money,
which was her own and for her comfort, would be a
more interesting subject to discuss. Perhaps Elinor
herself perceived this, for she began immediately to ask
questions about the Hudsons and Hills, and all the people
of the parish, with much eagerness of questioning,
but a flagging interest in the replies, as her mother
soon saw. "And Mary Dale, is she still there?" she
asked. Mrs. Dennistoun entered into a little history
of how Mary Dale had gone away to nurse a distant
cousin who had been ill, and finally had died and left a
very comfortable little fortune to her kind attendant.
Elinor listened with little nods and appropriate exclamations,
but before the evening was out asked again,
"And Mary Dale?" then hastily corrected herself with
an "Oh, I remember! you told me." But it was perhaps
safer not to question her how much she remembered
of what she had been told.</p>
<p>Thus there were notes of disquiet in even that delightful
evening, such a contrast as it was to all the
evenings since she had left home. Even when John
came, what a poor substitute for Elinor! The ingratitude
of those whose heart is set on one object made
Mrs. Dennistoun thus make light of what had been her
great consolation. He was very kind, very good, and
oh, how glad she had been to see him through that heavy
winter—but he was not Elinor! It was enough for
Elinor to step across her mother's threshold to make
Mrs. Dennistoun feel that there was no substitute for
her—none: and that John was of no more consequence
than the Rector or any habitual caller. But, at the
same time, in all the melody of the home-coming, in the
sweetness of Elinor's voice, and look, and kiss, in the
perfection of seeing her there again in her own place,
and listening to her dear step running up and down
the no longer silent house, there were notes of disquiet
which could not be mistaken. She was not unhappy,
the mother thought; her eyes could not be so bright,
nor her colour so fair unless she was happy. Trouble
does not embellish, and Elinor was embellished. But
yet—there were notes of disquiet in the air.</p>
<p>Next day Mrs. Dennistoun drove her child to the
railway in order not to lose a moment of so short a
visit, and naturally, though she had received that unexpected
visit with rapture, feeling that a whole night
of Elinor was worth a month, a year of anybody else,
yet now that Elinor was going she found it very short.
"You'll come again soon, my darling?" she said, as
she stood at the window of the carriage ready to say
good-bye.</p>
<p>"Whenever I can, mother dear, of that you may be
sure; whenever I can get away."</p>
<p>"I don't wish to draw you from your husband.
Don't get away—come with Philip from Saturday to
Monday. Give him my love, and tell him so. He
shall not be bored; but Sunday is a day without engagements."</p>
<p>"Oh, not now, mamma. There are just as many
things to do on Sundays as on any other day."</p>
<p>There were a great many words on Mrs. Dennistoun's
lips, but she did not say them; all she did say was,
"Well, then, Elinor—when you can get away."</p>
<p>"Oh, you need not doubt me, mamma." And the
train, which sometimes lingers so long, which some
people that very day were swearing at as so slow,
"Like all country trains," they said—that inevitable
heartless thing got into motion, and Mrs. Dennistoun
watched it till it disappeared; and—what was that
that came over Elinor's face as she sank back into the
corner of her carriage, not knowing her mother's
anxious look followed her still—what was it? Oh,
dreadful, dreadful life! oh, fruitless love and longing!—was
it relief? The mother tried to get that look out
of her mind as she drove silently and slowly home,
creeping up hill after hill. There was no need to
hurry. All that she was going to was an empty and
silent house, where nobody awaited her. What was
that look on Elinor's face? Relief! to have it over, to
get away again, away from her old home and her fond
mother, away to her new life. Mrs. Dennistoun was
not a jealous mother nor unreasonable. She said to
herself—Well! it was no doubt a trial to the child to
come back—to come alone. All the time, perhaps, she
was afraid of being too closely questioned, of having to
confess that <i>he</i> did not want to come, perhaps grudged
her coming. She might be afraid that her mother
would divine something—some hidden opposition,
some dislike, perhaps, on his part. Poor Elinor! and
when everything had passed over so well, when it was
ended, and nothing had been between them but love
and mutual understanding, what wonder if there came
over her dear face a look of relief! This was how this
good woman, who had seen a great many things in
her passage through life, explained her child's look:
and though she was sad was not angry, as many less
tolerant and less far-seeing might have been in her
place.</p>
<p>John, that good John, to whom she had been so ungrateful,
came down next Saturday, and to him she
confided her great news, but not all of it. "She came
down—alone?" he said.</p>
<p>"Well," said Mrs. Dennistoun, bravely; "she knew
very well it was her I wanted to see, and not Philip.
They say a great deal about mothers-in-law, but why
shouldn't we in our turn have our fling at sons-in-law,
John? It was not him I wanted to see: it was my
own child: and Elinor understood that, and ran off by
herself. Bless her for the thought."</p>
<p>"I understand that," said John. He had given the
mother more than one look as she spoke, and divined
her better than she supposed. "Oh, yes, I can understand
that. The thing I don't understand is why he
let her; why he wasn't too proud to bring her back to
you, that you might see she had taken no harm. If it
had been I<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"Ah, but it was not you," said Mrs. Dennistoun;
"you forget that. It never could have been you."</p>
<p>He looked quickly at her again, and it was on his
lips to ask, "Why could it never have been I?" but he
did not; for he knew that if it had ever been him, it
could not have been for years. He was too prudent,
and Elinor, even if she had escaped Phil Compton,
would have met some one else. He had no right to
say, or even think, what, in the circumstances, he
would have done. He did not make any answer, but
she understood him as he understood her.</p>
<p>And later in the evening she asked his advice as to
what she should do. "I am not fond of asking advice,"
she said, "and I don't think there is another in the
world I would ask it from but you. What should I
do? It would cost me nothing to run up to town for a
part of the season at least. I might get a little house,
and be near her, where she could come to me when
she pleased. Should I do it, or would it be wise not to
do it? I don't want to spy upon her or to force her to
tell me more than she wishes. John, my dear, I will
tell you what I would tell no one else. I caught a
glimpse of her dear face when the train was just going
out of sight, and she was sinking back in her corner
with a look of relief<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"Of relief!" he cried.</p>
<p>"John, don't form any false impression! it was no
want of love: but I think she was thankful to have
seen me, and to have satisfied me, and that I had asked
no questions that she could not answer—in a way."</p>
<p>John clenched his fist, but he dared not make
any gesture of disgust, or suggest again, "If it had
been I."</p>
<p>"Well, now," she said, "remember I am not angry—fancy
being angry with Elinor!—and all I mean is
for her benefit. Should I go? it might be a relief to
her to run into me whenever she pleased; or should I
not go? lest she might think I was bent on finding out
more than she chose to tell?"</p>
<p>"Wouldn't it be right that you should find out?"</p>
<p>"That is just the point upon which I am doubtful.
She is not unhappy, for she is—she is prettier than ever
she was, John. A girl does not get like that—her eyes
brighter, her colour clearer, looking—well, beautiful!"
cried the mother, her eyes filling with bright tears, "if
she is unhappy. But there may be things that are not
quite smooth, that she might think it would make me
unhappy to know, yet that if let alone might come all
right. Tell me, John, what should I do?"</p>
<p>And they sat debating thus till far on in the night.</p>
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