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<h2> CHAPTER XLIV. OUR NEW HONEYMOON. </h2>
<p>It is not to be disguised or denied that my spirits were depressed on my
journey to London.</p>
<p>To resign the one cherished purpose of my life, when I had suffered so
much in pursuing it, and when I had (to all appearance) so nearly reached
the realization of my hopes, was putting to a hard trial a woman's
fortitude and a woman's sense of duty. Still, even if the opportunity had
been offered to me, I would not have recalled my letter to Mr. Playmore.
"It is done, and well done," I said to myself; "and I have only to wait a
day to be reconciled to it—when I give my husband my first kiss."</p>
<p>I had planned and hoped to reach London in time to start for Paris by the
night-mail. But the train was twice delayed on the long journey from the
North; and there was no help for it but to sleep at Benjamin's villa, and
to defer my departure until the morning.</p>
<p>It was, of course, impossible for me to warn my old friend of the change
in my plans. My arrival took him by surprise. I found him alone in his
library, with a wonderful illumination of lamps and candles, absorbed over
some morsels of torn paper scattered on the table before him.</p>
<p>"What in the world are you about?" I asked.</p>
<p>Benjamin blushed—I was going to say, like a young girl; but young
girls have given up blushing in these latter days of the age we live in.</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing, nothing!" he said, confusedly. "Don't notice it."</p>
<p>He stretched out his hand to brush the morsels of paper off the table.
Those morsels raised a sudden suspicion in my mind. I stopped him.</p>
<p>"You have heard from Mr. Playmore!" I said. "Tell me the truth, Benjamin.
Yes or no?"</p>
<p>Benjamin blushed a shade deeper, and answered, "Yes."</p>
<p>"Where is the letter?"</p>
<p>"I mustn't show it to you, Valeria."</p>
<p>This (need I say it?) made me determined to see the letter. My best way of
persuading Benjamin to show it to me was to tell him of the sacrifice that
I had made to my husband's wishes. "I have no further voice in the
matter," I added, when I had done. "It now rests entirely with Mr.
Playmore to go on or to give up; and this is my last opportunity of
discovering what he really thinks about it. Don't I deserve some little
indulgence? Have I no claim to look at the letter?"</p>
<p>Benjamin was too much surprised, and too much pleased with me, when he
heard what had happened, to be able to resist my entreaties. He gave me
the letter.</p>
<p>Mr. Playmore wrote to appeal confidentially to Benjamin as a commercial
man. In the long course of his occupation in business, it was just
possible that he might have heard of cases in which documents have been
put together again after having been torn up by design or by accident.
Even if his experience failed in this particular, he might be able to
refer to some authority in London who would be capable of giving an
opinion on the subject. By way of explaining his strange request, Mr.
Playmore reverted to the notes which Benjamin had taken at Miserrimus
Dexter's house, and informed him of the serious importance of "the
gibberish" which he had reported under protest. The letter closed by
recommending that any correspondence which ensued should be kept a secret
from me—on the ground that it might excite false hopes in my mind if
I were informed of it.</p>
<p>I now understood the tone which my worthy adviser had adopted in writing
to me. His interest in the recovery of the letter was evidently so
overpowering that common prudence compelled him to conceal it from me, in
case of ultimate failure. This did not look as if Mr. Playmore was likely
to give up the investigation on my withdrawal from it. I glanced again at
the fragments of paper on Benjamin's table, with an interest in them which
I had not felt yet.</p>
<p>"Has anything been found at Gleninch?" I asked.</p>
<p>"No," said Benjamin. "I have only been trying experiments with a letter of
my own, before I wrote to Mr. Playmore."</p>
<p>"Oh, you have torn up the letter yourself, then?"</p>
<p>"Yes. And, to make it all the more difficult to put them together again, I
shook up the pieces in a basket. It's a childish thing to do, my dear, at
my age—"</p>
<p>He stopped, looking very much ashamed of himself.</p>
<p>"Well," I went on; "and have you succeeded in putting your letter together
again?"</p>
<p>"It's not very easy, Valeria. But I have made a beginning. It's the same
principle as the principle in the 'Puzzles' which we used to put together
when I was a boy. Only get one central bit of it right, and the rest of
the Puzzle falls into its place in a longer or a shorter time. Please
don't tell anybody, my dear. People might say I was in my dotage. To think
of that gibberish in my note-book having a meaning in it, after all! I
only got Mr. Playmore's letter this morning; and—I am really almost
ashamed to mention it—I have been trying experiments on torn
letters, off and on, ever since. You won't tell upon me, will you?"</p>
<p>I answered the dear old man by a hearty embrace. Now that he had lost his
steady moral balance, and had caught the infection of my enthusiasm, I
loved him better than ever.</p>
<p>But I was not quite happy, though I tried to appear so. Struggle against
it as I might, I felt a little mortified when I remembered that I had
resigned all further connection with the search for the letter at such a
time as this. My one comfort was to think of Eustace. My one encouragement
was to keep my mind fixed as constantly as possible on the bright change
for the better that now appeared in the domestic prospect. Here, at least,
there was no disaster to fear; here I could honestly feel that I had
triumphed. My husband had come back to me of his own free will; he had not
given way, under the hard weight of evidence—he had yielded to the
nobler influences of his gratitude and his love. And I had taken him to my
heart again—not because I had made discoveries which left him no
other alternative than to live with me, but because I believed in the
better mind that had come to him, and loved and trusted him without
reserve. Was it not worth some sacrifice to have arrived at this result!
True—most true! And yet I was a little out of spirits. Ah, well!
well! the remedy was within a day's journey. The sooner I was with Eustace
the better.</p>
<p>Early the next morning I left London for Paris by the tidal-train.
Benjamin accompanied me to the Terminus.</p>
<p>"I shall write to Edinburgh by to-day's post," he said, in the interval
before the train moved out of the station. "I think I can find the man Mr.
Playmore wants to help him, if he decides to go on. Have you any message
to send, Valeria?"</p>
<p>"No. I have done with it, Benjamin; I have nothing more to say."</p>
<p>"Shall I write and tell you how it ends, if Mr. Playmore does really try
the experiment at Gleninch?"</p>
<p>I answered, as I felt, a little bitterly.</p>
<p>"Yes," I said "Write and tell me if the experiment fail."</p>
<p>My old friend smiled. He knew me better than I knew myself.</p>
<p>"All right!" he said, resignedly. "I have got the address of your banker's
correspondent in Paris. You will have to go there for money, my dear; and
you <i>may</i> find a letter waiting for you in the office when you least
expect it. Let me hear how your husband goes on. Good-by—and God
bless you!"</p>
<p>That evening I was restored to Eustace.</p>
<p>He was too weak, poor fellow, even to raise his head from the pillow. I
knelt down at the bedside and kissed him. His languid, weary eyes kindled
with a new life as my lips touched his. "I must try to live now," he
whispered, "for your sake."</p>
<p>My mother-in-law had delicately left us together. When he said those words
the temptation to tell him of the new hope that had come to brighten our
lives was more than I could resist.</p>
<p>"You must try to live now, Eustace," I said, "for some one else besides
me."</p>
<p>His eyes looked wonderingly into mine.</p>
<p>"Do you mean my mother?" he asked.</p>
<p>I laid my head on his bosom, and whispered back—"I mean your child."</p>
<p>I had all my reward for all that I had given up. I forgot Mr. Playmore; I
forgot Gleninch. Our new honeymoon dates, in my remembrance, from that
day.</p>
<p>The quiet time passed, in the by-street in which we lived. The outer stir
and tumult of Parisian life ran its daily course around us, unnoticed and
unheard. Steadily, though slowly, Eustace gained strength. The doctors,
with a word or two of caution, left him almost entirely to me. "You are
his physician," they said; "the happier you make him, the sooner he will
recover." The quiet, monotonous round of my new life was far from wearying
me. I, too, wanted repose—I had no interests, no pleasures, out of
my husband's room.</p>
<p>Once, and once only, the placid surface of our lives was just gently
ruffled by an allusion to the past. Something that I accidentally said
reminded Eustace of our last interview at Major Fitz-David's house. He
referred, very delicately, to what I had then said of the Verdict
pronounced on him at the Trial; and he left me to infer that a word from
my lips, confirming what his mother had already told him, would quiet his
mind at once and forever.</p>
<p>My answer involved no embarrassments or difficulties; I could and did
honestly tell him that I had made his wishes my law. But it was hardly in
womanhood, I am afraid, to be satisfied with merely replying, and to leave
it there. I thought it due to me that Eustace too should concede
something, in the way of an assurance which might quiet <i>my</i> mind. As
usual with me, the words followed the impulse to speak them. "Eustace," I
asked, "are you quite cured of those cruel doubts which once made you
leave me?"</p>
<p>His answer (as he afterward said) made me blush with pleasure. "Ah,
Valeria, I should never have gone away if I had known you then as well as
I know you now!"</p>
<p>So the last shadows of distrust melted away out of our lives.</p>
<p>The very remembrance of the turmoil and the trouble of my past days in
London seemed now to fade from my memory. We were lovers again; we were
absorbed again in each other; we could almost fancy that our marriage
dated back once more to a day or two since. But one last victory over
myself was wanting to make my happiness complete. I still felt secret
longings, in those dangerous moments when I was left by myself, to know
whether the search for the torn letter had or had not taken place. What
wayward creatures we are! With everything that a woman could want to make
her happy, I was ready to put that happiness in peril rather than remain
ignorant of what was going on at Gleninch! I actually hailed the day when
my empty purse gave me an excuse for going to my banker's correspondent on
business, and so receiving any letters waiting for me which might be
placed in my hands.</p>
<p>I applied for my money without knowing what I was about; wondering all the
time whether Benjamin had written to me or not. My eyes wandered over the
desks and tables in the office, looking for letters furtively. Nothing of
the sort was visible. But a man appeared from an inner office: an ugly
man, who was yet beautiful to my eyes, for this sufficient reason—he
had a letter in his hand, and he said, "Is this for you, ma'am?"</p>
<p>A glance at the address showed me Benjamin's handwriting.</p>
<p>Had they tried the experiment of recovering the letter? and had they
failed?</p>
<p>Somebody put my money in my bag, and politely led me out to the little
hired carriage which was waiting for me at the door. I remember nothing
distinctly until I opened the letter on my way home. The first words told
me that the dust-heap had been examined, and that the fragments of the
torn letter had been found.</p>
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