<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIVB" id="CHAPTER_XIVB"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
<h3>THE ENTRY.</h3>
<p>It was very nearly midnight when Mowbray returned from his visit to Sir
Gilbert Harrington's. To his great surprise, he found Helen waiting for
him, even in the hall; for the moment she heard the door-bell she ran
out to meet him.</p>
<p>"Why are you up so late, Helen?" he exclaimed: "and for Heaven's sake
tell me what makes you look so pale.—Where is Rosalind?"</p>
<p>"She is in bed;—she has been in tears all day; I made her go to bed.
But, oh, Charles! my mother!—she has left the house."</p>
<p>"Gracious Heaven! what do you mean? Did she leave the house in anger?
Did she ask for me?"</p>
<p>"No, Charles: nor for me either!"</p>
<p>"And where on earth is she gone?"</p>
<p>"No one in the house has the remotest idea: it is impossible even to
guess. But she has taken Fanny and Curtis with her."</p>
<p>"When did she set out?"</p>
<p>"While Rosalind and I were eating our miserable melancholy dinner. Mr.
Cartwright, I find, called after you went, and was shown, as usual, to
her dressing-room; but he did not stay, Thomas says, above half an hour,
for he both let him in and out. Soon after he went away, Fanny was sent
for; and she and Curtis remained with her till a few minutes before
dinner-time. Curtis then went into the kitchen, it seems, and ordered a
tray to be taken for my mother and Fanny into the dressing-room, and the
only message sent to Rosalind and me was, that mamma was not well, and
begged not to be disturbed. Curtis must have seen the coachman and
settled every thing with him very secretly; for not one of the servants,
except the new stable-boy, knew that the carriage was ordered."</p>
<p>"How are we to interpret this, Helen?—Such a night too!—as dark as
pitch. Had I not known the way blindfold, I should never have got home.
I left Sir Gilbert in a rage because I would not sleep there;—but my
heart was heavy; I felt restless and anxious at the idea of remaining
from you during the night: I think it was a presentiment of this
dreadful news.—Oh! what a day has this been to me! So gay, so happy in
the morning! so supremely wretched before night!—I can remember nothing
that I said which could possibly have driven her to leave her home. What
can it mean, Helen?"</p>
<p>"Alas! Charles, I have no power to answer you. If asking questions could
avail, might I not ask what I have done? And yet, at the moment of her
leaving home for the night, she sent me word that I was <i>not to disturb
her</i>!"</p>
<p>"The roads too are so bad! Had she lamps, Helen?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes. Some of the maids, while shutting up the rooms upstairs, saw
the lights moving very rapidly towards the lodges."</p>
<p>"It is an inexplicable and very painful mystery. But go to bed, my
dearest Helen! you look most wretchedly ill and miserable."</p>
<p>"Ill?—No, I am not ill, Charles, but miserable; yes, more miserable
than I have ever felt since my poor father's death was first made known
to me."</p>
<p>The following morning brought no relief to the anxiety which this
strange absence occasioned. Rosalind joined the brother and sister at
breakfast, and her jaded looks more than confirmed Helen's report of the
preceding night. Charles, however, hardly saw her sufficiently to know
how she looked, for he carefully avoided her eyes; but if the gentlest
and most soothing tone of voice, and the expression of her almost tender
sympathy in the uneasiness he was enduring, could have consoled the
young man for all he had suffered and was suffering, he would have been
consoled.</p>
<p>The day passed heavily; but Helen looked so very ill and so very
unhappy, that Charles could not bear to leave her; and though a mutual
feeling of embarrassment between himself and Rosalind made his remaining
with them a very doubtful advantage, he never quitted them.</p>
<p>But it was quite in vain that he attempted to renew the occupations
which had made the last six weeks pass so delightfully. He began to
read; but Helen stopped him before the end of the page, by saying, "I
cannot think what is the reason of it, Charles, but I cannot comprehend
a single syllable of what you are reading."</p>
<p>Rosalind, blushing to the ears, and actually trembling from head to
foot, invited him to play at chess with her. Without replying a word, he
brought the table and set up the men before her; but the result of the
game was, that Charles gave Rosalind checkmate, and it was Helen only
who discovered it.</p>
<p>At an early hour they separated for the night; for the idea of waiting
for Mrs. Mowbray seemed equally painful to them all, and the morrow's
sun rose upon them only to bring a repetition of the sad and restless
hours of the day that was past. Truly might they have said they were
weary of conjecture; for so completely had they exhausted every
supposition to which the imagination of either of the party could reach,
without finding one on which common sense would permit them to repose,
that, by what seemed common consent, they ceased to hazard a single "may
be" more.</p>
<p>They were sitting with their coffee-cups before them, and Rosalind was
once more trying to fix the attention of Charles, as well as her own, to
the chess-board, when a lusty pull at the door-bell produced an alarm
which caused all the servants in the house to jump from their seats, and
one half of the chessmen to be overturned by the violent start of
Rosalind.</p>
<p>A few moments of breathless expectation followed. The house door was
opened, and the steps of several persons were heard in the hall, but no
voice accompanied them. Helen rose, but trembled so violently, that her
brother threw his arms round her and almost carried her to a sofa.
Rosalind stood beside her, looking very nearly as pale as herself; while
Charles made three steps forward and one back again, and then stood with
his hands clasped and his eyes fixed on the door in a manner which
showed that, in spite of his manhood, he was very nearly as much
agitated as his companions.</p>
<p>The next sound they heard was the voice of the lady of the mansion, and
she spoke loud and clear, as she laid her hand on the lock, and partly
opening the door, said addressing the butler, who with half a dozen
other servingmen had hurried to answer the bell, "Chivers! order all the
servants to meet me in this room immediately; and fail not to come
yourself."</p>
<p>Mowbray had again stepped forward upon hearing his mother's voice, but
stopped short to listen to her words; and having heard them, he turned
back again, and placing himself behind the sofa on which Helen sat,
leaned over it to whisper in her ear—"Let me not see you overcome,
Helen! and then I shall be able to bear any thing."</p>
<p>As he spoke, the door was thrown widely open, and a lady entered dressed
entirely in white and very deeply veiled, followed by Fanny Mowbray and
Mr. Cartwright.</p>
<p>A heavy sense of faintness seized on the heart of Helen, but she stood
up and endeavoured to advance; Rosalind, on the contrary, stepped back
and seated herself in the darkest corner of the room; while Charles
hastily walked towards the veiled lady, and in a voice thick from
emotion, exclaimed, "My mother!"</p>
<p>"Yes, Charles!" she replied; "your mother; but no longer a widowed,
desolate mother, shrinking before the unnatural rebuke of her son. I
would willingly have acted with greater appearance of deliberation, but
your conduct rendered this impossible. Mr. Cartwright! permit me to
present you to this hot-headed young man and his sister, as my husband
and their father."</p>
<p>This terrible but expected annunciation was received in total silence.
Mowbray seemed to think only of his sister; for without looking towards
the person thus solemnly presented to him, he turned to her, and taking
her by the arm, said, "Helen!—you had better sit down."</p>
<p>Fanny, who had entered the room immediately after her mother, looked
pale and frightened; but though she fixed a tearful eye on Helen, she
attempted not to approach her.</p>
<p>Mr. Cartwright himself stood beside his bride, or rather a little in
advance of her: his tall person drawn up to its greatest height.
Meekness, gentleness, and humility appeared to have his lips in their
keeping; but unquenchable triumph was running riot in his eyes, and
flashed upon every individual before him with a very unequivocal and
somewhat scornful air of authority.</p>
<p>This tableau endured till the door was again thrown open, and one by one
the servants entered, forming at last a long line completely across the
room. When all were in their marshalled places, which here, as
elsewhere, were in as exact conformity to the received order of
precedence as if they had been nobles at a coronation, the lady bride
again lifted her voice and addressed them thus: "I have called you all
together on the present occasion in order to inform you that Mr.
Cartwright is my husband and your master. I hope it is unnecessary for
me to say that every thing in the family must henceforward be submitted
solely to his pleasure, and that his commands must on all occasions
supersede those of every other person. I trust you will all show
yourselves sensible of the inestimable blessing I have bestowed upon you
in thus giving you a master who can lead you unto everlasting life; and
as I have married for the glory of Heaven, so I trust to receive its
blessing upon the same, and to see every member of my family advancing
daily under the guidance of their earthly master's hand to that state
which shall ensure them favour from their heavenly one in the life to
come. Amen! Repeat, I beg you—all of you repeat with me Amen!"</p>
<p>Though there were some throats there in which Amen would have stuck,
there were enough present besides these to get up a tolerably articulate
Amen.</p>
<p>Mr. Cartwright then stepped forward, and laying his hat and gloves on
the table, said aloud, "Let us pray!"</p>
<p>The obedient menials knelt before him,—all save one. This bold
exception was the housekeeper; a staid and sober person of fifty years
of age, who during the dozen years she had presided over the household,
had constantly evinced a strict and conscientious adherence to her
religious duties, and was, moreover, distinguished for her uniformly
respectful, quiet, and unobtrusive demeanour. But she now stepped
forward from her place at the head of the line, and said in a low voice,
but very slowly and distinctly, "I cannot, sir, on this occasion kneel
down to pray at your bidding. This is not a holy business at all, Mr.
Cartwright; and if you were to give me for salary the half of what you
are about to wring from the orphan children of my late master, (deceased
just eight calendar months ago,) I would not take it, sir, to live here
and witness what I cannot but look upon as great sin."</p>
<p>The good woman then gave a sad look at Helen and her brother, who were
standing together, dropped a respectful curtesy as her eyes rested on
them, and then left the room.</p>
<p>"Her sin be on her own head!" said Mr. Cartwright as he himself kneeled
down upon a footstool which stood near the table. He drew a cambric
handkerchief from his pocket, gave a preparatory "hem," and apparently
unconscious that Miss Torrington had darted from the remote corner in
which she had been ensconced and followed the housekeeper out of the
room, remained for a moment with his eyes fixed on Mowbray and Helen,
who remained standing.</p>
<p>"It would be a frightful mockery for us to kneel!" said Charles, drawing
his sister back to the sofa she had quitted. "Sit down with me, Helen;
and when we are alone we will pray for strength to endure as we ought to
do whatever calamity it is Heaven's will to try us with."</p>
<p>The bride was kneeling beside her husband; but she rose up and said,
"You are of age, Charles Mowbray, and too stiff-necked and wilful to
obey your mother: but you, Helen, I command to kneel."</p>
<p>She then replaced herself with much solemnity; and Helen knelt too,
while breathing a silent prayer to be forgiven for what she felt to be
profanation.</p>
<p>Charles stood for a moment irresolute, and then said, dropping on his
knees beside her, "Heaven will pardon me for your sake, dear
Helen,—even for kneeling at a service that my heart disclaims."</p>
<p>Mr. Cartwright hemmed again, and began.</p>
<p>"I thank thee! that by thy especial calling and election I am placed
where so many sinful souls are found, who through and by me may be shown
the path by which to escape the eternal pains of hell. But let thy
flames blaze and burn, O Lord! for those who neglect so great salvation!
Pour down upon them visibly thy avenging judgments, and let the earth
see it and be afraid. To me, O Lord! grant power, strength, and courage
to do the work that is set before me. Let me be a rod and a scourge to
the ungodly; and let no sinful weakness on the part of the wife whom
thou hast given me come across or overshadow the light received from
thee for the leading of the rebellious back unto thy paths. Bless my
virtuous wife; teach her to be meekly obedient to my word, and to thine
through me; and make her so to value the inestimable mercy of being
placed in the guiding hands of thy elected servant, that the miserable
earthly dross which she maketh over to me in exchange for the same may
seem but as dirt and filthiness in her sight! May such children as are
already born unto her be brought to a due sense of thy exceeding mercy
in thus putting it into their mother's heart to choose thine elected
servant to lead them through the dangerous paths of youth; make them
rejoice and be exceeding glad for the same, for so shall it be good in
thy sight!"</p>
<p>This terrible thanksgiving, with all its minute rehearsing of people and
of things, went on for a considerable time longer; but enough has been
given to show the spirit of it. As soon as it was ended, the new master
of the mansion rose from his knees, and waiting with an appearance of
some little impatience till his audience had all recovered their feet,
he turned to his bride with a smile of much complacency, and said,
"Mrs. Cartwright, my love, where shall I order Chivers to bring us some
refreshments? Probably the dining-room fire is out. Shall we sup here?"</p>
<p>"Wherever you please," answered the lady meekly, and blushing a little
at the sound of her new name pronounced for the first time before her
children.</p>
<p>This address and the answer to it were too much for Helen to endure with
any appearance of composure. She hid her face in her handkerchief as she
passed her mother, and giving Fanny, who was seated near the door, a
hasty kiss, left the room, followed by her brother.</p>
<p>Helen ran to the apartment of Rosalind; and Mowbray ran with her,
forgetful, as it seemed, of the indecorum of such an unauthorized
intrusion at any time, and more forgetful still of the icy barrier which
had seemed to exist between him and its fair inhabitant since the first
expression of his love and of his hope had been so cruelly chilled by
her light answer to it. But in this moment of new misery every thing was
forgotten but the common sorrow: they found Rosalind passionately
sobbing, and Mrs. Williams, the housekeeper, weeping very heartily
beside her.</p>
<p>"Oh, my Helen!" exclaimed the young heiress, springing forward to meet
her; "Williams says they cannot take my money from me. Will you let us
divide my fortune and live together?"</p>
<p>"Williams forgets your age, Rosalind," replied Helen: but though there
was pain in recalling this disqualifying truth, there was a glance of
pleasure too in the look with which Helen thanked her; and Charles, as
he gazed on her swollen eyes and working features, felt that, cruel as
she had been to him, she must ever be the dearest, as she was the best
and the loveliest, being in the world.</p>
<p>And there was assuredly comfort, even at such a moment, in the devoted
friendship of Rosalind, and in the respectful but earnest expressions of
affection from the good housekeeper; but the future prospects of Charles
and his sisters was one upon which it was impossible to look without
dismay.</p>
<p>"What ought we to do?" said Helen, appealing as much to her old servant
as her young friend. "Can it be our duty to live with this hypocritical
and designing wretch, and call him <i>father</i>?"</p>
<p>"No!" replied Rosalind vehemently. "To do so would be shame and sin."</p>
<p>"But where can the poor girls take refuge? You forget, Miss Torrington,
that they are penniless," said Charles.</p>
<p>"But I am not penniless, sir," replied Rosalind, looking at him with an
expression of anger that proceeded wholly from his formal mode of
address, but which he interpreted as the result of a manner assumed to
keep him at a distance.</p>
<p>"May I venture to say one word, my dear children, before I take my leave
of you?" said Mrs. Williams.</p>
<p>"Oh yes," said Helen, taking her by the hand; "I wish you would give us
your advice, Williams: we are too young to decide for ourselves at such
a dreadful moment as this."</p>
<p>"And for that very reason, my dear Miss Helen, I would have you wait a
little before you decide at all. Master Charles,—I beg his pardon—Mr.
Mowbray,—is altogether a different consideration; and if so be it is
any way possible for him, I think he should leave, and wait for the end
elsewhere: but for you and poor Miss Fanny, my dear young lady, I do
think you must learn to bear and forbear till such time as you may leave
your misguided mamma, and perhaps accept this noble young lady's offer,
and share her great fortune with her,—for a time I mean, Miss
Helen,—for it can't be but my mistress will come to her senses sooner
or later, and then she will remember she is a mother; and she will
remember too, take my word for it, the noble-hearted but too confiding
gentleman, who was your father."</p>
<p>Tears flowed from every eye, for poor Mowbray was no exception, at this
allusion to the beloved father, the gentle master, and the friendly
guardian; but this did not prevent the good woman's words from having
their full weight,—it rather added to it, for it brought back the vivid
remembrance of one in whose temper there was no gall.</p>
<p>"It will be hard to bear, Williams," replied Helen; "but I do indeed
believe that you are right, and that, for a time at least, this cruelly
changed house must be our home. But do you know that in the midst of all
our misery, I have one comfort,—I think poor Fanny will be restored to
us. Did you see the expression of her lovely face as she looked at us,
Charles? Even you did not look more miserable."</p>
<p>"And if that be so, Miss Helen, it may atone for much; for it was a
grievous sight to see the poor innocent child taking all Mr.
Cartwright's brass for gold. If she has got a peep at his cloven foot, I
shall leave you almost with a light heart—for I have grieved over her."</p>
<p>"I will take all the comfort I can, Williams, from your words, and will
follow your counsel too, upon one condition; and that is, nobody must
prevent my setting off betimes to-morrow morning, as you and I did,
Rosalind, once before, for Oakley. If my dear godmother advises me as
you do, Williams, I will return and quietly put my neck into this
hateful yoke, and so remain till Heaven shall see fit to release me."</p>
<p>"Heaven knows, I shall not oppose that plan," said Rosalind eagerly;
"for to my judgment, it is the very best you can pursue."</p>
<p>"Indeed I think so," added Charles; "and, dark and dismal as the
mornings are, I would advise you, Helen, to set out before the time
arrives for either accepting or refusing the general summons to join the
family breakfast-table."</p>
<p>"And may I go too?" said Rosalind with a glance half reproachful at
Charles for the manner in which he seemed to avoid speaking to her.</p>
<p>"May you, Rosalind?" cried Helen. "For pity's sake, do not fancy it
possible that I can do anything without you now: I should feel that you
were forsaking me."</p>
<p>"I never forsake any one that I have ever loved," said Rosalind with
emotion, "whatever you or any one else may think to the contrary."</p>
<p>"Well, then, we will all three go together. But you little thought,
Rosalind, when you first came here, that you would have to trudge
through muddy lanes, and under wintry skies for want of a carriage: but
on this occasion, at least, we will not ask Mr. Cartwright to permit us
the use of one of his."</p>
<p>"Then go to bed, my dear young ladies," said Mrs. Williams, "that you
may be early up to-morrow: and let me hear from you, Miss Helen. I shall
not go from Wrexhill, at least not till I know a little how you will
settle every thing. I will take Mrs. Freeman's pretty little rooms, that
you always admire so much, Master Charles; and there I will stay for the
present."</p>
<p>"Oh! that beautiful little cottage that they call the Mowbray Arms!"
said Rosalind. "How we shall envy her, Helen!"</p>
<p>The party then separated; for the good housekeeper most strenuously
opposed Rosalind's proposition of passing the night with her friend.</p>
<p>"You would neither of you sleep a wink, ladies, if you bide together.
And now, though there is more sorrow with you than such young hearts
ought to have, yet you will sleep when you have nobody to talk to about
it; for what makes old folks wake and watch, will often made young folks
sleep."</p>
<p>And the good woman's prediction proved true; though the sleep that
followed the tremendous blow they had received was too feverish and full
of dreams to make the waking feel like that delightful return to new
life and new joy which the waking of the young should ever be.</p>
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