<h2>CHAPTER XLIV</h2>
<p>October 24th.—Thank heaven, I am free and safe at
last. Early we rose, swiftly and quietly dressed, slowly
and stealthily descended to the hall, where Benson stood ready
with a light, to open the door and fasten it after us. We
were obliged to let one man into our secret on account of the
boxes, &c. All the servants were but too well
acquainted with their master’s conduct, and either Benson
or John would have been willing to serve me; but as the former
was more staid and elderly, and a crony of Rachel’s
besides, I of course directed her to make choice of him as her
assistant and confidant on the occasion, as far as necessity
demanded, I only hope he may not be brought into trouble thereby,
and only wish I could reward him for the perilous service he was
so ready to undertake. I slipped two guineas into his hand,
by way of remembrance, as he stood in the doorway, holding the
candle to light our departure, with a tear in his honest grey
eye, and a host of good wishes depicted on his solemn
countenance. Alas! I could offer no more: I had
barely sufficient remaining for the probable expenses of the
journey.</p>
<p>What trembling joy it was when the little wicket closed behind
us, as we issued from the park! Then, for one moment, I
paused, to inhale one draught of that cool, bracing air, and
venture one look back upon the house. All was dark and
still: no light glimmered in the windows, no wreath of smoke
obscured the stars that sparkled above it in the frosty
sky. As I bade farewell for ever to that place, the scene
of so much guilt and misery, I felt glad that I had not left it
before, for now there was no doubt about the propriety of such a
step—no shadow of remorse for him I left behind.
There was nothing to disturb my joy but the fear of detection;
and every step removed us further from the chance of that.</p>
<p>We had left Grassdale many miles behind us before the round
red sun arose to welcome our deliverance; and if any inhabitant
of its vicinity had chanced to see us then, as we bowled along on
the top of the coach, I scarcely think they would have suspected
our identity. As I intend to be taken for a widow, I
thought it advisable to enter my new abode in mourning: I was,
therefore, attired in a plain black silk dress and mantle, a
black veil (which I kept carefully over my face for the first
twenty or thirty miles of the journey), and a black silk bonnet,
which I had been constrained to borrow of Rachel, for want of
such an article myself. It was not in the newest fashion,
of course; but none the worse for that, under present
circumstances. Arthur was clad in his plainest clothes, and
wrapped in a coarse woollen shawl; and Rachel was muffled in a
grey cloak and hood that had seen better days, and gave her more
the appearance of an ordinary though decent old woman, than of a
lady’s-maid.</p>
<p>Oh, what delight it was to be thus seated aloft, rumbling
along the broad, sunshiny road, with the fresh morning breeze in
my face, surrounded by an unknown country, all
smiling—cheerfully, gloriously smiling in the yellow lustre
of those early beams; with my darling child in my arms, almost as
happy as myself, and my faithful friend beside me: a prison and
despair behind me, receding further, further back at every
clatter of the horses’ feet; and liberty and hope
before! I could hardly refrain from praising God aloud for
my deliverance, or astonishing my fellow-passengers by some
surprising outburst of hilarity.</p>
<p>But the journey was a very long one, and we were all weary
enough before the close of it. It was far into the night
when we reached the town of L—, and still we were seven
miles from our journey’s end; and there was no more
coaching, nor any conveyance to be had, except a common cart, and
that with the greatest difficulty, for half the town was in
bed. And a dreary ride we had of it, that last stage of the
journey, cold and weary as we were; sitting on our boxes, with
nothing to cling to, nothing to lean against, slowly dragged and
cruelly shaken over the rough, hilly roads. But Arthur was
asleep in Rachel’s lap, and between us we managed pretty
well to shield him from the cold night air.</p>
<p>At last we began to ascend a terribly steep and stony lane,
which, in spite of the darkness, Rachel said she remembered well:
she had often walked there with me in her arms, and little
thought to come again so many years after, under such
circumstances as the present. Arthur being now awakened by
the jolting and the stoppages, we all got out and walked.
We had not far to go; but what if Frederick should not have
received my letter? or if he should not have had time to prepare
the rooms for our reception, and we should find them all dark,
damp, and comfortless, destitute of food, fire, and furniture,
after all our toil?</p>
<p>At length the grim, dark pile appeared before us. The
lane conducted us round by the back way. We entered the
desolate court, and in breathless anxiety surveyed the ruinous
mass. Was it all blackness and desolation? No; one
faint red glimmer cheered us from a window where the lattice was
in good repair. The door was fastened, but after due
knocking and waiting, and some parleying with a voice from an
upper window, we were admitted by an old woman who had been
commissioned to air and keep the house till our arrival, into a
tolerably snug little apartment, formerly the scullery of the
mansion, which Frederick had now fitted up as a kitchen.
Here she procured us a light, roused the fire to a cheerful
blaze, and soon prepared a simple repast for our refreshment;
while we disencumbered ourselves of our travelling-gear, and took
a hasty survey of our new abode. Besides the kitchen, there
were two bedrooms, a good-sized parlour, and another smaller one,
which I destined for my studio, all well aired and seemingly in
good repair, but only partly furnished with a few old articles,
chiefly of ponderous black oak, the veritable ones that had been
there before, and which had been kept as antiquarian relics in my
brother’s present residence, and now, in all haste,
transported back again.</p>
<p>The old woman brought my supper and Arthur’s into the
parlour, and told me, with all due formality, that ‘the
master desired his compliments to Mrs. Graham, and he had
prepared the rooms as well as he could upon so short a notice;
but he would do himself the pleasure of calling upon her
to-morrow, to receive her further commands.’</p>
<p>I was glad to ascend the stern-looking stone staircase, and
lie down in the gloomy, old-fashioned bed, beside my little
Arthur. He was asleep in a minute; but, weary as I was, my
excited feelings and restless cogitations kept me awake till dawn
began to struggle with the darkness; but sleep was sweet and
refreshing when it came, and the waking was delightful beyond
expression. It was little Arthur that roused me, with his
gentle kisses. He was here, then, safely clasped in my
arms, and many leagues away from his unworthy father! Broad
daylight illumined the apartment, for the sun was high in heaven,
though obscured by rolling masses of autumnal vapour.</p>
<p>The scene, indeed, was not remarkably cheerful in itself,
either within or without. The large bare room, with its
grim old furniture, the narrow, latticed windows, revealing the
dull, grey sky above and the desolate wilderness below, where the
dark stone walls and iron gate, the rank growth of grass and
weeds, and the hardy evergreens of preternatural forms, alone
remained to tell that there had been once a garden,—and the
bleak and barren fields beyond might have struck me as gloomy
enough at another time; but now, each separate object seemed to
echo back my own exhilarating sense of hope and freedom:
indefinite dreams of the far past and bright anticipations of the
future seemed to greet me at every turn. I should rejoice
with more security, to be sure, had the broad sea rolled between
my present and my former homes; but surely in this lonely spot I
might remain unknown; and then I had my brother here to cheer my
solitude with his occasional visits.</p>
<p>He came that morning; and I have had several interviews with
him since; but he is obliged to be very cautious when and how he
comes; not even his servants or his best friends must know of his
visits to Wildfell—except on such occasions as a landlord
might be expected to call upon a stranger tenant—lest
suspicion should be excited against me, whether of the truth or
of some slanderous falsehood.</p>
<p>I have now been here nearly a fortnight, and, but for one
disturbing care, the haunting dread of discovery, I am
comfortably settled in my new home: Frederick has supplied me
with all requisite furniture and painting materials: Rachel has
sold most of my clothes for me, in a distant town, and procured
me a wardrobe more suitable to my present position: I have a
second-hand piano, and a tolerably well-stocked bookcase in my
parlour; and my other room has assumed quite a professional,
business-like appearance already. I am working hard to
repay my brother for all his expenses on my account; not that
there is the slightest necessity for anything of the kind, but it
pleases me to do so: I shall have so much more pleasure in my
labour, my earnings, my frugal fare, and household economy, when
I know that I am paying my way honestly, and that what little I
possess is legitimately all my own; and that no one suffers for
my folly—in a pecuniary way at least. I shall make
him take the last penny I owe him, if I can possibly effect it
without offending him too deeply. I have a few pictures
already done, for I told Rachel to pack up all I had; and she
executed her commission but too well—for among the rest,
she put up a portrait of Mr. Huntingdon that I had painted in the
first year of my marriage. It struck me with dismay, at the
moment, when I took it from the box and beheld those eyes fixed
upon me in their mocking mirth, as if exulting still in his power
to control my fate, and deriding my efforts to escape.</p>
<p>How widely different had been my feelings in painting that
portrait to what they now were in looking upon it! How I
had studied and toiled to produce something, as I thought, worthy
of the original! what mingled pleasure and dissatisfaction I had
had in the result of my labours!—pleasure for the likeness
I had caught; dissatisfaction, because I had not made it handsome
enough. Now, I see no beauty in it—nothing pleasing
in any part of its expression; and yet it is far handsomer and
far more agreeable—far less repulsive I should rather
say—than he is now: for these six years have wrought almost
as great a change upon himself as on my feelings regarding
him. The frame, however, is handsome enough; it will serve
for another painting. The picture itself I have not
destroyed, as I had first intended; I have put it aside; not, I
think, from any lurking tenderness for the memory of past
affection, nor yet to remind me of my former folly, but chiefly
that I may compare my son’s features and countenance with
this, as he grows up, and thus be enabled to judge how much or
how little he resembles his father—if I may be allowed to
keep him with me still, and never to behold that father’s
face again—a blessing I hardly dare reckon upon.</p>
<p>It seems Mr. Huntingdon is making every exertion to discover
the place of my retreat. He has been in person to
Staningley, seeking redress for his grievances—expecting to
hear of his victims, if not to find them there—and has told
so many lies, and with such unblushing coolness, that my uncle
more than half believes him, and strongly advocates my going back
to him and being friends again. But my aunt knows better:
she is too cool and cautious, and too well acquainted with both
my husband’s character and my own to be imposed upon by any
specious falsehoods the former could invent. But he does
not want me back; he wants my child; and gives my friends to
understand that if I prefer living apart from him, he will
indulge the whim and let me do so unmolested, and even settle a
reasonable allowance on me, provided I will immediately deliver
up his son. But heaven help me! I am not going to
sell my child for gold, though it were to save both him and me
from starving: it would be better that he should die with me than
that he should live with his father.</p>
<p>Frederick showed me a letter he had received from that
gentleman, full of cool impudence such as would astonish any one
who did not know him, but such as, I am convinced, none would
know better how to answer than my brother. He gave me no
account of his reply, except to tell me that he had not
acknowledged his acquaintance with my place of refuge, but rather
left it to be inferred that it was quite unknown to him, by
saying it was useless to apply to him, or any other of my
relations, for information on the subject, as it appeared I had
been driven to such extremity that I had concealed my retreat
even from my best friends; but that if he had known it, or should
at any time be made aware of it, most certainly Mr. Huntingdon
would be the last person to whom he should communicate the
intelligence; and that he need not trouble himself to bargain for
the child, for he (Frederick) fancied he knew enough of his
sister to enable him to declare, that wherever she might be, or
however situated, no consideration would induce her to deliver
him up.</p>
<p>30th.—Alas! my kind neighbours will not let me
alone. By some means they have ferreted me out, and I have
had to sustain visits from three different families, all more or
less bent upon discovering who and what I am, whence I came, and
why I have chosen such a home as this. Their society is
unnecessary to me, to say the least, and their curiosity annoys
and alarms me: if I gratify it, it may lead to the ruin of my
son, and if I am too mysterious it will only excite their
suspicions, invite conjecture, and rouse them to greater
exertions—and perhaps be the means of spreading my fame
from parish to parish, till it reach the ears of some one who
will carry it to the Lord of Grassdale Manor.</p>
<p>I shall be expected to return their calls, but if, upon
inquiry, I find that any of them live too far away for Arthur to
accompany me, they must expect in vain for a while, for I cannot
bear to leave him, unless it be to go to church, and I have not
attempted that yet: for—it may be foolish weakness, but I
am under such constant dread of his being snatched away, that I
am never easy when he is not by my side; and I fear these nervous
terrors would so entirely disturb my devotions, that I should
obtain no benefit from the attendance. I mean, however, to
make the experiment next Sunday, and oblige myself to leave him
in charge of Rachel for a few hours. It will be a hard
task, but surely no imprudence; and the vicar has been to scold
me for my neglect of the ordinances of religion. I had no
sufficient excuse to offer, and I promised, if all were well, he
should see me in my pew next Sunday; for I do not wish to be set
down as an infidel; and, besides, I know I should derive great
comfort and benefit from an occasional attendance at public
worship, if I could only have faith and fortitude to compose my
thoughts in conformity with the solemn occasion, and forbid them
to be for ever dwelling on my absent child, and on the dreadful
possibility of finding him gone when I return; and surely God in
His mercy will preserve me from so severe a trial: for my
child’s own sake, if not for mine, He will not suffer him
to be torn away.</p>
<p>November 3rd.—I have made some further acquaintance with
my neighbours. The fine gentleman and beau of the parish
and its vicinity (in his own estimation, at least) is a young . .
. .</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>Here it ended. The rest was torn away. How cruel,
just when she was going to mention me! for I could not doubt it
was your humble servant she was about to mention, though not very
favourably, of course. I could tell that, as well by those
few words as by the recollection of her whole aspect and
demeanour towards me in the commencement of our
acquaintance. Well! I could readily forgive her
prejudice against me, and her hard thoughts of our sex in
general, when I saw to what brilliant specimens her experience
had been limited.</p>
<p>Respecting me, however, she had long since seen her error, and
perhaps fallen into another in the opposite extreme: for if, at
first, her opinion of me had been lower than I deserved, I was
convinced that now my deserts were lower than her opinion; and if
the former part of this continuation had been torn away to avoid
wounding my feelings, perhaps the latter portion had been removed
for fear of ministering too much to my self-conceit. At any
rate, I would have given much to have seen it all—to have
witnessed the gradual change, and watched the progress of her
esteem and friendship for me, and whatever warmer feeling she
might have; to have seen how much of love there was in her
regard, and how it had grown upon her in spite of her virtuous
resolutions and strenuous exertions to—but no, I had no
right to see it: all this was too sacred for any eyes but her
own, and she had done well to keep it from me.</p>
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