<h1><SPAN name="b5">BOOK V</SPAN><br/> HER DELIVERANCE</h1>
<h2><SPAN name="b5c1">CHAPTER I</SPAN><br/> LOUISA UNCONTROLLED</h2>
<h3>I</h3>
<p>Hilda, after a long railway journey, was bathing her face, arms, and
neck at the large double washstand in the large double bedroom on the
second floor of No. 59 Preston Street. At the back of the washstand was an
unused door which gave into a small bedroom occupied by the youngest Miss
Watchett. George Cannon came up quietly behind her. She pretended not to
hear him. He put his hands lightly on her wet arms. Smiling with
condescending indulgence, half to herself, she still pretended to ignore
him, and continued her toilet.</p>
<p>The return from the honeymoon, which she had feared, had accomplished
itself quite simply and easily. She had feared the return, because only
upon the return was the marriage to be formally acknowledged and published.
It had been obviously impossible to announce, during the strenuous summer
season, the engagement of the landlord to a young woman who lived under the
same roof with him. The consequences of such an indiscretion would have
been in various ways embarrassing. Hence not a word was said. Nor were
definite plans for the wedding made until George remarked one evening that
he would like to be married at Chichester, Chichester being the name of his
new private hotel. Which exhibition of sentimentality had both startled and
touched Hilda. Chichester, however, had to be renounced, owing to the
difficulty of residence. The subject having been thus fairly broached,
George had pursued it, and one day somewhat casually stated that he had
taken a room in Lewes and meant to sleep there every night for the term
imposed by the law. Less than three weeks later, Hilda had inobtrusively
departed from No. 59, the official account being that she was to take a
holiday with friends after the fatigues of August and early September. She
left the train at Lewes, and there, in the presence of strangers, was
married to George Cannon, who had quitted Brighton two days earlier and was
supposed to be in London on business. Even Sarah Gailey, though her health
had improved, did not assist at the wedding. Sarah, sole depositary of the
secret, had to remain in charge of No. 59.</p>
<p>A strange wedding! Not a single wedding present, except those
interchanged by the principals! Nor had any of the problems raised by the
marriage been solved, or attacked. The future of Sarah Gailey, for example!
Was Sarah to go on living with them? It was inconceivable, and yet the
converse was also inconceivable. Sarah had said nothing, and nothing had
been said to Sarah. Matters were to settle themselves. It had not even been
decided which room Mr. and Mrs. Cannon should inhabit as man and wife. It
was almost certain that, in the dead period between the popular summer
season and the fashionable autumn season, there would be several bedrooms
empty. Hilda, like George, did not want to bother with a lot of tedious
details, important or unimportant. The attitude of each was: "Let me get
married first, and then I'll see to all that."</p>
<p>Thus had the return been formidable to Hilda. All the way from Ireland
she had been saying to herself: "I shall have to go up the steps, and into
the house, and be spoken to as Mrs. Cannon! And then there'll be Sarah...!"
But the entry into the house had produced no terror. Everywhere George's
adroitness had been wonderful, extraordinarily comforting and reassuring,
and nowhere more so than in the vestibule of No. 59. The tone in which he
had said to Louisa, "Take Mrs. Cannon's handbag, Louisa," had been a marvel
of ease. Louisa had incontestably blenched, for the bizarre Sarah, who
conserved in Brighton the inmost spirit of the Five Towns, had thought fit
to tell the servants nothing whatever. But the trained veteran in Louisa
had instantly recovered, and she had replied "Yes, sir," with a simplicity
which proved her to be the equal of George Cannon.... The worst was over
for Hilda. And the next moments were made smooth by reason of a great piece
of news which, forcing Sarah Gailey to communicate it at once, monopolized
attention, and so entirely relieved the bride's self-consciousness.</p>
<p>Florence Bagster, having insolently quarrelled with her mistress, had
left her service without notice. Mr. Boutwood had also gone, and the
connection between the two departures was only too apparent, not merely to
Sarah, but also to the three Miss Watchetts, who had recently arrived.
Florence, who could but whisper, had shouted at her mistress. Little,
flushing, modest Florrie, who yesterday in the Five Towns was an infant,
had compromised herself with a fat widower certainly old enough to be her
father. And the widower, the friend of the house, had had so little regard
for the feelings of the house that he had not hesitated to flaunt with
Florrie in the town. It was known that they were more or less together, and
that he stood between Florrie and the world.</p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>"I suppose I'd better write at once to her mother--or perhaps her aunt;
her aunt's got more sense," said Hilda, as she dropped the sponge and
groped for a towel, her eyes half blinded.</p>
<p>In moving she had escaped from his hands.</p>
<p>"What do you say?" she asked, having heard a vague murmur through the
towel.</p>
<p>"I say you can write if you like." George spoke with a careless
smile.</p>
<p>Now, facing her, he put his hands on her damp shoulders. She looked up
at him over the towel, leaning her head forward, and suspending action. Her
nose was about a foot from his. She saw, as she had seen a hundred times,
every detail of his large, handsome and yet time-worn face, every hair of
his impressive moustache, all the melting shades of colour in his dark
eyes. His charm was coarse and crude, but he was very skilful, and there
was something about his experienced, weather-beaten, slightly depraved air,
which excited her. She liked to feel young and girlish before him; she
liked to feel that with him, alone of all men, her modesty availed nothing.
She was beginning to realize her power over him, and the extent of it. It
was a power miraculous and mysterious, never claimed by her, and never
admitted by him save in glance and gesture. This power lay in the fact that
she was indispensable to him. He was not her slave--she might indeed have
been considered the human chattel--but he was the slave of his need of her.
He loved her. In him she saw what love was; she had seen it more and more
clearly ever since the day of their engagement. She was both proud and
ashamed of her power. He did not possess a similar power over herself. She
was fond of him, perhaps getting fonder; but his domination of her senses
was already nearly at an end. She had passed through painful, shattering
ecstasies of bliss, hours unforgettable, hours which she knew could never
recur. And she was left sated and unsatisfied. So that by virtue of this
not yet quite bitter disillusion, she was coming to regard herself as his
superior, as being less naïve than he, as being even essentially older
than he. And in speaking to him sometimes she would put on a grave and
precociously sapient mien, as if to indicate that she had access to sources
of wisdom for ever closed to him.</p>
<p>"But don't you think we <i>ought</i> to write?" she frowned.</p>
<p>"Certainly if you like! It won't do any good. You don't suppose her aunt
will come down here, do you? And even if she did.... There it is, and there
you are!"</p>
<p>"Just let me wipe my shoulders, will you?" she said.</p>
<p>He lifted his hands obediently, and as they were damp he rubbed them on
the loose corner of the towel.</p>
<p>"Well," he said, "I must be off, I reckon."</p>
<p>"Shall you see Mr. Boutwood?"</p>
<p>"I might.... I know where to catch him, I fancy."</p>
<p>She seemed to have a glimpse of her husband's separate life in the
town--masculine haunts and habits of which she knew nothing and would
always know nothing. And the large existence of the male made her
envious.</p>
<p>"Going to see him now?"</p>
<p>"Well, yes." George smiled roguishly.</p>
<p>"What shall you say to him?"</p>
<p>"What can I say to him? No business of mine, you know, except that we've
lost a decent servant. But I expect that's Sarah's fault. She's no use
whatever with servants, now, Sarah isn't."</p>
<p>"<i>I</i> shall never speak to Mr. Boutwood again!" Hilda exclaimed
almost passionately.</p>
<p>"Oh, but--"</p>
<p>"His behaviour is simply scandalous. It's really wicked. A man like
him!"</p>
<p>George put his lips out deprecatingly. "You may depend she asked for
it," he said.</p>
<p>"What?"</p>
<p>"She asked for it," he repeated with convinced firmness, and looked at
her steadily.</p>
<p>A flush slowly spread over her face and neck, and she lowered her gaze.
In her breast pride and shame were again mingled.</p>
<p>"You keep your hair on, littl'un," said George soothingly, and kissed
her. Then he took his hat and stick, which were with a lot of other things
on the broad white counterpane, and went off stylishly.</p>
<p>"You don't understand," she threw at him with a delicious side-glance of
reproof as he opened the door. She reproached herself for the deceiving
coquetry of the glance.</p>
<p>"Don't I?" he returned airily.</p>
<p>He was quite sure that nothing escaped his intelligence. To Hilda,
shocked by the coarseness and the obtuseness which evidently characterized
his attitude, now as on other occasions, this self-confidence was
desolating; it was ominously sinister.</p>
<h3>III</h3>
<p>She was alone with her image in the mirror, and the image was precisely
the same that she had always seen; she could detect no change in it
whatever. She liked the sensation of being alone and at home in this room
which before she had only entered as an overseer and which she had never
expected to occupy. She savoured the intimacy of the room--the necessaries
on the washstand, the superb tortoiseshell brushes, bought by George in
Dublin, on the dressing-table, the open trunks, George's clothes on a
chair, and her own flimsy trifles on the bed. Through the glass she saw,
behind her image, the image of the closed door; and then she turned round
to look at the real door and to assure herself that it was closed.
Childish! And yet...! George had shut the door. She remembered the noise of
its shutting. And that noise, in her memory, seemed to have transformed
itself into the sound of fate's deep bell. She could hear the clang, sharp,
definite. She realized suddenly and with awe that her destiny was fixed
hereafter. She had come to the end of her adventures and her vague dreams.
For she had always dreamt vaguely of an enlarged liberty, of wide
interests, and of original activities--such as no woman to her knowledge
had ever had. She had always compared the life of men with the life of
women, and admitted and resented the inferiority of the latter. She had had
glimpses, once, of the male world; she had made herself the only woman
shorthand-writer in the Five Towns, and one of the earliest in
England--dizzy thought! But the glimpses had been vain and tantalizing. She
had been in the male world, but not of it, as though encircled in a glass
ball which neither she nor the males could shatter. She had had money,
freedom, and ambition, and somehow, through ignorance or through lack of
imagination or opportunity, had been unable to employ them. She had never
known what she wanted. The vision had never been clear. And she reflected:
"I wonder if my daughter, supposing I had one, would be as different from
me as I am from my mother!"</p>
<p>She could recall with intense vividness the moment when she had first
really contemplated marriage. It was in the steam-tram after having seen
Edwin Clayhanger at the door of Clayhanger's shop. And she could recall the
sense of relief with which she had envisaged a union with some man stronger
and more experienced than herself. In the relief was a certain secret
shame, as though it implied cowardice, a shrinking away from the challenge
of life and from the call of a proud instinct. In the steam-tram she had
foreseen the time when she would belong utterly to some man, surrendering
to him without reserve, the time when she would be a woman. And the thing
had come about! Only yesterday she had been a little girl entering George
Cannon's office with timid audacity to consult him. Only yesterday George
Cannon had been a strange, formidable man, indefinitely older and
infinitely cleverer than she. And now they were man and wife! Now she was
his! Now she profoundly knew him, and he was no longer formidable, in spite
of his force. She had a recondite dominion over him. She guessed herself to
be his superior in certain qualities. He was revealed to her; she felt that
she was not revealed to him, and that in spite of her wholehearted
surrender she had not given all because of his blindness to what she
offered. She could not completely respect him. But she was his. She was
naught apart from him. She was the wife. His existence went on mainly as
before; hers was diverted, narrowed--fundamentally altered. Never now could
she be enfranchised into the male world!</p>
<h3>IV</h3>
<p>She slipped her arms into a new bodice purchased in London on the second
day of the marriage. Blushing, she had tried on that bodice in a great shop
in Oxford Street; then it was that she had first said 'my husband' in
public. All that day she had felt so weak and shy and light and helpless
and guilty that she had positively not known what she was doing; she had
moved in a phantom world. Only, she had perceived quite steadily and
practically that she must give more attention to her clothes. Her old
contempt for finery expired in the glory of her new condition. And now, as
she settled the elegant bodice on her shoulders, and fastened it, and
patted her hair, and picked up the skirt and poised it over her head, she
had a stern, preoccupied look, as of one who said: "This that I am doing is
important. I must not be hurried in doing it. It is vital that I should
look well and that no detail of my appearance should jar." Already she
could see herself standing before George when he returned for the meal--the
first meal which they would take together in the home. She could feel his
eyes on her: she could anticipate her own mood--in which would be mingled
pride, misgiving, pleasure, helplessness, abandonment--and the secret
condescension towards him of her inmost soul.</p>
<p>All alone in the room she could feel his hands again on her shoulders: a
mysterious excitation.... She was a married woman. She had the right to
discuss Florrie's case with aloof disdain, if she chose. Her respectability
was unassailable. None might penetrate beyond the fact of her marriage. And
yet, far within her, she was ashamed. She dimly admitted once more, as on
several occasions previous to her marriage, that she had dishonoured an
ideal. Her conscience would not chime with the conscience of society. She
thought, as she prepared with pleasurable expectancy for her husband: "This
is not right. This cannot lead to good. It must lead to evil. I am bound to
suffer for it. The whole thing is wrong. I know it and I have always known
it."</p>
<p>Already she was disappointed with her marriage. Amid the fevers of
bodily appetite she could clearly distinguish the beginning of lassitude;
she no longer saw her husband as a romantic and baffling figure; she had
explored and chartered his soul, and not all his excellences could atone
for his earthliness. She wondered grimly where and under what circumstances
he had acquired the adroitness which had charmed and still did charm her.
She saw in front of her a vista of days and years in which ennui would
probably increase and joy diminish. And she put her shoulders back
defiantly, and thought: "Well, here I am anyhow! I wanted him and I've got
him. What I have to go through I shall go through!"</p>
<p>And all the time, floating like vapour over these depths was a sheeny
mood of bright expectation and immediate naïve content. And she said
gaily that she must write at once to Janet Orgreave to announce the
marriage, and that her mother's uncle up in the north must also be
informed.</p>
<h3>V</h3>
<p>Unusual phenomena made themselves apparent on the top staircase: raised
voices which Hilda could hear more and more plainly, even through the shut
door. At No. 59, in the off-seasons, nobody ever spoke in a loud tone,
particularly on the staircase, except perhaps Florrie when, in conversation
with Louisa, she thought she was out of all other hearing. Hilda's voice
was very clear and penetrating, but not loud. George Cannon's voice in
public places such as the staircase had an almost caressing softness. The
Watchetts cooed like faint doves, thereby expressing the delicate
refinement of their virginal natures. The cook's voice was unknown beyond
the kitchen. And nobody was more grimly self-controlled in speech than
Sarah Gailey and Louisa. These two--and especially Louisa--seemed generally
to be restraining with ease tremendous secret forces of bitterness and
contempt. And now it was just these two who were noisy, and becoming
noisier, to the dismay of a scandalized house. Owing to some accident or
negligence the secret forces had got loose.</p>
<p>Hilda shook her head. It was clear that the problem of Sarah Gailey
would have to be tackled and settled very soon. The poor woman's physical
sufferings had without doubt reacted detrimentally on her temperament and
temper. She used to be quite extraordinarily adroit in the directing of
servants, though her manner to them never approached geniality. But she had
quarrelled with Florrie, and now she was breaking the peace with Louisa! It
was preposterous and annoying, and it could not be allowed to continue.
Hilda was not seriously alarmed, because she had the most perfect
confidence in George's skill to restore order and calm, and to conquer
every difficulty of management; and she also put a certain trust in
herself; but the menacing and vicious accents of Louisa startled her, and
she sympathized with Sarah Gailey, for whom humiliation was assuredly in
store--if not immediately at the tongue of Louisa, then later when George
would have to hint the truth to her about her decadence.</p>
<p>The dispute on the attic landing appeared to be concerning linen which
Louisa had omitted to remove from Florrie's abandoned couch in her
kennel.</p>
<p>"I ain't going to touch her sheets, not for nobody!" Louisa proclaimed
savagely. And by that single phrase, with its implications, she laid
unconsciously bare the sordid baseness of her ageing heart; she exposed by
her mere intonation of the word 'sheets' all the foulness of jealousy and
thwarted salacity that was usually concealed beneath her tight dress and
neat apron, and beneath her prim gestures and deferential tones. Her
undisciplined voice rang spinsterishly down the staircase, outraging it,
defiling the whole interior.</p>
<p>Hilda as silently as possible unlatched the door of the bedroom, and
stood with ear cocked. Should she issue forth and interfere, or should she
remain discreetly where she was? Almost in the same instant she heard the
cautious unlatching of the drawing-room door; two of the Watchetts were
there listening also. And there came up from the ground floor a faint
giggle. The cook, at the kitchen door, was enjoying herself and giggling
moral support to her colleague. The giggle proved that the master was out,
that the young mistress had not yet established a definite position, and
that during recent weeks the old mistress must have been steadily
dissipating her own authority. Hilda peered along the landing from her
lair, and upstairs and downstairs; she could see nothing but senseless
carpets and brass rods and steps and banisters; but she knew that the
entire household--she had the sensation that the very house itself--was
alert and eavesdropping.</p>
<p>There was a hesitating movement on the unseen stairs above, and then
Hilda could see Sarah Gailey's felt slippers and the valance of her skirt.
And she could hear Sarah's emotional breathing.</p>
<p>"Very well, Louisa, I've done!" Sarah's voice was quieter now. She was
trying to control it, and to a limited extent was controlling its volume.
It shook in spite of her. She spoke true. She had indeed done. She was at
the end of her resources.</p>
<p>"I've been in houses," Louisa conqueringly sneered, "that I have! But I
never been in a house afore where one as ought to have been scullery-girl
went off with a boarder, and nothing said, and him the friend of the
master! And it isn't as if that was all!... Sheets, indeed!"</p>
<p>"I've nothing further to say," Sarah returned unnecessarily, and
descended the stair. "I shall simply report to Mr. Cannon. We shall
see."</p>
<p>"And what's this about <i>Mrs</i>. Cannon?" Louisa shouted, beside
herself.</p>
<p>The peculiarity of her tone arrested Sarah Gailey. Hilda flushed. The
Watchetts were listening. The Watchetts had not yet been told of the
marriage. The announcement was to be made to them formally, a little later.
And now it was Louisa who was making the announcement, brutally, coarsely.
The outrage of the episode was a hundredfold intensified; it grew into an
inconceivable ghastly horror. Hilda's self-respect seemed to have a
physical body and Louisa to be hacking at it with a jagged knife.</p>
<p>"Mr. Cannon has brought his wife home," said Sarah Gailey shortly, with
a dignity and courage that increased as her distance from the appalling,
the incredible Louisa. Hilda could see her pale face now. The eyebrows and
chin were lifted in scorn of the vile menial, but the poor head was
trembling.</p>
<p>"And what about his other wife?"</p>
<p>"Louisa!"--Sarah Gailey looked again up the stairs--"I know you're in a
temper and not responsible for what you say. But you'd better be careful."
She spoke with elaborate haughty negligence.</p>
<p>"Had I?" Louisa shrilled. "What I say is, what about his other wife?
What about the old woman he married in Devonshire? Why, God bless me,
Florrie was full of it--couldn't talk about anything else in bed of a
night! Didn't you know the old woman'd been inquiring for her beautiful
'usband down your way?" She laughed loudly. "Turnhill--what's-its-name?...
And all of you lying low, and then making out all of a sudden as he's
brought his wife home! A nice house! And I've been in a few, too!"</p>
<p>Hilda could feel her heart beating with terrific force against her
bodice, but she was conscious of no other sensation. She heard a loud snort
of shattering contempt from Louisa; and then a strange and terrific silence
fell on the stairs. There was no sound even of a movement. The Watchetts
did not stir; the cook did not stir; Sarah Gailey did not stir; Louisa's
fury was sated. The empty landing lay, as it were, expectant at Hilda's
door.</p>
<p>Then Sarah Gailey perceived Hilda half hidden in the doorway, and
staggeringly rushed towards her. In an instant they were both in the
bedroom and the door shut.</p>
<p>"When will George be back so that he can put her out of the house?"
Sarah whispered frantically.</p>
<p>"Soon, I expect," said Hilda, and felt intensely self-conscious.</p>
<p>They said no more. And it was as though the house were besieged and
invested, and only in that room were they safe, and even in that room only
for a few moments.</p>
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