<h2><SPAN name="chap22"></SPAN>XXII.</h2>
<p>We go back for a moment to the preceding night, to account for Henchard’s
attitude.</p>
<p>At the hour when Elizabeth-Jane was contemplating her stealthy reconnoitring
excursion to the abode of the lady of her fancy, he had been not a little
amazed at receiving a letter by hand in Lucetta’s well-known characters.
The self-repression, the resignation of her previous communication had vanished
from her mood; she wrote with some of the natural lightness which had marked
her in their early acquaintance.</p>
<p class="letter">
HIGH-PLACE HALL<br/>
MY DEAR MR. HENCHARD,—Don’t be surprised. It is for your good and
mine, as I hope, that I have come to live at Casterbridge—for how long I
cannot tell. That depends upon another; and he is a man, and a merchant, and a
Mayor, and one who has the first right to my affections.<br/>
Seriously, <i>mon ami</i>, I am not so light-hearted as I may seem to be
from this. I have come here in consequence of hearing of the death of your
wife—whom you used to think of as dead so many years before! Poor woman,
she seems to have been a sufferer, though uncomplaining, and though weak in
intellect not an imbecile. I am glad you acted fairly by her. As soon as I knew
she was no more, it was brought home to me very forcibly by my conscience that
I ought to endeavour to disperse the shade which my <i>étourderie</i> flung
over my name, by asking you to carry out your promise to me. I hope you are of
the same mind, and that you will take steps to this end. As, however, I did not
know how you were situated, or what had happened since our separation, I
decided to come and establish myself here before communicating with you.<br/>
You probably feel as I do about this. I shall be able to see you in a day
or two. Till then, farewell.—Yours,</p>
<p class="right">
LUCETTA.</p>
<p class="letter">
<i>P.S.</i>—I was unable to keep my appointment to meet you for a moment
or two in passing through Casterbridge the other day. My plans were altered by
a family event, which it will surprise you to hear of.</p>
<p>Henchard had already heard that High-Place Hall was being prepared for a
tenant. He said with a puzzled air to the first person he encountered,
“Who is coming to live at the Hall?”</p>
<p>“A lady of the name of Templeman, I believe, sir,” said his
informant.</p>
<p>Henchard thought it over. “Lucetta is related to her, I suppose,”
he said to himself. “Yes, I must put her in her proper position,
undoubtedly.”</p>
<p>It was by no means with the oppression that would once have accompanied the
thought that he regarded the moral necessity now; it was, indeed, with
interest, if not warmth. His bitter disappointment at finding Elizabeth-Jane to
be none of his, and himself a childless man, had left an emotional void in
Henchard that he unconsciously craved to fill. In this frame of mind, though
without strong feeling, he had strolled up the alley and into High-Place Hall
by the postern at which Elizabeth had so nearly encountered him. He had gone on
thence into the court, and inquired of a man whom he saw unpacking china from a
crate if Miss Le Sueur was living there. Miss Le Sueur had been the name under
which he had known Lucetta—or “Lucette,” as she had called
herself at that time.</p>
<p>The man replied in the negative; that Miss Templeman only had come. Henchard
went away, concluding that Lucetta had not as yet settled in.</p>
<p>He was in this interested stage of the inquiry when he witnessed
Elizabeth-Jane’s departure the next day. On hearing her announce the
address there suddenly took possession of him the strange thought that Lucetta
and Miss Templeman were one and the same person, for he could recall that in
her season of intimacy with him the name of the rich relative whom he had
deemed somewhat a mythical personage had been given as Templeman. Though he was
not a fortune-hunter, the possibility that Lucetta had been sublimed into a
lady of means by some munificent testament on the part of this relative lent a
charm to her image which it might not otherwise have acquired. He was getting
on towards the dead level of middle age, when material things increasingly
possess the mind.</p>
<p>But Henchard was not left long in suspense. Lucetta was rather addicted to
scribbling, as had been shown by the torrent of letters after the <i>fiasco</i>
in their marriage arrangements, and hardly had Elizabeth gone away when another
note came to the Mayor’s house from High-Place Hall.</p>
<p>“I am in residence,” she said, “and comfortable, though
getting here has been a wearisome undertaking. You probably know what I am
going to tell you, or do you not? My good Aunt Templeman, the banker’s
widow, whose very existence you used to doubt, much more her affluence, has
lately died, and bequeathed some of her property to me. I will not enter into
details except to say that I have taken her name—as a means of escape
from mine, and its wrongs.</p>
<p>“I am now my own mistress, and have chosen to reside in
Casterbridge—to be tenant of High-Place Hall, that at least you may be
put to no trouble if you wish to see me. My first intention was to keep you in
ignorance of the changes in my life till you should meet me in the street; but
I have thought better of this.</p>
<p>“You probably are aware of my arrangement with your daughter, and have
doubtless laughed at the—what shall I call it?—practical joke (in
all affection) of my getting her to live with me. But my first meeting with her
was purely an accident. Do you see, Michael, partly why I have done
it?—why, to give you an excuse for coming here as if to visit <i>her</i>,
and thus to form my acquaintance naturally. She is a dear, good girl, and she
thinks you have treated her with undue severity. You may have done so in your
haste, but not deliberately, I am sure. As the result has been to bring her to
me I am not disposed to upbraid you.—In haste, yours always,</p>
<p>“LUCETTA.”</p>
<p class="p2">
The excitement which these announcements produced in Henchard’s gloomy
soul was to him most pleasurable. He sat over his dining-table long and
dreamily, and by an almost mechanical transfer the sentiments which had run to
waste since his estrangement from Elizabeth-Jane and Donald Farfrae gathered
around Lucetta before they had grown dry. She was plainly in a very coming-on
disposition for marriage. But what else could a poor woman be who had given her
time and her heart to him so thoughtlessly, at that former time, as to lose her
credit by it? Probably conscience no less than affection had brought her here.
On the whole he did not blame her.</p>
<p>“The artful little woman!” he said, smiling (with reference to
Lucetta’s adroit and pleasant manÅ“uvre with Elizabeth-Jane).</p>
<p>To feel that he would like to see Lucetta was with Henchard to start for her
house. He put on his hat and went. It was between eight and nine o’clock
when he reached her door. The answer brought him was that Miss Templeman was
engaged for that evening; but that she would be happy to see him the next day.</p>
<p>“That’s rather like giving herself airs!” he thought.
“And considering what we—” But after all, she plainly had not
expected him, and he took the refusal quietly. Nevertheless he resolved not to
go next day. “These cursed women—there’s not an inch of
straight grain in ’em!” he said.</p>
<p>Let us follow the train of Mr. Henchard’s thought as if it were a clue
line, and view the interior of High-Place Hall on this particular evening.</p>
<p>On Elizabeth-Jane’s arrival she had been phlegmatically asked by an
elderly woman to go upstairs and take off her things. She replied with great
earnestness that she would not think of giving that trouble, and on the instant
divested herself of her bonnet and cloak in the passage. She was then conducted
to the first floor on the landing, and left to find her way further alone.</p>
<p>The room disclosed was prettily furnished as a boudoir or small drawing-room,
and on a sofa with two cylindrical pillows reclined a dark-haired, large-eyed,
pretty woman, of unmistakably French extraction on one side or the other. She
was probably some years older than Elizabeth, and had a sparkling light in her
eye. In front of the sofa was a small table, with a pack of cards scattered
upon it faces upward.</p>
<p>The attitude had been so full of abandonment that she bounded up like a spring
on hearing the door open.</p>
<p>Perceiving that it was Elizabeth she lapsed into ease, and came across to her
with a reckless skip that innate grace only prevented from being boisterous.</p>
<p>“Why, you are late,” she said, taking hold of
Elizabeth-Jane’s hands.</p>
<p>“There were so many little things to put up.”</p>
<p>“And you seem dead-alive and tired. Let me try to enliven you by some
wonderful tricks I have learnt, to kill time. Sit there and don’t
move.” She gathered up the pack of cards, pulled the table in front of
her, and began to deal them rapidly, telling Elizabeth to choose some.</p>
<p>“Well, have you chosen?” she asked flinging down the last card.</p>
<p>“No,” stammered Elizabeth, arousing herself from a reverie.
“I forgot, I was thinking of—you, and me—and how strange it
is that I am here.”</p>
<p>Miss Templeman looked at Elizabeth-Jane with interest, and laid down the cards.
“Ah! never mind,” she said. “I’ll lie here while you
sit by me; and we’ll talk.”</p>
<p>Elizabeth drew up silently to the head of the sofa, but with obvious pleasure.
It could be seen that though in years she was younger than her entertainer in
manner and general vision she seemed more of the sage. Miss Templeman deposited
herself on the sofa in her former flexuous position, and throwing her arm above
her brow—somewhat in the pose of a well-known conception of
Titian’s—talked up at Elizabeth-Jane invertedly across her forehead
and arm.</p>
<p>“I must tell you something,” she said. “I wonder if you have
suspected it. I have only been mistress of a large house and fortune a little
while.”</p>
<p>“Oh—only a little while?” murmured Elizabeth-Jane, her
countenance slightly falling.</p>
<p>“As a girl I lived about in garrison towns and elsewhere with my father,
till I was quite flighty and unsettled. He was an officer in the army. I should
not have mentioned this had I not thought it best you should know the
truth.”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes.” She looked thoughtfully round the room—at the
little square piano with brass inlayings, at the window-curtains, at the lamp,
at the fair and dark kings and queens on the card-table, and finally at the
inverted face of Lucetta Templeman, whose large lustrous eyes had such an odd
effect upside down.</p>
<p>Elizabeth’s mind ran on acquirements to an almost morbid degree.
“You speak French and Italian fluently, no doubt,” she said.
“I have not been able to get beyond a wretched bit of Latin yet.”</p>
<p>“Well, for that matter, in my native isle speaking French does not go for
much. It is rather the other way.”</p>
<p>“Where is your native isle?”</p>
<p>It was with rather more reluctance that Miss Templeman said, “Jersey.
There they speak French on one side of the street and English on the other, and
a mixed tongue in the middle of the road. But it is a long time since I was
there. Bath is where my people really belong to, though my ancestors in Jersey
were as good as anybody in England. They were the Le Sueurs, an old family who
have done great things in their time. I went back and lived there after my
father’s death. But I don’t value such past matters, and am quite
an English person in my feelings and tastes.”</p>
<p>Lucetta’s tongue had for a moment outrun her discretion. She had arrived
at Casterbridge as a Bath lady, and there were obvious reasons why Jersey
should drop out of her life. But Elizabeth had tempted her to make free, and a
deliberately formed resolve had been broken.</p>
<p>It could not, however, have been broken in safer company. Lucetta’s words
went no further, and after this day she was so much upon her guard that there
appeared no chance of her identification with the young Jersey woman who had
been Henchard’s dear comrade at a critical time. Not the least amusing of
her safeguards was her resolute avoidance of a French word if one by accident
came to her tongue more readily than its English equivalent. She shirked it
with the suddenness of the weak Apostle at the accusation, “Thy speech
bewrayeth thee!”</p>
<p>Expectancy sat visibly upon Lucetta the next morning. She dressed herself for
Mr. Henchard, and restlessly awaited his call before mid-day; as he did not
come she waited on through the afternoon. But she did not tell Elizabeth that
the person expected was the girl’s stepfather.</p>
<p>They sat in adjoining windows of the same room in Lucetta’s great stone
mansion, netting, and looking out upon the market, which formed an animated
scene. Elizabeth could see the crown of her stepfather’s hat among the
rest beneath, and was not aware that Lucetta watched the same object with yet
intenser interest. He moved about amid the throng, at this point lively as an
ant-hill; elsewhere more reposeful, and broken up by stalls of fruit and
vegetables. The farmers as a rule preferred the open <i>carrefour</i> for their
transactions, despite its inconvenient jostlings and the danger from crossing
vehicles, to the gloomy sheltered market-room provided for them. Here they
surged on this one day of the week, forming a little world of leggings,
switches, and sample-bags; men of extensive stomachs, sloping like mountain
sides; men whose heads in walking swayed as the trees in November gales; who in
conversing varied their attitudes much, lowering themselves by spreading their
knees, and thrusting their hands into the pockets of remote inner jackets.
Their faces radiated tropical warmth; for though when at home their
countenances varied with the seasons, their market-faces all the year round
were glowing little fires.</p>
<p>All over-clothes here were worn as if they were an inconvenience, a hampering
necessity. Some men were well dressed; but the majority were careless in that
respect, appearing in suits which were historical records of their
wearer’s deeds, sun-scorchings, and daily struggles for many years past.
Yet many carried ruffled cheque-books in their pockets which regulated at the
bank hard by a balance of never less than four figures. In fact, what these
gibbous human shapes specially represented was ready money—money
insistently ready—not ready next year like a nobleman’s—often
not merely ready at the bank like a professional man’s, but ready in
their large plump hands.</p>
<p>It happened that to-day there rose in the midst of them all two or three tall
apple-trees standing as if they grew on the spot; till it was perceived that
they were held by men from the cider-districts who came here to sell them,
bringing the clay of their county on their boots. Elizabeth-Jane, who had often
observed them, said, “I wonder if the same trees come every week?”</p>
<p>“What trees?” said Lucetta, absorbed in watching for Henchard.</p>
<p>Elizabeth replied vaguely, for an incident checked her. Behind one of the trees
stood Farfrae, briskly discussing a sample-bag with a farmer. Henchard had come
up, accidentally encountering the young man, whose face seemed to inquire,
“Do we speak to each other?”</p>
<p>She saw her stepfather throw a shine into his eye which answered
“No!” Elizabeth-Jane sighed.</p>
<p>“Are you particularly interested in anybody out there?” said
Lucetta.</p>
<p>“O, no,” said her companion, a quick red shooting over her face.</p>
<p>Luckily Farfrae’s figure was immediately covered by the apple-tree.</p>
<p>Lucetta looked hard at her. “Quite sure?” she said.</p>
<p>“O yes,” said Elizabeth-Jane.</p>
<p>Again Lucetta looked out. “They are all farmers, I suppose?” she
said.</p>
<p>“No. There’s Mr. Bulge—he’s a wine merchant;
there’s Benjamin Brownlet—a horse dealer; and Kitson, the pig
breeder; and Yopper, the auctioneer; besides maltsters, and millers—and
so on.” Farfrae stood out quite distinctly now; but she did not mention
him.</p>
<p>The Saturday afternoon slipped on thus desultorily. The market changed from the
sample-showing hour to the idle hour before starting homewards, when tales were
told. Henchard had not called on Lucetta though he had stood so near. He must
have been too busy, she thought. He would come on Sunday or Monday.</p>
<p>The days came but not the visitor, though Lucetta repeated her dressing with
scrupulous care. She got disheartened. It may at once be declared that Lucetta
no longer bore towards Henchard all that warm allegiance which had
characterized her in their first acquaintance, the then unfortunate issue of
things had chilled pure love considerably. But there remained a conscientious
wish to bring about her union with him, now that there was nothing to hinder
it—to right her position—which in itself was a happiness to sigh
for. With strong social reasons on her side why their marriage should take
place there had ceased to be any worldly reason on his why it should be
postponed, since she had succeeded to fortune.</p>
<p>Tuesday was the great Candlemas fair. At breakfast she said to Elizabeth-Jane
quite coolly: “I imagine your father may call to see you to-day. I
suppose he stands close by in the market-place with the rest of the
corn-dealers?”</p>
<p>She shook her head. “He won’t come.”</p>
<p>“Why?”</p>
<p>“He has taken against me,” she said in a husky voice.</p>
<p>“You have quarreled more deeply than I know of.”</p>
<p>Elizabeth, wishing to shield the man she believed to be her father from any
charge of unnatural dislike, said “Yes.”</p>
<p>“Then where you are is, of all places, the one he will avoid?”</p>
<p>Elizabeth nodded sadly.</p>
<p>Lucetta looked blank, twitched up her lovely eyebrows and lip, and burst into
hysterical sobs. Here was a disaster—her ingenious scheme completely
stultified.</p>
<p>“O, my dear Miss Templeman—what’s the matter?” cried
her companion.</p>
<p>“I like your company much!” said Lucetta, as soon as she could
speak.</p>
<p>“Yes, yes—and so do I yours!” Elizabeth chimed in soothingly.</p>
<p>“But—but—” She could not finish the sentence, which
was, naturally, that if Henchard had such a rooted dislike for the girl as now
seemed to be the case, Elizabeth-Jane would have to be got rid of—a
disagreeable necessity.</p>
<p>A provisional resource suggested itself. “Miss Henchard—will you go
on an errand for me as soon as breakfast is over?—Ah, that’s very
good of you. Will you go and order—” Here she enumerated several
commissions at sundry shops, which would occupy Elizabeth’s time for the
next hour or two, at least.</p>
<p>“And have you ever seen the Museum?”</p>
<p>Elizabeth-Jane had not.</p>
<p>“Then you should do so at once. You can finish the morning by going
there. It is an old house in a back street—I forget where—but
you’ll find out—and there are crowds of interesting
things—skeletons, teeth, old pots and pans, ancient boots and shoes,
birds’ eggs—all charmingly instructive. You’ll be sure to
stay till you get quite hungry.”</p>
<p>Elizabeth hastily put on her things and departed. “I wonder why she wants
to get rid of me to-day!” she said sorrowfully as she went. That her
absence, rather than her services or instruction, was in request, had been
readily apparent to Elizabeth-Jane, simple as she seemed, and difficult as it
was to attribute a motive for the desire.</p>
<p>She had not been gone ten minutes when one of Lucetta’s servants was sent
to Henchard’s with a note. The contents were briefly:—</p>
<p class="letter">
DEAR MICHAEL,—You will be standing in view of my house to-day for two or
three hours in the course of your business, so do please call and see me. I am
sadly disappointed that you have not come before, for can I help anxiety about
my own equivocal relation to you?—especially now my aunt’s fortune
has brought me more prominently before society? Your daughter’s presence
here may be the cause of your neglect; and I have therefore sent her away for
the morning. Say you come on business—I shall be quite alone.</p>
<p class="right">
LUCETTA.</p>
<p>When the messenger returned her mistress gave directions that if a gentleman
called he was to be admitted at once, and sat down to await results.</p>
<p>Sentimentally she did not much care to see him—his delays had wearied
her, but it was necessary; and with a sigh she arranged herself picturesquely
in the chair; first this way, then that; next so that the light fell over her
head. Next she flung herself on the couch in the cyma-recta curve which so
became her, and with her arm over her brow looked towards the door. This, she
decided, was the best position after all, and thus she remained till a
man’s step was heard on the stairs. Whereupon Lucetta, forgetting her
curve (for Nature was too strong for Art as yet), jumped up and ran and hid
herself behind one of the window-curtains in a freak of timidity. In spite of
the waning of passion the situation was an agitating one—she had not seen
Henchard since his (supposed) temporary parting from her in Jersey.</p>
<p>She could hear the servant showing the visitor into the room, shutting the door
upon him, and leaving as if to go and look for her mistress. Lucetta flung back
the curtain with a nervous greeting. The man before her was not Henchard.</p>
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