<h2><SPAN name="chap40"></SPAN>XL.</h2>
<p>Long before this time Henchard, weary of his ruminations on the bridge, had
repaired towards the town. When he stood at the bottom of the street a
procession burst upon his view, in the act of turning out of an alley just
above him. The lanterns, horns, and multitude startled him; he saw the mounted
images, and knew what it all meant.</p>
<p>They crossed the way, entered another street, and disappeared. He turned back a
few steps and was lost in grave reflection, finally wending his way homeward by
the obscure river-side path. Unable to rest there he went to his
stepdaughter’s lodging, and was told that Elizabeth-Jane had gone to Mr.
Farfrae’s. Like one acting in obedience to a charm, and with a nameless
apprehension, he followed in the same direction in the hope of meeting her, the
roysterers having vanished. Disappointed in this he gave the gentlest of pulls
to the door-bell, and then learnt particulars of what had occurred, together
with the doctor’s imperative orders that Farfrae should be brought home,
and how they had set out to meet him on the Budmouth Road.</p>
<p>“But he has gone to Mellstock and Weatherbury!” exclaimed Henchard,
now unspeakably grieved. “Not Budmouth way at all.”</p>
<p>But, alas! for Henchard; he had lost his good name. They would not believe him,
taking his words but as the frothy utterances of recklessness. Though
Lucetta’s life seemed at that moment to depend upon her husband’s
return (she being in great mental agony lest he should never know the
unexaggerated truth of her past relations with Henchard), no messenger was
despatched towards Weatherbury. Henchard, in a state of bitter anxiety and
contrition, determined to seek Farfrae himself.</p>
<p>To this end he hastened down the town, ran along the eastern road over Durnover
Moor, up the hill beyond, and thus onward in the moderate darkness of this
spring night till he had reached a second and almost a third hill about three
miles distant. In Yalbury Bottom, or Plain, at the foot of the hill, he
listened. At first nothing, beyond his own heart-throbs, was to be heard but
the slow wind making its moan among the masses of spruce and larch of Yalbury
Wood which clothed the heights on either hand; but presently there came the
sound of light wheels whetting their felloes against the newly stoned patches
of road, accompanied by the distant glimmer of lights.</p>
<p>He knew it was Farfrae’s gig descending the hill from an indescribable
personality in its noise, the vehicle having been his own till bought by the
Scotchman at the sale of his effects. Henchard thereupon retraced his steps
along Yalbury Plain, the gig coming up with him as its driver slackened speed
between two plantations.</p>
<p>It was a point in the highway near which the road to Mellstock branched off
from the homeward direction. By diverging to that village, as he had intended
to do, Farfrae might probably delay his return by a couple of hours. It soon
appeared that his intention was to do so still, the light swerving towards
Cuckoo Lane, the by-road aforesaid. Farfrae’s off gig-lamp flashed in
Henchard’s face. At the same time Farfrae discerned his late antagonist.</p>
<p>“Farfrae—Mr. Farfrae!” cried the breathless Henchard, holding
up his hand.</p>
<p>Farfrae allowed the horse to turn several steps into the branch lane before he
pulled up. He then drew rein, and said “Yes?” over his shoulder, as
one would towards a pronounced enemy.</p>
<p>“Come back to Casterbridge at once!” Henchard said.
“There’s something wrong at your house—requiring your return.
I’ve run all the way here on purpose to tell ye.”</p>
<p>Farfrae was silent, and at his silence Henchard’s soul sank within him.
Why had he not, before this, thought of what was only too obvious? He who, four
hours earlier, had enticed Farfrae into a deadly wrestle stood now in the
darkness of late night-time on a lonely road, inviting him to come a particular
way, where an assailant might have confederates, instead of going his purposed
way, where there might be a better opportunity of guarding himself from attack.
Henchard could almost feel this view of things in course of passage through
Farfrae’s mind.</p>
<p>“I have to go to Mellstock,” said Farfrae coldly, as he loosened
his reins to move on.</p>
<p>“But,” implored Henchard, “the matter is more serious than
your business at Mellstock. It is—your wife! She is ill. I can tell you
particulars as we go along.”</p>
<p>The very agitation and abruptness of Henchard increased Farfrae’s
suspicion that this was a <i>ruse</i> to decoy him on to the next wood, where
might be effectually compassed what, from policy or want of nerve, Henchard had
failed to do earlier in the day. He started the horse.</p>
<p>“I know what you think,” deprecated Henchard running after, almost
bowed down with despair as he perceived the image of unscrupulous villainy that
he assumed in his former friend’s eyes. “But I am not what you
think!” he cried hoarsely. “Believe me, Farfrae; I have come
entirely on your own and your wife’s account. She is in danger. I know no
more; and they want you to come. Your man has gone the other way in a mistake.
O Farfrae! don’t mistrust me—I am a wretched man; but my heart is
true to you still!”</p>
<p>Farfrae, however, did distrust him utterly. He knew his wife was with child,
but he had left her not long ago in perfect health; and Henchard’s
treachery was more credible than his story. He had in his time heard bitter
ironies from Henchard’s lips, and there might be ironies now. He
quickened the horse’s pace, and had soon risen into the high country
lying between there and Mellstock, Henchard’s spasmodic run after him
lending yet more substance to his thought of evil purposes.</p>
<p>The gig and its driver lessened against the sky in Henchard’s eyes; his
exertions for Farfrae’s good had been in vain. Over this repentant
sinner, at least, there was to be no joy in heaven. He cursed himself like a
less scrupulous Job, as a vehement man will do when he loses self-respect, the
last mental prop under poverty. To this he had come after a time of emotional
darkness of which the adjoining woodland shade afforded inadequate
illustration. Presently he began to walk back again along the way by which he
had arrived. Farfrae should at all events have no reason for delay upon the
road by seeing him there when he took his journey homeward later on.</p>
<p>Arriving at Casterbridge Henchard went again to Farfrae’s house to make
inquiries. As soon as the door opened anxious faces confronted his from the
staircase, hall, and landing; and they all said in grievous disappointment,
“O—it is not he!” The manservant, finding his mistake, had
long since returned, and all hopes had centred upon Henchard.</p>
<p>“But haven’t you found him?” said the doctor.</p>
<p>“Yes.... I cannot tell ’ee!” Henchard replied as he sank down
on a chair within the entrance. “He can’t be home for two
hours.”</p>
<p>“H’m,” said the surgeon, returning upstairs.</p>
<p>“How is she?” asked Henchard of Elizabeth, who formed one of the
group.</p>
<p>“In great danger, father. Her anxiety to see her husband makes her
fearfully restless. Poor woman—I fear they have killed her!”</p>
<p>Henchard regarded the sympathetic speaker for a few instants as if she struck
him in a new light, then, without further remark, went out of the door and
onward to his lonely cottage. So much for man’s rivalry, he thought.
Death was to have the oyster, and Farfrae and himself the shells. But about
Elizabeth-Jane; in the midst of his gloom she seemed to him as a pin-point of
light. He had liked the look on her face as she answered him from the stairs.
There had been affection in it, and above all things what he desired now was
affection from anything that was good and pure. She was not his own, yet, for
the first time, he had a faint dream that he might get to like her as his
own,—if she would only continue to love him.</p>
<p>Jopp was just going to bed when Henchard got home. As the latter entered the
door Jopp said, “This is rather bad about Mrs. Farfrae’s
illness.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Henchard shortly, though little dreaming of
Jopp’s complicity in the night’s harlequinade, and raising his eyes
just sufficiently to observe that Jopp’s face was lined with anxiety.</p>
<p>“Somebody has called for you,” continued Jopp, when Henchard was
shutting himself into his own apartment. “A kind of traveller, or
sea-captain of some sort.”</p>
<p>“Oh?—who could he be?”</p>
<p>“He seemed a well-be-doing man—had grey hair and a broadish face;
but he gave no name, and no message.”</p>
<p>“Nor do I gi’e him any attention.” And, saying this, Henchard
closed his door.</p>
<p class="p2">
The divergence to Mellstock delayed Farfrae’s return very nearly the two
hours of Henchard’s estimate. Among the other urgent reasons for his
presence had been the need of his authority to send to Budmouth for a second
physician; and when at length Farfrae did come back he was in a state bordering
on distraction at his misconception of Henchard’s motives.</p>
<p>A messenger was despatched to Budmouth, late as it had grown; the night wore
on, and the other doctor came in the small hours. Lucetta had been much soothed
by Donald’s arrival; he seldom or never left her side; and when,
immediately after his entry, she had tried to lisp out to him the secret which
so oppressed her, he checked her feeble words, lest talking should be
dangerous, assuring her there was plenty of time to tell him everything.</p>
<p>Up to this time he knew nothing of the skimmington-ride. The dangerous illness
and miscarriage of Mrs. Farfrae was soon rumoured through the town, and an
apprehensive guess having been given as to its cause by the leaders in the
exploit, compunction and fear threw a dead silence over all particulars of
their orgie; while those immediately around Lucetta would not venture to add to
her husband’s distress by alluding to the subject.</p>
<p>What, and how much, Farfrae’s wife ultimately explained to him of her
past entanglement with Henchard, when they were alone in the solitude of that
sad night, cannot be told. That she informed him of the bare facts of her
peculiar intimacy with the corn-merchant became plain from Farfrae’s own
statements. But in respect of her subsequent conduct—her motive in coming
to Casterbridge to unite herself with Henchard—her assumed justification
in abandoning him when she discovered reasons for fearing him (though in truth
her inconsequent passion for another man at first sight had most to do with
that abandonment)—her method of reconciling to her conscience a marriage
with the second when she was in a measure committed to the first: to what
extent she spoke of these things remained Farfrae’s secret alone.</p>
<p>Besides the watchman who called the hours and weather in Casterbridge that
night there walked a figure up and down Corn Street hardly less frequently. It
was Henchard’s, whose retiring to rest had proved itself a futility as
soon as attempted; and he gave it up to go hither and thither, and make
inquiries about the patient every now and then. He called as much on
Farfrae’s account as on Lucetta’s, and on Elizabeth-Jane’s
even more than on either’s. Shorn one by one of all other interests, his
life seemed centring on the personality of the stepdaughter whose presence but
recently he could not endure. To see her on each occasion of his inquiry at
Lucetta’s was a comfort to him.</p>
<p>The last of his calls was made about four o’clock in the morning, in the
steely light of dawn. Lucifer was fading into day across Durnover Moor, the
sparrows were just alighting into the street, and the hens had begun to cackle
from the outhouses. When within a few yards of Farfrae’s he saw the door
gently opened, and a servant raise her hand to the knocker, to untie the piece
of cloth which had muffled it. He went across, the sparrows in his way scarcely
flying up from the road-litter, so little did they believe in human aggression
at so early a time.</p>
<p>“Why do you take off that?” said Henchard.</p>
<p>She turned in some surprise at his presence, and did not answer for an instant
or two. Recognizing him, she said, “Because they may knock as loud as
they will; she will never hear it any more.”</p>
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