The Way We Live Now (37 page)

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Authors: Anthony Trollope

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He had told his friend, and his friend had declared to him that it was impossible that he should marry a woman whom he had met in a railway train without knowing something about her. Roger did all he could to persuade the lover to forget his love – and partially succeeded. It is so pleasant and so natural that a young man should enjoy the company of a clever, beautiful woman on a long journey – so natural that during the journey he should allow himself to think that she may during her whole life be all in all to him as she is at that moment – and so natural again that he should see his mistake when he has parted from her! But Montague, though he was half false to his widow, was half true to her. He had pledged his word, and that he said ought to bind him. Then he returned to California, and learned through the instrumentality of Hamilton K. Fisker, that in San Francisco Mrs Hurtle was regarded as a mystery. Some people did not quite believe that there ever had been a Mr Hurtle. Others said that there certainly had been a Mr Hurtle, and that to the best of their belief he still existed. The fact, however, best known of her was, that she had shot a man through the head somewhere in Oregon. She had not been tried for it, as the world of Oregon had considered that the circumstances justified the deed. Everybody knew that she was very clever and very beautiful – but everybody also thought that she was very dangerous. ‘She always had money when she was here,' Hamilton Fisker said, ‘but no one knew where it came from.' Then he wanted to know why Paul inquired. ‘I don't think, you know, that I should like to go in for a life partnership, if you mean that,' said Hamilton K. Fisker.

Montague had seen her in New York as he passed through on his second journey to San Francisco, and had then renewed his promises in spite of his cousin's caution. He told her that he was going to see what he could make of his broken fortunes – for at this time, as the reader will remember, there was no great railway in existence – and she had promised to follow him. Since that they had never met till this day. She
had not made the promised journey to San Francisco, at any rate before he had left it. Letters from her had reached him in England, and these he had answered by explaining to her, or endeavouring to explain, that their engagement must be at an end. And now she had followed him to London! ‘Tell me everything,' she said, leaning upon him and looking up into his face.

‘But you – when did you arrive here?'

‘Here, at this house, I arrived the night before last. On Tuesday I reached Liverpool. There I found that you were probably in London, and so I came on. I have come only to see you. I can understand that you should have been estranged from me. That journey home is now so long ago! Our meeting in New York was so short and wretched. I would not tell you because you then were poor yourself, but at that moment I was penniless. I have got my own now out from the very teeth of robbers.' As she said this, she looked as though she could be very persistent in claiming her own – or what she might think to be her own. ‘I could not get across to San Francisco as I said I would, and when I was there you had quarrelled with your uncle and returned. And now I am here. I at any rate have been faithful.' As she said this his arm was again thrown over her, so as to press her head to his knee. ‘And now,' she said, ‘tell me about yourself?'

His position was embarrassing and very odious to himself. Had he done his duty properly, he would gently have pushed her from him, have sprung to his legs, and have declared that, however faulty might have been his previous conduct, he now found himself bound to make her understand that he did not intend to become her husband. But he was either too much of a man or too little of a man for conduct such as that. He did make the avowal to himself, even at that moment as she sat there. Let the matter go as it would, she should never be his wife. He would marry no one unless it was Hetta Carbury. But he did not at all know how to get this said with proper emphasis, and yet with properly apologetic courtesy. ‘I am engaged here about this railway,' he said. ‘You have heard, I suppose, of our projected scheme?'

‘Heard of it! San Francisco is full of it. Hamilton Fisker is the great man of the day there, and, when I left, your uncle was buying a villa for seventy-four thousand dollars. And yet they say that the best of it all has been transferred to you Londoners. Many there are very hard upon Fisker for coming here and doing as he did.'

‘It's doing very well, I believe,' said Paul, with some feeling of shame, as he thought how very little he knew about it.

‘You are the manager here in England?'

‘No – I am a member of the firm that manages it at San Francisco; but the real manager here is our chairman, Mr Melmotte.'

‘Ah – I have heard of him. He is a great man – a Frenchman, is he not? There was talk of inviting him to California. You know him, of course?'

‘Yes; – I know him. I see him once a week.'

‘I would sooner see that man than your Queen, or any of your dukes or lords. They tell me that he holds the world of commerce in his right hand. What power – what grandeur!'

‘Grand enough,' said Paul, ‘if it all came honestly.'

‘Such a man rises above honesty,' said Mrs Hurtle, ‘as a great general rises above humanity when he sacrifices an army to conquer a nation. Such greatness is incompatible with small scruples. A pigmy man is stopped by a little ditch, but a giant stalks over the rivers.'

‘I prefer to be stopped by the ditches,' said Montague.

‘Ah, Paul, you were not born for commerce. And I will grant you this, that commerce is not noble unless it rises to great heights. To live in plenty by sticking to your counter from nine in the morning to nine at night, is not a fine life. But this man with a scratch of his pen can send out or call in millions of dollars. Do they say here that he is not honest?'

‘As he is my partner in this affair, perhaps I had better say nothing against him.'

‘Of course such a man will be abused. People have said that Napoleon was a coward, and Washington a traitor. You must take me where I shall see Melmotte. He is a man whose hand I would kiss; but I would not condescend to speak even a word of reverence to any of your emperors.'

‘I fear you will find that your idol has feet of clay.'

‘Ah – you mean that he is bold in breaking those precepts of yours about coveting worldly wealth. All men and women break that commandment, but they do so in a stealthy fashion, half drawing back the grasping hand, praying to be delivered from temptation while they filch only a little, pretending to despise the only thing that is dear to them in the world. Here is a man who boldly says that he recognizes no such law; that wealth is power, and that power is good, and that the more a man has of wealth the greater and the stronger and the nobler he can be. I love a man who can turn the hobgoblins inside out and burn the wooden bogies that he meets.'

Montague had formed his own opinions about Melmotte. Though connected with the man, he believed their grand director to be as vile a
scoundrel as ever lived. Mrs Hurtle's enthusiasm was very pretty, and there was something of feminine eloquence in her words. But it was shocking to see them lavished on such a subject. ‘Personally, I do not like him,' said Paul.

‘I had thought to find that you and he were hand and glove.'

‘Oh no.'

‘But you are prospering in this business?'

‘Yes – I suppose we are prospering. It is one of those hazardous things in which a man can never tell whether he be really prosperous till he is out of it. I fell into it altogether against my will. I had no alternative.'

‘It seems to me to have been a golden chance.'

‘As far as immediate results go it has been golden.'

‘That at any rate is well, Paul. And now – now that we have got back into our old way of talking, tell me what all this means. I have talked to no one after this fashion since we parted. Why should our engagement be over? You used to love me, did you not?'

He would willingly have left her question unanswered, but she waited for an answer. ‘You know I did,' he said.

‘I thought so. This I know, that you were sure and are sure of my love to you. Is it not so? Come, speak openly like a man. Do you doubt me?'

He did not doubt her, and was forced to say so. ‘No, indeed.'

‘Oh, with what bated,
2
half-mouthed words you speak – fit for a girl from a nursery! Out with it if you have anything to say against me! You owe me so much at any rate. I have never ill-treated you. I have never lied to you. I have taken nothing from you – if I have not taken your heart. I have given you all that I have to give.' Then she leaped to her feet and stood a little apart from him. ‘If you hate me, say so.'

‘Winifred,' he said, calling her by her name.

‘Winifred!
3
Yes, now for the first time, though I have called you Paul from the moment you entered the room. Well, speak out Is there another woman that you love?'

At this moment Paul Montague proved that at any rate he was no coward. Knowing the nature of the woman, how ardent, how impetuous she could be, and how full of wrath, he had come at her call intending to tell her the truth which he now spoke. ‘There is another,' he said.

She stood silent, looking into his face, thinking how she would commence her attack upon him. She fixed her eyes upon him, standing quite upright, squeezing her own right hand with the fingers of the left. ‘Oh,' she said, in a whisper – ‘that is the reason why I am told that I am to be – off.'

‘That was not the reason.'

‘What; – can there be more reason than that – better reason than that? Unless, indeed, it be that as you have learned to love another so also you have learned to – hate me.'

‘Listen to me, Winifred.'

‘No, sir, no Winifred now! How did you dare to kiss me, knowing that it was on your tongue to tell me I was to be cast aside? And so you love – some other woman! I am too old to please you, too rough – too little like the dolls of your own country! What were your – other reasons? Let me hear your – other reasons, that I may tell you that they are lies.'

The reasons were very difficult to tell, though when put forward by Roger Carbury they had been easily pleaded. Paul knew but little about Winifred Hurtle, and nothing at all about the late Mr Hurtle. His reasons curtly put forward might have been so stated. ‘We know too little of each other,' he said.

‘What more do you want to know? You can know all for the asking. Did I ever refuse to answer you? As to my knowledge of you and your affairs, if I think it sufficient, need you complain? What is it that you want to know? Ask anything, and I will tell you. Is it about my money? You knew when you gave me your word that I had next to none. Now I have ample means of my own. You knew that I was a widow. What more? If you wish to hear of the wretch that was my husband, I will deluge you with stories. I should have thought that a man who loved would not have cared to hear much of one – who perhaps was loved once.'

He knew that his position was perfectly indefensible. It would have been better for him not to have alluded to any reasons, but to have remained firm to his assertion that he loved another woman. He must have acknowledged himself to be false, perjured, inconstant, and very base. A fault that may be venial to those who do not suffer, is damnable, deserving of an eternity of tortures, in the eyes of the sufferer. He must have submitted to be told that he was a fiend, and might have had to endure whatever of punishment a lady in her wrath could inflict upon him. But he would have been called upon for no further mental effort. His position would have been plain. But now he was all at sea. ‘I wish to hear nothing,' he said.

‘Then why tell me that we know so little of each other? That, surely, is a poor excuse to make to a woman – after you have been false to her. Why did you not say that when we were in New York together? Think of it, Paul. Is not that mean?'

‘I do not think that I am mean.'

‘No; – a man will lie to a woman, and justify it always. Who is – this lady?'

He knew that he could not at any rate be warranted in mentioning Hetta Carbury's name. He had never even asked her for her love, and certainly had received no assurance that he was loved. ‘I cannot name her.'

‘And I, who have come hither from California to see you, am to return satisfied because you tell me that you have – changed your affections? That is to be all, and you think that fair? That suits your own mind, and leaves no sore spot in your heart? You can do that, and shake hands with me, and go away – without a pang, without a scruple?'

‘I did not say so.'

‘And you are the man who cannot bear to hear me praise Augustus Melmotte because you think him dishonest! Are you a liar?'

‘I hope not.'

‘Did you say you would be my husband? Answer me, sir.'

‘I did say so.'

‘Do you now refuse to keep your promise? You shall answer me.'

‘I cannot marry you.'

‘Then, sir, are you not a liar?' It would have taken him long to explain to her, even had he been able, that a man may break a promise and yet not tell a lie. He had made up his mind to break his engagement before he had seen Hetta Carbury, and therefore he could not accuse himself of falseness on her account. He had been brought to his resolution by the rumours he had heard of her past life, and as to his uncertainty about her husband. If Mr Hurtle were alive, certainly then he would not be a liar because he did not marry Mrs Hurtle. He did not think himself to be a liar, but he was not at once ready with his defence. ‘Oh, Paul,' she said, changing at once into softness – ‘I am pleading to you for my life. Oh, that I could make you feel that I am pleading for my life! Have you given a promise to this lady also?'

‘No,' said he. ‘I have given no promise.'

‘But she loves you?'

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