第28章 Chapter 4 (6)
Before I could assure her that she might depend on my acting in the strictest accordance with her wishes, we were both startled by advancing footsteps in the shrubbery. Someone was coming from the house to seek for us! I felt the blood rush into my cheeks and then leave them again. Could the third person who was fast approaching us, at such a time and under such circumstances, be Miss Fairlie?
It was a relief -- so sadly, so hopelessly was my position towards her changed already -- it was absolutely a relief to me, when the person who had disturbed us appeared at the entrance of the summer-house, and proved to be only Miss Fairlie's maid.
‘Could I speak to you for a moment, miss?' said the girl, in rather a flurried, unsettled manner.
Miss Halcombe descended the steps into the shrubbery, and walked aside a few paces with the maid.
Left by myself, my mind reverted, with a sense of forlorn wretchedness which it is not in any words that I can find to describe, to my approaching return to the solitude and the despair of my lonely London home. Thoughts of my kind old mother, and of my sister, who had rejoiced with her so innocently over my prospects in Cumberland -- thoughts whose long banishment from my heart it was now my shame and my reproach to realize for the first time -- came back to me with the loving mournfulness of old, neglected friends.
My mother and my sister, what would they feel when I returned to them from my broken engagement, with the confession of my miserable secret -- they who had parted from me so hopefully on that last happy night in the Hampstead cottage!
Anne Catherick again! Even the memory of the farewell evenIng with my mother and my sister could not return to me now unconnected with that other memory of the moonlight walk back to London. What did it mean? Were that woman and I to meet once more? It was possible, at the least. Did she know that I lived in London? Yes; I had told her so, either before or after that strange question of hers, when she had asked me so distrustfully if I knew many men of the rank of Baronet. Either before or after -- my mind was not calm enough, then, to remember which.
A few minutes elapsed before Miss Halcombe dismissed the maid and came back to me. She, too, looked flurried and unsettled now.
‘We have arranged all that is necessary, Mr Hartright,' she said. ‘We have understood each other, as friends should, and we may go back at once to the house. To tell you the truth, I am uneasy about Laura. She has sent to say she wants to see me directly, and the maid reports that her mistress is apparently very much agitated by a letter that she has received this morning -- the same letter, no doubt, which I sent on to the house before we came here.'
We retraced our steps together hastily along the shrubbery path. Although Miss Halcombe had ended all that she thought it necessary to say on her side, I had not ended all that I wanted to say on mine. From the moment when I had discovered that the expected visitor at Limmeridge was Miss Fairlie's future husband, I had felt a bitter curiosity, a burning envious eagerness, to know who he was. It was possible that a future opportunity of putting the question might not easily offer, so I risked asking it on our way back to the house.
‘Now that you are kind enough to tell me we have understood each other, Miss Halcombe,' I said, ‘now that you are sure of my gratitude for your forbearance and my obedience to your wishes, may I venture to ask who' -- (I hesitated -- I had forced myself to think of him, but it was harder still to speak of him, as her promised husband) -- ‘who the gentleman engaged to Miss Fairlie is?'
Her mind was evidently occupied with the message she had received from her sister. She answered in a hasty, absent way --
‘A gentleman of large property in Hampshire.'
Hampshire! Anne Catherick's native place. Again, and yet again, the woman in white. There was a fatality in it.
‘And his name?' I said, as quietly and indifferently as I could.
‘Sir Percival Glyde.'
Sir -- Sir Percival! Anne Catherick's question -- that suspicious question about the men of the rank of Baronet whom I might happen to know -- had hardly been dismissed from my mind by Miss Halcombe's return to me in the summer-house, before it was recalled again by her own answer. I stopped suddenly, and looked at her.
‘Sir Percival Glyde,' she repeated, imagining that I had not heard her former reply.
‘Knight, or Baronet?' I asked, with an agitation that I could hide no longer.
She paused for a moment, and then answered, rather coldly --
‘Baronet, of course.'