In volunteering a promise not to inform her brother of Peak’s singular position, Marcella spoke with sincerity. She was prompted by incongruous feelings—a desire to compel Godwin’s gratitude, and disdain of the circumstances in which she had discovered him. There seemed to be little likelihood of Christian’s learning from any other person that she had met with Peak at Budleigh Salterton; he had, indeed, dined with her at the Walworths’, and might improve his acquaintance with that family, but it was improbable that they would ever mention in his hearing the stranger who had casually been presented to them, or indeed ever again think of him. If she held her peace, the secret of Godwin’s retirement must still remain impenetrable. He would pursue his ends as hitherto, thinking of her, if at all, as a weak woman who had immodestly betrayed a hopeless passion, and who could be trusted never to wish him harm.
That was Marcella’s way of reading a man’s thoughts. She did not attribute to Peak the penetration which would make him uneasy. In spite of masculine proverbs, it is the habit of women to suppose that the other sex regards them confidingly, ingenuously. Marcella was unusually endowed with analytic intelligence, but in this case she believed what she hoped. She knew that Peak’s confidence in her must be coloured with contempt, but this mattered little so long as he paid her the compliment of feeling sure that she was superior to ignoble temptations. Many a woman would behave with treacherous malice. It was in her power to expose him, to confound all his schemes, for she knew the authorship of that remarkable paper in The Critical Review. Before receiving Peak’s injunction of secrecy, Earwaker had talked of ‘The New Sophistry’ with Moxey and with Malkin; the request came too late. In her interview with Godwin at the Exeter hotel, she had not even hinted at this knowledge, partly because she was unconscious that Peak imagined the affair a secret between himself and Earwaker, partly because she thought it unworthy of her even to seem to threaten. It gratified her, however, to feel that he was at her mercy, and the thought preoccupied her for many days.
Passion which has the intellect on its side is more easily endured than that which offers sensual defiance to all reasoning, but on the other hand it lasts much longer. Marcella was not consumed by her emotions; she often thought calmly, coldly, of the man she loved. Yet he was seldom long out of her mind, and the instigation of circumstances at times made her suffering intense. Such an occasion was her first meeting with Sidwell Warricombe, which took place at the Walworths’, in London. Down in Devonshire she had learnt that a family named Warricombe were Peak’s intimate friends; nothing more than this, for indeed no one was in a position to tell her more. Wakeful jealousy caused her to fix upon the fact as one of significance; Godwin’s evasive manner when she questioned him confirmed her suspicions; and as soon as she was brought face to face with Sidwell, suspicion became certainty. She knew at once that Miss Warricombe was the very person who would be supremely attractive to Godwin Peak.
An interval of weeks, and again she saw the face that in the meantime had been as present to her imagination as Godwin’s own features. This time she conversed at some length with Miss Warricombe. Was it merely a fancy that the beautiful woman looked at her, spoke to her, with some exceptional interest? By now she had learnt that the Moorhouses and the Warricombes were connected in close friendship: it was all but certain, then, that Miss Moorhouse had told Miss Warricombe of Peak’s visit to Budleigh Salterton, and its incidents. Could this in any way be explanatory of the steady, searching look in those soft eyes?
Marcella had always regarded the emotion of jealousy as characteristic of a vulgar nature. Now that it possessed her, she endeavoured to call it by other names; to persuade herself that she was indignant on abstract grounds, or anxious only with reference to Peak’s true interests. She could not affect surprise. So intensely sympathetic was her reading of Godwin’s character that she understood—or at all events recognised—the power Sidwell would possess over him. He did not care for enlightenment in a woman; he was sensual—though in a subtle way; the aristocratic vein in his temper made him subject to strong impressions from trivialities of personal demeanour, of social tone.
Yet all was mere conjecture. She had not dared to utter Peak’s name, lest in doing so she should betray herself. Constantly planning to make further discoveries, she as constantly tried to dismiss all thought of the matter—to learn indifference. Already she had debased herself, and her nature must be contemptible indeed if anything could lure her forward on such a path.
None the less, she was assiduous in maintaining friendly relations with the Walworths. Christian, too, had got into the habit of calling there; it was significant of the noticeable change which was come upon him—a change his sister was at no loss to understand from the moment that he informed her (gravely, but without expressiveness) of Mr. Palmer’s death. Instead of shunning ordinary society, he seemed bent on extending the circle of his acquaintance. He urged Marcella to invite friendly calls, to have guests at dinner. There seemed to be a general revival of his energies, exhibited in the sphere of study as well as of amusement. Not a day went by without his purchasing books or scientific apparatus, and the house was brightened with works of art chosen in the studios which Miss Walworth advised him to visit. All the amiabilities of his character came into free play; with Marcella he was mirthful, affectionate, even caressing. He grew scrupulous about his neckties, his gloves, and was careful to guard his fingers against corroding acids when he worked in the laboratory. Such indications of hopefulness caused Marcella more misgiving than pleasure; she made no remark, but waited with anxiety for some light on the course of events.
Just before dinner, one evening, as she sat alone in the drawing-room, Christian entered with a look which portended some strange announcement. He spoke abruptly:
‘I have heard something astonishing.’
‘What is that?’
‘This afternoon I went to the matinee at the Vaudeville, and found myself among a lot of our friends—the Walworths and the Hunters and the Mortons. Between the acts I was talking to Hunter, when a man came up to us, spoke to Hunter, and was introduced to me—a Mr Warricombe. What do you think he said? “I believe you know my friend Peak, Mr. Moxey?” “Peak? To be sure! Can you tell me what has become of him?” He gave me an odd look. “Why, I met him last, some two months ago, in Devonshire.” At that moment we were obliged to go to our places, and I couldn’t get hold of the fellow again. Hunter told me something about him; he knows the Walworths, it seems—belongs to a good Devonshire family. What on earth can Peak be doing over there?’
Marcella kept silence. The event she had judged improbable had come to pass. The chance of its doing so had of course increased since Christian began to associate freely with the Walworths and their circle. Yet, considering the slightness of the connection between that group of people and the Warricombe family, there had seemed no great likelihood of Christian’s getting acquainted with the latter. She debated rapidly in her troubled mind how to meet this disclosure. Curiosity would, of course, impel her brother to follow up the clue; he would again encounter Warricombe, and must then learn all the facts of Peak’s position. To what purpose should she dissemble her own knowledge?
Did she desire that Godwin should remain in security? A tremor more akin to gladness than its opposite impeded her utterance. If Warricombe became aware of all that was involved in Godwin Peak’s withdrawal from among his friends—if (as must follow) he imparted the discovery to his sister——
The necessity of speaking enabled her to ignore these turbulent speculations, which yet were anything but new to her.
‘They met at Budleigh Salterton,’ she said, quietly.
‘Who did? Warricombe and Peak?’
‘Yes. At the Moorhouses’. It was when I was there.’
Christian stared at her.
‘When you were there? But—you met Peak?’
His sister smiled, turning from the astonished gaze.
‘Yes, I met him.’
‘But, why the deuce——? Why didn’t you tell me, Marcella?’
‘He asked me not to speak of it. He didn’t wish you to know that—that he has decided to become a clergyman.’
Christian was stricken dumb. In spite of his sister’s obvious agitation, he could not believe what she told him; her smile gave him an excuse for supposing that she jested.
‘Peak a clergyman?’ He burst out laughing. ‘What’s the meaning of all this?—Do speak intelligibly! What’s the fellow up to?’
‘I am quite serious. He is studying for Orders—has been for this last year.’
In desperation, Christian turned to another phase of the subject.
‘Then Malkin was mistaken?’
‘Plainly.’
‘And you mean to tell me that Peak——? Give me more details. Where’s he living? How has he got to know people like these Warricombes?’
Marcella told all that she knew, and without injunction of secrecy. The affair had passed out of her hands; destiny must fulfil itself. And again the tremor that resembled an uneasy joy went through her frame.
‘But how,’ asked Christian, ‘did this fellow Warricombe come to know that I was a friend of Peak’s?’
‘That’s a puzzle to me. I shouldn’t have thought he would have remembered my name; and, even if he had, how could he conclude——’
She broke off, pondering. Warricombe must have made inquiries, possibly suggested by suspicions.
‘I scarcely spoke of Mr. Peak to anyone,’ she added. ‘People saw, of course, that we were acquaintances, but it couldn’t have seemed a thing of any importance.’
‘You spoke with him in private, it seems?’
‘Yes, I saw him for a few minutes—in Exeter.’
‘And you hadn’t said anything to the Walworths that—that would surprise them?’
‘Purposely not.—Why should I injure him?’
Christian knit his brows. He understood too well why his sister should refrain from such injury.
‘You would have behaved in the same way,’ Marcella added.
‘Why really—yes, perhaps so. Yet I don’t know.—In plain English, Peak is a wolf in sheep’s clothing!’
‘I don’t know anything about that,’ she replied, with gloomy evasion.
‘Nonsense, my dear girl!—Had he the impudence to pretend to you that he was sincere?’
‘He made no declaration.’
‘But you are convinced he is acting the hypocrite, Marcella. You spoke of the risk of injuring him.—What are his motives? What does he aim at?’
‘Scarcely a bishopric, I should think,’ she replied, bitterly.
‘Then, by Jove! Earwaker may be right!’
Marcella darted an inquiring look at him.
‘What has he thought?’
‘I’m ashamed to speak of it. He suggested once that Peak might disguise himself for the sake of—of making a good marriage.’
The reply was a nervous laugh.
‘Look here, Marcella.’ He caught her hand. ‘This is a very awkward business. Peak is disgracing himself; he will be unmasked; there’ll be a scandal. It was kind of you to keep silence—when don’t you behave kindly, dear girl?—but think of the possible results to us. We shall be something very like accomplices.’
‘How?’ Marcella exclaimed, impatiently. ‘Who need know that we were so intimate with him?’
‘Warricombe seems to know it.’
‘Who can prove that he isn’t sincere?’
‘No one, perhaps. But it will seem a very odd thing that he hid away from all his old friends. You remember, I betrayed that to Warricombe, before I knew that it mattered.’
Yes, and Mr. Warricombe could hardly forget the circumstance. He would press his investigation—knowing already, perhaps, of Peak’s approaches to his sister Sidwell.
‘Marcella, a man plays games like that at his own peril. I don’t like this kind of thing. Perhaps he has audacity enough to face out any disclosure. But it’s out of the question for you and me to nurse his secret. We have no right to do so.’
‘You propose to denounce him?’
Marcella gazed at her brother with an agitated look.
‘Not denounce. I am fond of Peak; I wish him well. But I can’t join him in a dishonourable plot.—Then, we mustn’t endanger our place in society.’
‘I have no place in society,’ Marcella answered, coldly.
‘Don’t say that, and don’t think it. We are both going to make more of our lives; we are going to think very little of the past, and a great deal of the future. We are still young; we have happiness before us.’
‘We?’ she asked, with shaken voice.
‘Yes—both of us! Who can say’——
Again he took her hand and pressed it warmly in both his own. Just then the door opened, and dinner was announced. Christian talked on, in low hurried tones, for several minutes, a............