Heartsease or Brother's Wife by Charlotte Mary Yonge - HTML preview

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Chapter II.10

 

Unschooled affections, strong and wild,

 Have been my playmates from a child,

 And strengthening in the breast unseen,

 Poisoned the fount within.--Thoughts in Past Years

 The morning of the next day had been fine, and was spent in shooting by Arthur and Mr. Fotheringham; but the latter came home in time to ride with John, to make a call on some old friends, far beyond what had long been John's distance. The afternoon closed in a violent storm of wind and rain, which drove Arthur indoors, and compelled Violet to resort for exercise to the gallery, where she paced up and down with Johnnie in her arms, watching for the return of the others, as each turn brought her to the end window. As Lord Martindale came upstairs, he paused at the sight of the slender young figure--her head bent over her little one. Perhaps he was thinking what might have been, if his own children had ever been as much to their mother; for when Violet turned towards him he sighed, as he roused himself, and asked whether she saw John coming. Then joining her, he looked at his grandson, saying, 'He is improving very fast. How like you he grows!'

 'Poor little fellow, he was not at all well yesterday, and I began to think of asking whether I should send for Mr. Legh.'

 'Whatever you do, beware of doctoring!' was Lord Martindale's rather hasty answer. 'Of doctoring and governessing!--I have seen enough of it, and I resolved my two youngest should run wholesomely wild, never be dosed, and never learn a lesson till they were six years old.'

 'But this poor little man is really delicate, and I have no experience,' pleaded Violet.

 'Depend upon it, my dear,' said Lord Martindale, with sorrowful emotion in his voice, as he saw the little fair head resting caressingly on her neck, 'you are doing more for him than all the physicians in England. You must not tease him and yourself with fretting and anxiety.'

 'I know it is my duty not to be over-anxious,' said Violet, with her heart full, as she clasped her hands close round her tiny treasure.

 'You must not,' said his grandfather. 'It was the notion that mine could never have enough teaching or doctoring-as if that was what they wanted! Some system or other was always being tried on them, and they were never left to healthy action of mind or body, till the end was that I lost my two pretty little girls! And poor John, I never saw a more wretched-looking child than he was when I took him to Dr.--.'

 'And what was his advice?'

 'His advice was this. "Throw away lessons and physic. Give him other children to play with, make him wear a brown holland pinafore, and let him grope in the dirt." I believe it saved his life! I begged Mrs. Fotheringham to let him do just like her children, little thinking what was to come of that.' Then catching himself up, as if fearing to give Violet pain, 'Not that I should have regretted that connection. She was all that could be wished, and I judged by personal merits.' He hesitated, but spoke warmly, as if applying the words to Violet. 'Their youth was my only objection from the first. Nothing would have rejoiced me more than their marriage.'

 'O, yes,' said Violet, 'he says so much of your kindness.' She feared she had said too much, but Lord Martindale caught at her words. 'Has he ever adverted to that affair!'

 'Sometimes,' said Violet, shyly.

 'What! Actually spoken of poor Helen! I am heartily glad to hear it. How is he bearing it? Does he speak calmly?'

 'Yes, calmly and cheerfully, as if he liked to dwell on the thought.' Lord Martindale laid his hand on her arm, and said, gratefully, 'You have done him a great deal of good.'

 Seldom had she been more gratified, but at that moment a dripping figure burst on them, and Theodora's voice impetuously exclaimed, 'Violet! you must know something of babies! What shall I do for the child at the lodge? She will die if something is not done quickly.'

 She was in an agony of breathless agitation; the motherless baby at the lodge had been taken violently ill, the parish doctor was not at home, and she feared that Mr. Legh could not arrive from Whitford in time!

 Violet shared in her distress, and gathering from her description that it might be such an attack as Johnnie's at Ventnor, longed to be on the spot, and tried to believe the rain lessening enough for her to go. Theodora seized on her proposal, but Lord Martindale interfered. 'How can you be so thoughtless?' said he, in a far more decided manner than usual.

 'The child's life depends on it!' said Theodora, vehemently.

 'Pshaw!' said Lord Martindale, 'Violet has her own life and her child's to think of.' 'Then you won't come!'

 'I am afraid I ought not,' said Violet, mournfully.

 Theodora flung away in passionate despair and contempt, and was rushing off, when Violet pursued her, and implored her to listen one moment, and she could not let go her last hope. Violet offered some medicine that had been prepared for Johnnie--which she was sure could at least do no harm, and she could give some advice. Perhaps she mingled it with too many excuses and lamentations at being forced to stay at home; at least, Theodora thought her fanciful, rejoicing in the self-importance of imaginary ill-health.

 'Why! there's the carriage!' she exclaimed, as it drove down the avenue. 'Yes, it is gone for John,' said Theodora, bluntly.

 'Where is he?'

 'At the Goldingsby turnpike. He took shelter there, and Percy came back to order the carriage to fetch him. Percy is gone on to Whitford for Mr. Legh.' 'What a pity! I could have gone to the lodge in the carriage.’

 Theodora was provoked that her impatience had made her miss this chance: so, without answering, she ran down the steps, and was almost whirled along the avenue by the wild wind that roared in the branches, tearing the leaves from the trees, and whirling them round and round. She hardly felt it--her whole soul was set upon the little orphan; the misery of watching the suffering she could not relieve, joined with passionate resentment at her father and sister- in-law, who she fancied made light of it. Only Mr. Fotheringham, when stopping at the lodge on his way, had shown what she thought tolerable humanity. He had shared her concern, consoled her despair, suggested asking counsel of Mrs. Martindale, and finally rode off five miles to Whitford in quest of the doctor.

 Violet's advice proved not to be despicable; the measures she recommended relieved the little one, and by the time Percy and the apothecary made their appearance, it was asleep on Theodora's lap, and Mr. Legh pronounced that it was in a fair way to do well. She wished she could have watched it all night, but it was late, and Mr. Fotheringham stood waiting at the door. So she laid it in the cradle, gave her directions to the old woman who had charge of it, and resumed her brown cloak and hood, in which she walked about in all weathers, without umbrella, for which, as for parasols, she had a supreme aversion. Mr. Legh wished to prevail on her to let him drive her home, but she would not hear of it. Percy put up his umbrella, and offered to shelter her, but she held aloof.

 'No, no. Where did you get that elegant cotton machine?'

 'I borrowed it at the turnpike.'

 'And rode home with it on Arthur's mare?'

 'Of course I did. I was not going to get wet through.'

 'But how did you get her to let you carry it. She objects to his taking out his handkerchief.'

 'I am not going to be beaten by a mare, and she soon found that out.' 'What have you done with her?'

 'I took her home, and came back again. I wonder what Arthur will say to me for taking his gallant gray on to Whitford. I must get up a pathetic appeal to the feelings of a father!'

 'Well, I did not recollect you had the gray, or I would have told you to take my horse. However, there's no harm done, and it saved time.'

 'Whoo--h!' as the gust came roaring down furiously upon them, pelting fiercely with rain, flapping and tearing at Theodora's cloak, like the wind in the fable, trying to whirl her off her feet, and making vehement efforts to wrench the umbrella out of Percy's hand. A buffet with wind and weather was a frolic which she particularly enjoyed, running on before the blast, then turning round to walk backwards and recover breath to laugh at him toiling with the umbrella. Never had she looked brighter, her dark eyes, lately so sad and soft, now sparkling and dancing with mirth, her brown cheek glowing with fresh red from the rain and wind that had loosened her hair, and was sporting with a long black tress that streamed beyond her bonnet, and fluttered over her face--life, strength, and activity in every limb, and her countenance beaming with sportiveness and gaiety, the more charming because so uncommon. It was a rare chance to catch Theodora at play.

 'Ha! you'll be beat! You will have to shut up the miserable invention unknown to our forefathers.'

 'Not I. I shall not give up the distinction between man and beast in the rain.' 'Man! Why even ants carry parasols.'

 'That is in the sun. Parasols belong to an epoch of earlier civilization. Vide Ninevite carvings--Persian satraps!'

 'So you reduce yourself to a Persian satrap!'

 'No; it was reserved for modern times to discover the true application of the umbrella. Were you rational enough to come back in the carriage?' 'No, indeed. To do justice to Violet, she would have come down in it, if I had not forgotten to tell her of it.'

 'I am glad you do her justice for once.'

 She would not answer, and took advantage of another combat with the wind to cover her silence.

 'Theodora,' said he, abruptly, 'I cannot help it; I must say it!'

 'Well?'

 'I do not think you feel as you ought towards your brother’s wife.'

 'John has told you this?'

 'No; I have observed it. You had set your affections on Arthur; and thinking he had thrown himself away, you do not resist the common propensity to hate a sister-in-law.'

 'You like to provoke me,' said Theodora; 'but,' and her voice trembled, 'it is unkind to bring this up--the pain and grief of my life, when I was happy and forgetful for once.'

 'Far, far from unkindness. It is because I cannot bear to see you unhappy.' 'I trusted no one saw that.'

 'I have known you too long, and thought of you too much, not to be grieved at the sight of your forced spirits and suppressed sorrow.'

 It would have angered her from another; from him it touched her to find how closely and kindly he had watched her.

 'I cannot help it,' she said. 'He was my all.'

 'Have you striven with it?'

 'Of course I have. I have lived in a tumult of occupation, but--'

 'But you have not conquered yourself, and grappled with the serpents that poison your life.'

 'Pray what do you call those serpents?'

 'If you look them in the face, I believe you will find they are pride and jealousy.' 'You like to find generic names,' said Theodora, trying for a cold smile. 'Because it is safer to know and crush a venomous beast than to dally with it.' 'If I find there are such serpents, I will crush them and thank you.' 'No other woman would so have answered,' cried Percy, exultingly. 'Because,' said she, her throat swelling, 'no other man is true and downright friend enough to warn me honestly.'

 'Theodora, Theodora, you are a grand creature, nearly thrown away for want of breaking in.'

 'Too true,' said she, sadly.

 'I must say it. Will you let me? Will you trust yourself and your happiness to me? It has been the vision and hope of my solitude to see you what you might be! the flaws in that noble nature corrected, its grandeur and devotedness shining forth undimmed. Together we would crush the serpents--bring out all that is excellent.' 'I think there might be a chance for me with you,' said she, in an odd sort of tone. 'You mean it?' he exclaimed, trying to see her face, but her hood flapped over it. 'I do. You appreciate me.'

 She let him walk beside her, and hold the umbrella over her; but not a word was spoken till they were ascending the steps, when she said, 'Don't tell papa till night. I do not choose to look foolish.'

 'Good luck to thee, umbrella!' said Percy, holding it on high, ere closing it. 'Thy sea-green dome has been a canopy of bliss. Honour to thy whalebones!' Then, in a very different manner, 'Oh! Theodora, could you but guess how you have mingled in every scheme or wish of mine; how often I have laughed myself to scorn for dreaming, as if there could be any chance!'

 'Ah! what an uproar my aunt will make!' exclaimed Theodora, somewhat exultingly. Some one crossed the hall, and she ran away, but stepped back from the foot of the stairs, laid her hand on his arm, and with a face inexpressibly sweet and brilliant, said, 'We shall get on very well together. We need have no nonsense. But I did not know how happy you had made me.'

 She escaped again; she would not have said thus much if she had not known there could be no reply, for Lady Martindale was sailing down the grand staircase.

 She met him no more till dinner, when he was silent, and she talkative and flighty, so that Violet suspected there had been a quarrel.

 The next morning, the first tidings were that John had a cold and was confined to his bed by cough and pain in the chest; while something too was said of his having been kept up late at night talking. Theodora paid a visit to the sick child in the early morning, and after breakfast accompanied Violet to the lodge, where Violet found the poor little thing nursed with more goodwill than skill by its old aunt and Theodora, took it into her own motherly arms, gave it food and medicine, and hushed it to sleep so successfully, that Theodora respected what she called the feminine element.

 The two sisters walked back happily together; but at the door Lord Martindale met them, exclaiming, 'Where have you been, Theodora? Come here.' Violet wished to be certified that John was not worse, but could find no one but Mr. Fotheringham, who, with a little twist of the corner of his mouth, assured her that there was no cause for uneasiness on that account.

 Some time had gone by; she was writing letters, while Percy stood in the deep window, reading the newspapers, and making a great rustling with them. Suddenly Arthur entered, exclaiming,

 'Well, Violet, here is a piece of news! Guess!'

 'That is the way people always tell wedding news.'

 'Right. Now then for the victims.'

 'Your sister? What really? And who? Oh, not Lord St. Erme?'

 'The very antipodes, as Harrison would say! Guess again.'

 'Help me, Mr. Fotheringham,' she began; but Arthur, with a tremendous start, exclaimed, 'Hollo! if that is not a shame! How I wish I had said what a shocking bad match it is!'

 'You think so, do you?' said Percy, advancing, and heartily shaking Arthur's ready hand.

 'Oh! that is your look-out,' said Arthur, shrugging his shoulders.

 'But, do you really mean it?' said Violet, looking from one to the other, as Percy's hand seemed to claim the same welcome from her.

 'Indeed, I do,' said Percy, earnestly. 'O, how glad John will be!' was her congratulation.

 'So, I must say nothing about the gray,' proceeded Arthur. 'What is it some one says about Cupid's steeds? I vow I will call her Psyche, if it is only to make Theodora savage!'

 'Where is your father?' said Percy.

 'With John. That was where I heard it.' Then, as Percy was leaving the room, 'Well, you are a bold man! I hope you mean to kill the cat on the wedding-day. That is all.'

 'I am obliged for your experience,' said Percy.

 'If you make her like this one by the end of a year--'

 'O, hush, Arthur!'

 Percy hastened from the room. Violet could not recover from her astonishment. 'Could Lord Martindale actually have consented?'

 'Makes no difficulty at all. He has grown wiser since poor John's time. I have taught him one may be trusted to choose for oneself.'

 'But your aunt?'

 'Ah! there is nothing she hates like a Fotheringham; but she has not the power over my father she once had. She will have to take up with us for very spite. But what they are to live on I do not know, unless my father keeps them.' 'I thought he was heir to a baronetcy.'

 'Yes; but there is a half-witted son of old Sir Antony in the way, who will keep Percy out of the property for the term of his natural life, as well as if he was a wise man.'

 After luncheon, Violet had a message from John to ask for a visit from her. She found him on the sofa in the sitting-room, apparently oppressed and uncomfortable; but he looked brightened by her entrance, and pleased when she offered to stay and read to him.

 'The very thing I have been figuring to myself as most agreeable. I don't want to talk or think. I have been overdoing both.'

 So she had to repress her curiosity, and give him the repose of her pleasant reading, till he dropped asleep; and after waiting some time, in the fear of awakening him, she gently left the room, and had time for another visit to the lodge, where she fell in with the lovers, and found them disputing about the cotton umbrella. Percy announced that he should give his own in exchange, and retain it for ever, as a trophy of what could be accomplished with both horse and woman. Theodora was a little cross. If he wished to keep it out of sentiment, that was all very well; but to give it the turn of glorying over her was displeasing. He wanted to make her confess that she had submitted to its shelter. 'No, you only walked by me, and held it up.'

 'I appeal to you, Mrs. Martindale. Is not that the popular view of being under an umbrella?'

 Theodora would not speak, and Violet thought him wrong in teasing her. Silence ensued, but ended in his saying, as they came to the steps, 'Well, Theodora, shall I restore the umbrella as a hated object?'

 'No, no,' said she; 'do what you please with it, only don't talk nonsense about it.' Then, when Violet was gone,--'You must not triumph over me, Percy; I cannot bear it. If it is pride, have patience with me.'

 'I should have asked you to forgive me,' said Percy, affected by the tone of humility.

 'No, no, indeed!' said Theodora, smiling; 'but I warn you, my serpent is dealt with more safely by treading on it than by irritating it,' and there was an indignant gleam in her dark eye. 'Now I am going to tell my aunt.'

 'I would wish you well through it; but I believe you are eager for the battle. Only let me say one thing, Theodora--be forbearing, or you will be fostering the enemy.'

 'I can deal with her,' said Theodora.

 But she was met in a manner she had not expected. Mrs. Nesbit beckoned her to her side, laid her hand on hers, and peered up in her face with witch-like eyes, that disconcerted her usually ready speech, and called up a blush. 'I see,' said Mrs. Nesbit. 'I do not blame you for the fault of your father and brother. I knew how it would be.'

 'Has mamma told you?' said Theodora. 'Papa promised that I should be the first to tell!'

 'Your mamma does not know what will mortify her so extremely.'

 'Then how have you heard it?'

 'I have seen it. I knew what you had to tell from the instant you entered. And your father has given you his consent?' raising her hand, as if to say, 'I give up all hopes of him.'

 'Yes, he highly approves.'

 Here Lady Martindale came into the room.

 'You need not be vexed, my dear,' began Mrs. Nesbit. 'It will not be made public, and there will be no harm done.'

 'What will not, dear aunt? you alarm me.'

 'This foolish affair into which Lord Martindale and John have drawn this poor child.'

 'Aunt! aunt!' cried Theodora, 'you do not know what you say. It is of my own free will--uninfluenced. I would choose him, and hold fast to him through worlds of opposition.'

 'Yes, yes; we understand all that,' said Mrs. Nesbit, with a contemptuous accent; 'but as it cannot be at once, you will soon have enough of that overbearing temper. At twenty, there is plenty of time to get over such an affair, and form a more suitable connection.'

 'Never!' cried Theodora.

 'What, my dear!' said astonished Lady Martindale. 'You engaged, and you have not told me!'

 'Only since yesterday, mamma. He spoke to papa only this morning.' 'But who is it? Nothing that your aunt disapproves, I trust, my dear.' 'Percy Fotheringham,' said Theodora, standing firm, and exulting in defiance; but her aunt continued that same provoking disregard.

 'Yes, you see it is of no use to oppose her. For my part, I think her papa has acted wisely in permitting the engagement. Contradiction would embellish her hero; while, left to him, she will soon find him out. I do not concern myself, for Miss Martindale can get over a little matter of this kind.'

 'It is of no use to make protestations,' said Theodora; and she left the room much more annoyed than she could have been by the violent opposition for which she was prepared. Cool contempt was beyond everything irritating, especially where reply was impossible, and argument undignified.

 Mrs. Nesbit continued to behave as if the engagement did not exist, and Violet could not suppose her informed of it. Lady Martindale looked melancholy and distressed, especially after having been with John, whom, however, she declared to be better, and desirous of seeing his sister. Theodora went to him, but remained a very short time.

 Violet ventured in with his mother, to wish him good night, and he thanked her warmly for having read him to sleep. 'When I am laid up again, you will know where to find a nurse for me,' added he to his mother; a speech which obtained for Violet a positively cordial and affectionate good night from Lady Martindale. Though mending, he did not leave his room the next day, as it was damp and chilly; and he again asked for Violet's company in the afternoon, since he supposed she was not thinking of going out.

 'O, no; no one does, except Theodora. I saw something brown half-way across the park, which must be either her cloak, or the old cow-man's worst round frock.' 'And Percy not in attendance?'

 'No; he and Arthur are lingering at luncheon, talking about the Austrian army. When did you hear about this?'

 'As soon as I came in. He marched into my room, sat down, and said, "There! I've done it." I thought he had broken the knees of Arthur's gray, till he explained

 -"No; I have taken your sister on my hands."'

 'So you were watching them all the evening!'

 'Yes; I was very anxious as to how my father might view it.'

 'I suppose that hurt you more than the rain?'

 'Excitement, as Brown would say. Perhaps it might. We talked long and late, and afterwards I fell into the old strain of thought. From what Percy tells me, his sister must have influenced Theodora far more than I thought possible. To her he ascribes her religious tone. If he is right, my mistake in neglecting her has been worse than I supposed.'

 'Then this is all the better! Do you remember saying you despaired of a Petruchio?'

 'It is on the Petruchio principle that he takes her, and avowedly. None but Katharina was ever so wooed or so won!'

 'That is very much to her honour.'

 'If she realizes his being in earnest. She would make one doubt whether she has any earnest. Yesterday evening she so treated, the subject that I was on the point of saying, "Reply not to me with a fool-born jest." And how do you think she answered my father, when he asked her if she knew what she undertook? As my namesake said, "I shall wash all day and ride out on the great dog at night." 'Was not that a sort of shyness?'

 'I would fain hope so. If I had ever seen anything like deep earnest feeling I should be satisfied. Yet Percy declares, I trust he may be right, that she has the very strongest affections, and much tenderness of character. He says her nature came straight from the tropics, and must not be judged by sober English rules.' 'If you had seen her distress about the child at the lodge!'

 'Ah! he said those tears settled the matter, and showed him that she had the woman's heart as well as the candour that would conquer her waywardness. It sounds a little too like a lover's self- justification.'

 'Do you think so?' said Violet. 'You do not know what she is with the dumb boy, and with Johnnie.'

 'I was just going to have instanced her neglect of Johnnie.'

 'I assure you,' cried Violet, eagerly, 'that is only because she does not like me. You cannot think how fond she is of him. When I am out of the way she goes to the nursery and pets him till Sarah is almost jealous of his fondness for her.' 'I have no patience with her,' exclaimed John.

 'I thought you would have been glad.'

 'I do not like Percy to make a mistake, and get his feelings trifled with. He deserves a wife like himself.'

 'Did you hear of Arthur's advice to him?'

 'To kill the cat on the wedding-day. That might answer if it were to be at once; but it is a cat with nine lives, and I do not think she will bear to have it killed before the wedding-day.'

 'Then it is not to be soon?'

 'No, my father thinks her not fit for a poor man's wife, and cannot give her more than L5000, so they must wait till they can begin on an income equal to yours.' 'And I suppose that will be when he gets some appointment.'

 'And there is the Worthbourne estate as a provision for the future, so that there is no imprudence. For my part, I regret the delay; Theodora would shine if she had to rough it, provided always she was truly attached to her husband.' 'She would bear poverty beautifully.'

 'But it is not a thing to advise. I am accused already of being romantic and imprudent, yet I would urge it on my father if I saw them desirous to hasten it. I do not understand them, and perhaps I am unreasonable. I do not like his happiness to be in such perverse hands, yet I am uneasy at the delay. It suits my aunt's predictions, and they are far too apt to come true. I feel them like a spell. She always foretold that Helen and I should never marry. And it cannot be denied that she has great insight into character, so that I am alarmed at her declaring this will not come to good. If not, I have no hope for Theodora! She will either be hard and unfeminine, or turn to worldliness, and be such another as my aunt. She has it in her.'

 'You are taking to horrid predictions yourself.'

 'Well, I acknowledge her capabilities, but there has been woful mismanagement, and my father feels it.'

 'I was surprised at his consenting so readily.'

 'He has once been too much grieved to be led to act against his own judgment again. He thinks very highly of Percy, and is glad Theodora should be in safe keeping; she was so wilful this last season in London as to make him very uneasy.'

 Mr. Fotheringham came in, and Violet was going, but was claimed for some more work upon the Crusaders, and told that Arthur was gone out to inspect his gray. Arthur found the weather better than it appeared from indoors, and strolled into the park to indulge in a cigar. Ere long he perceived the brown waterproof cloak, and throwing away the end of his cigar, called out, 'Halloa! a solitary ramble. Have you given Earl Percy the slip?'

 'You do not expect him to be always philandering after me?'

 'There's a popular delusion with regard to lovers.'

 'We are not such ninnies.'

 'But seriously, Theodora, what can induce Fotheringham to have you?' 'I expected you to ask what induced me to have him.'

 'That in its own time! Tell me, first, why he takes you.'

 'The same reason that you took Violet.'

 'As if you and Violet were to be named together!'

 'Or you and Percy!'

 They laughed, and Theodora then spoke with deep feeling. 'It does surprise me, Arthur, but it is the more pleasure. He has known me all my life, and sees there is less humbug in me than in other women. He knows I have a heart.' 'That scientific discovery is his reason. Now for yours.'

 'Because he understands me.'

 'So your partnership is founded on a stock of mutual understanding! I devoutly hope it is; for my notion is that Percy will stand no nonsense.'

 'Of course not.'

 'It remains to be proved how you will like that.'

 'I am not given to nonsense.'

 Arthur whistled.

 'That means that I will not yield when I am not convinced.'

 'And he will make you.'

 'He will never be unreasonable,' exclaimed Theodora.

 'It does not follow that you will not.'

 'That is unjust. I yield where duty, good sense, or affection make it needful.' 'Oho! Affection! That is like other people. Now I see some hope of you.' 'Did you think I would have had him without it?'

 'Certainly, it is the only explanation. You will not find being wife to a scrub of an attache the same thing as being Miss Martindale.'

 'I am glad of it. My mind revolts at the hollowness of my present life.' 'Well done!' ejaculated Arthur.

 'I do,' said Theodora, vehemently. 'Ours has never been a home; it was all artificial, and we had separate worlds. You and I amalgamated best; but, oh! Arthur, you never cared for me as I did for you. The misery of my life has been want of affection. Any one who loved me could have guided me at will. You doubt! You don't know what is in me! How I felt as if I woul