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The Woman Thou Gavest Me: Being the Story of Mary O'Neill, a novel by Hall Caine |
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Part 2. My Marriage - Chapter 28 |
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_ SECOND PART. MY MARRIAGE TWENTY-EIGHTH CHAPTER
That Martin's story was true I had never one moment's doubt, first because Martin had told it, and next because it agreed at all points with the little I had learned of Lord Raa in the only real conversation I had yet had with him. Obviously he cared for the other woman, and if, like his friend Eastcliff, he had been rich enough to please himself, he would have married her; but being in debt, and therefore in need of an allowance, he was marrying me in return for my father's money. It was shocking. It was sinful. I could not believe that my father, the lawyers and the Bishop knew anything about it. I determined to tell them, but how to do so, being what I was, a young girl out of a convent, I did not know. Never before had I felt so deeply the need of my mother. If she had been alive I should have gone to her, and with my arms about her neck and my face in her breast, I should have told her all my trouble. There was nobody but Aunt Bridget, and little as I had ever expected to go to her under any circumstances, with many misgivings and after much hesitation I went. It was the morning before the day of my marriage. I followed my aunt as she passed through the house like a biting March wind, scolding everybody, until I found her in her own room. She was ironing her new white cap, and as I entered (looking pale, I suppose) she flopped down her flat iron on to its stand and cried: "Goodness me, girl, what's amiss? Caught a cold with your morning walks, eh? Haven't I enough on my hands without that? We must send for the doctor straight. We can't have _you_ laid up now, after all this trouble and expense." "It isn't that, Auntie." "Then in the name of goodness what is it?" I told her, as well as I could for the cold grey eyes that kept looking at me through their gold-rimmed spectacles. At first my aunt listened with amazement, and then she laughed outright. "So _you've_ heard that story, have you? Mary O'Neill," she said, with a thump of her flat iron, "I'm surprised at you." I asked if she thought it wasn't true. "How do I know if it's true? And what do I care whether it is or isn't? Young men will be young men, I suppose." She went on with her ironing as she added: "Did you expect you were marrying a virgin? If every woman asked for that there would be a nice lot of old maids in the world, wouldn't there?" I felt myself flushing up to the forehead, yet I managed to say: "But if he is practically married to the other woman. . . ." "Not he married. Whoever thinks about marriage in company like that? You might as well talk about marriage in the hen coop." "But all the same if he cares for her, Auntie. . . ." "Who says he cares for her? And if he does he'll settle her off and get rid of her before he marries you." "But will that be right?" I said, whereupon my aunt rested her iron and looked at me as if I had said something shameful. "Mary O'Neill, what do you mean? Of course it will be right. He shouldn't have two women, should he? Do you think the man's a barn-door rooster?" My confusion was increasing, but I said that in any case my intended husband could not care for _me_, or he would have seen more of me. "Oh, you'll see enough of him by and by. Don't you worry about that." I said I was not sure that he had made me care much for him. "Time enough for that, too. You can't expect the man to work miracles." Then, with what courage was left me, I tried to say that I had been taught to think of marriage as a sacrament, instituted by the Almighty so that those who entered it might live together in union, peace and love, whereas . . . But I had to stop, for Aunt Bridget, who had been looking at me with her hard lip curled, said: "Tut! That's all right to go to church with on Sunday, but on weekdays marriage is no moonshine, I can tell you. It's a practical matter. Just an arrangement for making a home, and getting a family, and bringing up children--that's what marriage is, if you ask me." "But don't you think love is necessary?" "Depends what you mean by love. If you mean what they talk about in poetry and songs--bleeding hearts and sighs and kisses and all that nonsense--no!" said my aunt, with a heavy bang on her ironing. "That's what people mean when they talk about marrying for love, and it generally ends in poverty and misery, and sensible women have nothing to do with it. Look at me," she said, spitting on the bottom of her iron, "do you think I married for love when I married the colonel? No indeed! 'Here's a quiet respectable man with a nice income,' I said, 'and if I put my little bit to his little bit we'll get along comfortably if he _is_ a taste in years,' I said. Look at your mother, though. She was one of the marrying-for-love kind, and if we had let her have her way where would she have been afterwards with her fifteen years as an invalid? And where would you have been by this time? No," said Aunt Bridget, bringing down her flat-iron with a still heavier bang, "a common-sense marriage, founded on suitability of position and property, and all that, is the only proper sort of match. And that's what's before you now, girl, so for goodness' sake don't go about like the parish pan, letting every busybody make mischief with you. My Betsy wouldn't if she had your chance--I can tell you that much, my lady." I did not speak. There was another bang or two of the flat-iron, and then, "Besides, love will come. Of course it will. It will come in time. If you don't exactly love your husband when you marry him you'll love him later on. A wife ought to teach herself to love her husband. I know I had to, and if. . . ." "But if she can't, Auntie?" "Then she ought to be ashamed of herself, and say nothing about it." It was useless to say more, so I rose to go. "Yes, go," said Aunt Bridget. "I'm so bothered with other people's business that my head's all through-others. And, Mary O'Neill," she said, looking after me as I passed through the door, "for mercy's sake do brighten up a hit, and don't look as if marrying a husband was like taking a dose of jalap. It isn't as bad as that, anyway." It served me right. I should have known better. My aunt and I spoke different languages; we stood on different ground. Returning to my room I found a letter from Father Dan. It ran--
"I have been afraid to go far into the story we spoke about from fear of offending my Bishop, but I have inquired of your father and he assures me that there is not a word of truth in it. "So I am compelled to believe that our good Martin must have been misinformed, and am dismissing the matter from my mind. Trusting you will dismiss it from your mind also, "Yours in Xt., "D.D." _ |