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[table=80%,#ffffff,#000000,1][tr][td]Part 5
AT ALDBRICKHAM AND ELSEWHERE
"Thy aerial part, and all the fiery parts which are mingled in thee, though by nature they have an upward tendency, still in obedience to the disposition of the universe they are over-powered here in the compound mass the body."--M. ANTONINUS (Long).
“你身具气成分及诸火成分,混生而呈上逸之势,奈因寓于浑成之本体,受制于宇宙之大法,不得不循从,所以力绌而不果。”——M.安托尼奴斯(朗)
Part 5 Chapter 1
How Gillingham's doubts were disposed of will most quickly appear by passing over the series of dreary months and incidents that followed the events of the last chapter, and coming on to a Sunday in the February of the year following.
Sue and Jude were living in Aldbrickham, in precisely the same relations that they had established between themselves when she left Shaston to join him the year before. The proceedings in the law-courts had reached their consciousness, but as a distant sound and an occasional missive which they hardly understood.
They had met, as usual, to breakfast together in the little house with Jude's name on it, that he had taken at fifteen pounds a year, with three-pounds-ten extra for rates and taxes, and furnished with his aunt's ancient and lumbering goods, which had cost him about their full value to bring all the way from Marygreen. Sue kept house, and managed everything.
As he entered the room this morning Sue held up a letter she had just received.
"Well; and what is it about?" he said after kissing her.
"That the decree NISI in the case of Phillotson VERSUS Phillotson and Fawley, pronounced six months ago, has just been made absolute."
"Ah," said Jude, as he sat down.
The same concluding incident in Jude's suit against Arabella had occurred about a month or two earlier. Both cases had been too insignificant to be reported in the papers, further than by name in a long list of other undefended cases.
"Now then, Sue, at any rate, you can do what you like!" He looked at his sweetheart curiously.
"Are we--you and I--just as free now as if we had never married at all?"
"Just as free--except, I believe, that a clergyman may object personally to remarry you, and hand the job on to somebody else."
"But I wonder--do you think it is really so with us? I know it is generally. But I have an uncomfortable feeling that my freedom has been obtained under false pretences!"
"How?"
"Well--if the truth about us had been known, the decree wouldn't have been pronounced. It is only, is it, because we have made no defence, and have led them into a false supposition? Therefore is my freedom lawful, however proper it may be?"
"Well--why did you let it be under false pretences? You have only yourself to blame," he said mischievously.
"Jude--don't! You ought not to be touchy about that still. You must take me as I am."
"Very well, darling: so I will. Perhaps you were right. As to your question, we were not obliged to prove anything. That was their business. Anyhow we are living together."
"Yes. Though not in their sense."
"One thing is certain, that however the decree may be brought about, a marriage is dissolved when it is dissolved. There is this advantage in being poor obscure people like us-- that these things are done for us in a rough and ready fashion. It was the same with me and Arabella. I was afraid her criminal second marriage would have been discovered, and she punished; but nobody took any interest in her--nobody inquired, nobody suspected it. If we'd been patented nobilities we should have had infinite trouble, and days and weeks would have been spent in investigations."
By degrees Sue acquired her lover's cheerfulness at the sense of freedom, and proposed that they should take a walk in the fields, even if they had to put up with a cold dinner on account of it. Jude agreed, and Sue went up-stairs and prepared to start, putting on a joyful coloured gown in observance of her liberty; seeing which Jude put on a lighter tie.
"Now we'll strut arm and arm," he said, "like any other engaged couple. We've a legal right to."
They rambled out of the town, and along a path over the low-lying lands that bordered it, though these were frosty now, and the extensive seed-fields were bare of colour and produce. The pair, however, were so absorbed in their own situation that their surroundings were little in their consciousness.
"Well, my dearest, the result of all this is that we can marry after a decent interval."
"Yes; I suppose we can," said Sue, without enthusiasm.
"And aren't we going to?"
"I don't like to say no, dear Jude; but I feel just the same about it now as I have done all along. I have just the same dread lest an iron contract should extinguish your tenderness for me, and mine for you, as it did between our unfortunate parents."
"Still, what can we do? I do love you, as you know, Sue."
"I know it abundantly. But I think I would much rather go on living always as lovers, as we are living now, and only meeting by day. It is so much sweeter--for the woman at least, and when she is sure of the man. And henceforward we needn't be so particular as we have been about appearances."
"Our experiences of matrimony with others have not been encouraging, I own," said he with some gloom; "either owing to our own dissatisfied, unpractical natures, or by our misfortune. But we two----"
"Should be two dissatisfied ones linked together, which would be twice as bad as before.... I think I should begin to be afraid of you, Jude, the moment you had contracted to cherish me under a Government stamp, and I was licensed to be loved on the premises by you--Ugh, how horrible and sordid! Although, as you are, free, I trust you more than any other man in the world."
"No, no--don't say I should change!" he expostulated; yet there was misgiving in his own voice also.
"Apart from ourselves, and our unhappy peculiarities, it is foreign to a man's nature to go on loving a person when he is told that he must and shall be that person's lover. There would be a much likelier chance of his doing it if he were told not to love. If the marriage ceremony consisted in an oath and signed contract between the parties to cease loving from that day forward, in consideration of personal possession being given, and to avoid each other's society as much as possible in public, there would be more loving couples than there are now. Fancy the secret meetings between the perjuring husband and wife, the denials of having seen each other, the clambering in at bedroom windows, and the hiding in closets! There'd be little cooling then."
"Yes; but admitting this, or something like it, to be true, you are not the only one in the world to see it, dear little Sue. People go on marrying because they can't resist natural forces, although many of them may know perfectly well that they are possibly buying a month's pleasure with a life's discomfort. No doubt my father and mother, and your father and mother, saw it, if they at all resembled us in habits of observation. But then they went and married just the same, because they had ordinary passions. But you, Sue, are such a phantasmal, bodiless creature, one who--if you'll allow me to say it-- has so little animal passion in you, that you can act upon reason in the matter, when we poor unfortunate wretches of grosser substance can't."
"Well," she sighed, "you've owned that it would probably end in misery for us. And I am not so exceptional a woman as you think. Fewer women like marriage than you suppose, only they enter into it for the dignity it is assumed to confer, and the social advantages it gains them sometimes--a dignity and an advantage that I am quite willing to do without."
Jude fell back upon his old complaint--that, intimate as they were, he had never once had from her an honest, candid declaration that she loved or could love him. "I really fear sometimes that you cannot," he said, with a dubiousness approaching anger. "And you are so reticent. I know that women are taught by other women that they must never admit the full truth to a man. But the highest form of affection is based on full sincerity on both sides. Not being men, these women don't know that in looking back on those he has had tender relations with, a man's heart returns closest to her who was the soul of truth in her conduct. The better class of man, even if caught by airy affectations of dodging and parrying, is not retained by them. A Nemesis attends the woman who plays the game of elusiveness too often, in the utter contempt for her that, sooner or later, her old admirers feel; under which they allow her to go unlamented to her grave."
Sue, who was regarding the distance, had acquired a guilty look; and she suddenly replied in a tragic voice: "I don't think I like you to-day so well as I did, Jude!"
"Don't you? Why?"
"Oh, well--you are not nice--too sermony. Though I suppose I am so bad and worthless that I deserve the utmost rigour of lecturing!"
"No, you are not bad. You are a dear. But as slippery as an eel when I want to get a confession from you."
"Oh yes I am bad, and obstinate, and all sorts! It is no use your pretending I am not! People who are good don't want scolding as I do.... But now that I have nobody but you, and nobody to defend me, it is very hard that I mustn't have my own way in deciding how I'll live with you, and whether I'll be married or no!"
"Sue, my own comrade and sweetheart, I don't want to force you either to marry or to do the other thing--of course I don't! It is too wicked of you to be so pettish! Now we won't say any more about it, and go on just the same as we have done; and during the rest of our walk we'll talk of the meadows only, and the floods, and the prospect of the farmers this coming year."
After this the subject of marriage was not mentioned by them for several days, though living as they were with only a landing between them it was constantly in their minds. Sue was assisting Jude very materially now: he had latterly occupied himself on his own account in working and lettering headstones, which he kept in a little yard at the back of his little house, where in the intervals of domestic duties she marked out the letters full size for him, and blacked them in after he had cut them. It was a lower class of handicraft than were his former performances as a cathedral mason, and his only patrons were the poor people who lived in his own neighbourhood, and knew what a cheap man this "Jude Fawley: Monumental Mason" (as he called himself on his front door) was to employ for the simple memorials they required for their dead. But he seemed more independent than before, and it was the only arrangement under which Sue, who particularly wished to be no burden on him, could render any assistance.
在上一章所叙种种变化后,接下来的几个月沉闷单调,没有波澜起伏,但是季令安对费乐生的决定所持的怀疑,到次年二月一个礼拜天,就在须臾间廓清了。
苏和裘德这时住在奥尔布里肯,他们之间的关系跟她从沙氏顿来同他相聚时建立的相比,一切照旧。法庭的诉讼程序犹如远方传来的声音,时有所闻而已,至于间或送达的法律文书,他们看了也不大明白。
他们住在一座标着裘德名牌的小房子里,平常都是早饭时候见面。裘德一年得出十五镑房租,外加三镑十先令房捐,家里摆着他姑婆的古老笨重的家具,单为把它们从马利格林运过来的花费就抵得上它们的全部价值。苏管家,料理一切。
那个早上,他一进屋子就瞧见苏手上拿着一封信,是她才收到的。
“呃,这里头是什么玩意儿?”他吻了苏之后说。
“是费乐生诉费乐生和福来一案的最后判决书,六个月以前公告过,现在已经到期,判决刚刚生效。”
“啊。”裘德说着就坐下来。
裘德诉阿拉贝拉离婚案大约一两个月之前也有了同样结果。两案实在无足重轻,所以报章不屑报道,只在一长串无异议案件表上公布一下姓名就算了。
“苏,你现在总算可以想干什么就干什么啦!”他看着心爱的人,带着好奇的神气。
“咱们——你跟我这么一来是不是跟压根儿没结过婚一样自由呢?”
“一样自由——我看,就差一样,牧师也许拒绝由他本人给你主持婚礼,让给别人替他办吧。”
“不过我还是没明白——你真是觉着咱们就那么自由吗?我大致知道是自由了。可是我心里直嘀咕,因为我这自由是靠欺诈弄到手的。”
“怎么这么说呢?”
“呃——人家要是知道咱们的实情,决不会把判决公告出来。就因为咱们一点没为自己辩护,让他们做了错误的推断,认为理当如此,对不对?不管程序多正当,难道我这自由就合乎法律的规定吗?”
“哎——你先头干吗用欺诈取得自由呢?这只好怪你自己喽。”他说,故意怄她。
“裘德——别这么说!你大可不必为这个瞎生气。我是怎么样就怎么样,你别把我看错了。”
“好啦,好啦,亲亲,我听命就是啦。你大概对吧。至于你那个问题,咱们本来无需去表示什么,该怎么办是他们的事儿。反正咱们在一块儿过啦。”
“话是这么说,不过他们的判决的含义不是这个意思。”
“有一点总是确定无疑的。别管判决怎么来的,反正该判离婚就判了离婚。拿咱们这样出不了头的穷人说,碰上这样的事也有好处——反正按现成规章给咱们草草一办就行了。我跟阿拉贝拉的事也一样。我原来还担心她第二次犯了法的婚姻一旦叫人发现了,要受惩罚呢;可是谁对她也没兴趣,没人去查问,也没人起疑心。咱们要是有封号的贵族,那麻烦可就无尽无休了,一调查就是多少天,多少个礼拜。”
苏自己也跟她情人一样因获得自由而慢慢感到心情舒畅,于是提出到野外散步,尽管晚上免不了吃冷饭。裘德也赞成。她上楼打扮了一下,穿上一件艳丽的长袍来纪念她的自由。裘德一看她这样,也打了条色调明快的领带。
“现在咱们可以挽着胳臂大摇大摆地走啦,”他说,“就跟别的订了婚的两口子一样。咱们现在有合法权利这样做啦。”
他们慢慢腾腾地出了市区,顺着一条小路走。路两边的洼地全结了霜,广阔的麦田已经下了种,庄稼还没露头,还是原来干巴巴的泥土颜色。不过这一对情人全心沉浸在他们自己这会儿所处的情境里,周围的景物在他们的意识里占不到地位。
“啊,我的最亲爱的,既然有了这么个结果,再到个适当时间,咱们就可以结婚啦。”
“是啊,我看咱们可以结婚啦。”苏说,没表现出热情。
“那咱们要不要就办呢?”
“我可不想说别这样,亲爱的裘德;不过我这会儿的感觉,还跟我以前经历的一样。我还跟以前一样怕,怕的是一份铁一般的契约就把你对我的柔情、我对你的柔情,全给葬送了,落得跟咱们不幸的爹妈的下场一样。”
“那要是这样,咱们又能怎么办呢?你知道,苏,我是真真爱你呀。”
“我知道得心里快盛不下啦。可是我觉着宁可咱们老接着情人那样过下去,一天见一回就行啦。那样要甜蜜得多呢——至少女人是这个感觉,只要她觉着这个男人靠得住就行。往后咱们也就用不着老是为出头露面费心思啦。”
“要说按咱们跟别人的结婚经验,的确叫人心灰意冷,这我也有数。”他说,略显颓丧。“要不是因为咱们生来不知足,不实际,就是因为咱们命不好。不过咱们两个——”
“要是两个都不知足,又凑到一块儿,那不是比以前还雪上加霜吗?我想着,一朝你靠着政府大印,按契约把我据为己有,我呢,按“只限店内”特许条件承你错爱,我一定害怕起来了,裘德——噢,这多可怕、多肮脏啊!固然你现在随心所欲,谁也管不着,我对你可比对谁都信赖哪。”
“对,对——你可不能说我会变心!”他急着阻止她往下说,不过他声音也带着几分疑虑。
“撇开咱们自己、咱们倒霉的乖僻不说吧,如果谁要是对一个男人说他应该受某某,要当她的情人,按男人的天性,那就背道而驰了,他再也不会把那个人爱下去了。如果人家叫他别爱,那么他爱那个人的缘分可能还大得多呢。要是结婚仪式,包括起誓签约,说从当天起,他们双方相爱到此为止,又由于双方都成了对方的人,要尽量留在各自小天地而避免在公开场合相伴露面,那一来相亲相爱的夫妻准比现在多了。你就好好想想吧,那发了假誓的丈夫和妻子该怎么偷偷约会呀,不许他们见面,那就逾窗入室,藏身柜子,共度良宵!这样他们的爱情就不会冷下去了。”
“你说得不错。不过就算你看到情况会这样,或者大致这样,说实话,你也不是唯一有这种看法的人,亲爱的小苏啊。人们接连不断地结婚是因为他们抗不住自然的力量,尽管其中很多人心里完全有数,为了得到一个月的快乐,可能要拿一辈子受罪做代价。我爹我妈,你爹你妈,要是也有跟咱们一样的观察事物的习惯,毫无疑问,也看得明白。无奈他们还是照结婚不误,因为他们都有普通的情欲。可是你呢,苏啊,你空灵有如幻影,飘渺若无肉身,是这般生灵,你若容我说,我就说你简直就没有出自动物本能的情欲,所以你所作所为一概听命于理性,而我们这些粗劣坯子造出来的可怜而又不幸的浊物可办不到啊。”
“唉,”她叹口气,“你也承认咱们要是结婚,结局大概也挺惨。我倒不是你想象的那么一个一万里头也挑个出来的女人。不过真想结婚的女人比你设想的少得多,她们所以走这一步,不过自以为有了个身份,有时候也能得到在社会上的好处——而我是我行我素,不管什么身份与好处。”
裘德的思想禁不住回到他耿耿于怀的事情上——他脽吞然关系亲热,可他连一回也没听她诚实而恳挚地表白过,说她爱他,或她能爱他。“我的确有时候挺害怕你不爱我。”他说,那疑心近乎生气。“你就是这么一字不提。我知道,女人都从别的女人那儿学,千万别对男人把实话说尽。但是最高形式的情深意切的爱的基础正是双方毫无保留的真诚。那类女人,因为她们不是男人,不知道他回顾以往跟女人柔情缱绻之时,他感到最贴心的总是言行表现出真心的那个女人。素性好的男人固然一时让假假真真的柔情一擒一纵,可是他们并不会老让她们摆布。一个好玩欲擒故纵、藏头露尾手腕的女人,早晚受到报应,自食其果,让原来对她倾心相与的男人鄙视;他们也因此看着她走向绝路,而不会为之动容,流涕。”
苏正目注远处,脸上显出内愧,突然她以伤感的口气回应说:“我觉着今儿个不像先头那么喜欢你啦,裘德!”
“你不喜欢?这是为什么?”
“哦,我讨厌——你老是说教。不过我想我这么坏,这么下作,活该你劈头盖脸教训一通!”
“不是这么回事儿,你不坏。你是个叫人疼的。不过我一想听你说真心话,你就跟鳗鱼一样滑。”
“啊,我就是又坏又不讲理,坏到家啦。你捧我,说我不坏,那没用!品性好的人不像我这样招人骂!……不过我现在既然没别人,只有你,也没别人替我说话,你要是不许我按自己的方式决定怎么跟你一块儿过,决定跟还是不跟你结婚,那我就觉着苦不堪言啦!”
“苏啊,你是我的同志,是我的心上人哪,我才不想勉强你结婚或者干这个于那个——我绝对不会那样!你这么乱发脾气,实在太要不得!现在咱们别谈这个啦,还是照以前一样,该怎么样,就怎么样。咱们还有一段时间散散步,就谈谈牧场呀,流水呀,往后这一年的年景呀,好啦。”
以后几天他们没再提结婚这个题目,不过他们住在一块儿,中间只隔个楼梯平台,心里免不了老揣着这件事。苏现在给裘德帮的忙倒挺实在的,他如今一心扑在干活上,在墓碑上凿字。房后边有个小院子,他把石头都放在里边。苏做完家务事,一有空,就帮他把字母按大小描好,等他镌好,再上墨。他这个手艺比从前当大教堂的石匠要下一等,他的主顾都是住在方近左右的穷人,他们都认识这个“石匠裘德•福来:专凿纪念碑”(他自己前门上有这个招牌),干活要价低。他们需要为亡人立个简单的纪念物,就找他。但是他如今看来比以前更不必俯仰由人了。苏特别不愿意成他的累赘,她能帮他忙的也只能在这方面插得上手。
Part 5 Chapter 2
IT was an evening at the end of the month, and Jude had just returned home from hearing a lecture on ancient history in the public hall not far off. When he entered, Sue, who had been keeping indoors during his absence, laid out supper for him. Contrary to custom she did not speak. Jude had taken up some illustrated paper, which he perused till, raising his eyes, he saw that her face was troubled.
"Are you depressed, Sue?" he said.
She paused a moment. "I have a message for you," she answered.
"Somebody has called?"
"Yes. A woman." Sue's voice quavered as she spoke, and she suddenly sat down from her preparations, laid her hands in her lap, and looked into the fire. "I don't know whether I did right or not!" she continued. "I said you were not at home, and when she said she would wait, I said I thought you might not be able to see her."
"Why did you say that, dear? I suppose she wanted a headstone. Was she in mourning?"
"No. She wasn't in mourning, and she didn't want a headstone; and I thought you couldn't see her." Sue looked critically and imploringly at him.
"But who was she? Didn't she say?"
"No. She wouldn't give her name. But I know who she was--I think I do! It was Arabella!"
"Heaven save us! What should Arabella come for? What made you think it was she?"
"Oh, I can hardly tell. But I know it was! I feel perfectly certain it was--by the light in her eyes as she looked at me. She was a fleshy, coarse woman."
"Well--I should not have called Arabella coarse exactly, except in speech, though she may be getting so by this time under the duties of the public house. She was rather handsome when I knew her."
"Handsome! But yes!--so she is!"
"I think I heard a quiver in your little mouth. Well, waiving that, as she is nothing to me, and virtuously married to another man, why should she come troubling us?"
"Are you sure she's married? Have you definite news of it?"
"No--not definite news. But that was why she asked me to release her. She and the man both wanted to lead a proper life, as I understood."
"Oh Jude--it was, it WAS Arabella!" cried Sue, covering her eyes with her hand. "And I am so miserable! It seems such an ill omen, whatever she may have come for. You could not possibly see her, could you?"
"I don't really think I could. It would be so very painful to talk to her now--for her as much as for me. However, she's gone. Did she say she would come again?"
"No. But she went away very reluctantly."
Sue, whom the least thing upset, could not eat any supper, and when Jude had finished his he prepared to go to bed. He had no sooner raked out the fire, fastened the doors, and got to the top of the stairs than there came a knock. Sue instantly emerged from her room, which she had but just entered.
"There she is again!" Sue whispered in appalled accents.
"How do you know?"
"She knocked like that last time."
They listened, and the knocking came again. No servant was kept in the house, and if the summons were to be responded to one of them would have to do it in person. "I'll open a window," said Jude. "Whoever it is cannot be expected to be let in at this time."
He accordingly went into his bedroom and lifted the sash. The lonely street of early retiring workpeople was empty from end to end save of one figure--that of a woman walking up and down by the lamp a few yards off.
"Who's there?" he asked.
"Is that Mr. Fawley?" came up from the woman, in a voice which was unmistakably Arabella's.
Jude replied that it was.
"Is it she?" asked Sue from the door, with lips apart.
"Yes, dear," said Jude. "What do you want, Arabella?" he inquired.
"I beg your pardon, Jude, for disturbing you," said Arabella humbly. "But I called earlier--I wanted particularly to see you to-night, if I could. I am in trouble, and have nobody to help me!"
"In trouble, are you?"
"Yes."
There was a silence. An inconvenient sympathy seemed to be rising in Jude's breast at the appeal. "But aren't you married?" he said.
Arabella hesitated. "No, Jude, I am not," she returned. "He wouldn't, after all. And I am in great difficulty. I hope to get another situation as barmaid soon. But it takes time, and I really am in great distress because of a sudden responsibility that's been sprung upon me from Australia; or I wouldn't trouble you--believe me I wouldn't. I want to tell you about it."
Sue remained at gaze, in painful tension, hearing every word, but speaking none.
"You are not really in want of money, Arabella?" he asked, in a distinctly softened tone.
"I have enough to pay for the night's lodging I have obtained, but barely enough to take me back again."
"Where are you living?"
"In London still." She was about to give the address, but she said, "I am afraid somebody may hear, so I don't like to call out particulars of myself so loud. If you could come down and walk a little way with me towards the Prince Inn, where I am staying to-night, I would explain all. You may as well, for old time's sake!"
"Poor thing! I must do her the kindness of hearing what's the matter, I suppose," said Jude in much perplexity. "As she's going back to-morrow it can't make much difference."
"But you can go and see her to-morrow, Jude! Don't go now, Jude!" came in plaintive accents from the doorway. "Oh, it is only to entrap you, I know it is, as she did before! Don't go, dear! She is such a low-passioned woman-- I can see it in her shape, and hear it in her voice!
"But I shall go," said Jude. "Don't attempt to detain me, Sue. God knows I love her little enough now, but I don't want to be cruel to her." He turned to the stairs.
"But she's not your wife!" cried Sue distractedly. "And I----"
"And you are not either, dear, yet," said Jude.
"Oh, but are you going to her? Don't! Stay at home! Please, please stay at home, Jude, and not go to her, now she's not your wife any more than I!"
"Well, she is, rather more than you, come to that," he said, taking his hat determinedly. "I've wanted you to be, and I've waited with the patience of Job, and I don't see that I've got anything by my self-denial. I shall certainly give her something, and hear what it is she is so anxious to tell me; no man could do less!"
There was that in his manner which she knew it would be futile to oppose. She said no more, but, turning to her room as meekly as a martyr, heard him go down-stairs, unbolt the door, and close it behind him. With a woman's disregard of her dignity when in the presence of nobody but herself, she also trotted down, sobbing articulately as she went. She listened. She knew exactly how far it was to the inn that Arabella had named as her lodging. It would occupy about seven minutes to get there at an ordinary walking pace; seven to come back again. If he did not return in fourteen minutes he would have lingered. She looked at the clock. It was twenty-five minutes to eleven. He MIGHT enter the inn with Arabella, as they would reach it before closing time; she might get him to drink with her; and Heaven only knew what disasters would befall him then.
In a still suspense she waited on. It seemed as if the whole time had nearly elapsed when the door was opened again, and Jude appeared.
Sue gave a little ecstatic cry. "Oh, I knew I could trust you!-- how good you are!"--she began.
"I can't find her anywhere in this street, and I went out in my slippers only. She has walked on, thinking I've been so hard-hearted as to refuse her requests entirely, poor woman. I've come back for my boots, as it is beginning to rain."
"Oh, but why should you take such trouble for a woman who has served you so badly!" said Sue in a jealous burst of disappointment.
"But, Sue, she's a woman, and I once cared for her; and one can't be a brute in such circumstances."
"She isn't your wife any longer!" exclaimed Sue, passionately excited. "You MUSTN'T go out to find her! It isn't right! You CAN'T join her, now she's a stranger to you. How can you forget such a thing, my dear, dear one!"
"She seems much the same as ever--an erring, careless, unreflecting fellow-creature," he said, continuing to pull on his boots. "What those legal fellows have been playing at in London makes no difference in my real relations to her. If she was my wife while she was away in Australia with another husband she's my wife now."
"But she wasn't! That's just what I hold! There's the absurdity!-- Well--you'll come straight back, after a few minutes, won't you, dear? She is too low, too coarse for you to talk to long, Jude, and was always!"
"Perhaps I am coarse too, worse luck! I have the germs of every human infirmity in me, I verily believe--that was why I saw it was so preposterous of me to think of being a curate. I have cured myself of drunkenness I think; but I never know in what new form a suppressed vice will break out in me! I do love you, Sue, though I have danced attendance on you so long for such poor returns! All that's best and noblest in me loves you, and your freedom from everything that's gross has elevated me, and enabled me to do what I should never have dreamt myself capable of, or any man, a year or two ago. It is all very well to preach about self-control, and the wickedness of coercing a woman. But I should just like a few virtuous people who have condemned me in the past, about Arabella and other things, to have been in my tantalizing position with you through these late weeks!--they'd believe, I think, that I have exercised some little restraint in always giving in to your wishes--living here in one house, and not a soul between us."
"Yes, you have been good to me, Jude; I know you have, my dear protector."
"Well--Arabella has appealed to me for help. I must go out and speak to her, Sue, at least!"
"I can't say any more!--Oh, if you must, you must!" she said, bursting out into sobs that seemed to tear her heart. "I have nobody but you, Jude, and you are deserting me! I didn't know you were like this--I can't bear it, I can't! If she were yours it would be different!"
"Or if you were."
"Very well then--if I must I must. Since you will have it so, I agree! I will be. Only I didn't mean to! And I didn't want to marry again, either! ... But, yes--I agree, I agree! I do love you. I ought to have known that you would conquer in the long run, living like this!"
She ran across and flung her arms round his neck. "I am not a cold-natured, sexless creature, am I, for keeping you at such a distance? I am sure you don't think so! Wait and see! I do belong to you, don't I? I give in!"
"And I'll arrange for our marriage to-morrow, or as soon as ever you wish."
"Yes, Jude."
"Then I'll let her go," said he, embracing Sue softly. "I do feel that it would be unfair to you to see her, and perhaps unfair to her. She is not like you, my darling, and never was: it is only bare justice to say that. Don't cry any more. There; and there; and there!" He kissed her on one side, and on the other, and in the middle, and rebolted the front door.
The next morning it was wet.
"Now, dear," said Jude gaily at breakfast; "as this is Saturday I mean to call about the banns at once, so as to get the first publishing done to-morrow, or we shall lose a week. Banns will do? We shall save a pound or two."
Sue absently agreed to banns. But her mind for the moment was running on something else. A glow had passed away from her, and depression sat upon her features.
"I feel I was wickedly selfish last night!" she murmured. "It was sheer unkindness in me--or worse--to treat Arabella as I did. I didn't care about her being in trouble, and what she wished to tell you! Perhaps it was really something she was justified in telling you. That's some more of my badness, I suppose! Love has its own dark morality when rivalry enters in-- at least, mine has, if other people's hasn't.... I wonder how she got on? I hope she reached the inn all right, poor woman."
"Oh yes: she got on all right," said Jude placidly.
"I hope she wasn't shut out, and that she hadn't to walk the streets in the rain. Do you mind my putting on my waterproof and going to see if she got in? I've been thinking of her all the morning."
"Well--is it necessary? You haven't the least idea how Arabella is able to shift for herself. Still, darling, if you want to go and inquire you can."
There was no limit to the strange and unnecessary penances which Sue would meekly undertake when in a contrite mood; and this going to see all sorts of extraordinary persons whose relation to her was precisely of a kind that would have made other people shun them was her instinct ever, so that the request did not surprise him.
"And when you come back," he added, "I'll be ready to go about the banns. You'll come with me?"
Sue agreed, and went off under cloak and umbrella letting Jude kiss her freely, and returning his kisses in a way she had never done before. Times had decidedly changed. "The little bird is caught at last!" she said, a sadness showing in her smile.
"No--only nested," he assured her.
She walked along the muddy street till she reached the public house mentioned by Arabella, which was not so very far off. She was informed that Arabella had not yet left, and in doubt how to announce herself so that her predecessor in Jude's affections would recognize h