What I say at last is:
'We should never achieve it.'
He answers at once: 'I think we will.'
'The girl would suspect us.'
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'She will be distracted by the plot into which I shall draw her. She will be like everyone, putting on the things she sees the constructions she expects to find there.
She will look at you, here, knowing nothing of your uncle— who wouldn't, in her place, believe you innocent?'
'And her people, the thieves: shan't they look for her?'
'They shall look— as a thousand thieves look every day for the friends who have cheated and robbed them; and, finding nothing, they'll suppose her flown, and curse her for a while, and then forget her.'
'Forget her? Are you sure? Has she no— no mother?'
He shrugs. 'A sort of mother. A guardian, an aunt. She loses children all the time. I don't think she will trouble very hard over one child more. Especially if she supposes— as I mean that she
will— that the child has turned out swindler. Do you see? Her own reputation will help to bury her. Crooked girls can't expect to be cared for, like honest ones.' He pauses.
'They will watch her more closely, however, in the place we'll put her.'
I gaze away from him. 'A madhouse . . .'
'I am sorry for that,' he says quickly. 'But your own reputation— your own mother's reputation— will work for us there, just as our crooked girl's will. You must see how it will. You have been held in thrall to it, all these years. Here is your chance to profit by it, once; then be free of it, for ever.'
I still look away. Again, I am afraid he will see how deeply his words have stirred me.
I am almost afraid of how deeply they stir me, myself. I say, 'You speak as though my freedom were something to you. It's the money you care for.'
'I've admitted as much, have I not? But then, your freedom and my money are the same. That will be your safeguard, your insurance, until our fortune is secure. You may trust yourself, till then, not to my honour— for I have none— but, say, to my cupidity; which is anyway a greater thing than honour, in the world outside these walls. You will find that out. I might teach you how to profit from it. We can take some house, in London, as man and wife.— Live separately, of course,' he adds, with a smile, 'when the door of the house is closed .. . Once our money is got, however, your future will be your own; you must only be silent, then, as to the manner in which you got it. You understand me? Being once committed to this thing, we must be true to each other, or founder. I don't speak lightly. I don't wish to mislead you as to the nature of the business I'm proposing. Perhaps your uncle's care has kept you from a knowledge of the law ..."
'My uncle's care,' I say, 'has made me ready to consider any strategy that will relieve me of the burden of it. But— '
He waits and, when I add nothing, says, 'Well, I don't expect to hear you give me your decision now. I t ' s m y a i m t h a t y o u r u n c l e w i l l k e e p m e h e r e , t o w o r k o n h i s pictures— I am to view them tomorrow. If he does not, then we shall anyway be obliged to reconsider. But there are ways about that, as about everything.'
He passes his hand again before his eyes, and again looks older.
The clock has struck the twelve, the fire has died an hour before, and the room is terribly chill. I feel it, all at once. He sees me shiver. I think he reads it as fear, or 145
doubt. He leans, and at last takes my hand in his. He says, 'Miss Lilly, you say your freedom is nothing to me; but how could I see the life that is yours— how could any honest man see you kept down, made a slave to lewdness, leered at and insulted by fellows like Huss— and not wish to free you of it? Think of what I have proposed.
Then think of your choices. You may wait for another suitor: shall you find one, among the gentlemen your uncle's work brings here? And, if you do, shall he be as scrupulous as I, in the handling of your fortune?— of your person? Or, say you wait for your uncle to die, and find a liberty that way; meantime, his eyes have faded, his limbs have a tremor, he has worked you the harder as he has felt his powers fail. By then you are— what age? Say thirty- five, or forty. You have given your youth to the curating of books, of a kind that Hawtrey sells, for a shilling, to drapers' boys and clerks. Your fortune sits untouched in the vault of a bank. Your consolation is to be mistress of Briar— where the clock strikes off the hollow half- hours of all the life that is left to you, one by one.'
As he speaks, I look not at his face; but at my own foot in its slipper. I think again of the vision I have sometimes had— of myself, as a limb bound tight to a form it longs to outgrow. With the drops in me the vision is fiercer, I see the limb made crooked, the flesh sour and grow dense. I sit quite still, then raise my eyes to his. He is watching me, waiting to know if he has won me. He has. Not by what he has told me, about my future at Briar— for he has said nothing that I have not, long ago, already concluded for myself; but by the fact that he is here, telling it at all— that he has plotted, and travelled, forty miles— that he has stolen his way to the heart of the sleeping house, to my dark room, to me.
Of the girl in London— who, in less than a month, he will persuade to her doom by a similar method; and to whom, a little later, with tears on my cheek, I will repeat his own arguments— I think nothing, nothing at all.
I say, 'Tomorrow, when you are shown my uncle's pictures: praise the Romano, though the Caracci is more rare. Praise Morland over Rowlandson. He thinks Rowlandson a hack.'
That is all I say. It is enough, I suppose. He holds my gaze, nods, does not smile— I think he knows I should not like to see him smile, at such a moment. He looses his grip about my fingers and then he stands, straightening his coat. That breaks the spell of our conspiracy: now he is large, dark, out of place. I hope he will leave. Again I shiver and, seeing that, he says, 'I'm afraid I've kept you very late. You must be cold, and tired.'
He watches. Perhaps he is gauging my strength and beginning to grow doubtful. I shiver harder. He says, 'You won't be troubled— too troubled— by all I've said?'
I shake my head. But I am afraid to rise from the sofa, in case I tremble upon my legs and seem to him weak. I say, 'Will you go?'
'You are sure?'
'Quite sure. I shall do better if you leave me.'
'Of course.'
He would like to say more. I turn my face and will not let him, and in time hear his careful tread upon the carpet, the gentle opening and closing of the door. I sit a 146
moment, then lift my feet, tuck the skirts of my cloak about my legs, raise my hood, lie with my head upon the hard and dusty sofa cushion.
This is not my bed, and the hour for bed has sounded and passed, and there are none of the things— my mother's portrait, my box, my maid— about me, that I like to have close while I lie sleeping. But tonight, all things are out of their order, all my patterns have been disturbed. My liberty beckons: gaugeless, fearful, inevitable as death.
I sleep, and dream I am moving, swiftly, in a high-prowed boat, upon a dark and silent water.
C h a p t e r Nine
I suppose that even then— or rather, especially then, when our compact is so new, so unproved, its threads still slender and weak— I suppose that even then I might draw back, unloose myself from the tugging of his ambition. I believe I wake thinking I will; for the room— the room in which, in whispers, at the hush of midnight, he took my hand, unfolded his dangerous plan, like a man putting back the rustling wrappers about a poison— the room reassembles itself in the chill half- hour of dawn into all its rigid familiar lines. I lie and watch it. I know every curve and angle. I know them, too well. I remember weeping, as a girl of eleven, at the strangeness of Briar— at the silence, the stillness, the turning passages and cluttered walls. I supposed then that those things would be strange to me for ever, I felt their strangeness make me strange— make me a thing of points and hooks, a burr, a splinter in the gullet of the house. But Briar crept on me. Briar absorbed me. Now I feel the simple weight of the woollen cloak with which I have covered