Jude the Obsure - Page 124/318

"It is very odd that--" He stopped, regarding her.

"What?"

"That you are often not so nice in your real presence as you are in

your letters!"

"Does it really seem so to you?" said she, smiling with quick

curiosity. "Well, that's strange; but I feel just the same about

you, Jude. When you are gone away I seem such a coldhearted--"

As she knew his sentiment towards her Jude saw that they were getting

upon dangerous ground. It was now, he thought, that he must speak as

an honest man.

But he did not speak, and she continued: "It was that which made me

write and say--I didn't mind your loving me--if you wanted to, much!"

The exultation he might have felt at what that implied, or seemed to

imply, was nullified by his intention, and he rested rigid till he

began: "I have never told you--"

"Yes you have," murmured she.

"I mean, I have never told you my history--all of it."

"But I guess it. I know nearly."

Jude looked up. Could she possibly know of that morning performance

of his with Arabella; which in a few months had ceased to be a

marriage more completely than by death? He saw that she did not.

"I can't quite tell you here in the street," he went on with a gloomy

tongue. "And you had better not come to my lodgings. Let us go in

here."

The building by which they stood was the market-house; it was the

only place available; and they entered, the market being over, and

the stalls and areas empty. He would have preferred a more congenial

spot, but, as usually happens, in place of a romantic field or solemn

aisle for his tale, it was told while they walked up and down over a

floor littered with rotten cabbage-leaves, and amid all the usual

squalors of decayed vegetable matter and unsaleable refuse. He

began and finished his brief narrative, which merely led up to the

information that he had married a wife some years earlier, and that

his wife was living still. Almost before her countenance had time to

change she hurried out the words, "Why didn't you tell me before!"

"I couldn't. It seemed so cruel to tell it."

"To yourself, Jude. So it was better to be cruel to me!"

"No, dear darling!" cried Jude passionately. He tried to take her

hand, but she withdrew it. Their old relations of confidence seemed

suddenly to have ended, and the antagonisms of sex to sex were left

without any counter-poising predilections. She was his comrade,

friend, unconscious sweetheart no longer; and her eyes regarded him

in estranged silence.