The Woodlanders - Page 207/314

When a few minutes had been spent thus, Mrs. Charmond said, "I am so

wretched!" in a heavy, emotional whisper.

"You are frightened," said Grace, kindly. "But there is nothing to

fear; I know these woods well."

"I am not at all frightened at the wood, but I am at other things."

Mrs. Charmond embraced Grace more and more tightly, and the younger

woman could feel her neighbor's breathings grow deeper and more

spasmodic, as though uncontrollable feelings were germinating.

"After I had left you," she went on, "I regretted something I had said.

I have to make a confession--I must make it!" she whispered, brokenly,

the instinct to indulge in warmth of sentiment which had led this woman

of passions to respond to Fitzpiers in the first place leading her now

to find luxurious comfort in opening her heart to his wife. "I said to

you I could give him up without pain or deprivation--that he had only

been my pastime. That was untrue--it was said to deceive you. I could

not do it without much pain; and, what is more dreadful, I cannot give

him up--even if I would--of myself alone."

"Why? Because you love him, you mean."

Felice Charmond denoted assent by a movement.

"I knew I was right!" said Grace, exaltedly. "But that should not

deter you," she presently added, in a moral tone. "Oh, do struggle

against it, and you will conquer!"

"You are so simple, so simple!" cried Felice. "You think, because you

guessed my assumed indifference to him to be a sham, that you know the

extremes that people are capable of going to! But a good deal more may

have been going on than you have fathomed with all your insight. I

CANNOT give him up until he chooses to give up me."

"But surely you are the superior in station and in every way, and the

cut must come from you."

"Tchut! Must I tell verbatim, you simple child? Oh, I suppose I must! I

shall eat away my heart if I do not let out all, after meeting you like

this and finding how guileless you are." She thereupon whispered a few

words in the girl's ear, and burst into a violent fit of sobbing.

Grace started roughly away from the shelter of the fur, and sprang to

her feet.

"Oh, my God!" she exclaimed, thunderstruck at a revelation transcending

her utmost suspicion. "Can it be--can it be!"