Wives and Daughters: An Every-Day Story - Page 455/572

"I think you might finish your sentence," said her mother, after a

silence of five seconds.

"I cannot bear to exculpate myself to Roger Hamley. I will not submit

to his thinking less well of me than he has done,--however foolish

his judgment may have been. I would rather never see him again, for

these two reasons. And the truth is, I do not love him. I like him, I

respect him; but I will not marry him. I have written to tell him so.

That was merely as a relief to myself, for when or where the letter

will reach him-- And I have written to old Mr. Hamley. The relief

is the one good thing come out of it all. It is such a comfort

to feel free again. It wearied me so to think of straining up to

his goodness. 'Extenuate my conduct!'" she concluded, quoting Mr.

Gibson's words. Yet when Mr. Gibson came home, after a silent dinner,

she asked to speak with him, alone, in his consulting-room; and there

laid bare the exculpation of herself which she had given to Molly

many weeks before. When she had ended, she said:

"And now, Mr. Gibson,--I still treat you like a friend,--help me to

find some home far away, where all the evil talking and gossip mamma

tells me of cannot find me and follow me. It may be wrong to care

for people's good opinion,--but it is me, and I cannot alter myself.

You, Molly,--all the people in the town,--I haven't the patience

to live through the nine days' wonder.--I want to go away and be a

governess."

"But, my dear Cynthia,--how soon Roger will be back,--a tower of

strength!"

"Has not mamma told you I have broken it all off with Roger? I

wrote this morning. I wrote to his father. That letter will reach

to-morrow. I wrote to Roger. If he ever receives that letter, I hope

to be far away by that time; in Russia may be."

"Nonsense. An engagement like yours cannot be broken off, except by

mutual consent. You've only given others a great deal of pain without

freeing yourself. Nor will you wish it in a month's time. When you

come to think calmly, you'll be glad to think of the stay and support

of such a husband as Roger. You have been in fault, and have acted

foolishly at first,--perhaps wrongly afterwards; but you don't want

your husband to think you faultless?"

"Yes, I do," said Cynthia. "At any rate, my lover must think me so.

And it is just because I do not love him even as so light a thing as

I could love, that I feel that I couldn't bear to have to tell him

I'm sorry, and stand before him like a chidden child to be admonished

and forgiven."