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She ventured, when next alone with Eleanor, to express her wish of being
permitted to see it, as well as all the rest of that side of the house; and
Eleanor promised to attend her there, whenever they should have a convenient
hour. Catherine understood her: the general must be watched from home, before
that room could be entered. "It remains as it was, I suppose?" said
she, in a tone of feeling.
"Yes, entirely."
"And how long ago may it be that your mother died?"
"She has been dead these nine years." And nine years, Catherine
knew, was a trifle of time, compared with what generally elapsed after the
death of an injured wife, before her room was put to rights.
"You were with her, I suppose, to the last?"
"No," said Miss Tilney, sighing; "I
was unfortunately from home. Her illness was sudden and short; and, before I
arrived it was all over."
Catherine's blood ran cold with the horrid suggestions which naturally sprang
from these words. Could it be possible? Could Henry's father--? And yet how
many were the examples to justify even the blackest suspicions! And, when she
saw him in the evening, while she worked with her friend, slowly pacing the
drawing-room for an hour together in silent thoughtfulness, with downcast eyes
and contracted brow, she felt secure from all possibility of wronging him. It
was the air and attitude of a Montoni! What could
more plainly speak the gloomy workings of a mind not wholly dead to every sense
of humanity, in its fearful review of past scenes of guilt? Unhappy man! And
the anxiousness of her spirits directed her eyes towards his figure so
repeatedly, as to catch Miss Tilney's notice.
"My father," she whispered, "often walks about the room in this
way; it is nothing unusual."
"So much the worse!" thought Catherine; such ill-timed exercise
was of a piece with the strange unseasonableness of
his morning walks, and boded nothing good.
After an evening, the little variety and seeming length of which made her
peculiarly sensible of Henry's importance among them, she was heartily glad to
be dismissed; though it was a look from the general not designed for her
observation which sent his daughter to the bell. When the butler would have lit
his master's candle, however, he was forbidden. The latter was not going to
retire. "I have many pamphlets to finish," said he to Catherine,
"before I can close my eyes, and perhaps may be poring over the affairs of
the nation for hours after you are asleep. Can either of us be more meetly employed? My eyes will be blinding for the good of
others, and yours preparing by rest for future mischief."
But neither the business alleged, nor the magnificent compliment, could win
Catherine from thinking that some very different object must occasion so
serious a delay of proper repose. To be kept up for hours, after the family
were in bed, by stupid pamphlets was not very likely. There must be some deeper
cause: something was to be done which could be done only while the household
slept; and the probability that Mrs. Tilney yet
lived, shut up for causes unknown, and receiving from the pitiless hands of her
husband a nightly supply of coarse food, was the conclusion which necessarily
followed. Shocking as was the idea, it was at least better than a death
unfairly hastened, as, in the natural course of things, she must ere long be
released. The suddenness of her reputed illness, the absence of her daughter,
and probably of her other children, at the time--all favoured
the supposition of her imprisonment. Its origin--jealousy perhaps, or wanton
cruelty--was yet to be unravelled.
In revolving these matters, while she undressed, it suddenly struck her as
not unlikely that she might that morning have passed near the very spot of this
unfortunate woman's confinement--might have been within a few paces of the cell
in which she languished out her days; for what part of the abbey could be more
fitted for the purpose than that which yet bore the traces of monastic
division? In the high-arched passage, paved with stone, which already she had
trodden with peculiar awe, she well remembered the doors of which the general
had given no account. To what might not those doors lead? In support of the
plausibility of this conjecture, it further occurred to her that the forbidden
gallery, in which lay the apartments of the unfortunate Mrs. Tilney, must be, as certainly as her memory could guide
her, exactly over this suspected range of cells, and the staircase by the side
of those apartments of which she had caught a transient glimpse, communicating
by some secret means with those cells, might well have favoured
the barbarous proceedings of her husband. Down that staircase she had perhaps
been conveyed in a state of well-prepared insensibility!
Catherine sometimes started at the boldness of her own surmises, and
sometimes hoped or feared that she had gone too far; but they were supported by
such appearances as made their dismissal impossible.
The side of the quadrangle, in which she supposed the guilty scene to be
acting, being, according to her belief, just opposite her own, it struck her
that, if judiciously watched, some rays of light from the general's lamp might
glimmer through the lower windows, as he passed to the prison of his wife; and,
twice before she stepped into bed, she stole gently from her room to the
corresponding window in the gallery, to see if it appeared; but all abroad was
dark, and it must yet be too early. The various ascending noises convinced her
that the servants must still be up. Till midnight,
she supposed it would be in vain to watch; but then, when the clock had struck
twelve, and all was quiet, she would, if not quite appalled by darkness, steal
out and look once more. The clock struck twelve--and Catherine had been half an
hour asleep.
CHAPTER
24
The next day afforded no opportunity for the proposed examination of the
mysterious apartments. It was Sunday, and the whole time between morning and
afternoon service was required by the general in exercise abroad or eating cold
meat at home; and great as was Catherine's curiosity, her courage was not equal
to a wish of exploring them after dinner, either by the fading light of the sky
between six and seven o'clock, or by the yet more partial though stronger
illumination of a treacherous lamp. The day was unmarked therefore by anything
to interest her imagination beyond the sight of a very elegant monument to the
memory of Mrs. Tilney, which immediately fronted the
family pew. By that her eye was instantly caught and long retained; and the
perusal of the highly strained epitaph, in which every virtue was ascribed to
her by the inconsolable husband, who must have been in some way or other her
destroyer, affected her even to tears.
That the general, having erected such a monument, should be able to face it,
was not perhaps very strange, and yet that he could sit so boldly collected
within its view, maintain so elevated an air, look so fearlessly around, nay,
that he should even enter the church, seemed wonderful to Catherine. Not, however, that many instances of beings equally hardened in
guilt might not be produced. She could remember dozens who had
persevered in every possible vice, going on from crime to crime, murdering
whomsoever they chose, without any feeling of humanity or remorse; till a
violent death or a religious retirement closed their black career. The erection
of the monument itself could not in the smallest degree affect her doubts of
Mrs. Tilney's actual decease. Were she even to
descend into the family vault where her ashes were supposed to slumber, were
she to behold the coffin in which they were said to be enclosed--what could it
avail in such a case? Catherine had read too much not to be perfectly aware of
the ease with which a waxen figure might be introduced, and a supposititious
funeral carried on.
The succeeding morning promised something better. The general's early walk,
ill-timed as it was in every other view, was favourable
here; and when she knew him to be out of the house, she directly proposed to
Miss Tilney the accomplishment of her promise.
Eleanor was ready to oblige her; and Catherine reminding her as they went of
another promise, their first visit in consequence was to the portrait in her
bed-chamber. It represented a very lovely woman, with a mild and pensive
countenance, justifying, so far, the expectations of its new observer; but they
were not in every respect answered, for Catherine had depended upon meeting
with features, hair, complexion, that should be the very counterpart, the very
image, if not of Henry's, of Eleanor's--the only portraits of which she had
been in the habit of thinking, bearing always an equal resemblance of mother
and child. A face once taken was taken for generations. But here she was
obliged to look and consider and study for a likeness. She contemplated it,
however, in spite of this drawback, with much emotion, and, but for a yet
stronger interest, would have left it unwillingly.
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