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X
CHAPTER XI
The twain cantered along for some time without speech, Tess as she clung to him
still panting in her triumph, yet in other respects dubious.
She had perceived that the horse was not the spirited one he sometimes rose, and
felt no alarm on that score, though her seat was precarious enough despite her
tight hold of him.
She begged him to slow the animal to a walk, which Alec accordingly did.
"Neatly done, was it not, dear Tess?" he said by and by.
"Yes!" said she.
"I am sure I ought to be much obliged to you."
"And are you?" She did not reply.
"Tess, why do you always dislike my kissing you?"
"I suppose--because I don't love you." "You are quite sure?"
"I am angry with you sometimes!"
"Ah, I half feared as much." Nevertheless, Alec did not object to that
confession. He knew that anything was better then
frigidity.
"Why haven't you told me when I have made you angry?"
"You know very well why. Because I cannot help myself here."
"I haven't offended you often by love- making?"
"You have sometimes." "How many times?"
"You know as well as I--too many times."
"Every time I have tried?"
She was silent, and the horse ambled along for a considerable distance, till a faint
luminous fog, which had hung in the hollows all the evening, became general and
enveloped them.
It seemed to hold the moonlight in suspension, rendering it more pervasive
than in clear air.
Whether on this account, or from absent- mindedness, or from sleepiness, she did not
perceive that they had long ago passed the point at which the lane to Trantridge
branched from the highway, and that her
conductor had not taken the Trantridge track.
She was inexpressibly weary.
She had risen at five o'clock every morning of that week, had been on foot the whole of
each day, and on this evening had in addition walked the three miles to
Chaseborough, waited three hours for her
neighbours without eating or drinking, her impatience to start them preventing either;
she had then walked a mile of the way home, and had undergone the excitement of the
quarrel, till, with the slow progress of their steed, it was now nearly one o'clock.
Only once, however, was she overcome by actual drowsiness.
In that moment of oblivion her head sank gently against him.
D'Urberville stopped the horse, withdrew his feet from the stirrups, turned sideways
on the saddle, and enclosed her waist with his arm to support her.
This immediately put her on the defensive, and with one of those sudden impulses of
reprisal to which she was liable she gave him a little push from her.
In his ticklish position he nearly lost his balance and only just avoided rolling over
into the road, the horse, though a powerful one, being fortunately the quietest he
rode.
"That is devilish unkind!" he said. "I mean no harm--only to keep you from
falling."
She pondered suspiciously, till, thinking that this might after all be true, she
relented, and said quite humbly, "I beg your pardon, sir."
"I won't pardon you unless you show some confidence in me.
Good God!" he burst out, "what am I, to be repulsed so by a mere chit like you?
For near three mortal months have you trifled with my feelings, eluded me, and
snubbed me; and I won't stand it!" "I'll leave you to-morrow, sir."
"No, you will not leave me to-morrow!
Will you, I ask once more, show your belief in me by letting me clasp you with my arm?
Come, between us two and nobody else, now.
We know each other well; and you know that I love you, and think you the prettiest
girl in the world, which you are. Mayn't I treat you as a lover?"
She drew a quick pettish breath of objection, writhing uneasily on her seat,
looked far ahead, and murmured, "I don't know--I wish--how can I say yes or no when-
-"
He settled the matter by clasping his arm round her as he desired, and Tess expressed
no further negative.
Thus they sidled slowly onward till it struck her they had been advancing for an
unconscionable time--far longer than was usually occupied by the short journey from
Chaseborough, even at this walking pace,
and that they were no longer on hard road, but in a mere trackway.
"Why, where be we?" she exclaimed. "Passing by a wood."
"A wood--what wood?
Surely we are quite out of the road?" "A bit of The Chase--the oldest wood in
England. It is a lovely night, and why should we not
prolong our ride a little?"
"How could you be so treacherous!" said Tess, between archness and real dismay, and
getting rid of his arm by pulling open his fingers one by one, though at the risk of
slipping off herself.
"Just when I've been putting such trust in you, and obliging you to please you,
because I thought I had wronged you by that push!
Please set me down, and let me walk home."
"You cannot walk home, darling, even if the air were clear.
We are miles away from Trantridge, if I must tell you, and in this growing fog you
might wander for hours among these trees."
"Never mind that," she coaxed. "Put me down, I beg you.
I don't mind where it is; only let me get down, sir, please!"
"Very well, then, I will--on one condition.
Having brought you here to this out-of-the- way place, I feel myself responsible for
your safe-conduct home, whatever you may yourself feel about it.
As to your getting to Trantridge without assistance, it is quite impossible; for, to
tell the truth, dear, owing to this fog, which so disguises everything, I don't
quite know where we are myself.
Now, if you will promise to wait beside the horse while I walk through the bushes till
I come to some road or house, and ascertain exactly our whereabouts, I'll deposit you
here willingly.
When I come back I'll give you full directions, and if you insist upon walking
you may; or you may ride--at your pleasure."
She accepted these terms, and slid off on the near side, though not till he had
stolen a cursory kiss. He sprang down on the other side.
"I suppose I must hold the horse?" said she.
"Oh no; it's not necessary," replied Alec, patting the panting creature.
"He's had enough of it for to-night."
He turned the horse's head into the bushes, hitched him on to a bough, and made a sort
of couch or nest for her in the deep mass of dead leaves.
"Now, you sit there," he said.
"The leaves have not got damp as yet. Just give an eye to the horse--it will be
quite sufficient."
He took a few steps away from her, but, returning, said, "By the bye, Tess, your
father has a new cob to-day. Somebody gave it to him."
"Somebody?
You!" D'Urberville nodded.
"O how very good of you that is!" she exclaimed, with a painful sense of the
awkwardness of having to thank him just then.
"And the children have some toys."
"I didn't know--you ever sent them anything!" she murmured, much moved.
"I almost wish you had not--yes, I almost wish it!"
"Why, dear?"
"It--hampers me so." "Tessy--don't you love me ever so little
now?" "I'm grateful," she reluctantly admitted.
"But I fear I do not--" The sudden vision of his passion for herself as a factor in
this result so distressed her that, beginning with one slow tear, and then
following with another, she wept outright.
"Don't cry, dear, dear one! Now sit down here, and wait till I come."
She passively sat down amid the leaves he had heaped, and shivered slightly.
"Are you cold?" he asked.
"Not very--a little." He touched her with his fingers, which sank
into her as into down. "You have only that puffy muslin dress on--
how's that?"
"It's my best summer one. 'Twas very warm when I started, and I
didn't know I was going to ride, and that it would be night."
"Nights grow chilly in September.
Let me see." He pulled off a light overcoat that he had
worn, and put it round her tenderly. "That's it--now you'll feel warmer," he
continued.
"Now, my pretty, rest there; I shall soon be back again."
Having buttoned the overcoat round her shoulders he plunged into the webs of
vapour which by this time formed veils between the trees.
She could hear the rustling of the branches as he ascended the adjoining slope, till
his movements were no louder than the hopping of a bird, and finally died away.
With the setting of the moon the pale light lessened, and Tess became invisible as she
fell into reverie upon the leaves where he had left her.
In the meantime Alec d'Urberville had pushed on up the slope to clear his genuine
doubt as to the quarter of The Chase they were in.
He had, in fact, ridden quite at random for over an hour, taking any turning that came
to hand in order to prolong companionship with her, and giving far more attention to
Tess's moonlit person than to any wayside object.
A little rest for the jaded animal being desirable, he did not hasten his search for
landmarks.
A clamber over the hill into the adjoining vale brought him to the fence of a highway
whose contours he recognized, which settled the question of their whereabouts.
D'Urberville thereupon turned back; but by this time the moon had quite gone down, and
partly on account of the fog The Chase was wrapped in thick darkness, although morning
was not far off.
He was obliged to advance with outstretched hands to avoid contact with the boughs, and
discovered that to hit the exact spot from which he had started was at first entirely
beyond him.
Roaming up and down, round and round, he at length heard a slight movement of the horse
close at hand; and the sleeve of his overcoat unexpectedly caught his foot.
"Tess!" said d'Urberville.
There was no answer.
The obscurity was now so great that he could see absolutely nothing but a pale
nebulousness at his feet, which represented the white muslin figure he had left upon
the dead leaves.
Everything else was blackness alike. D'Urberville stooped; and heard a gentle
regular breathing.
He knelt and bent lower, till her breath warmed his face, and in a moment his cheek
was in contact with hers. She was sleeping soundly, and upon her
eyelashes there lingered tears.
Darkness and silence ruled everywhere around.
Above them rose the primeval yews and oaks of The Chase, in which there poised gentle
roosting birds in their last nap; and about them stole the hopping rabbits and hares.
But, might some say, where was Tess's guardian angel? where was the providence of
her simple faith?
Perhaps, like that other god of whom the ironical Tishbite spoke, he was talking, or
he was pursuing, or he was in a journey, or he was sleeping and not to be awaked.
Why it was that upon this beautiful feminine tissue, sensitive as gossamer, and
practically blank as snow as yet, there should have been traced such a coarse
pattern as it was doomed to receive; why so
often the coarse appropriates the finer thus, the wrong man the woman, the wrong
woman the man, many thousand years of analytical philosophy have failed to
explain to our sense of order.
One may, indeed, admit the possibility of a retribution lurking in the present
catastrophe.
Doubtless some of Tess d'Urberville's mailed ancestors rollicking home from a
fray had dealt the same measure even more ruthlessly towards peasant girls of their
time.
But though to visit the sins of the fathers upon the children may be a morality good
enough for divinities, it is scorned by average human nature; and it therefore does
not mend the matter.
As Tess's own people down in those retreats are never tired of saying among each other
in their fatalistic way: "It was to be." There lay the pity of it.
An immeasurable social chasm was to divide our heroine's personality thereafter from
that previous self of hers who stepped from her mother's door to try her fortune at
Trantridge poultry-farm.
END OF PHASE THE FIRST