ON Sunday morning, when the church bells in Stoniton were ringing for morning
service, Bartle Massey re-entered Adam's room, after a short absence, and said,
"Adam, here's a visitor wants to see you."
Adam was seated with is back towards the door, but he started up and turned
round instantly, with a flushed face and an eager look. His face was even
thinner and more worn than we have seen it before, but he was washed and shaven
this Sunday morning.
"Is it any news?" he said.
"Keep yourself quiet, my lad," said Bartle; "keep quiet. It's not what you're
thinking of. It's the young Methodist woman come from the prison. She's at the
bottom o' the stairs, and wants to know if you think well to see her, for she
has something to say to you about that poor castaway; but she wouldn't come in
without your leave, she said. She thought you'd perhaps like to go out and speak
to her. These preaching women are not so back'ard commonly," Bartle muttered to
himself.
"Ask her to come in," said Adam.
He was standing with his face towards the door, and as Dinah entered, lifting
up her mild grey eyes towards him, she saw at once the great change that had
come since the day when she had looked up at the tall man in the cottage. There
was a trembling in her clear voice as she put her hand into his and said, "Be
comforted, Adam Bede, the Lord has not forsaken her."
"Bless you for coming to her," Adam said. "Mr. Massey brought me word
yesterday as you was come."
They could neither of them say any more just yet, but stood before each other
in silence; and Bartle Massey, too, who had put on his spectacles, seemed
transfixed, examining Dinah's face. But he recovered himself first, and said,
"Sit down, young woman, sit down," placing the chair for her and retiring to his
old seat on the bed.
"Thank you, friend; I won't sit down," said Dinah, "for I must hasten back.
She entreated me not to stay long away. What I came for, Adam Bede, was to pray
you to go and see the poor sinner and bid her farewell. She desires to ask your
forgiveness, and it is meet you should see her to-day, rather than in the early
morning, when the time will be short."
Adam stood trembling, and at last sank down on his chair again.
"It won't be," he said, "it'll be put off--there'll perhaps come a pardon.
Mr. Irwine said there was hope. He said, I needn't quite give it up."
"That's a blessed thought to me," said Dinah, her eyes filling with tears.
"It's a fearful thing hurrying her soul away so fast."
"But let what will be," she added presently. "You will surely come, and let
her speak the words that are in her heart. Although her poor soul is very dark
and discerns little beyond the things of the flesh, she is no longer hard. She
is contrite, she has confessed all to me. The pride of her heart has given way,
and she leans on me for help and desires to be taught. This fills me with trust,
for I cannot but think that the brethren sometimes err in measuring the Divine
love by the sinner's knowledge. She is going to write a letter to the friends at
the Hall Farm for me to give them when she is gone, and when I told her you were
here, she said, 'I should like to say good-bye to Adam and ask him to forgive
me.' You will come, Adam? Perhaps you will even now come back with me."
"I can't," Adam said. "I can't say good-bye while there's any hope. I'm
listening, and listening--I can't think o' nothing but that. It can't be as
she'll die that shameful death--I can't bring my mind to it."
He got up from his chair again and looked away out of the window, while Dinah
stood with compassionate patience. In a minute or two he turned round and said,
"I will come, Dinah...to-morrow morning...if it must be. I may have more
strength to bear it, if I know it must be. Tell her, I forgive her; tell her I
will come-- at the very last."
"I will not urge you against the voice of your own heart," said Dinah. "I
must hasten back to her, for it is wonderful how she clings now, and was not
willing to let me out of her sight. She used never to make any return to my
affection before, but now tribulation has opened her heart. Farewell, Adam. Our
heavenly Father comfort you and strengthen you to bear all things." Dinah put
out her hand, and Adam pressed it in silence.
Bartle Massey was getting up to lift the stiff latch of the door for her, but
before he could reach it, she had said gently, "Farewell, friend," and was gone,
with her light step down the stairs.
"Well," said Bartle, taking off his spectacles and putting them into his
pocket, "if there must be women to make trouble in the world, it's but fair
there should be women to be comforters under it; and she's one--she's one. It's
a pity she's a Methodist; but there's no getting a woman without some
foolishness or other."
Adam never went to bed that night. The excitement of suspense, heightening
with every hour that brought him nearer the fatal moment, was too great, and in
spite of his entreaties, in spite of his promises that he would be perfectly
quiet, the schoolmaster watched too.
"What does it matter to me, lad?" Bartle said: "a night's sleep more or less?
I shall sleep long enough, by and by, underground. Let me keep thee company in
trouble while I can."
It was a long and dreary night in that small chamber. Adam would sometimes
get up and tread backwards and forwards along the short space from wall to wall;
then he would sit down and hide his face, and no sound would be heard but the
ticking of the watch on the table, or the falling of a cinder from the fire
which the schoolmaster carefully tended. Sometimes he would burst out into
vehement speech, "If I could ha' done anything to save her--if my bearing
anything would ha' done any good...but t' have to sit still, and know it, and do
nothing...it's hard for a man to bear...and to think o' what might ha' been now,
if it hadn't been for HIM....O God, it's the very day we should ha' been
married."
"Aye, my lad," said Bartle tenderly, "it's heavy--it's heavy. But you must
remember this: when you thought of marrying her, you'd a notion she'd got
another sort of a nature inside her. You didn't think she could have got
hardened in that little while to do what she's done."
"I know--I know that," said Adam. "I thought she was loving and
tender-hearted, and wouldn't tell a lie, or act deceitful. How could I think any
other way? And if he'd never come near her, and I'd married her, and been loving
to her, and took care of her, she might never ha' done anything bad. What would
it ha' signified-- my having a bit o' trouble with her? It 'ud ha' been nothing
to this."
"There's no knowing, my lad--there's no knowing what might have come. The
smart's bad for you to bear now: you must have time-- you must have time. But
I've that opinion of you, that you'll rise above it all and be a man again, and
there may good come out of this that we don't see."
"Good come out of it!" said Adam passionately. "That doesn't alter th' evil:
HER ruin can't be undone. I hate that talk o' people, as if there was a way o'
making amends for everything. They'd more need be brought to see as the wrong
they do can never be altered. When a man's spoiled his fellow-creatur's life,
he's no right to comfort himself with thinking good may come out of it. Somebody
else's good doesn't alter her shame and misery."
"Well, lad, well," said Bartle, in a gentle tone, strangely in contrast with
his usual peremptoriness and impatience of contradiction, "it's likely enough I
talk foolishness. I'm an old fellow, and it's a good many years since I was in
trouble myself. It's easy finding reasons why other folks should be patient."
"Mr. Massey," said Adam penitently, "I'm very hot and hasty. I owe you
something different; but you mustn't take it ill of me."
"Not I, lad--not I."
So the night wore on in agitation till the chill dawn and the growing light
brought the tremulous quiet that comes on the brink of despair. There would soon
be no more suspense.
"Let us go to the prison now, Mr. Massey," said Adam, when he saw the hand of
his watch at six. "If there's any news come, we shall hear about it."
The people were astir already, moving rapidly, in one direction, through the
streets. Adam tried not to think where they were going, as they hurried past him
in that short space between his lodging and the prison gates. He was thankful
when the gates shut him in from seeing those eager people.
No; there was no news come--no pardon--no reprieve.
Adam lingered in the court half an hour before he could bring himself to send
word to Dinah that he was come. But a voice caught his ear: he could not shut
out the words.
"The cart is to set off at half-past seven."
It must be said--the last good-bye: there was no help.
In ten minutes from that time, Adam was at the door of the cell. Dinah had
sent him word that she could not come to him; she could not leave Hetty one
moment; but Hetty was prepared for the meeting.
He could not see her when he entered, for agitation deadened his senses, and
the dim cell was almost dark to him. He stood a moment after the door closed
behind him, trembling and stupefied.
But he began to see through the dimness--to see the dark eyes lifted up to
him once more, but with no smile in them. O God, how sad they looked! The last
time they had met his was when he parted from her with his heart full of joyous
hopeful love, and they looked out with a tearful smile from a pink, dimpled,
childish face. The face was marble now; the sweet lips were pallid and half-open
and quivering; the dimples were all gone--all but one, that never went; and the
eyes--O, the worst of all was the likeness they had to Hetty's. They were
Hetty's eyes looking at him with that mournful gaze, as if she had come back to
him from the dead to tell him of her misery.
She was clinging close to Dinah; her cheek was against Dinah's. It seemed as
if her last faint strength and hope lay in that contact, and the pitying love
that shone out from Dinah's face looked like a visible pledge of the Invisible
Mercy.
When the sad eyes met--when Hetty and Adam looked at each other-- she felt
the change in him too, and it seemed to strike her with fresh fear. It was the
first time she had seen any being whose face seemed to reflect the change in
herself: Adam was a new image of the dreadful past and the dreadful present. She
trembled more as she looked at him.
"Speak to him, Hetty," Dinah said; "tell him what is in your heart."
Hetty obeyed her, like a little child.
"Adam...I'm very sorry...I behaved very wrong to you...will you forgive
me...before I die?"
Adam answered with a half-sob, "Yes, I forgive thee Hetty. I forgave thee
long ago."
It had seemed to Adam as if his brain would burst with the anguish of meeting
Hetty's eyes in the first moments, but the sound of her voice uttering these
penitent words touched a chord which had been less strained. There was a sense
of relief from what was becoming unbearable, and the rare tears came--they had
never come before, since he had hung on Seth's neck in the beginning of his
sorrow.
Hetty made an involuntary movement towards him, some of the love that she had
once lived in the midst of was come near her again. She kept hold of Dinah's
hand, but she went up to Adam and said timidly, "Will you kiss me again, Adam,
for all I've been so wicked?"
Adam took the blanched wasted hand she put out to him, and they gave each
other the solemn unspeakable kiss of a lifelong parting.
"And tell him," Hetty said, in rather a stronger voice, "tell him...for
there's nobody else to tell him...as I went after him and couldn't find
him...and I hated him and cursed him once...but Dinah says I should forgive
him...and I try...for else God won't forgive me."
There was a noise at the door of the cell now--the key was being turned in
the lock, and when the door opened, Adam saw indistinctly that there were
several faces there. He was too agitated to see more--even to see that Mr.
Irwine's face was one of them. He felt that the last preparations were
beginning, and he could stay no longer. Room was silently made for him to
depart, and he went to his chamber in loneliness, leaving Bartle Massey to watch
and see the end.
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