CHAPTER VIII – CHAPTER X
The three chapters open at Brockhurst’s Gun-Room, where Sir Richard Calmady sits amid cigar smoke and county papers shortly after a luncheon hosted for the Fallowfeild party, noticing his mother Katherine’s profound exhaustion from the day’s social obligations. Their conversation covers Ludovic Quayle’s growing pretentiousness from his London stays, the severe, humorless Lady Louisa Barking, and her pretty but unremarkable younger sister Lady Constance Fallowfeild. After offering Katherine a brief, comforting embrace, Richard urges her to rest, and reveals he has arranged to drive his troubled cousin Helen de Vallorbes to Newlands to bid Mrs. Cathcart farewell, as Miss St. Quentin is visiting. Despite Katherine’s concerns about the late hour, Richard insists on departing immediately, taking the reins of the mail-phaeton to collect Helen.
As they drive through the autumnal countryside, Helen, harassed by angry letters from Paris, speaks bitterly of the “return journey” to her unhappy marriage, confessing she is cruelly dominated by her husband Angelo de Vallorbes. Richard’s chivalry, pity, and a newly awakened, dangerous attraction respond in equal measure; he reasons that offering worship and service to a suffering woman is a legitimate, even obligatory, act of chivalry, not an impertinence. Their carriage is delayed by a slow-moving miller’s waggon, during which Helen frets that her earlier indiscreet disclosures may have damaged her standing with Richard, even as she grows more fascinated by his mingled nobility and physical deformity, and resolves not to lose his interest. Richard seizes the delay to offer his support, asking for her full confidence, and declares he cannot stand by to accept her unhappiness as unchangeable, hinting at financial support to free her from her husband’s control. Helen is deeply moved, her anxiety fading as she recognizes the depth of his commitment.
Chapter IX, titled “Which Touches Incidentally on Matters of Finance,” unfolds across a fog-shrouded late afternoon and early evening at and around Newlands. While Richard walks the horses in the thickening fog outside, Helen enters the house to visit her cousins Honoria St. Quentin and Mrs. Cathcart, where she unspools further details of Angelo’s cruelty: his jealous rages, profligate personal spending, threats to cut off her funds, and his desire to divorce her to access her remaining money. Honoria offers Helen a monetary loan, but Helen declines, saying she sees a path to resolving her crisis. For Richard, waiting in the impenetrable fog, Helen’s disclosures ignite consuming jealousy of Angelo, and deepen his self-loathing over his physical disability, which he fears makes him incapable of offering Helen the protection she deserves. When Helen returns to the carriage, Richard impulsively offers to act as her permanent banker, providing whatever funds she needs to be independent of her husband. Helen initially protests that accepting money from a man would invite scandal, but Richard insists his status as a disabled outsider means no one will suspect impropriety, and that supporting her would give his otherwise aimless life purpose. He confesses the humiliations his deformity has wrought, how he has no real prospects of independence or meaningful action, and that her acceptance would be an act of charity he does not deserve. Helen is so moved she nearly weeps as they drive home through the thickening fog.
Chapter X shifts to a railway train carrying Lady Louisa Barking and her brother Ludovic Quayle back to London after the Brockhurst luncheon. Lady Louisa, a ruthlessly pragmatic matriarch-in-training, is fixated on securing advantageous marriages for her younger sisters, and has set her sights on the wealthy, physically disabled Richard Calmady as a match for her simple, docile younger sister Constance. She peppers Ludovic with questions about Richard’s character, income, and prospects, trying to gauge if the match is feasible. Ludovic, amused and skeptical, shares circulating gossip about Helen: that her marriage was forced by her mercenary mother, that she and Angelo are deeply unhappy, that he has threatened divorce, and that she is flirtatious and financially reckless. Lady Louisa dismisses the gossip, arguing Constance’s lack of sharpness means she will never notice or object to Richard’s disability, and that their father dotes on Constance so deeply he will approve any match that secures her financial stability. Ludovic is privately doubtful, having observed Richard’s full attention was fixed on Helen during the luncheon, and he is certain their father will never agree to the match—a conclusion he feels privately relieved by, as he views the scheme as cruel to both Richard and Constance. The chapter closes as the train enters the grimy, industrial outskirts of London, the squalid urban landscape outside contrasting sharply with the siblings’ cold, dynastic scheming.
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