Jude the Obsure
Page 293"You must mind the shop this morning," he said casually. "I've to
go and get some inwards and half a pig from Lumsdon, and to call
elsewhere. If you live here you must put your shoulder to the wheel,
at least till I get the business started!"
"Well, for to-day I can't say." She looked deedily into his face.
"I've got a prize upstairs."
"Oh? What's that?"
"A husband--almost."
"No!"
"Yes. It's Jude. He's come back to me."
"Your old original one? Well, I'm damned!"
"But how does he come to be up there?" said Donn, humour-struck, and
nodding to the ceiling.
"Don't ask inconvenient questions, Father. What we've to do is to
keep him here till he and I are--as we were."
"How was that?"
"Married."
"Ah... Well it is the rummest thing I ever heard of--marrying an
old husband again, and so much new blood in the world! He's no
catch, to my thinking. I'd have had a new one while I was about it."
"It isn't rum for a woman to want her old husband back for
perhaps it is funny, rather!" And Arabella was suddenly seized with
a fit of loud laughter, in which her father joined more moderately.
"Be civil to him, and I'll do the rest," she said when she had
recovered seriousness. "He told me this morning that his head ached
fit to burst, and he hardly seemed to know where he was. And no
wonder, considering how he mixed his drink last night. We must keep
him jolly and cheerful here for a day or two, and not let him go back
to his lodging. Whatever you advance I'll pay back to you again.
But I must go up and see how he is now, poor deary."
Arabella ascended the stairs, softly opened the door of the first
she entered to the bedside and stood regarding him. The fevered
flush on his face from the debauch of the previous evening lessened
the fragility of his ordinary appearance, and his long lashes,
dark brows, and curly back hair and beard against the white pillow
completed the physiognomy of one whom Arabella, as a woman of rank
passions, still felt it worth while to recapture, highly important
to recapture as a woman straitened both in means and in reputation.
Her ardent gaze seemed to affect him; his quick breathing became
suspended, and he opened his eyes.