“You won’t, my lady,” he said. “You bet your life you won’t. No! So now then!”
And then gripping his hands more tightly behind him, he made a step towards her.
“You’re losing your bearings, Lady Harman,” he said, speaking with much intensity in a low earnest voice. “You don’t seem to be remembering where you are. You come and you tell me you’re going to do this and that. Don’t you know, Lady Harman, that it’s your wifely duty to obey, to do as I say, to behave as I wish?” He brought out a lean index finger to emphasize his remarks. “And I am going to make you do it!” he said.
“I’ve a perfect right,” she repeated.
He went on, regardless of her words. “What do you think you can do, Lady Harman? You’re going to all these places—how? Not in my motor-car, not with my money. You’ve not a thing that isn’t mine, that I haven’t given you. And if you’re going to have a lot of friends I haven’t got, where’re they coming to see you? Not in my house! I’ll chuck ’em out if I find ’em. I won’t have ’em. I’ll turn ’em out. See?”
“I’m not a slave.”
“You’re a wife—and a wife’s got to do what her husband wishes. You can’t have two heads on a horse. And in this horse—this house I mean, the head’s—me!”
“I’m not a slave and I won’t be a slave.”
“You’re a wife and you’ll stick to the bargain you made when you married me. I’m ready in reason to give you anything you want—if you do your duty as a wife should. Why!—I spoil you. But this going about on your own, this highty-flighty go-as-you-please,—no man on earth who’s worth calling a man will stand it. I’m not going to begin to stand it.... You try it on. You try it, Lady Harman.... You’ll come to your senses soon enough. See? You start trying it on now—straight away. We’ll make an experiment. We’ll watch how it goes. Only don’t expect me to give you any money, don’t expect me to help your struggling family, don’t expect me to alter my arrangements because of you. Let’s keep apart for a bit and you go your way and I’ll go mine. And we’ll see who’s sick of it first, we’ll see who wants to cry off.”
“I came down here,” said Lady Harman, “to give you a reasonable notice——”