登陆注册
37365300000084

第84章

She knew he could not be with her without being aware of this inner turmoil, and she hoped he would break the spell by some releasing word.But she presently understood that he recognized the futility of words, and was resolutely bent on holding her to her own purpose of behaving as if nothing had happened.Once more she inwardly accused him of insensibility, and her imagination was beset by tormenting visions of his past...Had such things happened to him before? If the episode had been an isolated accident--"a moment of folly and madness", as he had called it--she could understand, or at least begin to understand (for at a certain point her imagination always turned back); but if it were a mere link in a chain of similar experiments, the thought of it dishonoured her whole past...

Effie, in the interregnum between governesses, had been given leave to dine downstairs; and Anna, on the evening of Darrow's return, kept the little girl with her till long after the nurse had signalled from the drawing-room door.

When at length she had been carried off, Anna proposed a game of cards, and after this diversion had drawn to its languid close she said good-night to Darrow and followed Madame de Chantelle upstairs.But Madame de Chantelle never sat up late, and the second evening, with the amiably implied intention of leaving Anna and Darrow to themselves, she took an earlier leave of them than usual.

Anna sat silent, listening to her small stiff steps as they minced down the hall and died out in the distance.Madame de Chantelle had broken her wooden embroidery frame, and Darrow, having offered to repair it, had drawn his chair up to a table that held a lamp.Anna watched him as he sat with bent head and knitted brows, trying to fit together the disjoined pieces.The sight of him, so tranquilly absorbed in this trifling business, seemed to give to the quiet room a perfume of intimacy, to fill it with a sense of sweet familiar habit; and it came over her again that she knew nothing of the inner thoughts of this man who was sitting by her as a husband might.The lamplight fell on his white forehead, on the healthy brown of his cheek, the backs of his thin sunburnt hands.As she watched the hands her sense of them became as vivid as a touch, and she said to herself:

"That other woman has sat and watched him as I am doing.

She has known him as I have never known him...Perhaps he is thinking of that now.Or perhaps he has forgotten it all as completely as I have forgotten everything that happened to me before he came..."He looked young, active, stored with strength and energy;not the man for vain repinings or long memories.She wondered what she had to hold or satisfy him.He loved her now; she had no doubt of that; but how could she hope to keep him? They were so nearly of an age that already she felt herself his senior.As yet the difference was not visible; outwardly at least they were matched; but ill-health or unhappiness would soon do away with this equality.

She thought with a pang of bitterness: "He won't grow any older because he doesn't feel things; and because he doesn't, I SHALL..."And when she ceased to please him, what then? Had he the tradition of faith to the spoken vow, or the deeper piety of the unspoken dedication? What was his theory, what his inner conviction in such matters? But what did she care for his convictions or his theories? No doubt he loved her now, and believed he would always go on loving her, and was persuaded that, if he ceased to, his loyalty would be proof against the change.What she wanted to know was not what he thought about it in advance, but what would impel or restrain him at the crucial hour.She put no faith in her own arts: she was too sure of having none! And if some beneficent enchanter had bestowed them on her, she knew now that she would have rejected the gift.She could hardly conceive of wanting the kind of love that was a state one could be cozened into...

Darrow, putting away the frame, walked across the room and sat down beside her; and she felt he had something special to say.

"They're sure to send for me in a day or two now," he began.

She made no answer, and he continued: "You'll tell me before I go what day I'm to come back and get you?"It was the first time since his return to Givre that he had made any direct allusion to the date of their marriage; and instead of answering him she broke out: "There's something I've been wanting you to know.The other day in Paris I saw Miss Viner."She saw him flush with the intensity of his surprise.

"You sent for her?"

"No; she heard from Adelaide that I was in Paris and she came.She came because she wanted to urge me to marry you.

I thought you ought to know what she had done."Darrow stood up."I'm glad you've told me." He spoke with a visible effort at composure.Her eyes followed him as he moved away.

"Is that all?" he asked after an interval.

"It seems to me a great deal."

"It's what she'd already asked me." His voice showed her how deeply he was moved, and a throb of jealousy shot through her.

"Oh, it was for your sake, I know!" He made no answer, and she added: "She's been exceedingly generous...Why shouldn't we speak of it?"She had lowered her head, but through her dropped lids she seemed to be watching the crowded scene of his face.

"I've not shrunk from speaking of it."

"Speaking of her, then, I mean.It seems to me that if Icould talk to you about her I should know better----"She broke off, confused, and he questioned: "What is it you want to know better?"The colour rose to her forehead.How could she tell him what she scarcely dared own to herself? There was nothing she did not want to know, no fold or cranny of his secret that her awakened imagination did not strain to penetrate;but she could not expose Sophy Viner to the base fingerings of a retrospective jealousy, nor Darrow to the temptation of belittling her in the effort to better his own case.The girl had been magnificent, and the only worthy return that Anna could make was to take Darrow from her without a question if she took him at all...

同类推荐
  • 显识论

    显识论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 广博严净不退转轮经

    广博严净不退转轮经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 丛林校定清规总要

    丛林校定清规总要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 开春论

    开春论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 武编

    武编

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 李银河自选集

    李银河自选集

    这本集子包括两类文章,一类是专著片断,另一类是随笔。它们应当说是囊括了作者一生所做过的最主要的研究,囊括了作者关注过的一些最主要的话题。
  • 弥沙塞羯磨本

    弥沙塞羯磨本

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 长夜星繁

    长夜星繁

    章浩瀚:曾经有一个女孩在我面前,我没有发现,却和她闺蜜搞了早恋,如今我追悔莫及。司航:拜拜了您嘞,不以结婚为目的的谈恋爱都是耍流氓,我对小黎从来就没想过耍流氓。覃黎:暧昧对象是高中同学就算了,相亲对象还是幼儿园同学,姐这几年社会算是白闯了。伪装微笑杀手产品开发组长x做作第一名研院女技术员x又奶又狼创业小老板既是一个有关相遇和重逢的故事,也是一个充满迷茫和抉择的故事。小孩子才做选择题,26岁的爱情与面包,我们都要。排雷:狗血三角恋,三位都有前任、前任还不止一个,女主作精、摇摆不定,职业问题靠百度、非专业不要死抠。
  • 挪威流浪记

    挪威流浪记

    2016年,我第一次来到挪威,这里陌生的一切深深吸引着我。在这里我努力学语言,交朋友,旅行,搬家,找工作,谈恋爱,从紧张盲目到悠然从容。我要把我流浪般生活讲给你听。想象中的诗和远方变成现实后,仍然是平平淡淡的生活。就像朴树歌里唱的那样,平凡才是唯一的答案。在粗糙的现实中,希望我的生活能够给你一点点启发,一点点温柔和关怀。
  • 魔幻异界行

    魔幻异界行

    远古时期,伟大的创世神创造了世界,世界在时空法则的影响下,形成了无数的平行位面,而每一个位面都有着同样的一个灵魂,他们在不同的世界里过着不一样的生活,演绎着不一样的精彩!然而,一道紫色的闪电,让李雷灵魂穿越到异界大陆,遇到了同他灵魂同源的蓝发少年,两人灵魂共生,一体两魂,觉醒了不一样的元素之力,大陆四百多年未曾出现的两系觉醒者,雷和水的结合,紫色和蓝色的斑斓,狂暴和轻柔的共鸣,在这片满目苍夷的大陆上,会留下一段怎样的不朽传说呢?……
  • 异能者之地球巅峰

    异能者之地球巅峰

    一代衰神赵宇非无缘无故地就进入了达拉然超级科学研究学院,紧接着他的世界观彻底崩塌,他究竟遇到了哪些事?他今后的人生又会变成什么样?是继续当一个衰神还是站在世界的巅峰?......
  • 如梦似幻月

    如梦似幻月

    十哥送给她甜点,十哥赠予她胭脂,十哥为她抗旨。十哥答应她要娶她,只是
  • 枯风吟

    枯风吟

    小说《枯风吟》从某种角度讲:主人公禾苗是在离家出走步入现实社会中的迷茫与不安于现实的反叛。而我与木栩的相遇及短短两个月时间的模糊不清的恋爱,与康的友情在现如今是难能可贵的。故事并没有多么复杂的感情纠葛,也并没有多少压抑,而是以一种轻快的难以言语的方式表达对现实,对人际关系的处理。及混迹与社会的流浪故事。
  • 英雄联盟之菜鸟也疯狂

    英雄联盟之菜鸟也疯狂

    菜鸟始终是菜鸟!但是不要忽视菜鸟好吗?菜鸟也是可以成为大神的嘛!不疯魔,不成神!看新一代小菜鸟如何一步一步成为大神的吧!
  • 国术尊者

    国术尊者

    国术,只杀人,不表演。不出手则已,一出手惊人。