登陆注册
5142100000044

第44章 Raeburn's Homecoming (2)

Harassed, and tired, and out of spirits as he was, he nevertheless felt a certain pleasurable sensation as he left St.Pancras, driving homeward through the hot crowded streets.Erica would be waiting for him at home, and he had a comparatively leisure afternoon.There was the meeting on the Opium Trade at eight, but he might take her for a turn in one of the parks beforehand.She had always been a companion to him since her very babyhood, but now he was able to enjoy her companionship even more than in the olden times.Her keen intellect, her ready sympathy, her eagerness to learn, made her the perfection of a disciple, while not unnaturally he delighted in tracing the many similarities of character between himself and his child.Then, too, in his hard, argumentative, fighting life it was an unspeakable relief to be able to retire every now and then into a home which no outer storms could shake or disturb.Fond as he was of his sister, Mrs.Craigie, and Tom, they constituted rather the innermost circle of his friends and followers; it was Erica who made the HOME, though the others shared the house.It was to Erica's pure child-like devotion that he invariably turned for comfort.

Dismissing the cab at the corner of Guilford Square, he walked down the dreary little passage, looking up at the window to see if she were watching for him as usual.But today there was no expectant face; he recollected, however, that it was Thursday, always a busy day with them.

He opened the door with his latch key, and went in; still there was no sound in the house; he half paused for an instant, thinking that he should certainly hear her quick footsteps, the opening of a door, some sign of welcome, but all was as silent as death.Half angry with himself for having grown so expectant of that loving watch as to be seriously apprehensive at its absence, he hastily put down his bag and walked into the sitting room, his calm exterior belying a nameless fear at his heart.

What the French call expressively a "serrement de coeur" seized him when he saw that Erica was indeed at home, but that she was lying on the couch.She did not even spring up to greet him.

"Is anything the matter, dear? Are you ill?" he asked, hurriedly crossing the little room.

"Oh, have you not seen Aunt Jean? She was going to meet you at St.

Pancras," said Erica, her heart failing her a little at the prospect of telling her own bad news.But the exceeding anxiety of her father's face helped her to rise to the occasion.She laughed, and the laugh was natural enough to reassure him.

"It is nothing so very dreadful, and all this time you have never even given me a kiss, father." She drew down the grand-looking white head, and pressed her fair face to his.He sat down beside her.

"Tell me, dear, what is wrong with you?" he repeated.

"Well, I felt rather out of order, and they said I ought to see some one, and it seems that my tiresome spine is getting crooked, and the long and the short of it is that Mr.Doctor Osmond says Ishall get quite well again if I'm careful; but" she added, lightly, yet with the gentleness of one who thinks merely of the hearer's point of view "I shall have to be a passive verb for a year, and you will have to be my very strong man Kwasind.'""A year?" he exclaimed in dismay.

"Brian half gave me hope that it might not be so long," said Erica, "if I'm, very good and careful, and of course I shall be both.Iam only sorry because it will make me very useless.I did hope Ishould never have been a burden on you again, father.""Don't talk of such a thing, my little son Eric," he said, very tenderly."Who should take care of you if not your own father?

Besides, if you never wrote another line for me, you would help me by just being yourself.A burden!""Well, I've made you look as grave as half a dozen lawsuits," said Erica, pretending to stroke the lines of care from his forehead.

"I've had the morning to ruminate over the prospect, and really now that you know, it is not so very dreadful.A year will soon pass.""I look to you, Eric," said her father, "to show the world that we secularists know how to bear pain.You won't waste the year if you can do it."Her face lighted up.

"It was like you to think of that!" she said; "that would indeed be worth doing."Still, do what she would, Erica could not talk him back to cheerfulness.He was terribly distressed at her news, and more so when he found that she was suffering a good deal.He thought with a pang of the difference of the reality to his expectations.No walk for them in the park that evening, nor probably for many years to come.Yet he was ignorant of these matters, perhaps he exaggerated the danger or the duration; he would go across and see Brian Osmond at once.

Left once more to herself, the color died out of Erica's cheeks;she lay there pale and still, but her face was almost rigid with resoluteness.

"I am not going to give way!" she thought to herself."I won't shed a single tear.Tears are wasteful luxuries, bad for body and mind.And yet yet oh, it is hard just when I wanted to help father most! Just when I wanted to keep him from being worried.And a whole year! How shall I bear it, when even six hours has seemed half a life time! This is what Thekla would call a cross, but Ionly call it my horrid, stupid, idiotic old spine.Well, I must try to show them that Luke Raeburn's daughter knows how to bear pain; I must be patient, however much I boil over in private.Yet is it honest, I wonder, to keep a patient outside, while inside you are all one big grumble? Rather Pharisaical outside of the cup and platter; but it is all I shall be able to do, I'm sure.That is where Mr.Osmond's Christianity would come in; I do believe that goes right through his life, privatest thoughts and all.Odd, that a delusion should have such power, and over such a man! There is Sir Michael Cunningham, too, one of the greatest and best men in England, yet a Christian! Great intellects and much study, and still they remain Christians 'tis extraordinary.But a Christian would have the advantage over me in a case like this.First of all, I suppose, they would feel that they could serve their God as well on their backs as upright,while all the help I shall be able to give the cause is dreadfully indirect and problematical.Then ertainly they would feel that they might be getting ready for the next world where all wrong is, they believe, to be set right, while I am only terribly hindered in getting ready for this world a whole year without the chance of a lecture.And then they have all kinds of nice theories about pain, discipline, and that sort of thing, which no doubt make it more bearable, while to me it is just the one unmitigated evil.But, oh! They don't know what pain means!

For there is no death to them no endless separation.What a delusion it is! They ought to be happy enough.Oh, mother!

mother!"

After all, what she really dreaded in her enforced pause was the leisure for thought.She had plunged into work of all kinds, had half killed herself with work, had tried to hold her despair at arms' length.But now there was no help for it.She must rest, and the thoughts must come.

同类推荐
  • 三官灯仪

    三官灯仪

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Silverado Squatters

    The Silverado Squatters

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 警世

    警世

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 玉堂丛语

    玉堂丛语

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 养一斋李杜诗话

    养一斋李杜诗话

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 末世伪圣母

    末世伪圣母

    “人生苦短,及时行乐。”这是久映从小到大的座右铭。尤其是在妈妈去世之后,更是把这句话贯彻落实到底。大学毕业后,进入了一家私企,过着朝九晚五周末双休,每个月随公司旅旅游什么的悠闲日子。只是好景不长久,一场传染病侵袭了好多员工,久映工作量剧增也病倒了。原以为就只是传染病,打个针输个液自然会好。没想到医院也束手无策,病毒迅速猛烈的扩散,各国都没有针对此病的防御与治疗办法。病情急剧恶化,病员丧尸智力生吃人肉,社会秩序紊乱,道德崩塌。病毒从食物链顶端开始传染,其后是其他的飞禽走兽。世界充斥着硝烟,污染了土质水源,就连植物也妖魔化了。这是一个为了生存而一路砍杀,操练成了女汉子的故事。
  • 道德经通解(平装)

    道德经通解(平装)

    本书稿是作者学习《道德经》一书的心得的总结,以讲座的方式呈现出来。作者结合现代人生活中遇到的各种困惑,将《道德经》中相关的语录做了深入浅出的阐释,语言生动,说理明晰,既能帮助当代读者读懂《道德经》,也能帮助人们将其中的精华运用到生活当中。
  • 我要上你的身

    我要上你的身

    一个不相信爱情的娱记,一个生前万花丛中过的帅气男鬼,两者之间碰撞到了一起,会发出怎样的火花。男鬼说:“我要上你的身!”娱记回答:“做梦去吧!”是否成功,你得点开进来看才行!
  • 猎人笔记

    猎人笔记

    《猎人笔记》是一部形式独特的特写集。作品控诉了腐朽的农奴制度,表现了作者的民主主义思想。作品以一个猎人的行猎为线索,刻画了地主、管家、磨房主妇、城镇医生、贵族知识分子、农奴、农家孩子等众多的人物形象,真实地展现了农奴制背景下外省城乡各阶层人民的生活风貌。在美丽的大自然的景色中,发生的却是种种悲剧,体现了对农奴制度的无言控诉。作品也生动地描述了人民对美好生活的追求和向往。
  • 出轨

    出轨

    遍布着积雪的山谷中,有一片陈旧建筑物,四周被铁丝网包围。屋子内阴暗破败,布满了灰尘,工作台上摆放着许多化学仪器,像实验室。五名男女四下里走动,好奇探索。“六十多年了,居然从没人发现遗迹?”一个女孩纳闷地说。“这地方叫‘失魂谷’,传说有可怕的妖魔吃人,当地人都不敢靠近。咱们赶紧走吧,别呆在这儿,我老觉得后背麻酥酥地。”
  • 我替春风亲吻你

    我替春风亲吻你

    宋诗遇上沈俨,是一场蓄谋。沈俨遇上宋诗,是一场意外。这个游戏的碰撞,谁都可以是赢家。宋诗“我困在一个世界里,自己包裹着自己,我的世界像一个无力挣脱的蚕蛹,却偏偏追逐着蝴蝶才能拥抱的阳光。”沈俨“护你。”沈俨×宋诗。
  • 重生之豪门霸气妻

    重生之豪门霸气妻

    前世,她掏心掏肺对待舅舅一家,却被倒打一耙。不仅被夺了公司,财产和男友,还被陷害。落魄而死。这一世重来,势必夺回一切,并且加倍奉还。可是,那个,郝少啊!你一直当我跟屁虫,貌似不太好吧。
  • 妃难逃

    妃难逃

    第一次穿着警服出现在死党面前,她们个个笑得花枝乱颤、脸部肌肉抽筋。切,不就是警服不合身有点大她看起来有些臃肿么可是笑成这样,至于嘛!虽然她身材娇小,但是这并不妨碍她惩恶除奸保护一方天下吧?不想,一朝穿越,她竟成了蓝王的贱妃。本来威风八面的女子竟然沦为男人泄欲的工具顺带被一群无知无畏的女人欺辱这让她如何心甘?纵观古今,博览群书,费劲心机,小女子要上演古代版越狱!大概是她还不能适应猫和老鼠角色的转变,居然屡屡失手。一次又一次的凌辱,终将她心头的希望之火浇灭。有些男人,就如同罂粟,邪邪的让人沉迷,坏坏的叫人上瘾失了身,失了心她应该如何逃离这个欲求无休止、将她贬低到尘埃里的王爷?精彩片段一“你说,是逃离容易,还是捉住一个逃离的人容易?”某女警不耐的翻了一个白眼,“废话,当然是捉住一个逃离的人容易!”“为什么?”“为什么?”额头升起两道黑线,居然连着简单的问题都弄不清楚?“你没听过,法网恢恢,疏而不漏!”“那为什么一个逃犯要出动你们那么多的警力?他比你们厉害吗?”“…”“你们的追捕能力越来越低下了!”“…”“就说你吧,连我都跑不过,还想捉逃犯?”终于忍无可忍的在絮絮叨叨的某人头部重重一拳,“打击违法犯罪是多么的神圣,你丫的以为这是龟兔赛跑啊?”精彩片段二“贱人,还敢逃跑!”长臂一扬,一声清脆的巴掌,安静中尤为清晰。女子抬起头,姣好的面容上一双顾盼生辉的眼睛带着明显的愤怒,“放开我!”蓝王冷笑一声,蹲下身子,用力擒住女子的下巴,“胆敢用这种口气和本王说话?”“请你放开我,可以吗?”“休想!”蓝王手中的力道加紧,“你这辈子都是我的女人,休想逃出我的掌心!”“逃逃逃…”女人眉头皱的更紧,下巴吃痛,说出来的话却是锋芒毕露,“谁说要逃走了?定罪要讲证据的好伐?”啪的一声,反手又是一巴掌,“还敢狡辩!”女子的两颊高高肿起,胸前起伏不定,隐着怒火,“同志,你打人有瘾吗?”蓝王的眼睛眯成一条线,这个女人,今天似和往日不同——却更加挑起他凌辱她的欲望。一把拦腰抱起,大步流星走向卧榻…精彩片段三“喝了这汤药,把孩子打掉!”声音清冷无比,不带一丝温度。“不要!”眼中的伤痛无以复加,不相信他会决绝至此。“喝掉!”只是命令的口气,不带任何商量的余地。“为什么?”仰起脸来,清秀的脸上满是泪痕。
  • 婚姻之殇

    婚姻之殇

    妻子彻夜不归为了什么?是为了工作和事业,还是另有其他?面对妻子的各种难以启齿的行为,他为什么选择坚守婚姻?这其中隐藏着怎样的秘密?作为心理咨询医生,面对风韵犹在的富婆以及青春美丽的少女,他会有怎样的举动?一切交织而往,室息感、罪恶感,他该何去何从?
  • 宁古塔山水记

    宁古塔山水记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。