登陆注册
5213000000066

第66章 THE NINTH(6)

"We will get it over to-morrow," he reassured her."You need not think of it again."He took over Martin's brief note to Lady Hardy and set to work by telegram to arrange for her visit.She was in London at her Chelsea flat and easily accessible.She was to come to the house at mid-day on the morrow, and to ask not for Lady Hardy but for him.He would stay by her while she was in the house, and it would be quite easy for Lady Hardy to keep herself and her daughter out of the way.They could, for example, go out quietly to the dressmakers in the closed car, for many little things about the mourning still remained to be seen to.

Section 8

Miss Martin Leeds arrived punctually, but the doctor was well ahead of his time and ready to receive her.She was ushered into the drawing room where he awaited her.As she came forward the doctor first perceived that she had a very sad and handsome face, the face of a sensitive youth rather than the face of a woman.She had fine grey eyes under very fine brows; they were eyes that at other times might have laughed very agreeably, but which were now full of an unrestrained sadness.Her brown hair was very untidy and parted at the side like a man's.Then he noted that she seemed to be very untidily dressed as if she was that rare and, to him, very offensive thing, a woman careless of her beauty.She was short in proportion to her broad figure and her broad forehead.

"You are Dr.Martineau?" she said."He talked of you." As she spoke her glance went from him to the pictures that stood about the room.She walked up to the painting and stood in front of it with her distressed gaze wandering about her.

"Horrible!" she said."Absolutely horrible!...Did SHE do this?"Her question disconcerted the doctor very much."You mean Lady Hardy?" he asked."She doesn't paint.""No, no.I mean, did she get all these things together? ""Naturally," said Dr.Martineau.

"None of them are a bit like him.They are like blows aimed at his memory.Not one has his life in it.How could she do it? Look at that idiot statuette!...He was extraordinarily difficult to get.I have burnt every photograph I had of him.For fear that this would happen;that he would go stiff and formal--just as you have got him here.I have been trying to sketch him almost all the time since he died.But I can't get him back.He's gone."She turned to the doctor again.She spoke to him, not as if she expected him to understand her, but because she had to say these things which burthened her mind to someone."I have done hundreds of sketches.My room is littered with them.

When you turn them over he seems to be lurking among them.

But not one of them is like him."

She was trying to express something beyond her power."It is as if someone had suddenly turned out the light."She followed the doctor upstairs."This was his study," the doctor explained.

"I know it.I came here once," she said.

They entered the big bedroom in which the coffined body lay.

Dr.Martineau, struck by a sudden memory, glanced nervously at the desk, but someone had made it quite tidy and the portrait of Aliss Grammont had disappeared.Miss Leeds walked straight across to the coffin and stood looking down on the waxen inexpressive dignity of the dead.Sir Richmond's brows and nose had become sharper and more clear-cut than they had ever been in life and his lips had set into a faint inane smile.She stood quite still for a long time.At length she sighed deeply.

She spoke, a little as though she thought aloud, a little as though she talked at that silent presence in the coffin."Ithink he loved," she said."Sometimes I think he loved me.

But it is hard to tell.He was kind.He could be intensely kind and yet he didn't seem to care for you.He could be intensely selfish and yet he certainly did not care for himself....Anyhow, I loved HIM....There is nothing left in me now to love anyone else--for ever...."She put her hands behind her back and looked at the dead man with her head a little on one side."Too kind," she said very softly.

"There was a sort of dishonesty in his kindness.He would not let you have the bitter truth.He would not say he did not love you....

"He was too kind to life ever to call it the foolish thing it is.He took it seriously because it takes itself seriously.

He worked for it and killed himself with work for it...."She turned to Dr.Martineau and her face was streaming with tears."And life, you know, isn't to be taken seriously.It is a joke--a bad joke--made by some cruel little god who has caught a neglected planet....Like torturing a stray cat....But he took it seriously and he gave up his life for it.

"There was much happiness he might have had.He was very capable of happiness.But he never seemed happy.This work of his came before it.He overworked and fretted our happiness away.He sacrificed his happiness and mine."She held out her hands towards the doctor."What am I to do now with the rest of my life? Who is there to laugh with me now and jest?

"I don't complain of him.I don't blame him.He did his best--to be kind.

"But all my days now I shall mourn for him and long for him...."She turned back to the coffin.Suddenly she lost every vestige of self-control.She sank down on her knees beside the trestle."Why have you left me!" she cried.

"Oh! Speak to me, my darling! Speak to me, I TELL YOU! Speak to me!"It was a storm of passion, monstrously childish and dreadful.

She beat her hands upon the coffin.She wept loudly and fiercely as a child does....

Dr.Martineau drifted feebly to the window.

He wished he had locked the door.The servants might hear and wonder what it was all about.Always he had feared love for the cruel thing it was, but now it seemed to him for the first time that he realized its monstrous cruelty.

THE END

同类推荐
  • 道行般若经

    道行般若经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 抱真堂诗话

    抱真堂诗话

    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。
  • A Doll's House

    A Doll's House

    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。
  • 佛说兜调经

    佛说兜调经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 才调集

    才调集

    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
  • 燕京岁时记

    燕京岁时记

    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。
  • 千古浮华叹—风云劫

    千古浮华叹—风云劫

    风云浩劫撼穹苍,万物自然渡魂香。在这座浩渺的元洲大陆上,一场阴谋在悄悄酝酿。他是否能用自己的元素之力来粉碎这个阴谋,将这座大陆尘封万年的秘密揭开?而他身上的秘密又究竟是什么?
  • 一生要避开的26个心灵陷阱

    一生要避开的26个心灵陷阱

    “《正向力:一生要避开的26个心灵陷阱》由墨墨编著。世间陷阱是有形的,即使涉世不深,只要带着防范之心审慎行事,也不至轻易受骗。最难防范的是我们自身心中各种无形的陷阱。倘若不加警惕与辨别,那我们的一生,就会从这个陷阱落入那个陷阱,永远暗无天日。永远遭受伤害。我们应仔细审查内心,发现陷阱所在。同时,培养正知正念的力量,彻底清除陷阱,而不是简单地在表面掩盖一番,那样就会埋下更深的隐患,更重的危机。《正向力:一生要避开的26个心灵陷阱》就将告诉你一生要避开的26个心灵陷阱!”
  • 闲居编

    闲居编

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 蚀心醉爱,薄情总裁画地为牢

    蚀心醉爱,薄情总裁画地为牢

    【已完结】不经意的邂逅,让刚出大学校园的女孩,结识了冷漠却俊美异常的年轻男子。在炎炎盛夏,展开了一场平凡而又浪漫的恋情……剧情一:“晚上陪我去见个客户!”某女贼贼地笑着。“我不出卖“色”字相。”某男咬牙切齿地晲视了眼这个无良女!剧情二:“我的老公,可是要上的厅堂,下的厨房,进的卧房!”某女高昂着小脖子喧嚣着。“你可以检验一下……”某男坏坏地逗笑着。原本只是一场普通男女的爱恋,却被年轻男子身后,惊人的身世背景打破。当一切真相浮出水面,他们会做出怎样的选择?相爱入骨的两个人,他们的爱情道路会出现怎样的波折?本文百分百暖文,穿插小虐怡情,看过梓紫月文的亲们会知道,坑品绝对保证。
  • 易书轮回

    易书轮回

    男主禹是典型宅男,喜欢阅读古籍,尤喜易经。在石峁遗址偶食混沌初开之阴阳鱼,身体蒸发到异世界,开启成神之路。
  • 最让你情绪放松的心灵鸡汤(智慧背囊)

    最让你情绪放松的心灵鸡汤(智慧背囊)

    《智慧背囊》系列丛书包含有亲情故事、友情故事、情感故事、心灵鸡汤、哲理故事、成长故事等,囊括青少年成长阶段所必然经历的各个历程,从生活到学习,从内心到情感。这本《最让你情绪放松的心灵鸡汤(5A畅销版)》是该系列中的一册,作者是李继勇。《最让你情绪放松的心灵鸡汤(5A畅销版)》收录了《轮椅上的小提琴家》、《坐以待毙的地主》等故事。
  • 邪善夜魅百变君

    邪善夜魅百变君

    她只是个普普通通的大学生,但却穿越到了穷凶极恶的世界,她手无缚鸡之力怎能相安异世?她是被封印的可以冻结万物亦善亦邪的雪域一族,时光轮转是一直平和的沉睡,但当险恶重重时,她又将怎样?他是俊美非凡无所不能的非凡男子。他是邪恶的主上?他是善良的良人?他还是普通的市井小民?他是谁?
  • 我们的价值观:初中年级读本

    我们的价值观:初中年级读本

    一个国家的强盛,离不开精神的支撑;一个民族的进步,离不开文明的滋养;一个公民的成长,离不开价值的引导。走在复兴之路上的中华民族,不仅要在经济建设上奋起直追,更要在精神文化上焕发出自己的精气神。人生需要信仰驱动,发展需要价值导航。党的十八大顺应世情民意,从国家、社会和公民三个层面,用24个字提炼出现阶段全国人民价值观“最大公约数”的社会主义核心价值观,这就是国家层面的“富强、民主、文明、和谐”,社会层面的“自由、平等、公正、法治”,公民层面的“爱国、敬业、诚信、友善”。
  • 席卷长江

    席卷长江

    改朝换代参与者的最后报告,国共交锋亲历者的往事回忆,时代剧变见证者的战地写真……共和国军史丰碑上镌刻的经典战事!《1946-1950国共生死决战全纪录:席卷长江》献给中国共产党成立90周年。《1946-1950国共生死决战全纪录:席卷长江》由桂恒彬所著,讲述渡江战役是继三大战役后,我军又一次大规模的战役行动。此役共歼国民党军43万多人,解放了南京、杭州、上海、武汉等大城市和苏、浙、赣、皖、闽、鄂广大地区。这一胜利粉碎了以蒋介石为首的国民党反动集团企图“划江而治”的妄想,为进军华南、西南创造了有利条件,加速了全国的解放。