登陆注册
5233600000095

第95章 XXXII

Mr. Pembroke did not receive a clear account of what had happened when he returned for the interval. His sister--he told her frankly--was concealing something from him. She could make no reply. Had she gone mad, she wondered. Hitherto she had pretended to love her husband. Why choose such a moment for the truth?

"But I understand Rickie's position," he told her. "It is an unbalanced position, yet I understand it; I noted its approach while he was ill. He imagines himself his brother's keeper.

Therefore we must make concessions. We must negotiate." The negotiations were still progressing in November, the month during which this story draws to its close.

"I understand his position," he then told her. "It is both weak and defiant. He is still with those Ansells. Read this letter, which thanks me for his little stories. We sent them last month, you remember--such of them as we could find. It seems that he fills up his time by writing: he has already written a book."She only gave him half her attention, for a beautiful wreath had just arrived from the florist's. She was taking it up to the cemetery: today her child had been dead a year.

"On the other hand, he has altered his will. Fortunately, he cannot alter much. But I fear that what is not settled on you, will go. Should I read what I wrote on this point, and also my minutes of the interview with old Mr. Ansell, and the copy of my correspondence with Stephen Wonham?"But her fly was announced. While he put the wreath in for her, she ran for a moment upstairs. A few tears had come to her eyes.

A scandalous divorce would have been more bearable than this withdrawal. People asked, "Why did her husband leave her?" and the answer came, "Oh, nothing particular; he only couldn't stand her; she lied and taught him to lie; she kept him from the work that suited him, from his friends, from his brother,--in a word, she tried to run him, which a man won't pardon." A few tears; not many. To her, life never showed itself as a classic drama, in which, by trying to advance our fortunes, we shatter them. She had turned Stephen out of Wiltshire, and he fell like a thunderbolt on Sawston and on herself. In trying to gain Mrs.

Failing's money she had probably lost money which would have been her own. But irony is a subtle teacher, and she was not the woman to learn from such lessons as these. Her suffering was more direct. Three men had wronged her; therefore she hated them, and, if she could, would do them harm.

"These negotiations are quite useless," she told Herbert when she came downstairs. "We had much better bide our time. Tell me just about Stephen Wonham, though."He drew her into the study again. "Wonham is or was in Scotland, learning to farm with connections of the Ansells: I believe the money is to go towards setting him up. Apparently he is a hard worker. He also drinks!"She nodded and smiled. "More than he did?"

"My informant, Mr. Tilliard--oh, I ought not to have mentioned his name. He is one of the better sort of Rickie's Cambridge friends, and has been dreadfully grieved at the collapse, but he does not want to be mixed up in it. This autumn he was up in the Lowlands, close by, and very kindly made a few unobtrusive inquiries for me. The man is becoming an habitual drunkard."She smiled again. Stephen had evoked her secret, and she hated him more for that than for anything else that he had done. The poise of his shoulders that morning--it was no more--had recalled Gerald.

If only she had not been so tired! He had reminded her of the greatest thing she had known, and to her cloudy mind this seemed degradation. She had turned to him as to her lover; with a look, which a man of his type understood, she had asked for his pity;for one terrible moment she had desired to be held in his arms.

Even Herbert was surprised when she said, "I'm glad he drinks. Ihope he'll kill himself. A man like that ought never to have been born.""Perhaps the sins of the parents are visited on the children,"said Herbert, taking her to the carriage. "Yet it is not for us to decide.""I feel sure he will be punished. What right has he--" She broke off. What right had he to our common humanity? It was a hard lesson for any one to learn. For Agnes it was impossible.

Stephen was illicit, abnormal, worse than a man diseased. Yet she had turned to him: he had drawn out the truth.

"My dear, don't cry," said her brother, drawing up the windows.

"I have great hopes of Mr. Tilliard--the Silts have written--Mrs.

Failing will do what she can--"

As she drove to the cemetery, her bitterness turned against Ansell, who had kept her husband alive in the days after Stephen's expulsion. If he had not been there, Rickie would have renounced his mother and his brother and all the outer world, troubling no one. The mystic, inherent in him, would have prevailed. So Ansell himself had told her. And Ansell, too, had sheltered the fugitives and given them money, and saved them from the ludicrous checks that so often stop young men. But when she reached the cemetery, and stood beside the tiny grave, all her bitterness, all her hatred were turned against Rickie.

"But he'll come back in the end," she thought. "A wife has only to wait. What are his friends beside me? They too will marry. Ihave only to wait. His book, like all that he has done, will fail. His brother is drinking himself away. Poor aimless Rickie!

I have only to keep civil. He will come back in the end."She had moved, and found herself close to the grave of Gerald.

The flowers she had planted after his death were dead, and she had not liked to renew them. There lay the athlete, and his dust was as the little child's whom she had brought into the world with such hope, with such pain.

同类推荐
  • 闪电窗

    闪电窗

    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。
  • 痹门

    痹门

    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。
  • 吴逆取亡录

    吴逆取亡录

    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。
  • 随隐漫录

    随隐漫录

    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。
  • 无相思尘论

    无相思尘论

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 神之契约

    神之契约

    龙腾大陆,一个拥有很多《魂之契约》的大陆。当那传说中战神与杀伐神的《魂之契约》出现在萧玉龙身上时,他又将面临什么样考验,与妖兽与仙界,神界又会有什么样事情发生,让主角一次次陷入危机,其看萧玉龙怎么化解危机,而走向真正强者之路。
  • 此处有仙气

    此处有仙气

    (新书:我家师姐有点强)人人都劝苏楠收了心,安心给某人当厨子,毕竟修仙不易,她资质又那么不好,讨好了某人还更容易求得长生与荣华。但苏楠重活一世,深知靠天靠地靠男人,都不如靠自己。努力修炼,一把菜刀也能勇闯九天。正统修仙文,无金手指,有奸.情无恋情。????(欢脱文)
  • 异能小宠妃,神尊,太腹黑!

    异能小宠妃,神尊,太腹黑!

    【1v1男强女强,反套路,会修仙的鬼文】鬼帝命格,冥帝之女,画符布阵,视魂驭鬼,上下九十九重天人神共羡的天之骄女,投生到现世却成为了青楼的花魁,被人当成蛮族公主献给了王。“王上,臣妾只是个花魁,会污了您的名声。”“花魁好啊,说明我的女人全天下最美。”“王上,臣妾是个女鬼,会吸干你的阳气。”“不怕,本王随你吸,日日夜夜给你吸。”说好的禁欲禁情高冷的神尊呢?!
  • 论词随笔

    论词随笔

    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。
  • 总裁之不育前妻

    总裁之不育前妻

    清晨,一抹明亮的阳光透过落地窗洒下,映着花园里斑驳的树影,一起投射在落地窗隔断的主卧室里,美好的一天开始。暖暖的阳光照下,林楠眼睫轻轻的颤动。她慢慢的睁开了眼晴,起床,转头看着床上还睡得死死的人,她林楠的老公,已经结婚二年的老公方泽,心里暖暖的,不由勾起唇角,温柔的笑。方泽此时帅气的脸在晨起的光线下,衬得格外的柔和,平时里看起来有些微疏离的五官,一丝的冷漠一起消失,让林楠心里……
  • 青春在写字间里流浪

    青春在写字间里流浪

    写字楼流行病的奥利奥诊断法,旋转职业魔方职场里的功夫熊猫 换个角度看工作,幸福职场的健康“心”主张《青年心理》2009年佳作·职场卷助你提升心理能量,带你找到潜力无穷的自己。
  • 宿主大大别乱崩

    宿主大大别乱崩

    (快穿)(微虐)(1v1双洁)(江绾x君子阳)本以为只能带着仇恨草草了事的江绾碰上了只神秘的火焰,索性也就与它绑定了,从此一发不可收拾走上了穿梭与各大位面及现实的悲催人生。“绾绾,我只要你”江绾:穿梭各大位面就算了,虐渣渣也就算了,你还要我攻略一男的?#女主性格不定##以为是王者其实是青铜##永远是被带的那个##各大位面男神在线解锁#
  • 妃倾帝业

    妃倾帝业

    她,本是南陵皇室最受皇宠的公主,天之骄女,却不料一夜之间沦为亡国公主,流落民间。在茫茫江湖,她一步一步的壮大自己的势力,一心复国。同时,也遇上了几个让她难以抉择的男子。无乐堂尊主,东乐淮王,北安太子,花家少主,到底是谁在拨弄她的心弦?谁又能与她执手并肩,共看这天下锦绣?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 离天堂最近的地方

    离天堂最近的地方

    他是一个江湖混混,为人正义,她是富家千金,从小生活在象牙塔中,她和他的相遇是一个偶然,因为一次英雄救美的开始,可是爱情终究不能抵挡门第的悬殊,她为了和他在一起,和父母反目,他为了得到她父母的认可,愿意为爱人脱离江湖,一次受伤,差一点阴阳相隔,以为风雨之后就会看到彩虹,可是死神再一次无情的拆散了他和她的爱情,她得了脑癌,三个月的生命,为了能让他坚强的活下去,故意制定了五年的契约,伊人带着满满的爱踏上了异国他乡,她以为成全了他,没有想到,他被人算计死亡,有情人在天堂见面,离天堂最近的地方是哪里?
  • 八面玲珑的处世绝学

    八面玲珑的处世绝学

    本书提取了众多著名成功学大师的成功理论精髓。与一般的成功学教程不同,它不是板起面孔的说教,而是全方位探讨创造成功,助您成功是本书惟一的目标。在介绍方法与技巧时,又引述了各领域的名人事例,作为典型加以分析。