登陆注册
5242900000042

第42章 CHAPTER XV--THE END OF THE MEETING(1)

Stephen went on in her calm, cold voice:

'Did he tell you that I had asked him to marry me?' Despite herself, as she spoke the words a red tide dyed her face. It was not a flush;it was not a blush; it was a sort of flood which swept through her, leaving her in a few seconds whiter than before. Harold saw and understood. He could not speak; he lowered his head silently. Her eyes glittered more coldly. The madness that every human being may have once was upon her. Such a madness is destructive, and here was something more vulnerable than herself.

'Did he tell you how I pressed him?' There was no red tide this time, nor ever again whilst the interview lasted. To bow in affirmation was insufficient; with an effort he answered:

'I understood so.' She answered with an icy sarcasm:

'You understood so! Oh, I don't doubt he embellished the record with some of his own pleasantries. But you understood it; and that is sufficient.' After a pause she went on:

'Did he tell you that he had refused me?'

'Yes!' Harold knew now that he was under the torture, and that there was no refusing. She went on, with a light laugh, which wrung his heart even more than her pain had done . . . Stephen to laugh like that!

'And I have no doubt that he embellished that too, with some of his fine masculine witticisms. I understood myself that he was offended at my asking him. I understood it quite well; he told me so!' Then with feminine intuition she went on:

'I dare say that before he was done he said something kindly of the poor little thing that loved him; that loved him so much, and that she had to break down all the bounds of modesty and decorum that had made the women of her house honoured for a thousand years! And you listened to him whilst he spoke! Oh-h-h!' she quivered with her white-hot anger, as the fierce heat in the heart of a furnace quivers. But her voice was cold again as she went on:

'But who could help loving him? Girls always did. It was such a beastly nuisance! You "understood" all that, I dare say; though perhaps he did not put it in such plain words!' Then the scorn, which up to now had been imprisoned, turned on him; and he felt as though some hose of deathly chill was being played upon him.

'And yet you, knowing that only yesterday, he had refused me--refused my pressing request that he should marry me, come to me hot-foot in the early morning and ask me to be your wife. I thought such things did not take place; that men were more honourable, or more considerate, or more merciful! Or at least I used to think so; till yesterday. No! till to-day. Yesterday's doings were my own doings, and I had to bear the penalty of them myself. I had come here to fight out by myself the battle of my shame . . . '

Here Harold interrupted her. He could not bear to hear Stephen use such a word in connection with herself.

'No! You must not say "shame." There is no shame to you, Stephen.

There can be none, and no one must say it in my presence!' In her secret heart of hearts she admired him for his words; she felt them at the moment sink into her memory, and knew that she would never forget the mastery of his face and bearing. But the blindness of rage was upon her, and it is of the essence of this white-hot anger that it preys not on what is basest in us, but on what is best. That Harold felt deeply was her opportunity to wound him more deeply than before.

'Even here in the solitude which I had chosen as the battleground of my shame you had need to come unasked, unthought of, when even a lesser mind than yours, for you are no fool, would have thought to leave me alone. My shame was my own, I tell you; and I was learning to take my punishment. My punishment! Poor creatures that we are, we think our punishment will be what we would like best: to suffer in silence, and not to have spread abroad our shame!' How she harped on that word, though she knew that every time she uttered it, it cut to the heart of the man who loved her. 'And yet you come right on top of my torture to torture me still more and illimitably. You come, you who alone had the power to intrude yourself on my grief and sorrow; power given you by my father's kindness. You come to me without warning, considerately telling me that you knew I would be here because I had always come here when I had been in trouble. No--I do you an injustice. "In trouble" was not what you said, but that I had come when I had been in short frocks. Short frocks! And you came to tell me that you loved me. You thought, I suppose, that as Ihad refused one man, I would jump at the next that came along. Iwanted a man. God! God! what have I done that such an affront should come upon me? And come, too, from a hand that should have protected me if only in gratitude for my father's kindness!' She was eyeing him keenly, with eyes that in her unflinching anger took in everything with the accuracy of sun-painting. She wanted to wound;and she succeeded.

But Harold had nerves and muscles of steel; and when the call came to them they answered. Though the pain of death was upon him he did not flinch. He stood before her like a rock, in all his great manhood;but a rock on whose summit the waves had cast the wealth of their foam, for his face was as white as snow. She saw and understood; but in the madness upon her she went on trying new places and new ways to wound:

'You thought, I suppose, that this poor, neglected, despised, rejected woman, who wanted so much to marry that she couldn't wait for a man to ask her, would hand herself over to the first chance comer who threw his handkerchief to her; would hand over herself--and her fortune!'

'Oh, Stephen! How can you say such things, think such things?' The protest broke from him with a groan. His pain seemed to inflame her still further; to gratify her hate, and to stimulate her mad passion:

'Why did I ever see you at all? Why did my father treat you as a son; that when you had grown and got strong on his kindness you could thus insult his daughter in the darkest hour of her pain and her shame!' She almost choked with passion. There was now nothing in the whole world that she could trust. In the pause he spoke:

同类推荐
  • 王维诗全集

    王维诗全集

    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。
  • 沙弥罗经

    沙弥罗经

    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。
  • 天女散花

    天女散花

    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。
  • 释迦如来行迹颂

    释迦如来行迹颂

    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。
  • 道德真经传

    道德真经传

    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
  • 玉台画史别录

    玉台画史别录

    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。
  • 超神学院之黑暗天使

    超神学院之黑暗天使

    新书《永恒幽冥》己发布。欢迎加入超神学院之黑暗天使书友群,群聊号码:202088150他曾因爱成魔为凯莎屠尽魔人文明。他曾横扫万千星域威压亿万神魔。他曾令诸神仰望令神河退下王座。为平息他的怒火,阿滋尔封印恕瑞玛文明。为请求他的饶恕,德诺掀起内战。为获得他的垂青,烈阳俯首称臣。天使星外,他一剑斩灭数千战舰,千万战舰不敢向前一步。圣城之上,他一拳打破虚空,无数虚空战士尽皆全灭。他的姓名被列为禁忌,他的军团令人闻风丧胆。关于他的过往,史书不敢记载。他的一切,众生难辨对错。他曾是天使星云四王之一,亦是虚空宇宙的黑暗之王。
  • 山河在之东商篇

    山河在之东商篇

    “我是真的坚持不住了啊!”“你还是得撑下去,就差一点了,你不能放弃。”“东商从没有太后,而我!将成为第一个!而你,将成为我的第一个祭品!”
  • 美国高校学生事务管理

    美国高校学生事务管理

    本书选取了哈佛大学、斯坦福大学、耶鲁大学、哥伦比亚大学等私立大学和加州大学伯克利分校、弗吉尼亚大学、密歇根大学、北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校等公立大学,逐一对其办学理念、学科特色、学生事务管理架构、学生事务管理工作内容进行梳理,并对公寓住宿管理、法律申诉服务、多元文化教育、学生社团管理、新生入学指导、心理咨询、奖励资助、学术咨询等诸多具体学生事务的内涵、理念、实际操作等进行了描述,为我国高校学生工作者了解美国高校学生事务管理实务的重要参考书。
  • 若你不弃,此生不离

    若你不弃,此生不离

    人一生会遇到约2920万人,而两个人相爱的概率只有0.000049。 曾唯一与纪齐宣订婚,是为了让另一个男人林穆森难堪。六年之后,她嫁给纪齐宣,是为了给儿子优越的生活,也让自己重新回到上流社会。只是,被她抛弃过的纪齐宣,再也不是当年那个默默爱着她的沉静少年。生子、结婚、也许有爱情,曾唯一的经历与别人的完全相反,这个骄傲不懂爱的女人会收获她的幸福吗?
  • 爱你如诗美丽(纪伯伦全集)

    爱你如诗美丽(纪伯伦全集)

    本书收入了纪伯伦不为人知的大量散文、杂文、演讲、译文、箴言录等等,纪伯伦的诗歌才华掩盖了他作为冠绝一世的散文家的身份。这是目前全球收录纪伯伦散文、杂篇最全的一本书。从这本书中你可以看到一个慷慨激昂、横眉冷对的纪伯伦,或许这才是他作为20世纪最富盛名的思想家该有的一面。文中饱含纪伯伦对时代、民族、家国的忧思,因为这本书,他足以和鲁迅一起留名青史。
  • 我想陪你路过这个世界

    我想陪你路过这个世界

    “你是谁?”“嗯……按照你们人的说法,我应该叫阿素落。”阿修罗吗?他们结识于战火硝烟的年代,重逢于纸醉金迷的现在。她原本以来是故人归来,奈何却是完完全全不同的两个人?“神,本就是漠视的存在,带来美好的同时也会唤来大洪水,洗脱一切的罪恶。”而他,华奕,娱乐圈中炙手可热的大明星,华氏集团的继承人,风光无限的背后却是肮脏与血腥,他一只手燃起烟,一只手拿着枪,饮鸩止渴,占有和毁灭只在一念之间。他常说,炼狱归来的,只有恶魔。“如果我的蝴蝶想要飞走的话,那就剪断它的翅膀,就永远属于我了。”“既然你是神,那我就要渎神!”他以为的爱,是击溃所有理性之后最为原始的相拥,是剜出心脏的血吻……我们来玩一捉迷藏好不好:1,2,3……你在哪儿?
  • 老子(中小学生必读丛书)

    老子(中小学生必读丛书)

    《中小学生必读丛书:老子》中,我们整理了具有代表性的各家学说,进行了适当的取舍,以及谨慎的阐释,力求让读者在对“五千言”逐字逐句的解读中,自然而然地体悟“道”和“德”的含义。我们认为,对于这两个内涵丰富、深邃的词汇,任何过于武断和排他的解释,都是不负责任的。也许,真的只有通过“悟”的方式,我们才能理解道家的真谛。
  • 工作有方法:年轻人要掌握的101个业绩倍增法则

    工作有方法:年轻人要掌握的101个业绩倍增法则

    本书《工作有方法——年轻人要掌握的101个业绩倍增法则》,从计划、执行、时间、整理和简化、人际关系、心理建设、听、说、读、写、衣、食与行等角度,为你列出了最终的参考方向与解决方案。
  • 诸神含苞待宰

    诸神含苞待宰

    好吧,因为一场音乐会,我穿越了,我很狗血的穿越了,穿越在这装神弄鬼的世界,真希望哪一天一觉醒来依然在地球,在这该死的世界不是你杀我就是我杀你,杀人也就算了,最后还要杀妖杀鬼杀神杀魔,该死的,真当我是屠夫吗?好吧,我承认,杀来杀去的确是有意思多了。