登陆注册
5258500000093

第93章 XXX(2)

"Yes," he continued with a thrill of pardonable pride. "During the cruise I did a couple of articles on Crete--oh, just travel- impressions, of course; they couldn't be more. But the editor of the New Review has accepted them, and asks for others. And here's his cheque, if you please! So you see you might have let me take the jolly room downstairs with the pink curtains. And it makes me awfully hopeful about my book."

He had expected a rapturous outburst, and perhaps some reassertion of wifely faith in the glorious future that awaited The Pageant of Alexander; and deep down under the lover's well- being the author felt a faint twinge of mortified vanity when Susy, leaping to her feet, cried out, ravenously and without preamble: "Oh, Nick, Nick--let me see how much they've given you!"

He flourished the cheque before her in the firelight. "A couple of hundred, you mercenary wretch!"

"Oh, oh--" she gasped, as if the good news had been almost too much for her tense nerves; and then surprised him by dropping to the ground, and burying her face against his knees.

"Susy, my Susy," he whispered, his hand on her shaking shoulder.

"Why, dear, what is it? You're not crying?"

"Oh, Nick, Nick--two hundred? Two hundred dollars? Then I've got to tell you--oh now, at once!"

A faint chill ran over him, and involuntarily his hand drew back from her bowed figure.

"Now? Oh, why now?" he protested. "What on earth does it matter now--whatever it is?"

"But it does matter--it matters more than you can think!"

She straightened herself, still kneeling before him, and lifted her head so that the firelight behind her turned her hair into a ruddy halo. "Oh, Nick, the bracelet--Ellie's bracelet ....

I've never returned it to her," she faltered out.

He felt himself recoiling under the hands with which she clutched his knees. For an instant he did not remember what she alluded to; it was the mere mention of Ellie Vanderlyn's name that had fallen between them like an icy shadow. What an incorrigible fool he had been to think they could ever shake off such memories, or cease to be the slaves of such a past!

"The bracelet?--Oh, yes," he said, suddenly understanding, and feeling the chill mount slowly to his lips.

"Yes, the bracelet ... Oh, Nick, I meant to give it back at once; I did--I did; but the day you went away I forgot everything else. And when I found the thing, in the bottom of my bag, weeks afterward, I thought everything was over between you and me, and I had begun to see Ellie again, and she was kind to me and how could I?" To save his life he could have found no answer, and she pressed on: "And so this morning, when I saw you were frightened by the expense of bringing all the children with us, and when I felt I couldn't leave them, and couldn't leave you either, I remembered the bracelet; and I sent you off to telephone while I rushed round the corner to a little jeweller's where I'd been before, and pawned it so that you shouldn't have to pay for the children .... But now, darling, you see, if you've got all that money, I can get it out of pawn at once, can't I, and send it back to her?"

She flung her arms about him, and he held her fast, wondering if the tears he felt were hers or his. Still he did not speak; but as he clasped her close she added, with an irrepressible flash of her old irony: "Not that Ellie will understand why I've done it. She's never yet been able to make out why you returned her scarf-pin."

For a long time she continued to lean against him, her head on his knees, as she had done on the terrace of Como on the last night of their honeymoon. She had ceased to talk, and he sat silent also, passing his hand quietly to and fro over her hair.

The first rapture had been succeeded by soberer feelings. Her confession had broken up the frozen pride about his heart, and humbled him to the earth; but it had also roused forgotten things, memories and scruples swept aside in the first rush of their reunion. He and she belonged to each other for always: he understood that now. The impulse which had first drawn them together again, in spite of reason, in spite of themselves almost, that deep-seated instinctive need that each had of the other, would never again wholly let them go. Yet as he sat there he thought of Strefford, he thought of Coral Hicks. He had been a coward in regard to Coral, and Susy had been sincere and courageous in regard to Strefford. Yet his mind dwelt on Coral with tenderness, with compunction, with remorse; and he was almost sure that Susy had already put Strefford utterly out of her mind.

It was the old contrast between the two ways of loving, the man's way and the woman's; and after a moment it seemed to Nick natural enough that Susy, from the very moment of finding him again, should feel neither pity nor regret, and that Strefford should already be to her as if he had never been. After all, there was something Providential in such arrangements.

He stooped closer, pressed her dreaming head between his hands, and whispered: "Wake up; it's bedtime."

She rose; but as she moved away to turn on the light he caught her hand and drew her to the window. They leaned on the sill in the darkness, and through the clouds, from which a few drops were already falling, the moon, labouring upward, swam into a space of sky, cast her troubled glory on them, and was again hidden.

同类推荐
  • 千字文

    千字文

    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。
  • 使琉球录

    使琉球录

    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。
  • 千山剩人禅师语录

    千山剩人禅师语录

    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。
  • 送裴相公赴镇太原

    送裴相公赴镇太原

    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。
  • 十二游经

    十二游经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 偷天圣尊

    偷天圣尊

    穿越异世,一朝崛起,快意恩仇,万世不移!你便是风暴又何妨,因为我,将会成为掌控风暴的人!
  • 倾我一生与你一世

    倾我一生与你一世

    十度轮回转世,却从不在同一时代,同一地点,就如彼岸花一般,叶落花开,花谢叶生,生生世世交错。这一世,她不幸坠崖枉死,芳魂游荡天地间;这一世,他以乐引渡亡灵,一缕箫音绝尘世;这一世,他们终是相遇。骄傲如她,清冷如他,却从不知千年之前,忘川河畔,奈何桥头,三生石旁,早已缘定。人世的无奈牵绊纠葛,处处是殇;倾她一生,与他一世,即便来世神魂俱灭,亦执手这一生一世!
  • 新中国刑法的拓荒者:马克昌传

    新中国刑法的拓荒者:马克昌传

    本书记述了马克昌先生风云坎坷以及光辉灿烂的一生。他在少年时代志向远大,考入武汉法律系后,在专业上刻苦专研。因成绩优异被留校,从此开始了他为武大、为中国刑法界奉献的一生。在为“四人帮”的辩护中,他体现了一位法律工作者应有素养和职业道德。他以深厚的学养、广阔的视野、不计得失的胸襟让业内人叹服。在对后辈的爱护、提携方面,也体现了一位老者的大公无私和不求回报的高尚品德。
  • 古道

    古道

    湘黔古道上,客栈招待三教九流客人,挑夫跋山涉水贩运货物,土匪出没无常杀人掠货,彼此恩怨纠结。日寇铁蹄踏进家园,家仇国恨不共戴天,他们毅然捐弃恩怨,不惜舍弃生命血染古道,奏响了共御外侮的号角……古道歇脚思义亭上抒豪情崇山峻岭间,一条青石板路蜿蜒盘旋,走着一溜二十四条担子。挑夫个个赤膊,身上的疙瘩肉显出紫铜一般的颜色。翻过滚马坡,脚上的草鞋差不多已经磨穿了底,好在是下坡路,青石板早就被磨得光溜溜的,踏在上面说不出的凉爽舒适,肩膀上的桑木扁担随着脚步的节奏不住颤悠,发出“吱呀吱呀”的吟唱,给幽静的古道增添了生气活力。
  • 枯叶城

    枯叶城

    魔君来袭,异源侵略,世界崩塌,人类只剩最后一座城。在面对强大力量压制下的人类社会,是放弃抵抗还是顽强一搏?魔君是否能战胜人类统治世界,处于两者之间的魔孓又会站到哪一边的阵营?阴谋,暗杀,背叛,此起彼伏在上演,最后谁能站在至高点面对魔帝的威胁,一切答案尽在——枯叶城。
  • 当太妹遇到狂拽少爷

    当太妹遇到狂拽少爷

    在一次意外中,我受了伤,于是父亲把我送到郊区的一所封闭式学校来,一边让我学习,一边让我疗伤,还要我女扮男装,用了哥哥的名字。本以为可以在这里安静的生活一段时间,可惜……不知道从哪里冒出来一个不知天高地厚的小子说我是他的未婚妻,还当众吻了我。NND,这种情况还从来没在我韩冷月身上发生过。就算他长的好看了点,也不能这样啊……
  • 众神遗产

    众神遗产

    传说中,神创造了世界之后,又把世界交给了人类,神在把这个世界交给人类的时候,早已看到了这一天,于是,神在离开之前,把她们最珍贵的东西收藏在一个隐秘的地方。当人类遭遇灭绝边缘而黑暗力量即将破土而出的时候,将会有一位勇者带领他的伙伴找到这些东西,重新建立光明和秩序,这些东西就被称为“众神之遗产”。
  • 莫急,你要的岁月都会给你

    莫急,你要的岁月都会给你

    豆瓣超人气、嘴最贱、毒毒教大当家“毒舌奶奶CC”最辛辣观点。豆瓣上从未发表过的8万字内容首度面世。生活中的女汉子,写书时却是玻璃心,对于爱、背叛、受伤、柴米油盐霸气解读。言犀利却用轻轻的笔触修复你在社会丛林生活中遇到的伤。拒绝神秘主义,拒绝哄你开心,掏心窝地直言隐秘的生活真相,如果不能训练你内心更强大,至少给你安慰。天下万物来和去都有它时间,你若不伤,岁月无恙。如果世界上真有奇迹,那也是努力的另一个名字,只是需要自己慢慢等待。读这本书能静下自己的心,充满正能量,以自己喜欢的方式去生活。
  • 夫人被拐了

    夫人被拐了

    从小生活在灵云山庄的莫涵月,虽是婢女却娇养天成。惊闻身世之谜后愤然离家,却意外被拐,卷入一场惊天谋划中。她做为一颗棋子,在这场阴谋中沉沉浮浮,经历世间百态,是就此湮没,还是浴火重生,只在她一念之间。
  • 培养了不起的女孩

    培养了不起的女孩

    本书通过几十个具体、生动的育女案例,从培养新时代需要的女性入手,逐层展开,阐述了培养女孩的好心态、好性格、好习惯的重要性。本书指出,女孩子天生感情细腻,又善于提成饰自己的感受,所以,作为父母要给予女儿更细致的关心和爱,多和女儿交流,不要吝啬赞美之词,让她感到自己是出色的、重要的!