登陆注册
5264300000075

第75章 CHAPTER XV MRS. TAFT'S FRONT PORCH(2)

This relying upon Margaret's judgment had become a habit with Oliver. He not only consulted her about his canvases, but about everything else that concerned him. He had never formulated in his mind what this kind of companionship meant to him (we never do when we are in the midst of it), nor had he ever considered what would become of him when the summer was over, and the dream would end, and they each would return to the customary dulness of life; a life where there would be no blue ether nor clouds, nor vanishing points, nor values, nor tones, nor anything else that had made their heaven of a summer so happy.

They had both lived in this paradise for weeks without once bringing themselves to believe it could ever end (why do not such episodes last forever?) when Oliver awoke one morning to the fact that the fatal day of their separation would be upon him in a week's time or less. Margaret, with her more practical mind, had seen farther ahead than Oliver, and her laugh, in consequence, had been less spontaneous of late, and her interest in her work and in Oliver's less intense. She was overpowered by another sensation; she had been thinking of the day, now so near, when the old stage would drive up to Mrs. Taft's pasture-gate, and her small trunk and trap would be carried down on Hank's back and tumbled in, and she would go back alone to duty and the prosaic life of a New England village.

Neither of them supposed that it was anything else but the grief of parting that afflicted them, until there came a memorable autumn night--a night that sometimes comes to the blessed!--when the moon swam in the wide sky, breasting the soft white clouds, and when Oliver and Margaret sat together on the porch of Mrs. Taft's cottage--he on the steps at her feet, she leaning against the railing, the moonlight full upon her face.

They had been there since sunset. They had known all day what was in each other's mind, but they had avoided discussing it. Now they must face it.

"You go to-morrow, Madge?" Oliver asked. He knew she did. He spoke as if announcing a fact.

"Yes."

The shrill cry of a loon, like the cry of a child in pain, sifted down the ravine from the lake above and died away among the pines soughing in the night-wind. Oliver paused for a moment to listen, and went on:

"I don't want you to go. I don't know what I am going to do without you, Madge," he said with a long indrawn sigh.

"You are coming to us at Brookfield, you know, on your way back to New York. That is some thing." She glanced at him with a slightly anxious look in her eyes, as if waiting for his answer to reassure her.

He rose from his seat and began pacing the gravel.

Now and then he would stop, flick a pebble from its bed with his foot, and walk on. She heard the sound of his steps, but she did not look at him, even when he stopped abruptly in front of her.

"Yes, I know, but--that will only make it worse."

He was leaning over her now, one foot on the steps.

"It tears me all to pieces when I think this is our last night. We've had such a good time all summer.

You don't want to go home, do you?"

"No--I'd rather stay." The words came slowly, as if it gave her pain to utter them.

"Well--stay, then," he answered with some animation.

"What difference does a few days makes?

Let us have another week. We haven't been over to Bog Eddy yet; please stay, Madge."

"No, I must go, Ollie."

"But we'll be so happy, little girl."

"Life is not only being happy, Ollie. It's very real sometimes. It is to me--" and a faint sigh escaped her.

"Well, but why make it real to-morrow? Let us make it real next week, not now."

"It would be just as hard for you next week.

Why postpone it?" She was looking at him now, watching his face closely.

Her answer seemed to hurt him. With an impatient gesture he straightened himself, turned as if to resume his walk, and then, pushing away the end of her skirt, sat down beside her.

"I don't understand your theories, Madge, and I'm not going to discuss them. I don't want to talk of any such things; I'm too unhappy to-night. When I look ahead and think that if the Academy should not open, you wouldn't come back at all, and that I might not see you for months, I'm all broken up. What am I going to do without you, Madge?"

His voice was quivering, and a note of pain ran through it.

"Oh, you will have your work--you'll do just what you did before I came up." She was holding herself in by main strength; why, she could not tell --fighting an almost irresistible impulse to hide her face on his breast and cry.

"What good will that do me when you are gone?" he burst out, with a quick toss of his head and a certain bitterness in his tone.

"Well, but you were very happy before you saw me."

Again the cry of the loon came down the ravine.

He turned and with one of his quick, impatient gestures that she knew so well, put his hand on her shoulder.

"Stop, Madge, stop! Don't talk that way. I can't stand it. Look at me!" The pain had become unbearable now. "You've got to listen. I can't keep it back, and I won't. I never met anybody that I loved as I do you. I didn't think so at first. I never thought I could think so, but it's true.

You are not my sweetheart nor my friend, nor my companion, nor anything else that ever came into my life. You are my very breath, my soul, my being.

I never want you to leave me. I should never have another happy day if I thought this was to end our life. I laid awake half the night trying to straighten it out, and I can't, and there's no straightening it out and never will be unless you love me.

Oh, Madge! Madge! Don't turn away from me.

Let me be part of you--part of everything you do --and are--and will be."

He caught her hand in his warm palm and laid his cheek upon it. Still holding it fast he raised his head, laid his other hand upon her hair, smoothing it softly, and looked long and earnestly into her eyes as if searching for something hidden in their depths. Then, in a voice of infinite tenderness, he said:

"Madge, darling! Tell me true--could you ever love me?"

She sat still, her eyes fixed on his, her hand nestling in his grasp. Then slowly and carefully, one at a time, she loosened with her other hand the fingers that lay upon her hair, held them for an instant in her own, bent her head and touched them with her lips.

同类推荐
  • 曾子

    曾子

    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。
  • 一字顶轮王念诵仪轨

    一字顶轮王念诵仪轨

    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。
  • 观经

    观经

    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。
  • 道门经法相承次序

    道门经法相承次序

    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。
  • 佛说楼炭经

    佛说楼炭经

    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
  • 海刚峰先生居官公案传

    海刚峰先生居官公案传

    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。
  • 斗罗之萝莉切开黑

    斗罗之萝莉切开黑

    【新坑《柯南之圣杯许愿的正确方式》】本文cp:唐三×祁夜,一定要看完简介!【谢绝各种写作指导,杠精退散!你来我就怼!】这是一个关于王族刚出生的第六子祁夜被卷入了空间乱流后来到新世界的冒险故事。“儿子”跑掉的第n年,天道幽幽地叹口气,觉得道生艰难。隔壁天道好奇的问:你怎么了?天道叹息道:我“儿子”蝴蝶掉了“小闺女”喜欢上了一个呆丫头。隔壁天道:那把呆丫头摁死啊,那可是你的命运之子!唐三【微笑】:你要摁死谁?祁夜默默抬手,一簇火焰在指尖跳跃起来。隔壁天道:卧槽!天道【望天】:走好。#论今天的七七开窍了吗##论我喜欢的人情商超低系列#PS:拆三舞官配,实在接受不了拆的手动返回,不喜勿喷,谢绝恶言评论、ky人身。
  • 花吹雪

    花吹雪

    回想起来,我可能是一个受古书旧书浸太深太重的文人,我更喜欢中国传统文人那种疏朗和纤婉的情调,那种芭蕉绿竹的情调,那种古琴古萧的情调,那种唐风宋雨的情调。
  • 疑云鬼影

    疑云鬼影

    太平镇镇子不大,也就四五十户人家,左临平安县,右接清谷县,前望福平县,属于一马三疆之地,其实也就是一个三不管的地界。由于一地接三县,也算是商贾往来必经的枢纽,所以这里也还生意兴隆。刚到晌午,镇上的酒楼便已经是宾客盈门。可唯独镇子正中的醉仙居,空空荡荡,不见一个人影。两匹马,一前一后,来到了醉仙居,两个人甩镫下马。前面是个中年汉子,身材魁梧,满脸虬须,一脸英气;后面是个年轻人,面如朗月,斯斯文文,满身富贵之相。店主杨福善急忙满脸带笑迎了上来:“两位客官,实在抱歉,醉仙居今天已经被人包下了,还请两位移步到下一家用餐。”
  • 你努力的每一天,都是成功的前奏

    你努力的每一天,都是成功的前奏

    《你努力的每一天,都是成功的前奏》是才女陈静写给千万年轻人的人生成长之书。抛弃常规的心灵鸡汤文,陈静用充满感染力的文字,与无数年轻人分享自己对生活的感悟。几十篇发自肺腑的诚意之作,每一篇都有触动人心的力量。内含数十篇原创励志作品,十几万字的生活感悟,告诉读者:生活从来不会亏待真正努力的人,每一个孤独的当下,都暗藏着一个更优秀的自己!你有多努力,就会有多少光芒!将来的你,一定会感谢现在拼命的自己!口碑就是最好的推荐!阅读陈静最用心的作品——《你努力的每一天,都是成功的前奏》,人生充满正能量。
  • 评估(中篇)

    评估(中篇)

    国家某部委派遣的专家组一周后就要杀向东海大学,对该校的建筑学专业进行真刀实枪的评估了!建筑工程学院上上下下都笼罩在临战前的紧张不安气氛中,一个个磨刀霍霍,进行着现代化战争条件下的白刃战准备——这是院党委书记在誓师动员大会上要求的,当时他咬牙切齿地说:“没有刺刀见红的思想准备,就赢不了这场硬仗!请大家都把枪擦亮了、刀磨快了,院长一声令下,就都奋不顾身地往前冲,如果出现临阵脱逃或刀枪失灵的情况,军法从事!会后,请各位都把军令状给签了!”所谓“军令状”就是承诺书,要大家承诺评估期间绝不出现教学事故等等。
  • 石经考异

    石经考异

    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。
  • 我家妹子是玉帝

    我家妹子是玉帝

    夜半醉酒,却被一个血族少女吸了血液,此后,生活发生了天翻地覆的变化。青梅竹马的少女原来是个妖怪,家里的哈士奇原来也是个妖怪,从小住着的街道,原来就是妖怪的聚居地。然后有一天,一个自称是玉帝的小姑娘找上了他,“我,玉皇大帝,打钱。”他却迟迟下不了一个决定,这条狗,我到底干还是不干呢。
  • 绝世武圣

    绝世武圣

    谁说吊丝不能逆袭?沈涛偏偏就不信这个邪,以凡人之躯行逆天之事,不论是绝世天才、跨阶强者还是超级家族上古门派,挡我路者,杀无赦……
  • 杀无戒

    杀无戒

    现实世界中孤僻的双重人格天才陈言,在独具慧眼的舅舅引导下进入网游,当他把自己的高智商和潜在能力带到广阔的游戏世界时,开创个人团队模式,用独特计算手段应对未知对手,从此所向披靡,网游界刮起一阵滔天巨浪!