登陆注册
5361900000081

第81章

There was a noise outside the door, and Rolfe's voice speaking to the gaoler. Impatient for his entrance I started toward the door, but when it opened he made no move to cross the threshold. "I am not coming in," he said, with a face that he strove to keep grave. "I only came to bring some one else." With that he stepped back, and a second figure, coming forward out of the dimness behind him, crossed the threshold. It was a woman, cloaked and hooded. The door was drawn to behind her, and we were alone together.

Beside the cloak and hood she wore a riding mask. "Do you know who it is?" she asked, when she had stood, so shrouded, for a long minute, during which I had found no words with which to welcome her.

"Yea," I answered: "the princess in the fairy tale."

She freed her dark hair from its covering, and unclasping her cloak let it drop to the floor. "Shall I unmask?" she asked, with a sigh.

"Faith! I should keep the bit of silk between your eyes, sir, and my blushes. Am I ever to be the forward one? Do you not think me too bold a lady?" As she spoke, her white hands were busy about the fastening of her mask. "The knot is too hard," she murmured, with a little tremulous laugh and a catch of her breath.

I untied the ribbons.

"May I not sit down?" she said plaintively, but with soft merriment in her eyes. "I am not quite strong yet. My heart - you do not know what pain I have in my heart sometimes. It makes me weep of nights and when none are by, indeed it does!"

There was a settle beneath the window. I led her to it, and she sat down.

"You must know that I am walking in the Governor's garden, that hath only a lane between it and the gaol." Her eyes were downcast, her cheeks pure rose.

"When did you first love me?" I demanded.

"Lady Wyatt must have guessed why Master Rolfe alone went not to the bear-baiting, but joined us in the garden. She said the air was keen, and fetched me her mask, and then herself went indoors to embroider Samson in the arms of Delilah.'

"Was it here at Jamestown, or was it when we were first wrecked, or on the island with the pink hill when you wrote my name in the sand, or" -

"The George will sail in three days, and we are to be taken back to England after all. It does not scare me now."

"In all my life I have kissed you only once," I said.

The rose deepened, and in her eyes there was laughter, with tears behind. "You are a gentleman of determination," she said. "If you are bent upon having your way, I do not know that I - that I - can help myself. I do not even know that I want to help myself."

Outside the wind blew and the sun shone, and the laughter from below the fort was too far away and elfin to jar upon us. The world forgot us, and we were well content. There seemed not much to say: I suppose we were too happy for words. I knelt beside her, and she laid her hands in mine, and now and then we spoke. In her short and lonely life, and in my longer stern and crowded one, there had been little tenderness, little happiness. In her past, to those about her, she had seemed bright and gay; I had been a comrade whom men liked because I could jest as well as fight.

Now we were happy, but we were not gay. Each felt for the other a great compassion; each knew that though we smiled to-day, the groan and the tear might be to-morrow's due; the sunshine around us was pure gold, but that the clouds were mounting we knew full well.

"I must soon be gone," she said at last. "It is a stolen meeting. I do not know when we shall meet again."

She rose from the settle, and I rose with her, and we stood together beside the barred window. There was no danger of her being seen; street and square were left to the wind and the sunshine. My arm was around her, and she leaned her head against my breast.

"Perhaps we shall never meet again," she said.

"The winter is over," I answered. "Soon the trees will be green and the flowers in bloom. I will not believe that our spring can have no summer."

She took from her bosom a little flower that had been pinned there. It lay, a purple star, in the hollow of her hand. "It grew in the sun. It is the first flower of spring." She put it to her lips, then laid it upon the window ledge beside my hand. "I have brought you evil gifts, - foes and strife and peril. Will you take this little purple flower - and all my heart beside?"

I bent and kissed first the tiny blossom, and then the lips that had proffered it. "I am very rich," I said.

The sun was now low, and the pines in the square and the upright of the pillory cast long shadows. The wind had fallen and the sounds had died away. It seemed very still. Nothing moved but the creeping shadows until a flight of small white-breasted birds went past the window. "The snow is gone," I said. "The snowbirds are flying north."

"The woods will soon be green," she murmured wistfully. "Ah, if we could ride through them once more, back to Weyanoke" -

"To home," I said.

"Home," she echoed softly.

There was a low knocking at the door behind us. "It is Master Rolfe's signal," she said. "I must not stay. Tell me that you love me, and let me go."

I drew her closer to me and pressed my lips upon her bowed head.

"Do you not know that I love you?" I asked.

"Yea," she answered. "I have been taught it. Tell me that you believe that God will be good to us. Tell me that we shall be happy yet; for oh, I have a boding heart this day!"

Her voice broke, and she lay trembling in my arms, her face hidden. "If the summer never comes for us" - she whispered.

"Good-by, my lover and my husband. If I have brought you ruin and death, I have brought you, too, a love that is very great.

Forgive me and kiss me, and let me go."

"Thou art my dearly loved and honored wife," I said. "My heart forebodes summer, and joy, and peace, and home."

We kissed each other solemnly, as those who part for a journey and a warfare. I spoke no word to Rolfe when the door was opened and she had passed out with her cloak drawn about her face, but we clasped hands, and each knew the other for his friend indeed.

They were gone, the gaoler closing and locking the door behind them. As for me, I went back to the settle beneath the window, and, falling on my knees beside it, buried my face in my arms.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 见闻天道

    见闻天道

    天道是真的存在的,而且竟然还和自己想象的完全不同,竟然差一点颠覆了自己的世界观,为什么这种事情会发生在一个高中生的身上,又会在天道里面发生什么样的事情?简直无法想象。
  • 中国古代情报史论稿

    中国古代情报史论稿

    《中国古代情报史论稿》,本书《中国古代情报史论稿》主要收录储道立先生从事相关教学科研工作所撰文稿,既研究思想理论,又关注人物事件,是一部完整而成熟的情报史专著。
  • 凉风依旧你还在

    凉风依旧你还在

    风说它很念旧,会回到最初的地方她说只要你不丢下我,我就一直在他说我们其实没有那么好凉风依旧,你在哪
  • 外储说左上

    外储说左上

    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。
  • 25分之1秒的智慧:瞬间的心灵穿越

    25分之1秒的智慧:瞬间的心灵穿越

    尽管微表情稍纵即逝,但只要你掌握窍门,细心观察,仍然可以锁定这1/25秒的瞬间,让对手无处遁形。《1/25秒的智慧:瞬间的心灵穿越》收集了各种微表情,并结合实际情况加以说明,手把手地教你捕捉、分析、研判陌生人的微表情,交给你一个“阅读放大器”。而此时你就会发现,读懂人心不再是难事!这不是教你做“心灵神偷”,而是要将你打造成“读心达人”。
  • 破解企业人力资源风险

    破解企业人力资源风险

    企业的繁荣和发展最终起作用的是人,人是企业生存和发展的根本。人在企业中又是一最大的变数,正所谓“成也萧何,败也萧何”对人的管理也就是对企业的管理。本书就企业聘人,用人、管理人等方面存在的一系列问题进行了深刻独特到的分析,给用人者提供了警醒。同时,也让企业认识到自己人力资源管理方面的不足,从而加以改进,只有这样企业才能得到可持续发展。
  • 一世不了情

    一世不了情

    一直在等一个人,一直在等一个回头,一直在等一份笑容,终于等到我自己都没了笑容。可是为什么,我向左走,向右走,还是走不出爱你的圆。哭累了,沉默了,想放弃了,冷淡了,可是时间一过,却又开始想念你……
  • 解放海口(百城百战解放战争系列)

    解放海口(百城百战解放战争系列)

    本书以纪实手法描述了解放战争中,为解放海南,中国人民解放军浴血奋战,纪录了他们可歌可泣的英勇事迹,再现了解放战争的悲壮场面……
  • 北极光

    北极光

    林澈从小就喜欢和爷爷玩耍,可是后来爷爷的身体越来越严重,连一向吵架的爸爸妈妈也开始和睦起来了,可是真的有那么平静吗,爷爷去世后,林澈终于知道了,爸爸妈妈和好是假,为了爷爷的产业才是真,爸爸妈妈在打闹之中失去了生命,林澈也进入了孤儿院,直到十三岁才去了舅舅家,林澈按照遗嘱背负了许多人都眼红的财产,阴谋越来越多,林澈遇到了一个叫韩子澈的人,还有林书翰,在无数的分分合合后,林澈身穿白色婚纱出现在了众人面前。
  • 人生没有标配,每一步都珍贵

    人生没有标配,每一步都珍贵

    每个人都曾疑惑过:我在干什么?这就是我想要的生活吗?2015年6月,林夏萨摩在社交平台上写下《你才20多岁,为什么总怕来不及》,一时引爆各大网络,累计阅读量达到10亿次之多。她为了过自己想要的生活,毅然放弃前程大好的英语专业,转而背起浅薄的行囊,成为上海漂泊的异客。她住过地下室,做过文案、策划、执行、翻译,半夜十二点穿越上海大半个城市回到暂住地……现服务多家世界500强公司。《人生没有标配,每一步都珍贵》,是林夏萨摩的第二本励志随笔集。书中记录了作者对人生的独特感悟——人生没有标配,我们努力踏出的每一步,对人生来说都很珍贵,从生活的全方位展现一个正能量的姑娘。