登陆注册
5378700000142

第142章

I clasped my hands and hid my face in despair.Oh, the bitterness of heart with which I heard him say those simple words!

"You were very kind to her," said the calm, tearless man."In her name and for her sake, I thank you.""Oh, sir," I said, "why did you never write to her when you were in foreign parts?""I wrote often," he answered; "but each of my letters contained a remittance of money.Did Mary tell you she had a stepmother? If she did, you may guess why none of my letters were allowed to reach her.I now know that this woman robbed my sister.Has she lied in telling me that she was never informed of Mary's place of abode?"I remembered that Mary had never communicated with her stepmother after the separation, and could therefore assure him that the woman had spoken the truth.

He paused for a moment after that, and sighed.Then he took out a pocket-book, and said:

"I have already arranged for the payment of any legal expenses that may have been incurred by the trial, but I have still to reimburse you for the funeral charges which you so generously defrayed.Excuse my speaking bluntly on this subject; I am accustomed to look on all matters where money is concerned purely as matters of business."I saw that he was taking several bank-notes out of the pocket-book, and stopped him.

"I will gratefully receive back the little money I actually paid, sir, because I am not well off, and it would be an ungracious act of pride in me to refuse it from you," I said; "but I see you handling bank-notes, any one of which is far beyond the amount you have to repay me.Pray put them back, sir.What I did for your poor lost sister I did from my love and fondness for her.

You have thanked me for that, and your thanks are all I can receive."He had hitherto concealed his feelings, but I saw them now begin to get the better of him.His eyes softened, and he took my hand and squeezed it hard.

"I beg your pardon," he said; "I beg your pardon, with all my heart."There was silence between us, for I was crying, and I believe, at heart, he was crying too.At last he dropped my hand, and seemed to change back, by an effort, to his former calmness.

"Is there no one belonging to you to whom I can be of service?"he asked."I see among the witnesses on the trial the name of a young man who appears to have assisted you in the inquiries which led to the prisoner's conviction.Is he a relation?""No, sir--at least, not now--but I hope--""What?"

"I hope that he may, one day, be the nearest and dearest relation to me that a woman can have." I said those words boldly, because I was afraid of his otherwise taking some wrong view of the connection between Robert and me "One day?" he repeated."One day may be a long time hence.""We are neither of us well off, sir," I said."One day means the day when we are a little richer than we are now.""Is the young man educated? Can he produce testimonials to his character? Oblige me by writing his name and address down on the back of that card."When I had obeyed, in a handwriting which I am afraid did me no credit, he took out another card and gave it to me.

"I shall leave England to-morrow," he said."There is nothing now to keep me in my own country.If you are ever in any difficulty or distress (which I pray God you may never be), apply to my London agent, whose address you have there."He stopped, and looked at me attentively, then took my hand again.

"Wher e is she buried?" he said, suddenly, in a quick whisper, turning his head away.

I told him, and added that we had made the grave as beautiful as we could with grass and flowers.I saw his lips whiten and tremble.

"God bless and reward you!" he said, and drew me toward him quickly and kissed my forehead.I was quite overcome, and sank down and hid my face on the table.When I looked up again he was gone.

* * * * * * *

June 25th, 1841.I write these lines on my wedding morning, when little more than a year has passed since Robert returned to England.

His salary was increased yesterday to one hundred and fifty pounds a year.If I only knew where Mr.Mallinson was, I would write and tell him of our present happiness.But for the situation which his kindness procured for Robert, we might still have been waiting vainly for the day that has now come.

I am to work at home for the future, and Sally is to help us in our new abode.If Mary could have lived to see this day! I am not ungrateful for my blessings; but oh, how I miss that sweet face on this morning of all others!

I got up to-day early enough to go alone to the grave, and to gather the nosegay that now lies before me from the flowers that grow round it.I shall put it in my bosom when Robert comes to fetch me to the church.Mary would have been my bridesmaid if she had lived; and I can't forget Mary, even on my wedding-day....

THE NIGHT.

THE last words of the last story fell low and trembling from Owen's lips.He waited for a moment while Jessie dried the tears which Anne Rodway's simple diary had drawn from her warm young heart, then closed the manuscript, and taking her hand patted it in his gentle, fatherly way.

"You will be glad to hear, my love," he said, "that I can speak from personal experience of Anne Rodway's happiness.She came to live in my parish soon after the trial at which she appeared as chief witness, and I was the clergyman who married her.Months before that I knew her story, and had read those portions of her diary which you have just heard.When I made her my little present on her wedding day, and when she gratefully entreated me to tell her what she could do for me in return, I asked for a copy of her diary to keep among the papers that I treasured most.

同类推荐
  • 佛地经论

    佛地经论

    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。
  • 吴中水利书

    吴中水利书

    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。
  • 天仙道程宝则

    天仙道程宝则

    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。
  • 答王龙溪

    答王龙溪

    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。
  • 寂上人院联句

    寂上人院联句

    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
  • 红尘笺

    红尘笺

    两个相伴成长的少女,一个古灵精怪、一个单纯傻萌,却因遇见同一位男子而卷入江湖是非,人心难测、善恶无疆,两人在相同的际遇中选择了背道而驰的人生路,她们是否还能一如往昔地策马江湖,在情爱纠葛中她们又该何去何从?他是人中翘楚、卓尔不群,却与尘世有着格格不入的间离,至交决裂、知己叛离、情爱难圆,身负非凡身世的他在经历过暴雨倾盆之后能否重获艳阳?一对双生姐妹花,同喜同悲,亦爱上同一个男子,二人为夺所爱不择手段,到底谁能够终成眷属、双宿双飞,亦或是二人同坠魔渊、万劫不复……情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 每天学一点文学常识

    每天学一点文学常识

    当我们翻开书,去努力寻找时,才恍然发现,那些常识性的知识,是我们学习、工作、生活所必需的基础知识。常识是最基础的、最朴素的,但同时也是最丰富、最深刻的。《每天学一点常识》书系立意于打破学科壁垒,推广学科常识。本书《每天学一点文学常识》就是《每天学一点常识》书系之一。它通过知识+故事的形式,让你轻松悦读,并掌握文学常识。
  • Rose O' the River

    Rose O' the River

    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
  • 歙州砚谱

    歙州砚谱

    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。
  • 音乐的历史

    音乐的历史

    《音乐的历史》评述了世界音乐史上各个时期伟大的音乐家的心路历程。在众多人物面前,作者按时间先后顺序,以平易近人的语气、独特的犀利目光,对西方音乐发展历史进行了梳理。静心读来,高雅的音乐,经典的旋律,名垂乐史的大师,仿佛就在你的身边。该书逻辑和条理清晰,读者可以读一本故事书的状态来品读房龙的音乐思想,并由此大体把握欧洲音乐史的发展脉络,知晓那些光鲜的音乐家的别样人生。
  • 疯狂盗墓贼

    疯狂盗墓贼

    生在战乱时期的张富贵原本衣食无忧,算上一方财主的他,却不料所有家产在一夜之间被国民军阀洗劫一空。无奈之下拉上儿时玩伴,重操旧业,却无情的被卷入一场漩涡。到底是他人的棋子,还是自己主宰命运?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 铁血英雄

    铁血英雄

    为纪念中国人民解放军建军80周年,中国武警出版社精心策划出版了一批官兵喜爱看的图书和音像制品,其中多部图书入选中共中央宣传部等单位确定的纪念建军80周年重点图书。这些出版物在指导部队推动工作、引导官兵鼓舞士气上发挥了积极的作用。
  • 阴翳礼赞

    阴翳礼赞

    日本文学界堪称唯美的大师只有两位,一是川端康成,一是谷崎润一郎。这是一本影响了安藤忠雄、原研哉的东瀛美学经典读本!《阴翳礼赞》由家装入手,论述了“阴翳”在人们日常生活中的重要作用。作者细腻的笔触以及对日本之美的深刻体悟,在带给读者以不同的美学感受的同时,也有令人深思的人生智慧。纵然阳光美好,使万物自由生长,阴翳却不可或缺。本书收录了《懒惰说》、《恋爱与情色》、《我眼中的大阪与大阪人》、《关于“白痴艺术”》、《故里》、《幼少时代的美食记忆》六篇随笔。均为谷崎润一郎散文的名作。
  • The Autobiography of a Quack

    The Autobiography of a Quack

    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。
  • Louis Lambert

    Louis Lambert

    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。