登陆注册
5380000000107

第107章

Mrs.Hudson tossed her head and timidly bristled."This from you, Mr.Mallet!" she said with an injured air which Rowland found harrowing.

But Roderick, most characteristically, did not in the least resent his friend's assertion; he sent him, on the contrary, one of those large, clear looks of his, which seemed to express a stoical pleasure in Rowland's frankness, and which set his companion, then and there, wondering again, as he had so often done before, at the extraordinary contradictions of his temperament."My dear mother," Roderick said, "if you had had eyes that were not blinded by this sad maternal vanity, you would have seen all this for yourself; you would have seen that I'm anything but prosperous."

"Is it anything about money?" cried Mrs.Hudson.

"Oh, do write to Mr.Striker!"

"Money?" said Roderick."I have n't a cent of money;I 'm bankrupt!"

"Oh, Mr.Mallet, how could you let him?" asked Mrs.Hudson, terribly.

"Everything I have is at his service," said Rowland, feeling ill.

"Of course Mr.Mallet will help you, my son!" cried the poor lady, eagerly.

"Oh, leave Mr.Mallet alone!" said Roderick."I have squeezed him dry;it 's not my fault, at least, if I have n't!""Roderick, what have you done with all your money?" his mother demanded.

"Thrown it away! It was no such great amount.I have done nothing this winter.""You have done nothing?"

"I have done no work! Why in the world did n't you guess it and spare me all this? Could n't you see I was idle, distracted, dissipated?""Dissipated, my dear son?" Mrs.Hudson repeated.

"That 's over for the present! But could n't you see--could n't Mary see--that I was in a damnably bad way?"

"I have no doubt Miss Garland saw," said Rowland.

"Mary has said nothing!" cried Mrs.Hudson.

"Oh, she 's a fine girl!" Rowland said.

"Have you done anything that will hurt poor Mary?"Mrs.Hudson asked.

"I have only been thinking night and day of another woman!"Mrs.Hudson dropped helplessly into her seat again.

"Oh dear, dear, had n't we better go home?""Not to get out of her way!" Roderick said."She has started on a career of her own, and she does n't care a straw for me.

My head was filled with her; I could think of nothing else;I would have sacrificed everything to her--you, Mary, Mallet, my work, my fortune, my future, my honor! I was in a fine state, eh?

I don't pretend to be giving you good news; but I 'm telling the simple, literal truth, so that you may know why I have gone to the dogs.

She pretended to care greatly for all this, and to be willing to make any sacrifice in return; she had a magnificent chance, for she was being forced into a mercenary marriage with a man she detested.

She led me to believe that she would give this up, and break short off, and keep herself free and sacred and pure for me.

This was a great honor, and you may believe that I valued it.

It turned my head, and I lived only to see my happiness come to pass.

She did everything to encourage me to hope it would; everything that her infernal coquetry and falsity could suggest.""Oh, I say, this is too much!" Rowland broke out.

"Do you defend her?" Roderick cried, with a renewal of his passion.

"Do you pretend to say that she gave me no hopes?"He had been speaking with growing bitterness, quite losing sight of his mother's pain and bewilderment in the passionate joy of publishing his wrongs.Since he was hurt, he must cry out;since he was in pain, he must scatter his pain abroad.

Of his never thinking of others, save as they spoke and moved from his cue, as it were, this extraordinary insensibility to the injurious effects of his eloquence was a capital example;the more so as the motive of his eloquence was never an appeal for sympathy or compassion, things to which he seemed perfectly indifferent and of which he could make no use.

The great and characteristic point with him was the perfect absoluteness of his own emotions and experience.He never saw himself as part of a whole; only as the clear-cut, sharp-edged, isolated individual, rejoicing or raging, as the case might be, but needing in any case absolutely to affirm himself.

All this, to Rowland, was ancient history, but his perception of it stirred within him afresh, at the sight of Roderick's sense of having been betrayed.That he, under the circumstances, should not in fairness be the first to lodge a complaint of betrayal was a point to which, at his leisure, Rowland was of course capable of rendering impartial justice;but Roderick's present desperation was so peremptory that it imposed itself on one's sympathies."Do you pretend to say,"he went on, "that she did n't lead me along to the very edge of fulfillment and stupefy me with all that she suffered me to believe, all that she sacredly promised? It amused her to do it, and she knew perfectly well what she really meant.

She never meant to be sincere; she never dreamed she could be.

She 's a ravenous flirt, and why a flirt is a flirt is more than Ican tell you.I can't understand playing with those matters;for me they 're serious, whether I take them up or lay them down.

I don't see what 's in your head, Rowland, to attempt to defend Miss Light; you were the first to cry out against her!

You told me she was dangerous, and I pooh-poohed you.

You were right; you 're always right.She 's as cold and false and heartless as she 's beautiful, and she has sold her heartless beauty to the highest bidder.

I hope he knows what he gets!"

"Oh, my son," cried Mrs.Hudson, plaintively, "how could you ever care for such a dreadful creature?""It would take long to tell you, dear mother!"Rowland's lately-deepened sympathy and compassion for Christina was still throbbing in his mind, and he felt that, in loyalty to it, he must say a word for her."You believed in her too much at first,"he declared, "and you believe in her too little now."Roderick looked at him with eyes almost lurid, beneath lowering brows.

"She is an angel, then, after all?--that 's what you want to prove!"he cried."That 's consoling for me, who have lost her!

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 小店赚钱就这么简单

    小店赚钱就这么简单

    有句俗话叫作“生意做遍,不如开店”。开小店当老板不仅可以施展自己的才华,锻炼自己的能力,而且还可以积累自己的财富。本书是小店赚钱必读全书,包括小店筹备篇、小店打造篇、小店管理篇、小店经营篇、小店售后篇等。本书借助大量的开店实例为那些创业小店店主出谋划策,指点迷津,希望能帮助读者朋友实现自己的创业梦想。
  • 都市神兵

    都市神兵

    兵王回归花都,拳打高富帅,脚踢富二代,这是一个欢乐的世界,无人能挡!
  • 浮夸

    浮夸

    18段难以释怀的前尘往事,18篇动人心弦的感伤情事。这里没有哗众取宠的复杂情节,没有空洞华丽的词汇,只有都市男女深情的怅惘和纯真的沧桑。
  • 优美的校园散文

    优美的校园散文

    散文是美的,它能给人以美的享受,然而什么样的散文才是最美的散文呢?秦牧曾说:“精粹警辟的、谈笑风生的、亲切感人的、玲珑剔透的,使你读时入了神、读后印象久久不会消失的好散文,还是不多。”他还说:“一篇好的散文,应该通过各种各样的内容给人以思想的启发、美的感受、情操的陶冶。”品读精美的散文,宛如清风般涤荡沐浴;让散文的清扬与美丽永远地伴随你。
  • 捕爱精灵:异族男友掌上妻

    捕爱精灵:异族男友掌上妻

    我生活在一个古老的山村,那里的生活祥和而安逸,每当夜色降临总会听到狼嚎声不断,晚上山里就像是闹市一样喧闹不休。对于这个神奇的小村,这里生活的所有生物都有着无尽的传说,尤其是当我遇到了他……
  • 穿越之玩转古商

    穿越之玩转古商

    一朝穿越,来到了个架空时代。关键是人家穿越的要么是什么富贵人家,要么是什么厉害的江湖人士,为什么自己还是个普通人?我要逆袭,我要挣钱,把现代商业开在古代!别问我是谁,一穿越的小青年。
  • 重生之毒医大小姐

    重生之毒医大小姐

    那一世为人所害,凄凉惨死,却不料竟然重生,这一世,她为刀俎,定要将那些人送进地狱!
  • 七号霸宠

    七号霸宠

    堕入一场游戏的圈套,她赔尽了所有。残忍的现实,令她失去了自己的孩子,还有傲人的身材。五年后,当一切浮出水边,她再次踏上这边伤心之土,一边寻找着自己双生的姐姐,一边挖掘着当年事实的真相,然而,一切却是如此伤人。
  • 亚德哈姆

    亚德哈姆

    陈大少,眯着眼,跷着二郎腿,嘴里还叼根牙芊,得意洋洋坐在椅子对着大表叔讲:“当初要不是为了我老婆,球大爷才愿意去打打杀杀。。。。。。。。。。。。。。
  • 上位萌妻

    上位萌妻

    因误会,他们分开了三年。三年后,她携帅炸了天的宝宝归来。在机场偶遇了要出国的他。“顾伊一…,你个没良心的还知道回来啊。”她的闺密在出口处朝她喊。“小姨…你再朝妈咪喊一句的话,你的礼物就没有了哦~”戴着鸭舌帽一身黑衣的宝宝双手插着口袋低低的对面前的人说。“…小豆丁,你是不是不爱小姨我了?”女人嘟着嘴说到。“你说错了……”男孩抬起头来朝她微微一笑。“我就知道你还是爱我的。”女人弯下腰刚要抱男孩却听到了一句让她吐血的话。“本宝宝什么时候爱过你?”男孩说完这句话拖着自己小小的行李箱大步朝前走了。………………