登陆注册
5435100000171

第171章

"An idiot she certainly is not; and as to being cross-grained I have never found it. A human being with the grains running more directly all in the same way I have never come across.""Do not talk to me, Jonathan, like that," she said. "When I call her cross-grained I mean that she is running counter to her own happiness.""I cannot tell anything about that. I should have endeavoured, I think, to make her happy. She has certainly run counter to my happiness.""And now?"

"What -- as to this very moment! I shall leave Stalham tomorrow.""Why should you do that? Let her go if one must go.""That is just what I want to prevent. Why should she lose her little pleasure?""You don't suppose that we can make the house happy to her now!

Why should we care to do so when she will have driven you away?"He sat silent for a minute or two looking at the fire, with his hands on his two knees. "You must acknowledge, Jonathan," continued she, "that I have taken kindly to this Ayala of yours.""I do acknowledge it."

"But it cannot be that she should be the same to us simply as a young lady, staying here as it were on her own behalf, as she was when we regarded her as your possible wife. Then every little trick and grace belonging to her endeared itself to us because we regarded her as one who was about to become one of ourselves.

But what are her tricks and graces to us now?""They are all the world to me," said the Colonel.

"But you must wipe them out of your memory -- unless, indeed, you mean to ask her again.""Ah! -- that is it."

"You will ask her again?"

"I do not say so; but I do not wish to rob myself of the chance.

It may be that I shall. Of course I should tomorrow if I thought there was a hope. Tomorrow there would be none -- but I should like to know, that I could find her again in hands so friendly as yours, if at the end of a month I should think myself strong enough to encounter the risk of another refusal. Would Sir Harry allow her to remain here for another month?""He would say, probably, nothing about it.""My plan is this," he continued; "let her remain here, say, for three weeks or a month. Do you continue all your kindness to her -- if not for her sake then for mine. Let her feel that she is made one of yourselves, as you say.""That will be hard," said Lady Albury.

"It would not be hard if you thought that she was going to become so at last. Try it, for my sake. Say not a word to her about me -- though not shunning my name. Be to her as though I had told you nothing of this. Then when the period is over I will come again -- if I find that I can do so. If my love is still stronger than my sense of self-respect, I shall do so." All this Lady Albury promised to do, and then the interview between them was over.

"Colonel Stubbs is going to Aldershot tomorrow," said she to Ayala in the drawing-room after dinner. "He finds now that he cannot very well remain away." There was no hesitation in her voice as she said this, and no look in her eye which taught Ayala to suppose that she had heard anything of what had occurred in the wood.

"Is he indeed?" said Ayala, trying, but in vain, to be equally undemonstrative.

"It is a great trouble to us, but we are quite unable to prevent it -- unless you indeed can control him.""I cannot control him," said Ayala, with that fixed look of resolution with which Lady Albury had already become familiar.

That evening before they went to bed the Colonel bade them all goodbye, as he intended to start early in the morning. "I never saw such a fellow as you are for sudden changes," said Sir Harry.

"What is the good of staying here for hunting when the ground and Tony's temper are both as hard as brick-bats? If I go now I can get another week further on in March if the rain should come." With this Sir Harry seemed to be satisfied; but Ayala felt sure that Tony's temper and the rain had had nothing to do with it.

"Goodbye, Miss Dormer," he said, with his pleasantest smile, and his pleasantest voice.

"Goodbye," she repeated. What would she not have given that her voice should be as pleasant as his, and her smile! But she failed so utterly that the little word was inaudible -- almost obliterated by the choking of a sob. How bitterly severe had that word, Miss Dormer, sounded from his mouth! Could he not have called her Ayala for the last time -- even though all the world should have heard it? She was wide awake in the morning and heard the wheels of his cart as he was driven off. As the sound died away upon her ear she felt that he was gone from her for ever. How had it been that she had said, "I cannot," so often, when all her heart was set upon "I can?"And now it remained to her to take herself away from Stalham as fast as she might. She understood perfectly all those ideas which Lady Albury had expressed to her well-loved friend. She was nothing to anybody at Stalham, simply a young lady staying in the house -- as might be some young lady connected with them by blood, or some young lady whose father and mother had been their friends. She had been brought there to Stalham, now this second time, in order that Jonathan Stubbs might take her as his wife. Driven by some madness she had refused her destiny, and now nobody would want her at Stalham any longer. She had better begin to pack up at once -- and go. The coldness of the people, now that she had refused to do as she had been asked, would be unbearable to her. And yet she must not let it appear that Stalham was no longer dear to her merely because Colonel Stubbs had left it. She would let a day go by, and then say with all the ease she could muster that she would take her departure on the next. After that her life before her would be a blank.

She had known up to this -- so at least she told herself -- that Jonathan Stubbs would afford her at any rate another chance.

Now there could be no other chance.

同类推荐
  • 春秋公羊传注疏

    春秋公羊传注疏

    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。
  • 一山文集

    一山文集

    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。
  • 玄天上帝说报父母恩重经

    玄天上帝说报父母恩重经

    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。
  • 西征石城记

    西征石城记

    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。
  • Leviathan

    Leviathan

    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
  • 异世武巅

    异世武巅

    穿过多少生死,越过无数时空,带着炎黄一族无上秘技,他君临异世!面对宗门振兴的大任,他如何完成?穿越之谜,身世之惑,该如何解开?茫茫主界,无数上古大能接连陨落,是谁导演了这一切?以轮回铸剑、以天地为招,看背负着惊天阴谋的苍夜如何一步步,走上这异界的巅峰!
  • 穿越之绝色红颜:驭灵至尊

    穿越之绝色红颜:驭灵至尊

    江山如画,美人如诗,娑婆世界,步步生莲。<br/>她本弃儿,因缘际会,被选入世界最大的杀手组织,凭着惊人的天赋,成长为如今令政界精英和商贾大佬皆闻之丧胆,若幽冥般于无声无形间夺人性命,江湖人称“嗜血幽冥”的绝命杀手。……&nbsp;一朝穿越,成为举国皆知的集丑、愚、哑、废、病于一身的废物六小姐,当她再次睁开那清冷眼眸,风云将为之变色矣。<br/>
  • 地狱暗行者

    地狱暗行者

    他,经历了十万人的厮杀,成为了地狱暗行者的首领,一言定生死,一言决定他人的命运。他却有双重人格,一个是正常的一面,和普通人没什么区别,憨态可掬!另一个,则是地狱煞星,恶鬼修罗,一旦出现,必将血流千里,让得天地失色!如若有不长眼的触之逆鳞,其将会付出难以承受的代价……
  • 20岁经营自己 30岁经营孩子 40岁经营丈夫

    20岁经营自己 30岁经营孩子 40岁经营丈夫

    本书共分为三篇,主要内容包括:20岁,做一个漂亮聪明的女孩;30岁,做一个温柔体贴的妈妈;40岁,做一个魅力无限的妻子。
  • 美国期刊理论研究

    美国期刊理论研究

    本书共分五部分。“基础理论略述”讲述人们对于期刊的理解。“研究方法述评”综述了美国期刊研究的成果、趋势、存在的问题及未来研究努力的方向。“论文选萃”汇编并评注了十篇美国专家、学者发表的论文,内容涵盖读者群体的构建、期刊的影响、广告、女性杂志等。“名家演讲”编译了美国期刊业内部分权威人士的重要讲话,便于读者准确了解美国期刊业的发展动态及趋势。“名刊精粹”解读美国名刊的成功之道。中国与美国的社会制度不同,期刊的定位和性质存在较大差异,但这不妨碍我们在坚持社会主义办刊方向的前提下,尽可能地学习、借鉴和吸纳先进的理念和成功的做法,以促进我国期刊产业的发展。
  • 云山集

    云山集

    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。
  • 我叫锐萌萌

    我叫锐萌萌

    游戏的王者,夙愿终了的时候,来到了瓦洛兰大陆。黑铁,青铜,白银……一切从头,却有一颗王者的心。手中的那柄断剑,是否依然狂乱飞舞,蘸血为画。断剑重铸,骑士归来。我深爱的人啊,愿用一剑放逐,换你一生倾心!PS:书友群536174112,记得加群哦
  • 学园都市的雪花之盾

    学园都市的雪花之盾

    穿越到魔禁世界,人性的光暗,科学魔法两侧的冲突,身为“原石”不可能置身事外......一方通行是我妹夫,垣根帝督是我的赝作者(手动捂脸),御坂美琴是我...(??),麦野沉利是我组员,食蜂操祈是我秘书,削板军霸是我小弟。至于那个第六名......不好意思,我也在找。
  • 国色医妃

    国色医妃

    神农银针凭妙医,白衣素手掌生死。一卷圣旨风云变,名动天下显芳华。****谢桥是现代医学天才,淡漠张狂,医术无双。一朝穿越,沦为皇权博弈弃子。她命如草芥,谁人可欺。她是继母肉中刺,父亲心中耻辱,祖母眼中野种。“野种就是野种,掉在凤凰窝也改变不了你杂毛野鸡的身份!”“你是我这辈子的污点,若不是你娘下贱勾引,哪里会有你这孽障?”“你娘是个娼妇,你是个小娼妇,休想踏入辅国公府门槛!”风云瞬变,圣旨一出——“皇上有旨,凡有神农后裔下落者,赏银千两!”离京十五年的谢桥摇身一变,成为人人掷万金求一药的神农后裔。一朝功成名就,声名远扬——阴狠小人,难缠恶鬼齐涌而来,到处都是重重阴谋算计。谢桥森然冷笑,既然避无可避,那就踩出一条血路。开医馆,种药田,立医宗,医界以她为尊。通海商,除倭寇,建势力,海上以她为霸。斜倚在美人榻上,冷眼看着跪在地上的魍魉魑魅。勾唇冷笑——大鬼小鬼们,现在跪求?晚了!
  • 难二

    难二

    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。