登陆注册
20041400000035

第35章 CHAPTER IX(1)

THE GENERAL ORDER

Sir Terence sat alone in his spacious, severely furnished private room in the official quarters at Monsanto. On the broad carved writing-table before him there was a mass of documents relating to the clothing and accoutrement of the forces, to leaves of absence, to staff appointments; there were returns from the various divisions of the sick and wounded in hospital, from which a complete list was to be prepared for the Secretary of State for War at home; there were plans of the lines at Torres Vedras just .received, indicating the progress of the works at various points; and there were documents and communications of all kinds concerned with the adjutant-general's multifarious and arduous duties, including an urgent letter from Colonel Fletcher suggesting that the Commander-in-Chief should take an early opportunity of inspecting in person the inner lines of fortification.

Sir Terence, however, sat back in his chair, his work neglected, his eyes dreamily gazing through the open window, but seeing nothing of the sun-drenched landscape beyond, a heavy frown darkening his bronzed and rugged face. His mind was very far from his official duties and the mass of reminders before him - this Augean stable of arrears. He was lost in thought of his wife and Tremayne.

Five days had elapsed since the ball at Count Redondo's, where Sir Terence had surprised the pair together in the garden and his suspicions had been fired by the compromising attitude in which he had discovered them. Tremayne's frank, easy bearing, so unassociable with guilt, had, as we know, gone far, to reassure him, and had even shamed him, so that he had trampled his suspicions underfoot. But other things had happened since to revive his bitter doubts. Daily, constantly, had he been coming upon Tremayne and Lady O'Moy alone together in intimate, confidential talk which was ever silenced on his approach. The two had taken to wandering by themselves in the gardens at all hours, a thing that had never been so before, and O'Moy detected, or imagined that he detected, a closer intimacy between them, a greater warmth towards the captain on the part of her ladyship.

Thus matters had reached a pass in which peace of mind was impossible to him. It was not merely what he saw, it was his knowledge of what was; it was his ever-present consciousness of his own age and his wife's youth; it was the memory of his ante-nuptial jealousy of Tremayne which had been awakened by the gossip of those days - a gossip that pronounced Tremayne Una Butler's poor suitor, too poor either to declare himself or to be accepted if he did. The old wound which that gossip had dealt him then was reopened now. He thought of Tremayne's manifest concern for Una; he remembered how in that very room some six weeks ago, when Butler's escapade had first been heard of, it was from avowed concern for Una that Tremayne had urged him to befriend and rescue his rascally brother-in-law. He remembered, too, with increasing bitterness that it was Una herself had induced him to appoint Tremayne to his staff.

There were moments when the conviction of Tremayne's honesty, the thought of Tremayne's unswerving friendship for himself, would surge up to combat and abate the fires of his devastating jealousy.

But evidence would kindle those fires anew until they flamed up to scorch his soul with shame and anger. He had been a fool in that he had married a woman of half his years; a fool in that he had suffered her former lover to be thrown into close association with her.

Thus he assured himself. But he would abide by his folly, and so must she. And he would see to it that whatever fruits that folly yielded, dishonour should not be one of them. Through all his darkening rage there beat the light of reason. To avert, he bethought him, was better than to avenge. Nor were such stains to be wiped out by vengeance. A cuckold remains a cuckold though he take the life of the man who has reduced him to that ignominy.

Tremayne must go before the evil transcended reparation. Let him return to his regiment and do his work of sapping and mining elsewhere than in O'Moy's household.

Eased by that resolve he rose, a tall, martial figure, youth and energy in every line of it for all his six and forty years. Awhile he paced the room in thought. Then, suddenly, with hands clenched behind his back, he checked by the window, checked on a horrible question that had flashed upon his tortured mind. What if already the evil should be irreparable? What proof had he that it was not so?

The door opened, and Tremayne himself came in quickly.

"Here's the very devil to pay, sir," he announced, with that odd mixture of familiarity towards his friend and deference to his chief.

O'Moy looked at him in silence with smouldering, questioning eyes, thinking of anything but the trouble which the captain's air and manner heralded.

"Captain Stanhope has just arrived from headquarters with messages for you. A terrible thing has happened, sir. The dispatches from home by the Thunderbolt which we forwarded from here three weeks ago reached Lord Wellington only the day before yesterday."

Sir Terence became instantly alert.

"Garfield, who carried them, came into collision at Penalva with an officer of Anson's Brigade. There was a meeting, and Garfield was shot through the lung. He lay between life and death for a fortnight, with the result that the dispatches were delayed until he recovered sufficiently to remember them and to have them forwarded by other hands. But you had better see Stanhope himself."

The aide-de-camp came in. He was splashed from head to foot in witness of the fury with which he had ridden, his hair was caked with dust and his face haggard. But he carried himself with soldierly uprightness, and his speech was brisk. He repeated what Tremayne had already stated, with some few additional details.

同类推荐
  • Eugenie Grandet

    Eugenie Grandet

    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。
  • 佛说大乘庄严宝王经

    佛说大乘庄严宝王经

    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。
  • 观佛三昧海经

    观佛三昧海经

    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。
  • 颈项门

    颈项门

    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。
  • 方简肃文集

    方简肃文集

    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。
热门推荐
  • 重生四小姐:异世彼岸

    重生四小姐:异世彼岸

    穿越到了一个不知名的大陆,重新有了一个跟自己一样的身体,可原主竟然是个废物?!不能修炼也就算了,还不受宠,不受宠也没关系,还是个灾星,可那也没关系,反正她也不是福星,但是要不要这么多渣来找麻烦呢?凤凰涅槃,劫后重生,看女主虐渣女踩渣男,废渣爹,毁渣国,跨级晋升,能人成群闯世界
  • 校花的圣级保镖

    校花的圣级保镖

    叶逆,身怀风水绝技,登峰造极的医术,神秘莫测的实力,前往花花都市,本想低调行事,奈何不长眼的人太多,麻烦不断找上门来,那就让我一路高歌,披荆斩棘,高调行事,成为最强大的无冕之王,坐怀无数美女。
  • 境界之线

    境界之线

    既然这是吾的命运,吾就接收吧。少年的王者之力,穿越两界,纵横天下。
  • 罪囚大陆

    罪囚大陆

    在苍茫的海面上,天空乌黑一片,水天一色,仿佛要融入彼此。在海天之间,空中漂浮着一个青衫青年和一个黑袍青年,他们彼此对峙着,在他们的背后依约可见有两片大陆的影子,两片大陆上的修士全都将心神放在他们身上。所有人都在期待着一场宿命之战,除了这两个主角。片刻后,黑袍青年忽然笑着说道:“林子,我不想打了。”青衫青年说道:“这不是宿命之战吗?”黑袍青年笑道:“对于两个不信命的天命之子,宿命对于我们有说服力吗?”然后,他们相视一笑。冲向对方.......
  • 天地之玄

    天地之玄

    一个悲剧的年代,一群悲催的人,过着悲惨的生活,纵然如此悲情,他们依然能够卑鄙的活下去。修行神仙道术、抢夺神奇法宝、为解开天地之玄的奥秘,激情浪漫勇往直前!
  • 打好手中的坏牌

    打好手中的坏牌

    当困境来临时,我们除了坚持还应当如何应对?怎样才能利用自身优势,突破困境的重重包围?如何抓住转机,扭转牌局?如何将手中的坏牌变成一副好牌,改变自己的命运?本书告诉你如何出奇制胜、反输为赢,在逆境中成就自己理想的事业,开创出生活的另一番局面。
  • 冷酷校草霸爱小丫头

    冷酷校草霸爱小丫头

    初识于学校的他与她他,冷漠无情是大名鼎鼎的冰山校草,而面对她却总是束手无策她,蛮不讲理,是传说的小魔女。在他面前却愿意拔掉自身的刺她被迫与他同居,在同居日子里,他和她,将会擦出怎样的火花呢?‘你个傲娇货,真无耻'‘哦?那我就再无耻一点......’‘你能爱我一辈子吗?’‘我心不大装你刚好,别人的尺寸好像都不太合适’
  • 职场人都得看甄嬛

    职场人都得看甄嬛

    电视剧《甄嬛传》因紧促的剧情和精彩的故事情节而受到热捧,剧中女主角甄嬛也历经各种挫折,战胜敌人,也战胜自己。本书分析了甄嬛身上具备的阳光品质,即使面对误解,构陷,也能积极心态去看待生活。内容惩恶扬善,鼓励积极向上的做人做事风格。
  • 穿越火线:王者之路

    穿越火线:王者之路

    生化战争爆发,在保卫者跟潜伏者的背后,又有什么不为人知的秘密?
  • 界道苍穹

    界道苍穹

    他,一个神帝转生!前世的他,被尊为“圣轩神帝”,但,大道沧桑,苦陷轮回!新的一生,新的位面,昔日的神帝是否会笑傲宇宙?重踏苍穹?再创辉煌?