登陆注册
20052500000057

第57章 CHAPTER VII(4)

They threaded their way around it on the spongy carpet, covered by delicate lace-like vines that seemed to caress rather than trammel their moving feet, until they reached an open space before the pool. It was cushioned and matted with disintegrated pine bark, and here they sat down. Mrs. Horncastle furled her parasol and laid it aside; raised both hands to the back of her head and took two hat-pins out, which she placed in her smiling mouth; removed her hat, stuck the hat-pins in it, and handed it to Barker, who gently placed it on the top of a tall reed, where during the rest of that momentous meeting it swung and drooped like a flower; removed her gloves slowly; drank still smilingly and gratefully nearly a wineglassful of the water which Barker brought her in the green twisted chalice of a lily leaf; looked the picture of happiness, and then burst into tears.

Barker was astounded, dismayed, even terror-stricken. Mrs.

Horncastle crying! Mrs. Horncastle, the imperious, the collected, the coldly critical, the cynical, smiling woman of the world, actually crying! Other women might cry--Kitty had cried often--but Mrs. Horncastle! Yet, there she was, sobbing; actually sobbing like a schoolgirl, her beautiful shoulders rising and falling with her grief; crying unmistakably through her long white fingers, through a lace pocket-handkerchief which she had hurriedly produced and shaken from behind her like a conjurer's trick; her beautiful eyes a thousand times more lustrous for the sparkling beads that brimmed her lashes and welled over like the pool before her.

"Don't mind me," she murmured behind her handkerchief. "It's very foolish, I know. I was nervous--worried, I suppose; I'll be better in a moment. Don't notice me, please."

But Barker had drawn beside her and was trying, after the fashion of his sex, to take her handkerchief away in apparently the firm belief that this action would stop her tears. "But tell me what it is. Do Mrs. Horncastle, please," he pleaded in his boyish fashion.

"Is it anything I can do? Only say the word; only tell me SOMETHING!"

But he had succeeded in partially removing the handkerchief, and so caught a glimpse of her wet eyes, in which a faint smile struggled out like sunshine through rain. But they clouded again, although she didn't cry, and her breath came and went with the action of a sob, and her hands still remained against her flushed face.

"I was only going to talk to you of Kitty" (sob)--"but I suppose I'm weak" (sob)--"and such a fool" (sob) "and I got to thinking of myself and my own sorrows when I ought to be thinking only of you and Kitty."

"Never mind Kitty," said Barker impulsively. "Tell me about yourself--your own sorrows. I am a brute to have bothered you about her at such a moment; and now until you have told me what is paining you so I shall not let you speak of her." He was perfectly sincere. What were Kitty's possible and easy tears over the loss of her money to the unknown agony that could wrench a sob from a woman like this? "Dear Mrs. Horncastle," he went on as breathlessly, "think of me now not as Kitty's husband, but as your true friend. Yes, as your BEST and TRUEST friend, and speak to me as you would speak to him."

"You will be my friend?" she said suddenly and passionately, grasping his hand, "my best and truest friend? and if I tell you all,--everything, you will not cast me from you and hate me?"

Barker felt the same thrill from her warm hand slowly possess his whole being as it had the evening before, but this time he was prepared and answered the grasp and her eyes together as he said breathlessly, "I will be--I AM your friend."

She withdrew her hand and passed it over her eyes. After a moment she caught his hand again, and, holding it tightly as if she feared he might fly from her, bit her lip, and then slowly, without looking at him, said, "I lied to you about myself and Kitty that night; I did not come with her. I came alone and secretly to Boomville to see--to see the man who is my husband."

"Your husband!" said Barker in surprise. He had believed, with the rest of the world, that there had been no communication between them for years. Yet so intense was his interest in her that he did not notice that this revelation was leaving now no excuse for his wife's presence at Boomville.

Mrs. Horncastle went on with dogged bitterness, "Yes, my husband.

I went to him to beg and bribe him to let me see my child. Yes, MY child," she said frantically, tightening her hold upon his hand, "for I lied to you when I once told you I had none. I had a child, and, more than that, a child who at his birth I did not dare to openly claim."

She stopped breathlessly, stared at his face with her former intensity as if she would pluck the thought that followed from his brain. But he only moved closer to her, passed his arm over her shoulders with a movement so natural and protecting that it had a certain dignity in it, and, looking down upon her bent head with eyes brimming with sympathy, whispered, "Poor, poor child!"

Whereat Mrs. Horncastle again burst into tears. And then, with her head half drawn towards his shoulder, she told him all,--all that had passed between her and her husband,--even all that they had then but hinted at. It was as if she felt she could now, for the first time, voice all these terrible memories of the past which had come back to her last night when her husband had left her. She concealed nothing, she veiled nothing; there were intervals when her tears no longer flowed, and a cruel hardness and return of her old imperiousness of voice and manner took their place, as if she was doing a rigid penance and took a bitter satisfaction in laying bare her whole soul to him. "I never had a friend," she whispered;

"there were women who persecuted me with their jealous sneers; there were men who persecuted me with their selfish affections.

同类推荐
  • MARIE

    MARIE

    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。
  • 唐护法沙门法琳别传

    唐护法沙门法琳别传

    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。
  • 北梦录

    北梦录

    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。
  • 早梅

    早梅

    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。
  • 孑楼诗词话

    孑楼诗词话

    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
  • 暗爵诡堡

    暗爵诡堡

    命运的藤条捆绑住每个人内心深处。黑暗·寂静得像是要吞噬一切的猛兽,驱使人们走向恐惧的深渊,然而恐惧即是迷信的先祖,每一次新的灾难,都将燃尽最后的信仰。十二个人被诡异的"邀请"到一个神秘的城堡里,接连的惨案让它们惊愕地发现了——死亡的规律。这场游戏的"主导者"是谁?要做什么?疑问像潮水般涌现,能否揭开战幕!那么,从你翻开着本书的第一页,您,就是这场游戏的参与者。
  • 天惩者

    天惩者

    在这个大陆,统治者昏庸无道,为一己之私,把这个大陆搅得生灵涂炭,民不聊生,四处哀声栽倒。究竟谁能重整乾坤,救民于水火
  • 九转魔元

    九转魔元

    修道不成,我就修魔,反正都是修真者,最后都是要飞升仙界为目地的,薛元昊自我开解的说道:还有一点他没说,就是没有实力没有底气啊!在这个强者多如狗,修真者遍地走的世界,一句话说错都有可能引来杀身之祸,所以薛元昊在心里发誓一定要变强,强到可以掌握自己的命运,我命由我不由天。
  • 四十四岁必读书

    四十四岁必读书

    本书共分六章,包括:以一个分号给44岁做个总结、寻找事业的第二个春天、十面埋伏的情感危机、身心健康是你的头等大事、可怜天下父母心、继续修炼你的处世之道。
  • 制霸老公,请放手

    制霸老公,请放手

    她为了保住父亲生前的心血,被迫和他分手。从此他们形同陌路却又日日相见。他和别人相亲高调喊话,让众人关注。“相亲就相亲,我不在乎,我不在乎,我不在乎!”她无动于衷。正式订婚时她却意外出现,包中藏刀。“你敢和别人结婚,我就敢死在当场。”“张兮兮,是不是我把手里的股份给你,你就会和我睡。”他邪魅的问道。“你就不能把股份分几次给我,多睡几次!”捂脸~~
  • 墨恋慕:一吻定情

    墨恋慕:一吻定情

    【耽美】墨昊暄:老婆,回家了。慕黎:滚,谁是你老婆。墨昊暄:……我们什么时候去领证?慕黎:……我能拒绝吗?墨昊暄:你说呢?看着墨昊暄那邪邪的笑容,和那狼一样的眼神,慕黎浑身一颤,很是怀疑是不是入了狼窝。白泽晟:慕,你怀孕了。众人石化,慕黎呆呆的望着白泽晟,道:“这个玩笑不好玩!”“谁给你开玩笑了?”白泽晟白了眼慕黎……
  • 人鱼的旋律之光的起点

    人鱼的旋律之光的起点

    (本文修改中…)你说阳光总在风雨后,雨后的天边总会出现彩虹。为此,不断试着让自己变强。欲望兽,带来绝望与悲伤。可是,我们又怎么会被击垮?经历了无数困难的她们,早已褪去了当时的稚嫩,披上了成熟坚强的外壳。(ps:更新不稳定,谨慎入坑。)
  • 雾回首

    雾回首

    本文是大学时代所留下的半自传半幻想的小说,带有不少的青涩和狗血,还望读者们海涵
  • 神奇植物大揭秘

    神奇植物大揭秘

    植物世界奇花异草,多有神秘面纱,有许许多多的奇异植物,是很多人闻所未闻的。它们的神秘,让青少年朋友感到兴趣盎然,又迷惑不解。为了满足青少年朋友的需要,本书特此采用生动、形象的语言,帮助青少年朋友深入理解,使青少年朋友在阅读过程中犹如身临其境,轻松、愉快地探索植物的奥秘。
  • 蜀道仙烬

    蜀道仙烬

    寻仙问道,必有血染仙途。与天夺寿,必有天地劫杀。修仙者修命,与人斗,与万族斗,与天地斗。当蜀道踏足万族战场,龙游深海,鹏翔宇际,斩天劫,斗诸天,与远古仙佛论道,与上古邪魔厮杀。吾证道时,天地返虚,鸿蒙道始,混沌无终,六道封庭……