登陆注册
20095900000054

第54章 CHAPTER XI(3)

He went on with her in silence; he was much more affected by what she had told him than appeared. Ever since that evening of his return from Newport her image had had a terrible power to trouble him.

What Clifford Wentworth had told him--that had affected him, too, in an adverse sense; but it had not liberated him from the discomfort of a charm of which his intelligence was impatient.

"She is not honest, she is not honest," he kept murmuring to himself.

That is what he had been saying to the summer sky, ten minutes before.

Unfortunately, he was unable to say it finally, definitively; and now that he was near her it seemed to matter wonderfully little.

"She is a woman who will lie," he had said to himself.

Now, as he went along, he reminded himself of this observation; but it failed to frighten him as it had done before.

He almost wished he could make her lie and then convict her of it, so that he might see how he should like that. He kept thinking of this as he walked by her side, while she moved forward with her light, graceful dignity. He had sat with her before; he had driven with her; but he had never walked with her.

"By Jove, how comme il faut she is!" he said, as he observed her sidewise.

When they reached the cottage in the orchard she passed into the gate without asking him to follow; but she turned round, as he stood there, to bid him good-night.

"I asked you a question the other night which you never answered," he said.

"Have you sent off that document--liberating yourself?"

She hesitated for a single moment--very naturally.

Then, "Yes," she said, simply.

He turned away; he wondered whether that would do for his lie.

But he saw her again that evening, for the Baroness reappeared at her uncle's. He had little talk with her, however; two gentlemen had driven out from Boston, in a buggy, to call upon Mr. Wentworth and his daughters, and Madame Munster was an object of absorbing interest to both of the visitors.

One of them, indeed, said nothing to her; he only sat and watched with intense gravity, and leaned forward solemnly, presenting his ear (a very large one), as if he were deaf, whenever she dropped an observation. He had evidently been impressed with the idea of her misfortunes and reverses: he never smiled. His companion adopted a lighter, easier style; sat as near as possible to Madame Munster; attempted to draw her out, and proposed every few moments a new topic of conversation.

Eugenia was less vividly responsive than usual and had less to say than, from her brilliant reputation, her interlocutor expected, upon the relative merits of European and American institutions; but she was inaccessible to Robert Acton, who roamed about the piazza with his hands in his pockets, listening for the grating sound of the buggy from Boston, as it should be brought round to the side-door. But he listened in vain, and at last he lost patience. His sister came to him and begged him to take her home, and he presently went off with her.

Eugenia observed him leaving the house with Lizzie; in her present mood the fact seemed a contribution to her irritated conviction that he had several precious qualities.

"Even that mal-elevee little girl," she reflected, "makes him do what she wishes."

She had been sitting just within one of the long windows that opened upon the piazza; but very soon after Acton had gone away she got up abruptly, just when the talkative gentleman from Boston was asking her what she thought of the "moral tone" of that city. On the piazza she encountered Clifford Wentworth, coming round from the other side of the house.

She stopped him; she told him she wished to speak to him.

"Why did n't you go home with your cousin?" she asked.

Clifford stared. "Why, Robert has taken her," he said.

"Exactly so. But you don't usually leave that to him."

"Oh," said Clifford, "I want to see those fellows start off.

They don't know how to drive."

"It is not, then, that you have quarreled with your cousin?"

Clifford reflected a moment, and then with a simplicity which had, for the Baroness, a singularly baffling quality, "Oh, no; we have made up!" he said.

She looked at him for some moments; but Clifford had begun to be afraid of the Baroness's looks, and he endeavored, now, to shift himself out of their range. "Why do you never come to see me any more?" she asked.

"Have I displeased you?"

"Displeased me? Well, I guess not!" said Clifford, with a laugh.

"Why have n't you come, then?"

"Well, because I am afraid of getting shut up in that back room."

Eugenia kept looking at him. "I should think you would like that."

"Like it!" cried Clifford.

"I should, if I were a young man calling upon a charming woman."

"A charming woman is n't much use to me when I am shut up in that back room!"

"I am afraid I am not of much use to you anywhere!" said Madame M; auunster.

"And yet you know how I have offered to be."

"Well," observed Clifford, by way of response, "there comes the buggy."

"Never mind the buggy. Do you know I am going away?"

"Do you mean now?"

"I mean in a few days. I leave this place."

"You are going back to Europe?"

"To Europe, where you are to come and see me."

"Oh, yes, I 'll come out there," said Clifford.

"But before that," Eugenia declared, "you must come and see me here."

"Well, I shall keep clear of that back room!" rejoined her simple young kinsman.

The Baroness was silent a moment. "Yes, you must come frankly--boldly.

That will be very much better. I see that now."

"I see it!" said Clifford. And then, in an instant, "What 's the matter with that buggy?" His practiced ear had apparently detected an unnatural creak in the wheels of the light vehicle which had been brought to the portico, and he hurried away to investigate so grave an anomaly.

The Baroness walked homeward, alone, in the starlight, asking herself a question. Was she to have gained nothing--was she to have gained nothing?

同类推荐
  • 瑶溪集

    瑶溪集

    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。
  • 脉因证治

    脉因证治

    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。
  • Glaucus

    Glaucus

    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。
  • 六十种曲狮吼记

    六十种曲狮吼记

    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。
  • 毗耶娑问经

    毗耶娑问经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 放开那男子让我来

    放开那男子让我来

    小时候的欺负,离开的时间,再次相逢究竟谁是老大?
  • 梦醒回高中

    梦醒回高中

    重新回到年轻的高中时代,我要活的精彩!那些年欠我的荣耀,我要变本加厉的要回来!我要的,现在就要!
  • 神佛墓地

    神佛墓地

    我是一个土地神,只是掌控神佛墓地这方圆百里的地方。整日面对死去的尸体,我似乎也就是一具尸体。大概十万年前,我发现自己竟然可以和失去的尸体沟通了,我可以看到他们生前的画面。我不在变得孤独,我如同吸血鬼一般,吮吸着一篇篇精彩的画面,我渴望了解外面的世界。十万年啊,我无时无刻不在沉浸在这些波澜壮阔的一篇篇人生当中。我终于知道自己为什么离不开这个墓地,原来我已经死了!这里的意识不过是封神榜摄取出来的神性物质。今天神佛墓地的天空被一具亿万里的尸体遮蔽,它似乎想要进入墓地,可我只是茫然的望着它,这一刻我的脑袋就像炸开了一般。我看到了那具尸体上裹着的神物!原来……我死后亿万年,原来神佛也死了……
  • 东行一世录

    东行一世录

    金黄的麦田随风微微起伏,田间有农人在俯首劳作,他们的脸上洋溢着幸福的笑容,田垄上有小孩在追逐嬉戏,农妇仔细地挑拣着饱满的稻穗——这是隐约的秋天的味道。只一眼,秋三便以为看到了天堂。
  • 母性

    母性

    Y县Y市某住宅,一位母亲发现高中生女儿在家坠楼身亡。自杀或是他杀,原因不明。尽己所能疼爱女儿的母亲,无法相信女儿竟然做出这样的事情……世间的女性只有两种:母亲和女儿。我带着母亲的爱来到这个世界,在充沛的母爱下长大,把母爱分给肚子里的新生命,孕育她长大直到降临这个世界。这是我人生中最幸福的一天,虽然其实是不幸的开始。“为什么我尽己所能地爱我女儿,悉心照料她长大?”"在只能救一个人的状况下,到底该救生我、养我的人,还是救我生下的人?”“我的世界没有色彩。”山坡上,充满鲜花和芳香的曾经美丽的家,究竟发生了什么?“母亲”究竟是什么? 接下来的事太残酷,我没有自信可以写出来……
  • 逢场作戏校初

    逢场作戏校初

    叶雪儿接受了同班男生沈亚星的追求,然而,叶雪儿曾经的玩伴洛小雨却再次出现在她的世界,再次遇见,却冷漠无言,一切的情感都隐藏在逢场作戏里,就在这时,同班的女生路琪却盯上了优雅的洛小雨。惊艳的时光,温柔的岁月,情是依旧,但天却不由人,该珍惜的,是雨?还是星?
  • 大帝仓颉

    大帝仓颉

    上古盘古以开天成道,女娲以救人成道,仓颉造字生造化,明天道,却遭天道反噬,仓颉大怒,已己身抗天道,遂卒。但天道大伤,人间大乱,盘古女娲不忍,随以仓颉所造字补全天道。至此后世之人想得道者,已修造化之字来成道。修者等级:开门、伤门、惊门、休门、杜门、景门、生门、死门
  • 青春下的独白

    青春下的独白

    本书是一部文集,共二十篇,包括十篇小说与十篇散文。全书共分为两辑,每辑十篇,第一辑是散文,第二辑是小说,基本都是作者在中学时期写成的。全书约十几万字,其中有对童年的回忆,有对学习的困扰,有对文学的向往,有对毕业的感想,有对恩师的回眸,有对爱情的期待,有对成长的感慨,也有对单亲家庭子女心理的探索与中学生早恋现象的思考……
  • 饥荒时代

    饥荒时代

    饥荒时代揭开不为人知的进化守则,适者生强者生,想成为这个时代主宰者的不仅仅只有人类。身陷孤岛,无法猜测边际的空间,九颗太阳围绕‘地球’旋转;光怪陆离,极具攻击性的原班,杀死后夺取能力诡异规则,这里是众神的埋骨地亦或是成神的阶梯——饥荒时代。
  • 百货零售店经营管理一本通

    百货零售店经营管理一本通

    本书分百货零售业概览、百货零售店开张筹备、百货零售店店面设计、百货零售店陈列管理等十四章节对如何经营好一家百货零售店进行了介绍。