登陆注册
18992500000051

第51章

They laid out their little plot against Madeleine and elaborated it carefully, both as to what Carrington should say and how he should say it, for Sybil asserted that men were too stupid to be trusted even in making a declaration of love, and must be taught, like little children to say their prayers. Carrington enjoyed being taught how to make a declaration of love.

He did not ask where Sybil had learned so much about men's stupidity. He thought perhaps Schneidekoupon could have thrown light on the subject. At all events, they were so busily occupied with their schemes and lessons, that they did not-reach home till Madeleine had become anxious lest they had met with some accident. The long dusk had become darkness before she heard the clatter of hoofs on the asphalt pavement, and she went down to the door to scold them for their delay. Sybil only laughed at her, and said it was all Mr. Carrington's fault: he had lost his way, and she had been forced to find it for him.

Ten days more passed before their plan was carried into effect.

April had come. Carrington's work was completed and he was ready to start on his journey. Then at last he appeared one evening at Mrs. Lee's at the very moment when Sybil, as chance would have it, was going out to pass an hour or two with her friend Victoria Dare a few doors away. Carrington felt a little ashamed as she went. This kind of conspiracy behind Mrs. Lee's back was not to his taste.

He resolutely sat down, and plunged at once into his subject. He was almost ready to go, he said; he had nearly completed his work in the Department, and he was assured that his instructions and papers would be ready in two days more; he might not have another chance to see Mrs. Lee so quietly again, and he wanted to take his leave now, for this was what lay most heavily on his mind; he should have gone willingly and gladly if it had not been for uneasiness about her; and yet he had till now been afraid to speak openly on the subject. Here he paused for a moment as though to invite some reply.

Madeleine laid down her work with a look of regret though not of annoyance, and said frankly and instantly that he had been too good a friend to allow of her taking offence at anything he could say; she would not pretend to misunderstand him. "My affairs," she added with a shade of bitterness, "seem to have become public property, and I would rather have some voice in discussing them myself than to know they are discussed behind my back."

This was a sharp thrust at the very outset, but Carrington turned it aside and went quietly on:

"You are frank and loyal, as you always are. I will be so too. I can't help being so. For months I have had no other pleasure than in being near you.

For the first time in my life I have known what it is to forget my own affairs in loving a woman who seems to me without a fault, and for one solitary word from whom I would give all I have in life, and perhaps itself."

Madeleine flushed and bent towards him with an earnestness of manner that repeated itself in her tone.

"Mr. Carrington, I am the best friend you have on earth. One of these days you will thank me with your whole soul for refusing to listen to you now.

You do not know how much misery I am saving you. I have no heart to give.

You want a young, fresh life to help yours; a gay, lively temperament to enliven your despondency; some one still young enough to absorb herself in you and make all her existence yours. I could not do it. I can give you nothing. I have done my best to persuade myself that some day I might begin life again with the old hopes and feelings, but it is no use. The fire is burned out. If you married me, you would destroy yourself You would wake up some day, and find the universe dust and ashes."

Carrington listened in silence. He made no attempt to interrupt or to contradict her. Only at the end he said with a little bitterness:

"My own life is worth so much to the world and to me, that I suppose it would be wrong to risk it on such a venture; but I would risk it, nevertheless, if you gave me the chance. Do you think me wicked for tempting Providence? I do not mean to annoy you with entreaties. I have a little pride left, and a great deal of respect for you. Yet I think, in spite of all you have said or can say, that one disappointed life may be as able to find happiness and repose in another, as to get them by sucking the young life-blood of a fresh soul."

To this speech, which was unusually figurative for Carrington, Mrs. Lee could find no ready answer. She could only reply that Carrington's life was worth quite as much as his neighbour's, and that it was worth so much to her, if not to himself, that she would not let him wreck it.

Carrington went on: "Forgive my talking in this way. I do not mean to complain. I shall always love you just as much, whether you care for me or not, because you are the only woman I have ever met, or am ever likely to meet, who seems to me perfect."

If this was Sybil's teaching, she had made the best of her time.

Carrington's tone and words pierced through all Mrs. Lee's armour as though they were pointed with the most ingenious cruelty, and designed to torture her. She felt hard and small before him. Life for life, his had been, and was now, far less bright than hers, yet he was her superior. He sat there, a true man, carrying his burden calmly, quietly, without complaint, ready to face the next shock of life with the same endurance he had shown against the rest. And he thought her perfect! She felt humiliated that any brave man should say to her face that he thought her perfect! She! perfect! In her contrition she was half ready to go down at his feet and confess her sins; her hysterical dread of sorrow and suffering, her narrow sympathies, her feeble faith, her miserable selfishness, her abject cowardice. Every nerve in her body tingled with shame when she thought what a miserable fraud she was; what a mass of pretensions unfounded, of deceit ingrained. She was ready to hide her face in her hands. She was disgusted, outraged with her own image as she saw it, contrasted with Carrington's single word:

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 高廷瑶和他的后裔们

    高廷瑶和他的后裔们

    《高廷瑶和他的后裔们》历史纪实散文,用纪实的手法记述了贵州清代明贤高廷瑶和他的后裔高以庄、高以廉、高培谷、高可亭、高言善、高言志等人生平事迹。
  • 格列佛游记(青少版名著)

    格列佛游记(青少版名著)

    这是一部奇书,自1726年问世后,两百多年来,先后被翻译成数十种文字;广为流传,是世界文学宝库中的一部不朽杰作。全书共四个部分,描写了外科医生格列佛航海漂流到小人国、大人国、飞岛国、慧马国的种种经历。小说通过虚构的情节,夸张的手法,对当时的英国社会政治、法律、议会、竞争、军事、教育、社会风尚乃至整个人类的种种劣根性都进行了无情的讽刺和抨击。“一本好书奠定一种品质”本书你将获得的品质是“幽默”。
  • 超龙逆战队

    超龙逆战队

    2024年G公司发明了一种名为‘翡翠药剂’的返老药水。可以让人服用之后常年保持年轻的样貌,而且增加寿命。药剂一出,全世界疯狂的争夺,可是却不知道,这只是一个阴谋。‘翡翠药剂’的恐怖却已经一发不可收拾。整个世界陷入了生化危机的末日。这时候,一个‘超龙逆战队’应运而生……
  • 重生归来:相府小姐不好惹

    重生归来:相府小姐不好惹

    新婚过后,她所一直爱慕的的丈夫,竟亲手将她送入牢房,任凭她被人受刑,不闻不问。她被妹妹亲手杀害,临终前还让她放弃了最后那生的希望。重生过后,霸气归来。我早已不再是那单纯,毫无杀伤力的弱女孩。而是嗜血,令人闻风丧胆的女子。让我毁容?我让你享尽剥骨之痛!让我失贞?我让你享受青楼女子的生活!凰临世,凤掌山。“愿与汝白丝相守,不知可愿嫁与否?”“滚!老娘不答应!”
  • 穿越之锦夜长风

    穿越之锦夜长风

    呆萌现代女,坠落古代天牢。靠智慧,搭救美男囚犯;凭口才,巧战双面太监。青楼脱险,接连离奇遭遇;皇宫遇故,数次险象环生。一路坎坷,她何以保命?两份真情,她怎样抉择?本文已出版,出版名为《彼岸千缘》为新文揽人气,敬请关注清清的新文《穿越之缠丝为蛊》————感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持————
  • 实斋笔记

    实斋笔记

    本书包括:历史寻踪、师友杂记、海外学记、域外寻史、辛亥期刊等内容。
  • 泊宅编

    泊宅编

    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。
  • 棋道纵横

    棋道纵横

    少年陈镜波在一本淘来的古旧棋谱中发现隐藏不知道多少年的武功秘籍,从此走上一条不同常人的道路。凭借棋谱中的武功,他打败各路高手;凭借棋谱中的秘籍,他在围棋界独领风骚;凭借棋谱,他渐渐达到只在古老传说中才有的境界。他能否勘破棋谱的秘密,迈出那最终的一步……
  • 煞王的病弱宠妃

    煞王的病弱宠妃

    她,镜月国丞相最宠爱的孙女,却是世人眼中的病秧子短命鬼,废材一个。他,落音国皇帝最宠爱的王爷,却是世人唯恐避之不及的煞王,修罗一个。只因,她有一个绝美动人的娘亲,位高权重者丧心病狂,一心置她于死地。只因,他煞气太重,妄想嫁给他的人一个个都死于非命。前世的她淡漠一生,终是让自己同归于尽,今世她用不惜任何代价守护亲情与爱情。从不知何为情爱的他们,一步步走向彼此的面前!(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 混沌噬魂

    混沌噬魂

    李文鹤一个普通的高中生,却因为几个星李际掌控者的无聊赌注,而被骗踏入异界,然而。几位掌控者在他踏入异界后,却又另加赌注。当李文鹤站在星际的巅峰原以为拜托命运束缚的他。却因为自己和几位掌控者的战斗引发空间乱流,自己也被带到另一个空间。另一空间里李文鹤在一次意外的情况下得知自身的命运竟另外有人在操纵,纵然自己已达星际掌控者之境还是无法摆脱命运的控制。无奈李文鹤只得再次踏上增强实力的道路。想以强横的实力来拜托命运的束缚。