登陆注册
19594200000170

第170章

`Mercy of God! How violent you are, Giovanni,' she said, unmoved. `Who is Ramirez . . . Ramirez . . . Who is he?' she repeated, dreamily, in the dusk and gloom of the clouded gulf, with a low red streak in the west like a hot bar of glowing iron laid across the entrance of a world sombre as a cavern, where the magnificent Capataz de Cargadores had hidden his conquests of love and wealth.

`Listen, Giselle,' he said, in measured tones; `I will tell no word of love to your sister. Do you want to know why?'

`Alas! I could not understand perhaps, Giovanni. Father says you are not like other men; that no one has ever understood you properly; that the rich will be surprised yet. . . . Oh! saints in heaven! I am weary.'

She raised her embroidery to conceal the lower part of her face, then let it fall on her lap. The lantern was shaded on the land side, but slanting away from the dark column of the lighthouse they could see the long shaft of light, kindled by Linda, go out to strike the expiring glow in a horizon of purple and red.

Giselle Viola, with her head resting against the wall of the house, her eyes half closed, and her little feet, in white stockings and black slippers, crossed over each other, seemed to surrender herself, tranquil and fatal, to the gathering dusk. The charm of her body, the promising mysteriousness of her indolence, went out into the night of the Placid Gulf like a fresh and intoxicating fragrance spreading out in the shadows, impregnating the air. The incorruptible Nostromo breathed her ambient seduction in the tumultuous heaving of his breast. Before leaving the harbour he had thrown off the store clothing of Captain Fidanza, for greater ease in the long pull out to the islands. He stood before her in the red sash and check shirt as he used to appear on the Company's wharf -- a Mediterranean sailor come ashore to try his luck in Costaguana. The dusk of purple and red enveloped him, too -- close, soft, profound, as no more than fifty yards from that spot it had gathered evening after evening about the self-destructive passion of Don Martin Decoud's utter scepticism, flaming up to death in solitude.

`You have got to hear,' he began at last, with perfect selfcontrol.

`I shall say no word of love to your sister, to whom I am betrothed from this evening, because it is you that I love. It is you! . . .'

The dusk let him see yet the tender and voluptuous smile that came instinctively upon her lips shaped for love and kisses, freeze hard in the drawn, haggard lines of terror. He could not restrain himself any longer. While she shrank from his approach, her arms went out to him, abandoned and regal in the dignity of her languid surrender. He held her head in his two hands, and showered rapid kisses upon the upturned face that gleamed in the purple dusk. Masterful and tender, he was entering slowly upon the fullness of his possession. And he perceived that she was crying. Then the incomparable Capataz, the man of careless loves, became gentle and caressing, like a woman to the grief of a child. He murmured to her fondly. He sat down by her and nursed her fair head on his breast. He called her his star and his little flower.

It had grown dark. From the living-room of the light-keeper's cottage, where Giorgio, one of the Immortal Thousand, was bending his leonine and heroic head over a charcoal fire, there came the sound of sizzling and the aroma of an artistic frittura .

In the obscure disarray of that thing, happening like a cataclysm, it was in her feminine head that some gleam of reason survived. He was lost to the world in their embraced stillness. But she said, whispering into his ear:

`God of mercy! What will become of me -- here -- now -- between this sky and this water I hate? Linda, Linda -- I see her! . . .' She tried to get out of his arms, suddenly relaxed at the sound of that name. But there was no one approaching their black shapes, enlaced and struggling on the white backround of the wall. `Linda! Poor Linda! I tremble! I shall die of fear before my poor sister Linda, betrothed today to Giovanni --my lover! Giovanni, you must have been mad! I cannot understand you! You are not like other men! I will not give you up -- never -- only to God himself! But why have you done this blind, mad, cruel, frightful thing?'

Released, she hung her head, let fall her hands. The altarcloth, as if tossed by a great wind, lay far away from them, gleaming white on the black ground.

`From fear of losing my hope of you,' said Nostromo.

`You knew that you had my soul! You know everything! It was made for you! But what could stand between you and me? What? Tell me!' she repeated, without impatience, in superb assurance.

`Your dead mother,' he said, very low.

`Ah! . . . Poor mother! She has always . . . She is a saint in heaven now, and I cannot give you up to her. No, Giovanni. Only to God alone.

You were mad -- but it is done. Oh! what have you done? Giovanni, my beloved, my life, my master, do not leave me here in this grave of clouds. You cannot leave me now. You must take me away -- at once -- this instant -- in the little boat. Giovanni, carry me off tonight, from my fear of Linda's eyes, before I have to look at her again.'

She nestled close to him. The slave of the San Tome silver felt the weight as of chains upon his limbs, a pressure as of a cold hand upon his lips. He struggled against the spell.

`I cannot,' he said. `Not yet. There is something that stands between us two and the freedom of the world.'

She pressed her form closer to his side with a subtle and naive instinct of seduction.

`You rave, Giovanni -- my lover!' she whispered, engagingly. `What can there be? Carry me off -- in thy very hands -- to Dona Emilia -- away from here. I am not very heavy.'

It seemed as though she expected him to lift her up at once in his two palms. She had lost the notion of all impossibility. Anything could happen on this night of wonder. As he made no movement, she almost cried aloud:

`I tell you I am afraid of Linda!' And still he did not move. She became quiet and wily. `What can there be?' she asked, coaxingly.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 校园小神医

    校园小神医

    乡村少年救了华佗老祖的残魂,学得神奇医术,一手治病救人,一手撩妹踩人。小毫针扎人,大毫针扎啥?
  • 猫爸爸的日记

    猫爸爸的日记

    这本书让你从新回到了童年,他的有趣,生动,会让你联想到更多的欢乐
  • 政治传播研究:理论、载体、形态、符号

    政治传播研究:理论、载体、形态、符号

    立足政治传播学,梳理评介西方政治传播学的发展历史、研究范式与研究方法、中国政治传播研究的现状、媒体与政府关系研究概况等。阐述报刊、广播电视、新媒体等大众媒介的政治传播功能及其与政治的关系。分析作为政治传播形态的政治新闻、政治宣传与政治的关联。并从传播符号角度对政治修辞、政治象征、政治形象进行研究。与同类政治传播著作相较有一定的创新性。
  • 洛河奇谭

    洛河奇谭

    延绵千年的洛河古国在一日之间江山易主,纳尽天下武林高手的三重天竟被神秘人操控反叛。不断在战火中飘摇的洛家王朝终是送葬在最后的王手中。数年后,少年柳洛初露锋芒,却发现一个接连一个的阴谋与混乱。从此,一场龙争虎斗,明争暗斗的武林和朝野的风云棋局展开。就此,看洛河古国的命运何去何从。
  • 校花之绝品保镖

    校花之绝品保镖

    高见,他贱,他手握长剑。贱是对生活的调侃和洒脱的姿态,剑是责任和守护,也是热血和情义。他可以俯下身体,也可以顶天立地。
  • 风尘之警

    风尘之警

    生活还像往常一样在继续,生化危机就在人们沉醉在太平盛世的时候爆发,五个各自拥有非凡背景的好朋友在这种灾难下该如何应对,等待他们的又是何种挑战?
  • 为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    这东南国,谁人不知,谁人不晓,这要嫁的王爷,是传说中的暴君,杀人不眨眼,嗜血成狂的一个魔君的?圣旨一下,要千家的女儿嫁给东南国国的这个平南王爷,千家一听,仿佛是立马炸开了锅一样的,你不愿意去,我不愿意去,自然,就是由这个痴儿傻儿嫁过去了?
  • 黄土奇谈

    黄土奇谈

    很多年以前,赫连勃勃建设了大夏国都统万城,百里城墙十里方,大夏铁骑战四方。2009年,几个户外爱好者组成的队伍来到统万城考察,因下雨路滑,不小心掉下土崖,一段奇妙的旅程由此开始……
  • 妖乱九天

    妖乱九天

    她是花效上神,神界第一美貌。她为他甘愿在虚无之境受三万年的炼狱之苦,只为破他生死劫。结果却是,他另娶他人,她心灰意冷。和师傅游历四海八荒,却被诬陷师徒不伦,天降惩罚。诛仙台上,白倾月为她抗下所有罪责,只剩一魄。她被逐出神界沦为堕仙,为了师傅的魂魄归位复活,她称凰妖界。“总有一日我要颠覆了这九重天。”――花效
  • 《灵之生命魔法》

    《灵之生命魔法》

    似乎回不了头,唯独童年时睡梦的呓语,才是自己最真实的语言。生命魔法,禁忌咒印,在死亡面前又能算什么。