登陆注册
19594400000064

第64章

"What must I do?" she asked."What will she want me to do?""It's only," said Martha, "if the pains come on very bad, to give her some drops.They're in a little green bottle by her bed.Five drops...yes, miss, five drops in a little green bottle.Only if the pains is very bad.She's brave--wonderful.I'd 'ave sat up till morning willing, and so of course would Miss Elizabeth.But she seemed to want you, miss."They were like two conspirators whispering there in the dark.The room within was so still.Maggie very softly pushed back the door and entered.She walked a few steps inside the room and hesitated.

There was no sound in the room at all, utter stillness so that Maggie could hear her own breathing as though it were some one else at her side warning her.Then slowly things emerged, the long white bed first, afterwards a shaded lamp beside it, a little table with bottles, a chair--beyond the circle of lighted shadow there were shapes, near the window a high glass, a dark shade that was the dressing-table, and faint grey squares where the windows hung.

In the room was a strange scent half wine, half medicine, and beyond that the plain tang of apples partially eaten, a little smell of oil too from the lamp--very faintly the figure of the Christ above the bed was visible.Maggie moved forward to the bed, then stopped again.She did not know what to do; she could see a dark shadow on the pillow that must she knew be her aunt's hair, and yet she did not connect that with her aunt.The room was cold and, she felt, of infinite space.The smell of the wine and the medicine made her shy and awkward as though she were somewhere where she should not be.

There came a little sigh, and then a very quiet, tired voice.

"Maggie, is that you?"

"Yes, Aunt Anne."

She came very close to the bed, and suddenly, as though a curtain had been drawn back, she could see her aunt's large eyes and white sharp face.

"It was very good of you, dear, to come.I felt ashamed to wake you up at such an hour, but I wanted you.I felt that only you must be with me to-night.It was a call from God.I felt that it must be obeyed.Sit down, dear.There, on that chair.You're not cold, are you?"Maggie sat down, gathering her dressing-gown close about her.She was not even now drawn right out of her dream, and the room seemed fantastic, to rise and fall a little, and to be filled with sound, just out of hearing.For a time she was so sleepy that she nodded on her chair, and the green lamp swelled and quivered and the very bed seemed to sway in the dark, but soon the cold air cleared her head, and she was wide awake, staring before her at the grey window-panes.

Her aunt did not for a long time speak again.Maggie sat there her mind a maze of the Chapel, old Crashaw, Miss Avies, and Martin.

Slowly the cold crept into her feet and her hands, but her head now was burning hot.Then suddenly her aunt began to talk in a dreamy rather lazy voice, not her natural daily tone which was always very sharp and clear.She talked on and on; sometimes her sentences were confused and unfinished, sometimes they seemed to Maggie to have no meaning; once or twice the voice dropped so low that Maggie did not catch the words, but always there was especial urgency behind the carelessness as though every word were being spoken for a listener's benefit--a listener who sat perhaps with pencil and notebook somewhere in the dark behind them.

"So sorry...so sorry, Maggie dear...so sorry," the words ran up and down."I hadn't meant to take you away before the service was over.Elizabeth could have...sometimes my pain is very bad and Ihave to lie down, you know.But it's nothing--nothing really--only I'm glad, rather, that you should share all our little troubles, because then you'll know us better, won't you? Dear Maggie, there's been something between us all this time, hasn't there? Ever since our first meeting--and it's partly been my fault.I wasn't good at first, I wanted to be kind, but I was stiff and shy.You wouldn't think that I'm shy? I am, terribly.I always have been since I was very little, and just to enter a room when other people are there makes me so embarrassed...I remember once when mother was alive her scolding me because I wouldn't come in to a tea-party.But Icouldn't; I stood outside the door in an agony, doing everything to make myself go in--but I couldn't...But now I've come to love you, dear, although of course you have your faults.But they are faults of your age, carelessness, selfishness.They are nothing in the eyes of God, who understands all our weaknesses.And you must learn to know Him, dear.That is my only prayer now.If I am taken, if I go before the great day--if it be His will--then I pray always, now that I may leave you in my place, waiting for Him as I have waited, trusting Him as I have trusted...you saw to-night what it means to us, what it must mean to any one who has listened.There were times, years ago, when I had not turned to God, when I did not care, when I thought of earthly love...God drew me to Himself...You too must come, Maggie--you must come.You mustn't stay outside--you are asked, you are invited--perhaps you will be compelled..."The voice sank: Maggie's teeth chattered in her head from the cold, and her foot had gone to sleep.She felt obstinate and rebellious and frightened, she could not think clearly, and the words that came from her, suddenly, seemed to her not to be her own.

"Aunt Anne, I want to do everything that you and Aunt Elizabeth think I should, but I must be myself, mustn't I? I'm grown up now;I've got my three hundred pounds and I don't think I want to be religious.I'm very grateful to you and Aunt Elizabeth, but I'm not a help to you much, I'm afraid.I know I'm very careless, I do want to be better, and that's all the more reason, perhaps, why I should go out and earn my own living.I'd learn more quickly then.But I do love you and Aunt Elizabeth..."She broke off; she did not love them.She knew that she did not.The only human being in all the world whom she loved was Martin.

同类推荐
  • Lady Windermere's Fan

    Lady Windermere's Fan

    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。
  • 明伦汇编人事典斋戒部

    明伦汇编人事典斋戒部

    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。
  • 伤寒六书

    伤寒六书

    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。
  • 大日如来剑印

    大日如来剑印

    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。
  • 建文皇帝遗迹

    建文皇帝遗迹

    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
  • 重生之我不想再爱你

    重生之我不想再爱你

    我本为羔羊,何必再重生。而且你说现在当个女人多不容易呀,不仅要上得厅堂,下得厨房,还得要斗得小三。为啥,你不让我穿越到古代,去领略古代美男子的风资。(请原谅简介无能,请看正文)
  • 笙歌泪

    笙歌泪

    “青青柳中云,殷殷原上水,此生情意,可待君。广漠绝飘渺,红颜若水萍,止问来生,莫成君。”…………十二年前,班家岭惨遭血洗,班家众人,无一存世。一年后,鲁国兵临祁国,太子百里曳华作为质子远行鲁国。三年后,鲁国靖安将军初次出征大获全胜。四年后,皇城内第一美人舞清云名扬天下。三年后,祁国质子百里曳华登上皇位,鲁国太子继位。一年后,祁国皇上迎娶鲁国清公主班殷水封为皇后,鲁国皇上迎娶叶氏之女叶晚歌,靖安将军迎娶魏国公主玄宁音。一年后,祁国喜添一对龙凤子,女娃封倾月,男娃晋太子,为表爱意,特允随母姓为班。五年后,祁国皇后殡于二十又二之龄。七日后,鲁国靖安将军死于祁国皇后坟前,怀里抱着的是歌女舞清云的画像。
  • 智商乐园

    智商乐园

    本书是一片快乐的阅读天地,童趣但不幼稚,启智却不教条,它能让你开心一刻,思考一回。 在开心中学习,在学习中益智,在益智中快乐。
  • 邪王毒妃:别惹狂傲女神

    邪王毒妃:别惹狂傲女神

    一朝重生,笑她废物?却不知她是来自多年后的绝世强者!翻手为云,覆手为雨!渣男纠缠,庶姐挑衅,世人耻笑,女子清冷一笑,素手一挥,毒倒碍眼之人!何为霸道?人若不服,杀了便是!何谓强者?天若欺我,逆了便是!他是暗夜至尊,世界只分他要的,他不要的。前者,他掠夺!后者,他摧毁!“女人,若天下人负你,我便为你屠尽天下人!”
  • 女将浮卿

    女将浮卿

    【大婚之日她凤冠霞帔等候迎娶,他却一身白衣翩翩而来。冰冷的剑隔着红衣抵住她,她只觉得自己像是被浸在了冰水里,苦笑,“你的剑为何会抵在我的心上?刺穿它,你开心吗。”】大名鼎鼎的苏国女将造就了天下之奇闻,一生威名赫赫,可谁又能料到最后却是栽在了情爱的手中?我享尽一生盛名,荣华浮生,我自觉晓,这天下万千珍贵也抵不上一个你。——[年少]苏卿纵使你我再相爱又如何?相爱之后依旧是天罗地网的阴谋与背叛。曾经我爱你至深,你却还是一剑斩断了你我纠缠数年的缕缕情丝,如今,我愿与君陌路,再不相见。——[如今]苏卿
  • 一生只准爱我:错恋情深

    一生只准爱我:错恋情深

    她为爱成奴,用一颗真心小心的爱着她的少爷,只为有一天他能有所回应,就算他醉后将她错看成了他心爱的女人,她亦或是笑着承受,然而一朝分娩,他竟残忍的说,“我说过,生下了孩子,你就给我滚。”
  • 曾有你的天气

    曾有你的天气

    夕阳弥漫在高中教室里,美的不是温暖的夕阳,而是从我的视角看过去的,你曾经的桌椅。
  • 《怒发冲冠》

    《怒发冲冠》

    当异族入侵,国家危亡,将军战死沙场,大半江山都沦入北方狼族铁蹄之下时,无论是卖肉的屠夫,弱冠的少年,徐娘半老的风尘女子还是铁刀生锈的老兵,都要怒吼一声:收拾旧河山,朝天阙!
  • 杰出青少年要培养的75种心理素质

    杰出青少年要培养的75种心理素质

    《杰出青少年要培养的75种心理素质》对青少年在成长和学习中常见的困惑和烦恼进行了阐释和破译,帮助读者更好地认识自己的内心世界,发掘自身的心灵潜力,进行自我调节与改变,逐渐培养成熟、过硬的心理素质。
  • 沉思录III

    沉思录III

    古罗马著名政治家、演说家、和哲学家马尔库斯·图利乌斯·西塞罗的传世名作。此书详细阐述了友谊与义务、善良与社会、利益与责任之间的关系——“友谊来不得半点虚假”、“任公职者要信守规则”、“只要能坚持,老年亦健康”,这样的语段让我们在觥筹交错、霓灯闪烁间坚定地认清自己而不至误入歧途。