登陆注册
19614300000226

第226章 CHAPTER THE FIFTY-THIRD.(2)

Julius understood that the subject was to proceed no further. Sir Patrick's letter had produced some impression on her, which the sensitive nature of the woman seemed to shrink from acknowledging, even to herself. They turned back to enter the cottage. At the door they were met by a surprise. Hester Dethridge, with her bonnet on--dressed, at that hour of the morning, to go out!

"Are you going to market already?" Anne asked.

Hester shook her head.

"When are you coming back?"

Hester wrote on her slate: "Not till the night-time."

Without another word of explanation she pulled her veil down over her face, and made for the gate. The key had been left in the dining-room by Julius, after he had let the doctor out. Hester had it in her hand. She opened he gate and closed the door after her, leaving the key in the lock. At the moment when the door banged to Geoffrey appeared in the passage.

"Where's the key?" he asked. "Who's gone out?"

His brother answered the question. He looked backward and forward suspiciously between Julius and Anne. "What does she go out for at his time?" he said. "Has she left the house to avoid Me?"

Julius thought this the likely explanation. Geoffrey went down sulkily to the gate to lock it, and returned to them, with the key in his pocket.

"I'm obliged to be careful of the gate," he said. "The neighborhood swarms with beggars and tramps. If you want to go out," he added, turning pointedly to Anne, "I'm at your service, as a good husband ought to be."

After a hurried breakfast Julius took his departure. "I don't accept your refusal," he said to his brother, before Anne. "You will see me here again." Geoffrey obstinately repe ated the refusal. "If you come here every day of your life," he said, "it will be just the same."

The gate closed on Julius. Anne returned again to the solitude of her own chamber. Geoffrey entered the drawing-room, placed the volumes of the Newgate Calendar on the table before him, and resumed the reading which he had been unable to continue on the evening before.

Hour after hour he doggedly plodded through one case of murder after another. He had read one good half of the horrid chronicle of crime before his power of fixing his attention began to fail him. Then he lit his pipe, and went out to think over it in the garden. However the atrocities of which he had been reading might differ in other respects, there was one terrible point of resemblance, which he had not anticipated, and in which every one of the cases agreed. Sooner or later, there was the dead body always certain to be found; always bearing its dumb witness, in the traces of poison or in the marks of violence, to the crime committed on it.

He walked to and fro slowly, still pondering over the problem which had first found its way into his mind when he had stopped in the front garden and had looked up at Anne's window in the dark. "How?" That had been the one question before him, from the time when the lawyer had annihilated his hopes of a divorce. It remained the one question still. There was no answer to it in his own brain; there was no answer to it in the book which he had been consulting. Every thing was in his favor if he could only find out "how." He had got his hated wife up stairs at his mercy--thanks to his refusal of the money which Julius had offered to him. He was living in a place absolutely secluded from public observation on all sides of it--thanks to his resolution to remain at the cottage, even after his landlady had insulted him by sending him a notice to quit. Every thing had been prepared, every thing had been sacrificed, to the fulfillment of one purpose--and how to attain that purpose was still the same impenetrable mystery to him which it had been from the first!

What was the other alternative? To accept the proposal which Julius had made. In other words, to give up his vengeance on Anne, and to turn his back on the splendid future which Mrs.

Glenarm's devotion still offered to him.

Never! He would go back to the books. He was not at the end of them. The slightest hint in the pages which were still to be read might set his sluggish brain working in the right direction. The way to be rid of her, without exciting the suspicion of any living creature, in the house or out of it, was a way that might be found yet.

Could a man, in his position of life, reason in this brutal manner? could he act in this merciless way? Surely the thought of what he was about to do must have troubled him this time!

Pause for a moment--and look back at him in the past.

Did he feel any remorse when he was plotting the betrayal of Arnold in the garden at Windygates? The sense which feels remorse had not been put into him. What he is now is the legitimate consequence of what he was then. A far more serious temptation is now urging him to commit a far more serious crime. How is he to resist? Will his skill in rowing (as Sir Patrick once put it), his swiftness in running, his admirable capacity and endurance in other physical exercises, help him to win a purely moral victory over his own selfishness and his own cruelty? No! The moral and mental neglect of himself, which the material tone of public feeling about him has tacitly encouraged, has left him at the mercy of the worst instincts in his nature--of all that is most vile and of all that is most dangerous in the composition of the natural man. With the mass of his fellows, no harm out of the common has come of this, because no temptation out of the common has passed their way. But with _him,_ the case is reversed. A temptation out of the common has passed _his_ way. How does it find him prepared to meet it? It finds him, literally and exactly, what his training has left him, in the presence of any temptation small or great--a defenseless man.

Geoffrey returned to the cottage. The servant stopped him in the passage, to ask at what time he wished to dine. Instead of answering, he inquired angrily for Mrs. Dethridge. Mrs. Dethridge not come back.

同类推荐
  • 说剑吟

    说剑吟

    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。
  • 善恶因果经

    善恶因果经

    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。
  • 阿弥陀经疏

    阿弥陀经疏

    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。
  • 郴行录

    郴行录

    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。
  • 中论

    中论

    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
  • 一个叫彭家园的村庄

    一个叫彭家园的村庄

    本书共收入作者近5年来利用工作之余创作的100余篇散文。在“江西散文现象研讨会”举办之前,成立五年的江西省散文学会已做了不少工作,特别是编辑出版的《江西散文十年佳作选》精选了我省85位散文作家的作品,既客观地反映了江西散文近十年来所取得的成就,又充分地展现了全省散文创作的崭新风貌。现在,《江西散文学会丛书》又将出版,这对于进一步“出精品、出人才”,繁荣江西的散文创作,无疑是十分可喜的。
  • 出逃99次:邪王的吃货狂妃

    出逃99次:邪王的吃货狂妃

    想要穷睡到太阳红,想要富早起去织布。裴妙妙一朝穿越成了卤肉店的富二代,本以为能冠名堂皇的享尽天下各种肉的美味。哪知她居然有个未婚夫,还是个高大上的王爷。为了自由,为了吃肉,开始了漫长的逃婚生涯。直到第九十八次被逮住,她不耻下问。“为什么你每次都能抓到我?”某男笑如春风,气定神闲。“你包袱里的肉香味一条街都能闻到。”素手一拍额头,她恍然大惊。“真是成也肉也,败也肉也。”
  • 剑出昆山

    剑出昆山

    每个人的心中都有属于自己的一个江湖,小说中只有意境,写法带虚。画面全靠脑补,只写意不写实。这是属于大家的江湖、属于大家的玄幻小说。
  • 重返上界

    重返上界

    因为她,他从上界来到了这个陌生的土地,一切若能轮回,他还是会走这条路,因为一切都是命中注定!
  • 跟小王子去旅行

    跟小王子去旅行

    每个人心中都有一个小王子;每个人心中都向往一场旅行。小王子驾着飞船重新回到了地球,带着他的灵魂、理想和爱,与作者开始一场奇妙的旋风环球之旅。这不只是一本妙趣横生、引人入胜的游记,更是一次心灵行走的记录。地理与幸福,本来是风马牛不相及的元素,却因为小王子的出现,像一道金色的阳光,穿过层层迷雾,直达真理的彼岸。本书选取了所到过的世间最美的地方,有新奇的旅行体验,有无限的冥想遐思。假使合上这本书,你有打起背包去行走的冲动,就带上生命中的小王子,展开一次奇妙独特,又只属于你的旅行吧!
  • 逆战:火种

    逆战:火种

    M病毒爆发,南州市陷入了危机当中,百分之九十的人类已经变成了嗜血、杀戮的丧尸。农民工彤鑫挣扎于生死之间,结识了仅于的幸存者,经历血与火,悲与泪等种种磨难。人性的勇敢与牺牲在这病毒肆虐的城市闪烁着圣洁光辉。一切都是为了活下来……森罗的长篇新书《带着女神闯江湖》在更新中,希望大家支持。已完本《浴火星际》
  • 莞尔一夏

    莞尔一夏

    这里的文字,没有浮华,纯粹的素淡。我喜欢淡雅,那是一种关于青春疼痛的寂寞。一路上,我们收获不少,但同时也在遗落。遗落的东西一件比一件更要珍贵。春天刚来不久,可是我还是要对夏天说一声早安。因为在这个春天,早已结束了很多东西,包括我的爱,以及来不及留下的年少轻狂。在梦里,我们开始在马路上奔跑,拼命地跑。我们都跑的很快。像是在追赶什么。又像是在逃避什么。在追赶什么?又是在逃避什么呢?
  • 一朝穿越红墙内:极品小妾

    一朝穿越红墙内:极品小妾

    一穿越就做人家小妾?为啥俺的命运这么悲催?不嫁不嫁,快点让他们滚蛋!什么?这里居然是妓院?那个,你们等一下,嘿嘿,我又想嫁了,带我去王府吧!哇塞,这个帅哥好帅啊!真是一个不折不扣的祸水,神马?约定?管它什么约定呢,先吃饱了肚子再说。“王爷,你这样每天半夜爬上我的床,该不会是爱上我了吧!”【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 中国识人学

    中国识人学

    全书共分三十八章,以古人的识人方法为基础,全面阐述了识人用人的古今理论,并列举了大量事例,深入研究和总结古人识人用人的成功经验和经验教训,对于当今社会的进步和发展具有积极意义。
  • 我们的故事那么长

    我们的故事那么长

    作为一名勤勤恳恳的千唯,林凡本想平淡的过完她的高中生活,不料顾念的出现将这一切打乱。关于爱情的所有,她想到的只有他;关于未来的解集,他勾画的全是她。爱过恨过,总该领悟。用成长祭奠青春,用失去告别未知。如果你的青春也曾受伤【温瞳&;#8226;寂年文学社】