登陆注册
19625100000075

第75章 XIV(4)

Days went by; a week. The vintage was over. The Senora wondered if Ramona would now ask again for a messenger to go to Temecula. Almost even the Senora relented, as she looked into the girl's white and wasted face, as she sat silent, her hands folded in her lap, her eyes fixed on the willows. The altar-cloth was done, folded and laid away. It would never hang in the Moreno chapel. It was promised, in Ramona's mind, to Father Salvierderra. She had resolved to go to him; if he, a feeble old man, could walk all the way between Santa Barbara and their home, she could surely do the same. She would not lose the way. There were not many roads; she could ask. The convent, the bare thought of which had been so terrible to Ramona fourteen days ago, when the Senora had threatened her with it, now seemed a heavenly refuge, the only shelter she craved. There was a school for orphans attached to the convent at San Juan Bautista, she knew; she would ask the Father to let her go there, and she would spend the rest of her life in prayer, and in teaching the orphan girls. As hour after hour she sat revolving this plan, her fancy projected itself so vividly into the future, that she lived years of her life. She felt herself middle-aged, old. She saw the procession of nuns, going to vespers, leading the children by the hand; herself wrinkled and white-haired, walking between two of the little ones. The picture gave her peace. As soon as she grew a little stronger, she would set off on her journey to the Father; she could not go just yet, she was too weak; her feet trembled if she did but walk to the foot of the garden. Alessandro was dead; there could be no doubt of that. He was buried in that little walled graveyard of which he had told her. Sometimes she thought she would try to go there and see his grave, perhaps see his father; if Alessandro had told him of her, the old man would be glad to see her; perhaps, after all, her work might lie there, among Alessandro's people. But this looked hard: she had not courage for it; shelter and rest were what she wanted,-- the sound of the Church's prayers, and the Father's blessing every day. The convent was the best.

She thought she was sure that Alessandro was dead; but she was not, for she still listened, still watched. Each day she walked out on the river road, and sat waiting till dusk. At last came a day when she could not go; her strength failed her. She lay all day on her bed. To the Senora, who asked frigidly if she were ill, she answered: "No, Senora, I do not think I am ill, I have no pain, but I cannot get up. I shall be better to-morrow."

"I will send you strong broth and a medicine," the Senora said; and sent her both by the hands of Margarita, whose hatred and jealousy broke down at the first sight of Ramona's face on the pillow; it looked so much thinner and sharper there than it had when she was sitting up. "Oh, Senorita! Senorita!" she cried, in a tone of poignant grief, "are you going to die? Forgive me, forgive me!"

"I have nothing to forgive you, Margarita," replied Ramona, raising herself on her elbow, and lifting her eyes kindly to the girl's face as she took the broth from her hands. "I do not know why you ask me to forgive you."

Margarita flung herself on her knees by the bed, in a passion of weeping. "Oh, but you do know, Senorita, you do know! Forgive me!"

"No, I know nothing," replied Ramona; "but if you know anything, it is all forgiven. I am not going to die, Margarita. I am going away," she added, after a second's pause. Her inmost instinct told her that she could trust Margarita now. Alessandro being dead, Margarita would no longer be her enemy, and Margarita could perhaps help her. "I am going away, Margarita, as soon as I feel a little stronger. I am going to a convent; but the Senora does not know. You will not tell?"

"No, Senorita!" whispered Margarita,-- thinking in her heart, "Yes, she is going away, but it will be with the angels." -- "No, Senorita, I will not tell. I will do anything you want me to."

"Thanks, Margarita mia," replied Ramona. "I thought you would;" and she lay back on her pillow, and closed her eyes, looking so much more like death than like life that Margarita's tears flowed faster than before, and she ran to her mother, sobbing out, "Mother, mother! the Senorita is ill to death. I am sure she is. She has taken to her bed; and she is as white as Senor Felipe was at the worst of the fever."

"Ay," said old Marda, who had seen all this for days back; "ay, she has wasted away, this last week, like one in a fever, sure enough; I have seen it. It must be she is starving herself to death."

"Indeed, she has not eaten for ten days,-- hardly since that day;" and Margarita and her mother exchanged looks. It was not necessary to further define the day.

"Juan Can says he thinks he will never be seen here again," continued Margarita.

"The saints grant it, then," said Marda, hotly, "if it is he has cost the Senorita all this! I am that turned about in my head with it all, that I've no thoughts to think; but plain enough it is, he is mixed up with whatever 'tis has gone wrong."

"I could tell what it is," said Margarita, her old pertness coming uppermost for a moment; "but I've got no more to say, now the Senorita's lying on her bed, with the face she's got. It's enough to break your heart to look at her. I could just go down on my knees to her for all I've said; and I will, and to Saint Francis too! She's going to be with him before long; I know she is."

"No," said the wiser, older Marda. "She is not so ill as you think.

She is young. It's the heart's gone out of her; that's all. I've been that way myself. People are, when they're young."

"I'm young!" retorted Margarita. "I've never been that way."

"There's many a mile to the end of the road, my girl," said Marda, significantly; "and 'It's ill boasting the first day out,' was a proverb when I was your age!"

同类推荐
  • 佛说尊胜大明王经

    佛说尊胜大明王经

    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。
  • Lavengro

    Lavengro

    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。
  • Shorter Prose Pieces

    Shorter Prose Pieces

    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。
  • 义盗记

    义盗记

    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。
  • CHITA A Memory of Last Island

    CHITA A Memory of Last Island

    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
  • 消逝的文明

    消逝的文明

    当我们参与到了远古文明的历史脚步,当我们想要改变这悲哀的一切,当我们被历史的洪流所掩埋,当一切成为历史,我们还能让他们重现天日吗?
  • TFBOYS我爱你

    TFBOYS我爱你

    她和他是青梅竹马,可是她却被迫离开了他。直到5年后,她又重新回到了那个地方,她是否能找到他呢?
  • 混迹灵界

    混迹灵界

    热血?青春?兄弟?情谊?恋人?柔情?家人?亲情?叶秋大声的喊道:我一样也不要少,我会用我的命,用我的全部去守护。
  • 问君能有多难求

    问君能有多难求

    出生在七夕之夜的王萦落,顺风顺水的活了十六年,掰指头算算也就遇到两个过不去的坎。一个是幼年被五个哥哥坑了一把,糊里糊涂当上了富可敌国的王家家主。另一个便是遇到了那个,迷的天下姑娘七荤八素的慕珏洛王爷,掏心掏肺的喜欢了人家八年,但人家却连她的脸都没能记住。正当她决定痛改前非洗心革面的时候,某个月黑风高的晚上,洛王爷一改往日沉稳,对她说了一句:“七七听说你喜欢本王?小小年纪,可不能养成半途而废的坏习惯。”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 吃心不改

    吃心不改

    食道女仙穿越地球,夺舍成日渐没落的苏氏餐饮继承人。表兄算计,亲父无能,身周危机四伏。没钱不算什么,最怕的,是没命!幸亏她捡到了一只吃货,只要投喂好他,吃货表示:一切我来给你解决。哪想吃货吃饭没吃够,还要把她拆吃入腹。看在吃货颜值过人,忠心爆表的份儿上,她勉强收了吧。
  • 爱上弃妇
  • The Maintenance of Free Trade

    The Maintenance of Free Trade

    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。
  • 苍穹惊云

    苍穹惊云

    万族林立,天才倍出,浩劫再起,卷袭天地。问苍茫大地,诸圣争霸,万古争雄,谁主沉浮?一个小家族少年,怎样凭借个人怒力,在浩劫与万古争雄中崛起,搅起苍穹惊云。
  • 残天至尊

    残天至尊

    独臂一挥,天地震抖;魔剑祭出,万魔听令;妖令既出,群妖听令!
  • 医女狂妃傲九天

    医女狂妃傲九天

    前世她天赋异禀,医术精湛,却只倾心于他。待扶他上九宵云天,却落得个族人离弃、亲人背叛,不得好死的下场,今生她收敛锋芒,脱胎换骨,凤凰涅槃,带着满腔的仇恨欲要他偿还一切,却惊讶的发现了当初被隐藏的真相……