登陆注册
4607300000104

第104章 I WILL WAIT FOR YOU(1)

Beatrice drove back to Paddington, and as she drove, though her face did not change from its marble cast of woe the great tears rolled down it, one by one.

They reached the deserted-looking station, and she paid the man out of her few remaining shillings--seeing that she was a stranger, he insisted upon receiving half-a-crown. Then, disregarding the astonished stare of a night porter, she found her way to the waiting room, and sat down. First she took the letter from her breast, and added some lines to it in pencil, but she did not post it yet; she knew that if she did so it would reach its destination too soon. Then she laid her head back against the wall, and utterly outworn, dropped to sleep--her last sleep upon this earth, before the longest sleep of all.

And thus Beatrice waited and slept at Paddington, while her lover waited and watched at Euston.

At five she woke, and the heavy cloud of sorrow, past, present, and to come, rushed in upon her heart. Taking her bag, she made herself as tidy as she could. Then she stepped outside the station into the deserted street, and finding a space between the houses, watched the sun rise over the waking world. It was her last sunrise, Beatrice remembered.

She came back filled with such thoughts as might well strike the heart of a woman about to do the thing she had decreed. The refreshment bar was open now, and she went to it, and bought a cup of coffee and some bread and butter. Then she took her ticket, not to Bryngelly or to Coed, but to the station on this side of Bryngelly, and three miles from it. She would run less risk of being noticed there. The train was shunted up; she took her seat in it. Just as it was starting, an early newspaper boy came along, yawning. Beatrice bought a copy of the /Standard/, out of the one and threepence that was left of her money, and opened it at the sheet containing the leading articles. The first one began, "The most powerful, closely reasoned, and eloquent speech made last night by Mr. Bingham, the Member for Pillham, will, we feel certain, produce as great an effect on the country as it did in the House of Commons. We welcome it, not only on account of its value as a contribution to the polemics of the Irish Question, but as a positive proof of what has already been suspected, that the Unionist party has in Mr. Bingham a young statesman of a very high order indeed, and one whom remarkable and rapid success at the Bar has not hampered, as is too often the case, in the larger and less technical field of politics."And so on. Beatrice put the paper down with a smile of triumph.

Geoffrey's success was splendid and unquestioned. Nothing could stop him now. During all the long journey she pleased her imagination by conjuring up picture after picture of that great future of his, in which she would have no share. And yet he would not forget her; she was sure of this. Her shadow would go with him from year to year, even to the end, and at times he might think how proud she would have been could she be present to record his triumphs. Alas! she did not remember that when all is lost which can make life beautiful, when the sun has set, and the spirit gone out of the day, the poor garish lights of our little victories can but ill atone for the glories that have been. Happiness and content are frail plants which can only flourish under fair conditions if at all. Certainly they will not thrive beneath the gloom and shadow of a pall, and when the heart is dead no triumphs, however splendid, and no rewards, however great, can compensate for an utter and irredeemable loss. She never guessed, poor girl, that time upon time, in the decades to be, Geoffrey would gladly have laid his honours down in payment for one year of her dear and unforgotten presence. She was too unselfish; she did not think that a man could thus prize a woman's love, and took it for an axiom that to succeed in life was his one real object--a thing to which so divine a gift as she had given Geoffrey is as nothing. It was therefore this Juggernaut of her lover's career that Beatrice would cast down her life, little knowing that thereby she must turn the worldly and temporal success, which he already held so cheap, to bitterness and ashes.

At Chester Beatrice got out of the train and posted her letter to Geoffrey. She would not do so till then because it might have reached him too soon--before all was finished! Now it would be delivered to him in the House after everything had been accomplished in its order.

She looked at the letter; it was, she thought, the last token that could ever pass between them on this earth. Once she pressed it to her heart, once she touched it with her lips, and then put it from her beyond recall. It was done; there was no going back now. And even as she stood the postman came up, whistling, and opening the box carelessly swept its contents into his canvas bag. Could he have known what lay among them he would have whistled no more that day.

Beatrice continued her journey, and by three o'clock arrived safely at the little station next to Bryngelly. There was a fair at Coed that day, and many people of the peasant class got in here. Amidst the confusion she gave up her ticket to a small boy, who was looking the other way at the time, and escaped without being noticed by a soul.

Indeed, things happened so that nobody in the neighbourhood of Bryngelly ever knew that Beatrice had been to London and back upon those dreadful days.

同类推荐
  • 邵氏闻见后录

    邵氏闻见后录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 吴三桂考

    吴三桂考

    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。
  • 独断

    独断

    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。
  • 明伦汇编家范典母党部

    明伦汇编家范典母党部

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大唐新语

    大唐新语

    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
  • 补肾食谱

    补肾食谱

    肾为先天之本,需要细心呵护。所谓“药补不如食补”,食补得法,肾精就能保持充盈,身体更健康。
  • 第一专宠,匪姐不好惹

    第一专宠,匪姐不好惹

    孽债啊!不能啊!他是个非男勿扰的怪王爷,女人,从来不碰!关起门来,翻翻账本,不是东风压倒西风,就是西风压倒东风。
  • 天上掉下个秦天师

    天上掉下个秦天师

    秦羽原本是天上的神将,却下凡人间体察明情,后来无意中发现了六界灵眼被破坏,在一路追查下秦羽发现灵眼被妖魔二界之主练手破坏,企图攻占人界,天庭得知便派下天兵天将和人界组成联军,交于秦羽指挥,由此,仙,人、妖、魔四界最大一次的群架由此拉开序幕,到底是谁能取得这次大群架的胜利。
  • 冥途仙路

    冥途仙路

    灵石太少?没关系!他天生金灵根,能感应灵石矿脉!堆金积玉,挥金如土!修炼艰辛?没关系!他有旷世仙宝,能储存天地灵气!与日俱增,一朝千里!万古长空,一朝风月!他自冥界重生,后被神秘老妪收养,重返人间,踏途仙界!这一切,他能否随心所愿?那一界,他能否傲视众生?一个誓言,他爱她一生一世,遍体鳞伤!一份承诺,她为他毁天灭地,生死相随……“上至九霄!下至九幽!吾愿奉上,千年寿元,毕生修为,愿妖魔相助!诸神相帮!”仙友群:765398172?欢迎您的加入。
  • 血色大领主

    血色大领主

    血色十字军,一个背负着振兴洛丹伦王国重任的民间军事组织,但它的命运却是残酷的。他们有理想,他们有热情,但最终惨淡收场。然而命运出现了些许偏差,一个不属于这个世界的灵魂来到了这个世界,血色十字军也因此迎来了新的救赎。记录一个穿越系统文最终变为重生领主文的小说。------------------------------------------本书书友群(602840078)欢迎大家加入
  • 雪嫁衣

    雪嫁衣

    何为天下?天下,是最初诞生的文明。天下,即我。何为天下?振长策而御宇内,吞二周而亡诸侯,威震四海。天下,是始皇帝之残暴,之威严。犯强汉者,虽远必诛。天下,是汉武帝之骄傲,之武功。万国来宾,为天可汗。天下,是唐率宗之雍容,之文明。何为天下?站在御宿山上,周围三十六里,便是天下。武功文化,秦皇汉武,英雄豪杰,都毫无意义。只因这里有一个绝顶的名——华音阁。
  • 姐,我去称霸天下了

    姐,我去称霸天下了

    五姐萧子笙在加冕以后,成功拥有了四个姐姐。为什么要称呼为五姐呢,因为她还有两个妹妹。 萧子笙觉得自从她踏上大姐这条贼船之后,就完全下不来了。 因为某些不好意思说的关系,萧子笙年近五十才开始了报仇之旅。模样还是个少年的她or他,猛然发现当年的伙伴差不多都半截入土了。 于是曾被誉为“一代丞相”的他打算不……好吧,仇还是要报的。 等等,麻烦等我一下,我忘了给我自己收尸了!!! 简单一句话,就是某六个姐妹被大姐带上贼船在黑化这条路上越走越远的故事。无男主文。本文又名:《不管怎么养姐妹都会黑化》,《花式复仇虐渣》,《总有人要挑衅神》
  • 末世之虫族之心

    末世之虫族之心

    末世降临,各种变异体屠杀人类,获得了虫族之心的陈明,能在这充满死亡的世界活下去吗???
  • 我想握住你的手

    我想握住你的手

    我们按时长大,不容拒绝,过程中有数不尽的秘密,落在纸上,便会遍地开花,然后发现,从懵懂到长大,只是一瞬间的事,当我学会飞,越过云端,我才发现,我是孤独的。
  • 古族皇后

    古族皇后

    她,聪明灵慧,文武全才。身处谷中,悠闲度日,本无需涉入皇室争斗。却在机缘巧合下,谨守族规,出谷涉尘.他,野心勃勃,深沉而内敛。与她几翻暗斗中,渐生情愫。无奈佳人芳心早有所托,因此情深而生恨.他,潇洒飘逸,谋略过人。与她情深意厚,却为宿命所累,终其一生无缘私守.他,是她一生守护之人。倾心绝色而痛失至爱,翻然醒悟,痛心疾首.———————————————————————————————————————————————一段架空的历史,一场风花雪月交织着权力争斗的爱情,在邑昱国初建之际悄然上演.