登陆注册
5230700000065

第65章 CHAPTER X(2)

Even then, there had been something sorrowful in that kiss, a quality he resented as troubling, a flavour that came to him after the wildness was spent. What was she struggling against? What was behind her resistance?

She loved him! It had never before occurred to him to enter into the nature of her feelings, having been so preoccupied with and tortured by his own. This realization, that she loved him, as it persisted, began to make him uneasy, though it should, according to all experience, have been a reason for sheer exultation. He began to see that with her it involved complications, responsibilities, disclosures, perhaps all of those things he had formerly avoided and resented in woman. He thought of certain friends of his who had become tangled up--of one in particular whose bank account had been powerless to extricate him.... And he was ashamed of himself.

In view of the nature of his sex experience, of his habit of applying his imagination solely to matters of business rather than to affairs of the heart,--if his previous episodes may be so designated,--his failure to surmise that a wish for marriage might be at the back of her resistance is not so surprising as it may seem; he laid down, half smoked, his third cigar. The suspicion followed swiftly on his recalling to mind her vehement repudiation of his proffered gifts did he think she wanted what he could buy for her! She was not purchasable--that way. He ought to have known it, he hadn't realized what he was saying. But marriage!

Literally it had never occurred to him to image her in a relation he himself associated with shackles. One of the unconscious causes of his fascination was just her emancipation from and innocence of that herd-convention to which most women--even those who lack wedding rings--are slaves. The force of such an appeal to a man of Ditmar's type must not be underestimated. And the idea that she, too, might prefer the sanction of the law, the gilded cage as a popular song which once had taken his fancy illuminatingly expressed it--seemed utterly incongruous with the freedom and daring of her spirit, was a sobering shock. Was he prepared to marry her, if he could obtain her in no other way? The question demanded a survey of his actual position of which he was at the moment incapable. There were his children! He had never sought to arrive at even an approximate estimate of the boy and girl as factors in his life, to consider his feelings toward them; but now, though he believed himself a man who gave no weight to social considerations--he had scorned this tendency in his wife--he was to realize the presence of ambitions for them. He was young, he was astonishingly successful; he had reason to think, with his opportunities and the investments he already had made, that he might some day be moderately rich; and he had at times even imagined himself in later life as the possessor of one of those elaborate country places to be glimpsed from the high roads in certain localities, which the sophisticated are able to recognize as the seats of the socially ineligible, but which to Ditmar were outward and visible emblems of success. He liked to think of George as the inheritor of such a place, as the son of a millionaire, as a "college graduate," as an influential man of affairs; he liked to imagine Amy as the wife of such another. In short, Ditmar's wife had left him, as an unconscious legacy, her aspirations for their children's social prestige....

The polished oak grandfather's clock in the hall had struck one before he went to bed, mentally wearied by an unwonted problem involving, in addition to self-interest, an element of ethics, of affection not wholly compounded of desire.

He slept soundly, however. He was one of those fortunate beings who come into the world with digestive organs and thyroid glands in that condition which--so physiologists tell us--makes for a sanguine temperament. And his course of action, though not decided upon, no longer appeared as a problem; it differed from a business matter in that it could wait. As sufficient proof of his liver having rescued him from doubts and qualms he was able to whistle, as he dressed, and without a tremor of agitation, the forgotten tune suggested to his consciousness during the unpleasant reverie of the night before,--"Only a Bird in a Gilded Cage!" It was Saturday. He ate a hearty breakfast, joked with George and Amy, and refreshed, glowing with an expectation mingled with just the right amount of delightful uncertainty that made the great affairs of life a gamble, yet with the confidence of the conqueror, he walked in sunlight to the mill. In view of this firm and hopeful tone of his being he found it all the more surprising, as he reached the canal, to be seized by a trepidation strong enough to bring perspiration to his forehead. What if she had gone! He had never thought of that, and he had to admit it would be just like her. You never could tell what she would do.

Nodding at Simmons, the watchman, he hurried up the iron-shod stairs, gained the outer once, and instantly perceived that her chair beside the window was empty! Caldwell and Mr. Price stood with their heads together bending over a sheet on which Mr. Price was making calculations.

"Hasn't Miss Bumpus come yet?" Ditmar demanded. He tried to speak naturally, casually, but his own voice sounded strange, seemed to strike the exact note of sickening apprehension that suddenly possessed him.

Both men turned and looked at him in some surprise.

"Good-morning, Mr. Ditmar," Caldwell said. "Why, yes, she's in your room."

"Oh!" said Ditmar.

"The Boston office has just been calling you--they want to know if you can't take the nine twenty-two," Caldwell went on. "It's about that lawsuit. It comes into court Monday morning, and Mr. Sprole is there, and they say they have to see you. Miss Bumpus has the memorandum."

Ditmar looked at his watch.

同类推荐
  • 后宋慈云走国全传

    后宋慈云走国全传

    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。
  • 水经注

    水经注

    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。
  • 锦带书

    锦带书

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 六十种曲西厢记

    六十种曲西厢记

    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。
  • 法华义疏

    法华义疏

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 万界元圣传

    万界元圣传

    纵横万界的人族元圣,误修隐藏阴谋的功法,在突破帝劫时,遭功法反噬,因深爱女子的一颗灵种,重回三百年前的地球。从此踏上了一条屠天之路。凭借元圣的神魂,发现地球竟然是远古仙域,而人类竟是仙裔,只不过血脉稀薄。从此,探蚩尤墓,开炎黄血脉,颤万妖胆,镇诸魔心。揭开地球的层层面纱......书友群:780247278
  • 东北出马实录

    东北出马实录

    真实的揭秘骗术,正而不邪,净而不染,正能量的面对生活!
  • 糖尿病食疗菜谱

    糖尿病食疗菜谱

    《糖尿病食疗菜谱》精选了近百种适合于糖尿病患者的食疗菜谱,你能在短时间内享受到食疗的好处,并且其菜肴色、香、味俱全。《糖尿病食疗菜谱》内容丰富,科学实用,易学易懂,非常适合糖尿病患者以及患者家属使用。
  • 庶女皇后要革命

    庶女皇后要革命

    刚一穿越就被皇帝临幸,才发现自己只不过是个工具;他的爱让她沉沦,却发现一切只是一个骗局;“我在你眼里,真的只不过是一个替身吗?”看着他,眼睛里充满了绝望;自作聪明,一时大意,受人蛊惑,差点万劫不复;多年后,凤凰涅槃,卷土重来,娇媚的女人笑靥如花,眼眸带狠。“和妃,当初你利用我的孩子登上皇后之位,怎么上去的,你就怎么给我下来!”“太后,当年你把我的孩子送给别人,赶尽杀绝,今天我也要让你尝尝骨肉分离的滋味……”“岳楚凌,当初你把我当成替身宠爱,然后弃之如敝屣,今天我要让你付出代价……”“你之所以回来就是为了报复么?”看着满目苍凉,他痛心地询问;嘴角上扬,微微一笑∶“你觉得呢?”情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 今古学考

    今古学考

    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。
  • 贵圈:男神只爱替身妞

    贵圈:男神只爱替身妞

    她曾经是被软饭男友抛弃的受气包,因为一张假脸替身跑路的天后。娱乐圈水深似海,白莲花,绿茶婊,层出不穷;炒绯闻,争上位,一浪高过一浪。冷傲总裁若即若离,说站在你那边的只有你自己。天后王座在上呦,她们愿意为你整容至死,她们愿意为你出卖余生。聚光灯下红颜混战,镜头背后全员撕逼!一路荆棘一路歌,她发誓要让当初受过的伤害十倍奉还。一寸红毯一寸血,她把曾经将死的仇恨化作利剑穿心。一张假脸,就像是没有根的花束,后遗症一到,终将枯萎腐烂。当正主归来,鸠占鹊巢的人生,到底该是谁的?
  • 无限愿望

    无限愿望

    被手机炸死的黄穹灵却幸运得到了世界珠和去幻想世界的机会!但是他人的愿望成了他的任务!而且世界珠小得可怜!最惨的是竟然阴差阳错转世成为了喵喵!看他怎样以灵兽之身开始了游玩、进化和收集之旅!看他怎样以最简单的方法来实现他人的愿望!自己的任务!看他怎样收集各个世界的美景、美食、美。
  • 撰集三藏及杂藏传

    撰集三藏及杂藏传

    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。
  • 外科十三方考

    外科十三方考

    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。
  • 末世掌天劫

    末世掌天劫

    道生一,一生二,二生三,三生万物,自盘古开天,女娲造人后,伏羲八卦,文王周易,人自命万物之长,从此,脚踏大地,耳听八方,广宇之内,无所不至。然,万物凋零,阴阳失衡,天道无情,降下灭世大难,人若自救,唯有掌天劫!!!