登陆注册
5261700000058

第58章 Chapter XXI(1)

The fire-light threw grotesque shadows on the walls. Ruth and Louis in the library made no movement to ring for lights; it was quite cosey as it was.

They had both drawn near the crackling wood-blaze, Ruth in a low rocker, Arnold in Mr. Levice's broad easy-chair.

"I surely thought you intended going to the concert this evening, Louis," she said, looking across at him. "I fancy Mamma expected you to accompany her."

"What! Voluntarily put myself into the cold when there is a fire blazing right here? Ah, no. At any rate, your mother is all right with the Lewises, and I am all right with you."

"I give you a guarantee I shall not bite; you look altogether too hard for my cannibalistic propensities."

"It is something not to be accounted soft. I think a redundancy of flesh overflows in trickling sentimentality. My worst enemy could not accuse me of either fault."

"But your best friend would not mind a little thaw now and then. One of the girls confided to me today that walking on and over-waxed floor was nothing to attempting an equal footing in conversation with you."

"I am sorry I am such a slippery customer. Does not the fire burn your face? Shall I hand you a screen?"

"No; I like to toast."

"But your complexion might char; move your chair a little forward."

"In two minutes I intend to have lights and to bring my work down. Will it make you tired to watch me?"

"Exceedingly. I prefer your undivided attention; it is not often we are alone, Ruth."

She looked up slightly startled; he seldom made personal remarks. Her pulses began to flutter with the premonition that reference to a tacitly buried secret was going to be made.

"We have been going out and receiving a good deal lately, though somehow I don't feel festive, with Father away in freezing New York. Mamma would gladly have stayed at home to-night if Jennie had not insisted."

"You think so? I fancy she was a very willing captive; she intimated as much to me."

"How?"

"Not in words, but her eyes were interesting reading: first, capitulation to Jennie, then, in rapid succession, inspiration, command, entreaty, a challenge and retreat, all directed at me. Possibly this eloquence was lost upon you."

"Entirely. What was your interpretation?"

"Ah, that was confidential. Perhaps I even endowed her with these thoughts, knowing her desires were in touch with my own."

"It is wanton cruelty to arouse a woman's curiosity and leave it unsatisfied."

"It is not cruelty; it is cowardice."

She gazed at him in wonder. His apple-blossom cheeks wore a rosier glow than usual. He seized a log from the box, threw it on the blaze that illumined their faces, grasped the poker, and leaning forward in his chair let it grow hot as he held it to the flames. His glasses fell off, dangling from the cord; and as he adjusted them, he caught the curious, half-amused smile on Ruth's attentive face. He gave the fire a sharp raking and addressed her, gazing into the leaping flames.

"I was wondering why, after all, you could not be happy as my wife."

A numbness as of death overspread her.

"I think I could make you happy, Ruth."

In the pregnant silence that followed he looked up, and meeting her sad, reproachful eyes, laid down the poker softly but resolutely; there was method in the action.

"In fact, I know I could make you happy."

"Louis, have you forgotten?" she cried in sharp pain.

"I have forgotten nothing," he replied incisively. "Listen to me, Ruth.

It is because I remember that I ask you. Give me the right to care for you, and you will be happier than you can ever be in these circumstances."

"You do not know what you ask, Louis. Even if I could, you would never be satisfied."

"Try me, Ruth," he entreated.

She raised herself from her easy, reclining position, and regarded him earnestly.

"What you desire," she said in a restrained manner, "would be little short of a crime for me. What manner of wife should I be to you when my every thought is given to another?"

His face put on the set look of one who has shut his teeth hard together.

"I anticipated this repulse," he said after a pause; "so what you have just assured me of does not affect my wish or my resolution to continue my plea."

"Would you marry a woman who feels herself as closely bound to another, or the memory of another, as if the marriage rite had been actually performed?

Oh, Louis, how could you force me to these disclosures?"

"I am seeking no disclosure, but it is impossible for me to continue silent now."

"Why?"

"Why? Because I love you."

They sat so close together he might have touched her by putting out his hand, but he remained perfectly still, only the pale excitement of long repression speaking from his face; but she shrank back at his words and raised her hand as if about to receive a blow.

"Do not be alarmed," he continued, noticing the action; "my love cannot hurt you, or it would have killed you long ago."

"Oh, Louis," she murmured, "forgive me; I never thought you cared so much."

"How should you? I am not a man to wear my heart upon my sleeve. I think I have always loved you; but living as familiarly as we have lived, seeing you whenever I wished, the thought that some day this might end never occurred to me. It was only when the possibility of some other man's claiming your love and taking you from me presented itself, that my heart rose up in arms against it, --and then I asked you to be my wife."

"Yes," she replied, raising her pale face; "and I refused. The same cause that moved me then, and to which you submitted without protest, rules me now, and you know it."

"No; I do not know it. What then might have had a possible issue is now done with--or do I err?"

Her mouth trembled piteously, but no tears came as she lowered her head.

"Then listen to me. You may think me a poor sort of a fellow even to wish you to marry me when you assure me that you love another. That means that you do not love me as a husband should be loved, but it does not prove that you never could love me so."

"It proves just that."

同类推荐
  • 又示宗武

    又示宗武

    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。
  • 弘光实录钞

    弘光实录钞

    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。
  • 瓶粟斋诗话

    瓶粟斋诗话

    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。
  • Cy Whittaker's Place

    Cy Whittaker's Place

    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。
  • 太上安镇九垒龙神妙经

    太上安镇九垒龙神妙经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 倾国倾城赋

    倾国倾城赋

    她有倾国倾城的容貌,带着一颗简单的真心入宫,却不知是自己兄长的步步为营。他是雄才大略文治武功的天下正主,坐拥江山美人,却因一曲《倾国倾城赋》难以忘怀。他是不败战神,是大漠里面驰骋无阻的天之骄子,保家卫国,却逃不开飞鸟尽良弓藏的宿命。她是一国皇后,伊人如水,有一种美丽永远不随时光而消逝,可惜,自古皇帝多薄情。他是名门之后,雄姿英发,却牵连进了皇位之争,为她生、为她死。昔日的“若得阿娇作妇,当以金屋贮之”犹在耳,内忧外患的长安城中,色衰日、爱去时。阿娇若歌,子夫若曲,李蓁若赋,钩戈若诗。看汉武帝一生中最重要的四个女人,看汉武帝背后的四个男人,看盛世西汉,看深宫内的勾心斗角。
  • 古董店老板

    古董店老板

    一场车祸后,再次醒过来身边却出现了一个陌生男子……接下来所发生的事情,简直就是颠覆了我的三观 本书纯属虚构
  • 佛祖心灯

    佛祖心灯

    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。
  • 大道至繁

    大道至繁

    鸿蒙苍穹,万千宇宙,究竟何为大道?道究竟浩瀚还是渺茫,极简还是至繁?且看我宿小羽万法一身,将这三界力挽狂澜!
  • 午夜飞行

    午夜飞行

    她是普通的海外留学生,在偶然的机会认识一个冷若冰霜的男人,并作为他的助理,走入了另外一个不为人知的世界。她跟着他的脚步去了许多地方,也在这过程中对他有了重新的认识,继而爱上了他。然而他呢?他爱她吗?后来她一直觉得,他们两人之间的感情就像是一次午夜飞行,强忍着寂寞和困顿,熬过那似乎永无止境的漫漫长夜,不过是为了能够看到一个瑰丽的黎明。
  • 三生三世之素锦绣缘

    三生三世之素锦绣缘

    三生三世素锦绣缘,同人文,这里不是重生文,只是改了一下素锦的性格。嗯,文笔不好请各位见谅。
  • 一世安稳

    一世安稳

    穿越一次要不混得风生水起都觉得对不起自己,顾清晚就决定对不起自己一回,她表示:这样的年代,作为一个女人还是安稳一点比较好!被恼羞成怒的大伯母拉去替嫁,顾清晚想了想,纵观各种小说电视剧里面所有的替嫁新娘最后都很幸福,那么,我嫁!不过嫁之前怎么都得给自己谋点福利吧!
  • 弃儿汤姆·琼斯史

    弃儿汤姆·琼斯史

    《弃儿汤姆·琼斯史》是英国小说家菲尔丁的代表作之一,其中对人性善恶有这深刻的描绘。琼斯是这本小说的主人公,也是故事中唯一一个真正正面的形象,其所勇敢追求爱情的过程,体现了“善有善报,恶有恶报”:他不管经历了多少不幸,最终还是收获了幸福。
  • 为何父母会伤人

    为何父母会伤人

    本书作者对比中西教育理念,倡导一种适合中国人传统儒家教育下的新型家教关系,糅合心理学、教育学与佛教禅修的理念于其中,帮助家长寻找孩子不听话、叛逆的原因,以及家长在孩子幼年时应如何进行教育做出了细致入微的分析、探索,提出了很多新颖的见解与想法,无论是对孩子,还是对家长,都有着很大的启发教育意义,并帮助家长建立有利于孩子成长的健康的家庭关系,特别是针对传统意义上的“挫败者”(成绩差的孩子)的教育。
  • 惊情四百年

    惊情四百年

    欧洲历史上最畅销的惊悚小说之一,开创了吸血鬼文化的先河,书中塑造的吸血鬼伯爵形象成了后世书籍和影视作品中吸血鬼的原型,“德古拉”也成了吸血鬼的代名词,作者也被称为“吸血鬼之父”。并且以作者名字命名的“布莱姆·斯托克奖”更是世界恐怖小说的最高奖项。本书讲述了这样一个故事,高贵、英俊的德古拉伯爵的到来,让整个伦敦陷入了一场前所未有的躁动。丛林里传来让人毛骨悚然的狼嚎,蝙蝠发出怪异的声音拍打着窗户,墓地闪烁着飘忽游移的身影,空气中充斥着茫茫的白雾;温柔迷人的姑娘在奇怪的梦中醒来,一天天走向苍白,疯人院的疯子高喊着期待“主人”的到来,可爱的孩童迷失在茂盛的丛林……伦敦的整个黑暗嗜血势力彻底复苏了!穿过夜色中的丛林和坟墓,在午夜的钟声中人们是否能够穿越黑暗的头?古老的十字架、神圣的饼屑、奇异的大蒜花;砍下的头颅和刺穿的心脏是否能让它们重获安宁?