登陆注册
5361800000016

第16章

Laurence drank deeply; but he had never felt clearer, never seen things more clearly. The wine gave him what he wanted, an edge to these few hours of pleasure, an exaltation of energy. It dulled his sense of pity, too. It was pity he was afraid of--for himself, and for this girl. To make even this tawdry room look beautiful, with firelight and candlelight, dark amber wine in the glasses, tall pink lilies spilling their saffron, exuding their hot perfume he and even himself must look their best. And with a weight as of lead on her heart, she managed that for him, letting him strew her with flowers and crush them together with herself. Not even music was lacking to their feast. Someone was playing a pianola across the street, and the sound, very faint, came stealing when they were silent--swelling, sinking, festive, mournful; having a far-off life of its own, like the flickering fire-flames before which they lay embraced, or the lilies delicate between the candles. Listening to that music, tracing with his finger the tiny veins on her breast, he lay like one recovering from a swoon. No parting. None! But sleep, as the firelight sleeps when flames die; as music sleeps on its deserted strings.

And the girl watched him.

It was nearly ten when he bade her go to bed. And after she had gone obedient into the bedroom, he brought ink and paper down by the fire.

The drifter, the unstable, the good-for-nothing--did not falter. He had thought, when it came to the point, he would fail himself; but a sort of rage bore him forward. If he lived on, and confessed, they would shut him up, take from him the one thing he loved, cut him off from her; sand up his only well in the desert. Curse them! And he wrote by firelight which mellowed the white sheets of paper; while, against the dark curtain, the girl, in her nightgown, unconscious of the cold, stood watching.

Men, when they drown, remember their pasts. Like the lost poet he had "gone with the wind." Now it was for him to be true in his fashion. A man may falter for weeks and weeks, consciously, subconsciously, even in his dreams, till there comes that moment when the only thing impossible is to go on faltering. The black cap, the little driven grey man looking up at it with a sort of wonder--faltering had ceased!

He had finished now, and was but staring into the fire.

"No more, no more, the moon is dead, And all the people in it;The poppy maidens strew the bed, We'll come in half a minute."Why did doggerel start up in the mind like that? Wanda! The weed-flower become so rare he would not be parted from her! The fire, the candles, and the fire--no more the flame and flicker!

And, by the dark curtain, the girl watched.

XKeith went, not home, but to his club; and in the room devoted to the reception of guests, empty at this hour, he sat down and read the report of the trial. The fools had made out a case that looked black enough. And for a long time, on the thick soft carpet which let out no sound of footfall, he paced up and down, thinking. He might see the defending counsel, might surely do that as an expert who thought there had been miscarriage of justice. They must appeal; a petition too might be started in the last event. The thing could--must be put right yet, if only Larry and that girl did nothing!

He had no appetite, but the custom of dining is too strong. And while he ate, he glanced with irritation at his fellow-members. They looked so at their ease. Unjust--that this black cloud should hang over one blameless as any of them! Friends, connoisseurs of such things--a judge among them--came specially to his table to express their admiration of his conduct of that will case. Tonight he had real excuse for pride, but he felt none. Yet, in this well-warmed quietly glowing room, filled with decorously eating, decorously talking men, he gained insensibly some comfort. This surely was reality; that shadowy business out there only the drear sound of a wind one must and did keep out--like the poverty and grime which had no real existence for the secure and prosperous. He drank champagne.

It helped to fortify reality, to make shadows seem more shadowy. And down in the smoking-room he sat before the fire, in one of those chairs which embalm after-dinner dreams. He grew sleepy there, and at eleven o'clock rose to go home. But when he had once passed down the shallow marble steps, out through the revolving door which let in no draughts, he was visited by fear, as if he had drawn it in with the breath of the January wind. Larry's face; and the girl watching it! Why had she watched like that? Larry's smile; and the flowers in his hand? Buying flowers at such a moment! The girl was his slave-whatever he told her, she would do. But she would never be able to stop him. At this very moment he might be rushing to give himself up!

His hand, thrust deep into the pocket of his fur coat, came in contact suddenly with something cold. The keys Larry had given him all that time ago. There they had lain forgotten ever since. The chance touch decided him. He turned off towards Borrow Street, walking at full speed. He could but go again and see. He would sleep better if he knew that he had left no stone unturned. At the corner of that dismal street he had to wait for solitude before he made for the house which he now loathed with a deadly loathing. He opened the outer door and shut it to behind him. He knocked, but no one came. Perhaps they had gone to bed. Again and again he knocked, then opened the door, stepped in, and closed it carefully. Candles lighted, the fire burning; cushions thrown on the floor in front of it and strewn with flowers! The table, too, covered with flowers and with the remnants of a meal. Through the half-drawn curtain he could see that the inner room was also lighted. Had they gone out, leaving everything like this? Gone out! His heart beat. Bottles! Larry had been drinking!

同类推荐
  • 和权载之离合诗

    和权载之离合诗

    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。
  • 四分戒本疏卷第一

    四分戒本疏卷第一

    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。
  • THE TIME MACHINE

    THE TIME MACHINE

    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。
  • Letters From High Latitudes

    Letters From High Latitudes

    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。
  • 养命机关金丹真诀

    养命机关金丹真诀

    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
  • 顾南寻她意

    顾南寻她意

    (全文完)他说过,无论天涯海角,他都会找到她,余生的种种,他会陪她一起度过。只是,这是场一梦南柯,还是只会变成回忆?都说遗忘是最大的悲哀,与他来说确实场爱的救赎。“知意,我只求,我这一生能好好的陪在你的身边,其他的,我真的什么都不求。”他常常对她说这句话,可同时却又在向他一步一步接近,她总会有种错觉,在遗忘又再次爱上的同时,她总是会觉得惶恐。只是或许,此生,他们根本就不应该相遇。
  • 奇侠系统

    奇侠系统

    游戏之中的一代剑尊凌锋穿越异界,却发现系统附身,只要斩杀身负罪恶值之人,不仅可以获得精气值,还可以获取侠义值。侠义值可以兑换功法、灵丹、神兵等等。于是,凌锋走上了一条杀生斩业之路,逆天崛起,横推异界。新书万界轮回之旅,欢迎捧场!
  • 单色旋律

    单色旋律

    一届不如意的高考过后,色盲少年威廉遇见了分手以久的恋人——林旖旎,引起了一段悠长的记忆。现实终究还是现实,他与早就在网络上认识的人慕容遥上了同一所大学并相恋了。失踪音信多年的夏羽绯与威廉本身就颇具渊源,而知道了夏羽绯与威廉相爱的林旖旎,却与其反目成仇……
  • 红妆清惜传

    红妆清惜传

    洛阳城东桃花李,飞来飞去落谁家?洛阳女儿惜颜色,坐见落花长叹息。今年花落颜色改,明年花开复谁在?已见松柏摧为薪,更闻桑田变成海。古人无复洛城东,今人还对落花风。年年岁岁花相似,岁岁年年人不同。寄言全盛红颜子,应怜半死白头翁。此翁白头真可怜,伊昔红颜美少年。公子王孙芳树下,清歌妙舞落花前。坐禄池台文锦乡,将军楼阁画神仙。一朝卧病无相识,三春行乐在谁边?宛转蛾眉能几时?须臾鹤发乱如丝。但看古来歌舞地,唯有黄昏鸟雀悲。
  • 尚不知他名姓

    尚不知他名姓

    “姓名?”不方便讲啦。“年龄?”你不会想知道的。“职业?”让我想想……好像什么都干,可什么也没干……这个这个,实在不太好说。“那你到底有什么是能说的?”嗯,我的心愿是世界和平……咳咳,是人与自然和谐相处!还有,要爱护花花草草,路边的野花草叶小树,不要摘,不要碰!想活命的话,切记切记!读者群QQ群:665676139欢迎进群交流
  • 历史的坏脾气

    历史的坏脾气

    本书讲述了晚清、民国时期的一些名人轶事,评述了一些社会现象,对读者了解中国近代史很有帮助。
  • 狼牙尖上的温柔

    狼牙尖上的温柔

    《狼牙尖上的温柔》是对梦境的迷恋的影像释放,残忍和宁静的并置,实现的欲望与未竟的渴望、暴力、爱情、性、死亡、意象的组合。 小说呈现了浓浓的魔幻色彩,人狼混杂、生死交融的奇异世界,荒诞、奇异,没有逻辑却又合乎情理,那么荒诞又那么神奇。小说把触目惊心的现实和迷离恍惚的幻觉结合在一起,通过夸张和虚实交错的艺术笔触来网罗人事,编织情节。这种似是而非,变幻想为现实而又不失其真,弥漫着浓重而强烈的神奇气氛。魔幻是途径,表现生活现实是目的。《狼牙尖上的温柔》是对梦境的迷恋的影像释放,残忍和宁静的并置,实现的欲望与未竟的渴望、暴力、爱情、性、死亡、意象的组合。
  • 女帝权术

    女帝权术

    一次意外的爆炸,她以为自己会死在这场爆炸之中,没想到醒来后却已经重生穿越了。这是一个架空的时代,所有的天马行空,只为和你相遇,千年之后,不悔曾经深爱你。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 吟游刺杀录

    吟游刺杀录

    这是一个剑与魔法的勇者大陆,一个拥有远大志向的吟游诗人。他立志写出最华美篇章,立志将爱与和平传递给世界,将欢笑带给每一个人,他希望那些大剑圣大魔导师一张嘴,都会蹦出他书里的段子。为此他15岁外出游历,10年时间走了半个大陆,却越来越落魄,最终不得不在酒馆讲段子,以维持生计。故事也从这里开始…而至于本书风格……你看封面不就知道了吗?
  • 多元宇宙之执剑求逍遥

    多元宇宙之执剑求逍遥

    这是一个迷茫少年自以为穿越到异世的故事。这是一个剑修行走在西方大陆以及多元宇宙的故事。这是一个没有目标执剑求逍遥的冒险故事……很长,很长。