登陆注册
5386600000085

第85章 THE NIGHT OF NUPTIALS(3)

"And leave your husband in the hangman's hands?" he asked.

"Let me go! Let me go!" was all that she could answer him, expressing the only thought of which in that dread moment her mind was capable.

That and the loathing on her face wounded his vanity for this beast was vain. His manner changed, and the abysmal brute in him was revealed in the anger he displayed. With foul imprecations he drove her out.

Next day a messenger from the Governor waited upon her at her house with a brief note to inform her that her husband would be hanged upon the morrow. Incredulity was succeeded by a numb, stony, dry-eyed grief, in which she sat alone for hours - a woman entranced.

At last, towards dusk, she summoned a couple of her grooms to attend and light her, and made her way, ever in that odd somnambulistic state, to the gaol of Middelburg. She announced herself to the head gaoler as the wife of Philip Danvelt, lying under sentence of death, and that she was come to take her last leave of him. It was not a thing to be denied, nor had the gaoler any orders to deny it.

So she was ushered into the dank cell where Philip waited for his doom, and by the yellow wheel of light of the lantern that hung from the shallow vaulted ceiling she beheld the ghastly change that the news of impending death had wrought in him. No longer was he the self-assured young burgher who, conscious of his innocence and worldly importance, had used a certain careless insolence with the Governor of Zeeland. Here she beheld a man of livid and distorted face, wild-eyed, his hair and garments in disarray, suggesting the physical convulsions to which he had yielded in his despair and rage.

"Sapphira!" he cried at sight of her. A sigh of anguish and he flung himself, shuddering and sobbing, upon her breast. She put her arms about him, soothed him gently, and drew him back to the wooden chair from which he had leapt to greet her.

He took his head in his hands and poured out the fierce anguish of his soul. To die innocent as he was, to be the victim of an arbitrary, unjust power! And to perish at his age!

Hearing him rave, she shivered out of an agony of compassion and also of some terror for herself. She would that he found it less hard to die. And thinking this she thought further, and uttered some of her thought aloud.

"I could have saved you, my poor Philip."

He started up, and showed her again that livid, distorted face of his.

"What do you mean?" he asked hoarsely. "You could have saved me, do you say? Then - then why - ""Ah, but the price, my dear," she sobbed.

"Price?" quoth he in sudden, fierce contempt. "What price is too great to pay for life? Does this Rhynsault want all our wealth, then yield it to him yield it so that I may live - ""Should I have hesitated had it been but that?" she interrupted.

And then she told him, whilst he sat there hunched and shuddering.

"The dog! The foul German dog!" he muttered through clenched teeth.

"So that you see, my dear," she pursued brokenly, "it was too great a price. Yourself, you could not have condoned it, or done aught else but loathe me afterwards."But he was not as stout-mettled as she deemed him, or else the all-consuming thirst of life, youth's stark horror of death, made him a temporizing craven in that hour.

"Who knows?" he answered. "Certes, I do not. But a thing so done, a thing in which the will and mind have no part, resolves itself perhaps into a sacrifice - "He broke off there, perhaps from very shame. After all he was a man, and there are limits to what manhood will permit of one.

But those words of his sank deeply into her soul. They rang again and again in her ears as she took her anguished way home after the agony of their farewells, and in the end they drove her out again that very night to seek the Governor of Zeeland.

Rhynsault was at supper when she came, and without quitting the table bade them usher her into his presence. He found her very white, but singularly calm and purposeful in her bearing.

"Well, mistress?"

"May I speak to you alone?"

Her voice was as steady as her glance.

He waved away the attendants, drank a deep draught from the cup at his elbow, wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, and sat back in his tall chair to hear her.

"Yesterday," she said, "you made, or seemed to make, me a proposal."He looked up at first in surprise, then with a faint smile on his coarse, red mouth. His glance had read her meaning clearly.

"Look you, mistress, here I am lord of life and death. Yet in the case of your husband I yield up that power to you. Say but the word and I sign the order for his gaol delivery at dawn.""I have come to say that word," she informed him.

A moment he looked up at her, his smile broadening, a flush mounting to his cheek-bones. Then he rose and sent his chair crashing behind him to the ground.

"Herrgott!" he grunted; and he gathered her slim, trembling body to his massive gold-laced breast.

Soon after sunrise on the morrow she was beating at the gates of Middelburg gaol, a paper clutched convulsively in her left hand.

She was admitted, and to the head gaoler she showed the paper that she carried.

"An order from the Governor of Zeeland for the gaol delivery of Philip Danvelt!" she announced almost hysterically.

The gaoler scanned the paper, then her face. His lips tightened.

"Come this way," he said; and led her down a gloomy corridor to the cell where yesterday she had seen her husband.

He threw wide the door, and Sapphira sprang in.

"Philip!" she cried, and checked as suddenly.

He lay supine and still upon the miserable pallet, his hands folded upon his breast, his face waxen, his eyes staring glassily through half-closed lids.

She sped to his side in a sudden chill of terror. She fell on her knees and touched him.

"Dead!" she screamed, and, kneeling, span round questioning to face the gaoler in the doorway. "Dead!""He was hanged at daybreak, mistress," said the gaoler gently.

She rocked a moment, moaning, then fell suddenly forward across her husband's body in a swoon.

同类推荐
  • URSULA

    URSULA

    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。
  • 颂古钩钜

    颂古钩钜

    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。
  • 佛说太子刷护经一卷

    佛说太子刷护经一卷

    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。
  • 商虫篇

    商虫篇

    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。
  • 回中牡丹为雨所败二

    回中牡丹为雨所败二

    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
  • 黄土高坡

    黄土高坡

    黄昏时,孩子们像一群鼓噪的老家贼从场院跑回村里,一路上吼着、喊着:“机器咬人喽!铁疙瘩闻见人肉香喽!”“铁疙瘩把亥丑的手咬掉了一圪节!”二花抱了柴禾正要做饭,听见孩子们的喊叫,将柴禾一扔追了上去:“你们说甚啦?说甚啦?”这会儿,杨三老汉也从场院急火火地赶回来,气喘吁吁,脸憋得通红,冲着二花先是用手比划,半天才挤出一句:“你哥的手让铡草机咬了……”泪水刷地从二花的眼里涌了出来:“爹,这可咋办?”“还能咋办,赶紧送医院呗!”
  • 海天绞杀(第二次世界大战史丛书)

    海天绞杀(第二次世界大战史丛书)

    第二次界大战的胜利具有伟大的历史意义。我们历史地辨证地看待这段人类惨痛历史,可以说,第二次世界大战的爆发给人类造成了巨大灾难,使人类文明惨遭浩劫,但同时,第二次世界大战的胜利,也开创了人类历史的新纪元,极大地推动了人类社会向前发展,给战后世界带来了广泛而深刻的影响。促进了世界进入力量制衡的相对和平时期;促进了殖民地国家的民族解放;促进了许多社会主义国家的诞生;促进了资本主义国家的经济、政治和社会改革;促进了人类认识的真理革命;促进了世界人民对和平的认识。
  • 太阳系法师

    太阳系法师

    “谁能告诉我,为什么一觉睡醒后,我的体内就多了个太阳系?”唐木:〣(?Δ?)〣
  • 逆天武神:至尊魔妃

    逆天武神:至尊魔妃

    “若能重活一世,我君清羽必定不再轻信任何人!”她,君清羽,君家毫无地位的庶女废物,却获得朱雀宝鼎认主,因错新亲人而导致神器被夺,追杀毁容!仇人婚礼前夕,不惜引爆丹田,同归于尽,谁知睁眼,竟回到了十年前,初次得到朱雀宝鼎的那一天……人生好不容易重新来过,这一世她的命运将由自己掌握!金麟岂是池中物,一遇风云便化龙。九霄龙吟惊天下,风云际会傲九天。※※※※※※※※※※※※“什么?你说的是真的?君家那废物竟然是神秘的炼阵师?”“是那种比炼丹师还要高贵的炼阵师?据说强大的炼阵师不但能制成炼丹师所会的东西,还能强行契约战兽!君家那个废物居然是大陆极少的炼阵师?”“当然是真的,你们可还记得前不久拍出高价的治疗之阵?听说就是出自君家这废物之手……”众人愕然,谁也不敢相信那软弱无能的废物有朝一日竟能脱变,是如此的风华绝代,光芒万丈!而她亦用手段让世人明白,谁才是天才,谁才是妖孽!※※※※※※※※※※※※重生前:“君清羽,你当真愚蠢的不可救药,现在就算你告诉世人,我是因为抢走了你的朱雀宝鼎,才有了如今的风光,又有谁会信你?对了,我忘记告诉你了,你知道拼死护你的师父与朋友是如何死的?他们被我活生生刮肉喂狗!生生疼死的!”山崖之巅,女子一袭白衣,如莲花般纯洁无暇,却字字恶毒,声声剜心。“你为什么这么做?”“哈哈,君清羽,你可道我未婚夫是谁?他是你十二年前所救的男人,我能得到他,是在冒充你的前提下!原本我的荣耀是你的,他也是你的,这两样东西都是我从你那夺来,所以我恨你!你若死了,我就能当做这些从最初就属于我!”重生后:“清羽妹妹,我们好歹是一族同胞,请你看在君家养你这么大的份上,放过我们这一次可好?”少女哭的梨花带雨,声声哀求。她站起身,冰冷的匕首低着少女的脖子,唇边的笑容犹如恶魔般绽放。“你说,我是将你的脸皮割下来,还是刮肉喂狗?”※※※※※※※※※※※※关于本文:一对一,男强,女强,宠文,无虐无误会,男女主身心皆干净,有洁癖的妹纸欢迎跳坑,我也有洁癖。此文表达的不只爱情,友情和亲情同样会有,不是每个出场的男人都会深情女主,我想写那种可以为朋友抛头颅洒热血的友情。武技:贱品,下品,中品,上品,极品,凡品……武者等级:后天一级到十二级……
  • 仙袍

    仙袍

    弹指间日月寂灭,生死外岁月轮回,天地容山河,乾坤纳虚无!游尽人间多少客,赤血云霄有少年……
  • 地球“发烧”了(趣味地理卷)

    地球“发烧”了(趣味地理卷)

    地理是研究地球表面各种自然现象、人文现象以及它们之间的相互关系和区域差异的学科,是最美丽的科学,也是与我们的生活联系最紧密的科学。为什么这样说呢?
  • 敢说你懂营销管理:亲历跨国名企的管理趣事

    敢说你懂营销管理:亲历跨国名企的管理趣事

    本书整理了作者多年来在世界500强跨国企业零售管理工作中积累的诸多鲜活案例,并将这些内容有体系地呈现出来,分别讨论了招聘培训、目标理、工作量管理、会议管理、客户管理、营销活动管理、团队激励与文化建设等七大营销管理要素,将枯燥的理论变成了有趣的生动读物,并对管理实务中的难题给出了具体的解决方案。 该书弥补了市场中既好看又实用的营销管理类图书比较少的现状,最适合营销主管和有志成为营销主管的人阅读,也可作为所有对管理感兴趣朋友的休闲读物,从中吸取“正能量”。
  • 甜心小娇妻,总裁挡不住

    甜心小娇妻,总裁挡不住

    她本是天才设计师,一场阴谋之下无奈选择放弃梦想,为了给弟弟治病,她苦苦奔波,遭人冷眼。他是霸道总裁,行事果决,因她的才华步步逼近,哪知凉薄的心开始狂乱。“做我的女人!”“不,唔……”话未出口,就被一双大手按在墙上。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 是爱过了火

    是爱过了火

    六年前生母坠崖,亲生哥哥成植物人,他将所有过错归结于她,处处凌辱,人人可欺。她不过是楚家养女,莫名担上罪责,为他掏心掏肺付出所有,他却只当她是妹妹的存血库,器官储存器!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 馑年无往事

    馑年无往事

    《馑年无往事》是一部散发着浓郁的生活气息和北京胡同的地方特色的长篇小说,是“原生态”的北京映象!饥荒年代,物质匮乏,陆仲祥在自家小院开了一家小酒铺,成为了胡同的中心,并由此展开了各种小人物的爱恨离合。故事背景虽然是在60年代,但故事的重心却是胡同老百姓的生活。作者淡化了那个年代特殊的政治环境,更多地着眼于底层民众的日常生活。本书描写的不仅是北京旧城区犄角旮旯的事儿,更是北京四合院里的人生百态。