登陆注册
5413600000028

第28章

He went on to answer himself: "No, there it is on the floor just where I put it, under the bedroom door.No matter--it was only to say I had to go out but would be back to lunch.Sorry Iwas kept so late last night.Glad you didn't wait up for me--but you might have left the bedroom door open--it'd have been perfectly safe." He laughed good-naturedly."As it was, I was so kind-hearted that I didn't disturb you, but slept on the sofa."As he advanced toward her with the obvious intention of kissing her, she slowly turned and faced him.Their eyes met and he stopped short--her look was like the eternal ice that guards the pole.

"I saw you at the theater last night," she said evenly."And this morning, I sat and watched you as you lay on the sofa over there."He was taken completely off his guard.With a gasp that was a kind of groan he dropped into a chair, the surface of his mind strewn with the wreckage of the lying excuses he had got ready.

"Please don't try to explain," she went on in the same even tone."I understand now about--about Paris and--everything.Iknow that--father was right."

He gave her a terrified glance--no tears, no trace of excitement, only calmness and all the strength he knew was in her nature and, in addition, a strength he had not dreamed was there.

"What do you intend to do?" he asked after a long silence.

She did not answer immediately.When she did, she was not looking at him.

"When I married you--across the river from Battle Field," she said, "I committed a crime against my father and mother.This is--my punishment--the beginning of it.And now--there'll be the--the--baby--" A pause, then: "I must bear the consequences--if I can.But I shall not be your wife--never--never again.If you wish me to stay on that condition, I'll try.If not--""You MUST stay, Pauline," he interrupted."I don't care what terms you make, you must stay.It's no use for me to try to defend myself when you're in this mood.You wouldn't listen.

But you're right about not going.If you did, it'd break your father's and mother's hearts.I admit I did drink too much last night, and made a fool of myself.But if you were more experienced, you'd--"He thought he had worked his courage up to the point where he could meet her eyes.He tried it.Her look froze his flow of words."I KNOW that you were false from the beginning," she said.

"The man I thought you were never existed--and I know it.We won't speak of this--ever--after now.Surely you can't wish me to stay?" And into her voice surged all her longing to go, all her hope that he would reject the only terms on which self-respect would let her stay.

"Wish you to stay?" he repeated.And he faced her, looking at her, his chest heaving under the tempest of hate and passion that was raging in him--hate because she was defying and dictating to him, passion because she was so beautiful as she stood there, like a delicate, fine hot-house rose poised on a long, graceful stem."No wonder I LOVE you!" he exclaimed between his clenched teeth.

A bright spot burned in each of her cheeks and her look made him redden and lower his eyes.

"Now that I understand these last five months," she said, "that from you is an insult."His veins and muscles swelled with the fury he dared not show;for he saw and felt how dangerous her mood was.

"I'll agree to whatever you like, Pauline," he said humbly.

"Only, we mustn't have a flare-up and a scandal.I'll never speak to you again about--about anything you don't want to hear."She went into her bedroom.When, after half an hour, she reappeared, she was ready to go down to lunch.In the elevator he stole a glance at her--there was no color in her face, not even in her lips.His rage had subsided; he was ashamed of himself--before her.But he felt triumphant too.

"I thought she'd go, sure, in spite of her fear of hurting her father and mother," he said to himself."A mighty close squeak.I was stepping round in a powder magazine, with every word a lit match."In January she sank into a profound lassitude.Nothing interested her, everything wearied her.As the time drew near, her mother came to stay with her; and day after day the two women sat silent, Mrs.Gardiner knitting, Pauline motionless, hands idle in her lap, mind vacant.If she had any emotion, it was a hope that she would die and take her child with her.

"That would settle everything, settle it right," she reflected, with youth's morbid fondness for finalities.

When it was all over and she came out from under the opiate, she lay for a while, open-eyed but unseeing, too inert to grope for the lost thread of memory.She felt a stirring in the bed beside her, the movement of some living thing.She looked and there, squeezed into the edge of the pillow was a miniature head of a little old man--wrinkled, copperish.Yet the face was fat--ludicrously fat.A painfully homely face with tears running from the closed eyes, with an open mouth that driveled and drooled.

"What is it?" she thought, looking with faint curiosity."And why is it here?"Two small fists now rose aimlessly in the air above the face and flapped about; and a very tempest of noise issued from the sagging mouth.

"A baby," she reflected.Then memory came--"MY baby!"She put her finger in the way of the wandering fists.First one of them, then the other, awkwardly unclosed and as awkwardly closed upon it.She smiled.The grip tightened and tightened and tightened until she wondered how hands so small and new could cling so close and hard.Then that electric clasp suddenly tightened about her heart.She burst into tears and drew the child against her breast.The pulse of its current of life was beating against her own--and she felt it.She sobbed, laughed softly, sobbed again.

Her mother was bending anxiously over her.

"What's the matter, dearest?" she asked."What do you wish?""Nothing!" Pauline was smiling through her tears."Oh, mother, I am SO happy!" she murmured.

And her happiness lasted with not a break, with hardly a pause, all that spring and all that summer--or, so long as her baby's helplessness absorbed the whole of her time and thought.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 溺爱之暖妻至上

    溺爱之暖妻至上

    青黛,就读于医药大学,平凡低调。却没人知晓,她天赋惊人,一手针灸更是使得出神入化。一个冬日寒夜,好心救了个中枪男人。却没想到,随后而来的竟是无穷无尽的纠缠。救她于危难,送她千金古籍,替她撑场子······好吧,这个男人其实也不错。***薄桀傲,四九城的天之骄子,放肆、桀骜。一次救命之恩,让他认识了这个看似普通的女人。从此,却再也放不下。以往的骄傲不逊在她面前通通化作了柔情似水。不过,拿了我的心,你怎么能不偿还呢?就让你赔我一辈子吧!——————————————薄桀傲步步逼近,盯着青黛的目光,灼灼如火。一字一句,从他的薄唇里吐出,摄人心魄,“青黛,我要定你了!”一句话简介,这就是一个桀骜天才汉子遇上淡定中医软妹子,化身痴情好男人,无限宠溺的甜文。【脱衣篇】“脱衣服。”薄桀傲一脸正经。什么?青黛瞪大双眼,他们总共才见过两次面吧!“脱掉。”薄桀傲口风不改,却多解释了一句,“给我看看伤。”看着一旁的医药箱,青黛才发现自己想多了。“我自己来就行。”男女有别,这种事情还是自己来吧。“我不想重复第三遍。”“要么,就让我来帮你。”薄桀傲嘴角忽地跳起一抹笑意,像是冷冬中百花盛开似的。青黛一愣,薄桀傲已经开始上手准备自力更生了。“流氓!”“啪”的一声,一记响亮的耳光印在薄桀傲俊美无瑕的脸上,格外刺目。【宝贝篇】薄家才五岁的小不点,眨巴着大眼搂着青黛,声音软软诺诺地,“妈咪,爸比昨天晚上是不是叫我了啊?”青黛一愣,昨天晚上,小宝宝不是很早就回房睡了吗?“怎么了?”青黛搂着自己儿子的小身子,笑着问道。小宝宝童言无忌,“我昨晚起床上厕所的时候,听到爸比在房里喊道,‘宝贝,宝贝!’,声音好大呢!”青黛脸上的笑意一僵,无言以对。倒是一旁的薄桀傲,嘴角勾起,傻儿子,此宝贝非彼宝贝啊!本文一对一,不喜勿入。情节虚构,较真者请点右上的小叉,谢谢合作。
  • 流血的仕途:李斯与秦帝国(全集)

    流血的仕途:李斯与秦帝国(全集)

    本书将战国末年群雄逐鹿的历史盛卷亦庄亦谐铺展开来,刻画出千古第一丞相李斯,在大秦政坛曲折、传奇的一生。在这个英雄辈出的时代,李斯为了实现自我价值,成就仕途理想,谨慎低调却又次次冒着杀头危险。他与史上最强悍的大老板秦始皇纠缠,与权倾天下的竞争对手吕不韦、嫪毐这样的危险政客周旋,隐忍蓄势多年,最终崛起为大秦男二号书中密布的智慧与谋略、杀伐与权术、心法与玄机,令人心惊……本书不仅是一部李斯的独家仕途笔记,也是一部为官、从商、自我成功不可错失的技术集成秘籍。读一遍参透历史,读两遍醒悟人生。看李斯在大转折期的官场生存智慧,发现两千年来中国仕途的终极诡秘!
  • 癌症是这样治愈的

    癌症是这样治愈的

    本书就癌症康复涉及的心理治疗、饮食调养、身心锻炼、生活指导及相关医学知识等内容进行了全面论述。全书分两个部分:创造癌症康复奇迹的心路历程和癌症患者须知道。
  • 听说顾先生暗恋我

    听说顾先生暗恋我

    全城瞩目的神秘订婚宴上,为抢头条混进来的她被拎出来,“我未婚妻,你们认识一下。”后妈和妹妹当众傻眼。她以为走上富裕人生时,突然空降神秘boss……陆晚晚内心真是“哔”了狗,都说顾安南富可敌国,谁来告诉她,三百八能计较一辈子的算哪门子有钱人?这必须要离婚好吗!
  • 打动人心的68个沟通技巧(教你成功丛书)

    打动人心的68个沟通技巧(教你成功丛书)

    沟通的本质是心灵与心灵的对话,沟通的目的是共赢,沟通的前提是心态,沟通的技巧是倾听。如何创造活跃的沟通气氛,而后直入对方的内心?如何凝聚谈话的焦点,吸引听者全部的注意力?如何强化谈话内容,清晰表达,消除沟通障碍?本书通过68个打动人心的沟通技巧,让你的沟通能力更上一层楼!
  • 佛系升级系统

    佛系升级系统

    什么是佛系升级?脑海中杀怪,升级不杀生,这就是佛系。
  • 瑶石山人稿

    瑶石山人稿

    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。
  • 回到古代当天才

    回到古代当天才

    刚刚毕业的江林因为某种原因来到了与他完全不熟悉的世界,成为了一个浑身是血的少年。就还在他思考如何去完成人生之际,却因为肚腹空空而无法行动。正在他准备轮回下一个人生之时,却遇到一位少女,就因为这几个简简单单的野菜饼,这个时代的人们将会发生巨大的改变
  • 凤兮凤兮

    凤兮凤兮

    卫玠总角乘羊车入市,风神秀异,见者皆以为玉人,观之者倾都。魏晋,是个风姿飘摇的年代。风流的年代里盛行着风流的思想,风流的年代里盛行着风流的衣着,风流的年代里甚至盛行着风流的药物——当然,风流的年代里最不应当缺少的,就是风流的灵魂。这许许多多的灵魂中,有一个,非常安静。他活了二十七岁,长眠了一千八百年。他活着的时候,名满天下,游洛阳、到南京,造成万人空巷的盛况,自己却“终生喜愠不行于色”,成为一个让人浮想联翩的谜语;后来他死了,谜底也就破了。人们忘记了他的身世、思想、经历、才华,只记得他传奇般的容貌。卫玠的名字,从此变成了一个人们茶余饭后津津乐道的,象征美男子的符号。关于他的那些曾经生动真实过的东西,只能在文字里复活——因此,有了这篇野史乱弹的传记。
  • 无公害蔬菜标准化生产技术(南方本)

    无公害蔬菜标准化生产技术(南方本)

    无公害农产品的标准化生产指的是依据《中华人民共和国标准化法》,农业部的《无公害农产品管理办法》,国家质检总局、农业部和各省、市、自治区公布的无公害农产品的相关质量技术标准,严格地按照国家标准、地方标准以及行业标准的规定,如产地环境质量标准、产品质量标准、生产技术规范等进行的无公害农产品的生产的过程。