登陆注册
5441400000077

第77章 Chapter 7(2)

These allowances of his spirit were all the same consistent with a great gladness at the sight of the term of his ordeal; for it was the end of his seeming to agree that questions and doubts had a place. The more he had inwardly turned the matter over the more it had struck him that they had in truth only an ugliness. What he could have best borne, as he now believed, would have been Charlotte's simply saying to him that she did n't like him enough. This he would n't have enjoyed, but he would quite have understood it and been able ruefully to submit. She DID like him enough--nothing to contradict that had (230) come out for him; so that he was restless for her as well as for himself. She looked at him hard a moment when he handed her his telegram, and the look, for what he fancied a dim shy fear in it, gave him perhaps his best moment of conviction that--as a man, so to speak--he properly pleased her. He said nothing--the words sufficiently did it for him, doing it again better still as Charlotte, who had left her chair at his approach, murmured them out. "We start to-night to bring you all our love and joy and sympathy." There they were, the words, and what did she want more? She did n't however as she gave him back the little unfolded leaf say they were enough--though he saw the next moment that her silence was probably not disconnected from her having just visibly turned pale. Her extraordinarily fine eyes, as it was his present theory that he had always thought them, shone at him the more darkly out of this change of colour; and she had again with it her apparent way of subjecting herself, for explicit honesty and through her willingness to face him, to any view he might take, all at his ease, and even to wantonness, of the condition he produced in her. As soon as he saw how emotion kept her soundless he knew himself deeply touched, since it proved that, little as she professed, she had been beautifully hoping. They stood there a minute while he took in from this sign that, yes then, certainly she liked him enough--liked him enough to make him, old as he was ready to brand himself, flush for the pleasure of it. The pleasure of it accordingly made him speak first. "Do you begin a little to be satisfied?"

(231) Still, oh still a little, she had to think. "We've hurried them you see. Why so breathless a start?"

"Because they want to congratulate us. They want," said Adam Verver, "to SEE our happiness."

She wondered again--and this time also, for him, as publicly as possible.

"So much as that?"

"Do you think it's too much?"

She continued to think plainly. "They were n't to have started for another week."

"Well, what then? Is n't our situation worth the little sacrifice? We'll go back to Rome as soon as you like WITH them."

This seemed to hold her--as he had previously seen her held, just a trifle inscrutably, by his allusions to what they would do together on a certain contingency. "Worth it, the little sacrifice, for whom? For us, naturally--yes," she said. "We want to see them--for our reasons. That is," she rather dimly smiled, "YOU do."

"And you do, my dear, too!" he bravely declared.

"Yes then--I do too," she after an instant ungrudgingly enough acknowledged.

"For us, however, something depends on it."

"Rather! But does nothing depend on it for them?"

"What CAN--from the moment that, as appears, they don't want to nip us in the bud? I can imagine their rushing up to prevent us. But an enthusiasm for us that can wait so very little--such intense eagerness, I confess," she went on, "more than a little puzzles me. You may think me," she also added, "ungracious and suspicious, but the Prince can't at (232) all WANT to come back so soon. He wanted quite too intensely to get away."

Mr. Verver considered. "Well, hasn't he been away?"

"Yes, just long enough to see how he likes it. Besides," said Charlotte, "he may n't be able to join in the rosy view of our case that you impute to Maggie. It can't in the least have appeared to him hitherto a matter of course that you should give his wife a bouncing stepmother."

Adam Verver at this looked grave. "I'm afraid then he'll just have to accept from us whatever his wife accepts; and accept it--if he can imagine no better reason--just because she does. That," he declared, "will have to do for him."

His tone made her for a moment meet his face; after which, "Let me," she abruptly said, "see it again--taking from him the folded leaf that she had given back and he had kept in his hand. "Is n't the whole thing," she asked when she had read it over, "perhaps but a way like another for their gaining time?"

He again stood staring; but the next minute, with that upward spring of his shoulders and that downward pressure of his pockets which she had already more than once at disconcerted moments determined in him, he turned sharply away and wandered from her in silence. He looked about in his small despair he crossed the hotel court, which, overarched and glazed, muffled against loud sounds and guarded against crude sights, heated, gilded, draped, almost carpeted, with exotic trees in tubs, exotic ladies in (233) chairs, the general exotic accent and presence suspended, as with wings folded or feebly fluttering, in the superior, the supreme, the inexorably enveloping Parisian medium, resembled some critical apartment of large capacity, some "dental," medical, surgical waiting-room, a scene of mixed anxiety and desire, preparatory, for gathered barbarians, to the due amputation or extraction of excrescences and redundancies of barbarism. He went as far as the porte-cochere, took counsel afresh of his usual optimism, sharpened even somehow just here by the very air he tasted, and then came back smiling to Charlotte. "It's incredible to you that when a man is still as much in love as Amerigo his most natural impulse should be to feel what his wife feels, to believe what she believes, to want what she wants?--in the absence, that is, of special impediments to his so doing."

同类推荐
  • 庚申夷氛纪略

    庚申夷氛纪略

    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。
  • 痛史

    痛史

    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。
  • 元故宫遗录

    元故宫遗录

    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。
  • 医家秘奥之脉法解

    医家秘奥之脉法解

    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。
  • 大方广佛花严经修慈分一卷

    大方广佛花严经修慈分一卷

    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。
热门推荐
  • 迈进

    迈进

    请看一个普通底层青年如何从最底层一步一步踏向巅峰活出自己的风采。彻底反转自己的人生从一个底层踏向一代枭雄本书会带给你一个全新的惊喜。带你进入另一个精神世界。有请!主人公宁萧带你走进新的世界
  • 南郭先生不说话

    南郭先生不说话

    不可一世的瞿琰琰女士结婚了,新郎是与其恋爱长跑六年的张梓源先生,他们的好友及伴娘首选余琰女士没有出席这场婚礼,并在不知名的远方发出了鼹鼠般的尖叫,而伴郎褚洵先生在面对采访镜头时只是冷漠地表示自己很高兴能来参加挚友的婚礼。以下是前方记者为您发来的报导:瞿琰琰:“我觉得我还能抢救一下。”张梓源:“别救我了,我想静静。”余琰:“啊——”褚洵:“我是静静。”对于瞿琰琰而言,张斯达只是在她的爱情里上演了一场又一场的滥竽充数。对于张梓源而言,瞿不知真的用了二十几年去展现她对爱情的一无所知。于是当岁月一页页揭过去,他们还是得手挽着手,走进鸡飞狗跳的婚姻。
  • 浮生如梦之南柯一梦

    浮生如梦之南柯一梦

    穿越千年的等候,跨时空的爱恋,梦中之人,何去何从。现实与梦境交织,她该如何选择?
  • 失控冷男香

    失控冷男香

    这对他也太不公平了吧?明明他是家里最小的儿子,明明他上面还有两个哥哥,为什么事事都选中他?逼自己接过家族企业的总裁位置也就罢了,现在还硬塞给自己一个未婚妻,而这个未婚妻居然还是个智力只有五岁的白痴!大名鼎鼎的“万花丛中过,片叶不沾身”的他颜面何在,让他沈子御情何以堪?哼,以为用一个美丽白痴就能管束住他吗?那你们的算盘可就打错了。他沈子御照样还是流连花丛中。可是为何看着她纯净的面孔,纯洁的眼睛,他会有内疚的感觉?而一年之后病愈的她已经有了与年龄相符的智力,外表也变得更加的成熟与美丽。面对这样的她,他居然有怦然心动的感觉,难道他爱上了这个小白痴?绝对不会的!可是为什么当她却与其他的男人说说笑笑,亲亲热热时他又会觉得烦躁不安?别忘了,她可是他的妻子,这辈子都别想逃出他的手掌心!即使不爱她,也不放开她。
  • 真实末日生存游戏

    真实末日生存游戏

    秋星雨怎么也没想到,自己竟然是关键人物,而自己的宠物还有另一重身份。为什么她会背叛自己!?究竟是丧尸可怕?还是人心更可怕?如何在这危险的末世中存活下来,才是成为王者的关键。
  • 明无

    明无

    少年究竟是魔还是神?曾经的挚友会与他为敌人还是……朋友?
  • 《世说新语》名句

    《世说新语》名句

    《国学名句故事绘:<世说新语>名句》是一本双色图文书。以魏晋南北朝时期非常有名的笔记体小说集《世说新语》为底本,精选了六十六则名句,分为立志修身、交友处世、治家劝学等各篇,逐则释义、析理,再配以暗合名句意蕴的历史典故、逸闻趣事、古画碑帖,供读者阅读、赏析。《世说新语》是中小学生必读名著,是教育部指定中华优秀传统文化教育读物;同时,《世说新语》记述的奇人趣事也最为人们津津乐道,鲁迅就称其为“名士的教科书”。我们以名句+故事+插图的形式出版,帮助中小学生和传统文化爱好者获得“三分钟轻松阅读,一辈子受益无穷”阅读价值。
  • 新壶中天

    新壶中天

    一壶一世界,一桃一轮回。一符一生死,一念一层天。我陈元九,愿用毕生精力,斩尽天下一切妖邪!
  • 医原

    医原

    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。
  • 贫道修气不修道法

    贫道修气不修道法

    施主,放手,我只是一名道士。不放........施主哈,我只是一名道士,只会驱邪抓鬼。那就练习。施主哈~男女授受不亲.......那我呢?邪魅一笑。擦擦冷汗,施主与我更加授受不亲