登陆注册
5442500000117

第117章 CHAPTER XXV(1)

"I DIDN'T ask your father, after all," was one of the things that Thorpe said to his wife next day. He had the manner of one announcing a concession, albeit in an affable spirit, and she received the remark with a scant, silent nod.

Two days later he recurred to the subject. They were again upon the terrace, where he had been lounging in an easy-chair most of the day, with the books his sister had bid him read on a table beside him. He had glanced through some of them in a desultory fashion, cutting pages at random here and there, but for the most part he had looked straight before him at the broad landscape, mellowing now into soft browns and yellows under the mild, vague October sun. He had not thought much of the books, but he had a certain new sense of enjoyment in the fruits of this placid, abstracted rumination which perhaps they had helped to induce.

"About your father," he said now, as his wife, who had come out to speak with him on some other matter, was turning to go away again: "I'm afraid I annoyed you the other day by what I said.""I have no recollection of it," she told him, with tranquil politeness, over her shoulder.

He found himself all at once keenly desirous of a conversation on this topic. "But I want you to recollect,"he said, as he rose to his feet. There was a suggestion of urgency in his tone which arrested her attention.

She moved slowly toward the chair, and after a little perched herself upon one of its big arms, and looked up at him where he leant against the parapet.

"I've thought of it a good deal," he went on, in halting explanation. His purpose seemed clearer to him than were the right phrases in which to define it.

"I persisted in saying that I'd do something you didn't want me to do--something that was a good deal more your affair than mine--and I've blamed myself for it.

That isn't at all what I want to do."

Her face as well as her silence showed her to be at a loss for an appropriate comment. She was plainly surprised, and seemingly embarrassed as well. "I'm sure you always wish to be nice," she said at last. The words and tone were alike gracious, but he detected in them somewhere a perfunctory note.

"Oh--nice!" he echoed, in a sudden stress of impatience with the word. "Damn being 'nice'! Anybody can be 'nice.' I'm thinking of something ten thousand times bigger than being 'nice.'""I withdraw the word immediately--unreservedly," she put in, with a smile in which he read that genial mockery he knew so well.

"You laugh at me--whenever I try to talk seriously,"he objected.

"I laugh?" she queried, with an upward glance of demurely simulated amazement. "Impossible! I assure you I've forgotten how.""Ah, now we get to it!" he broke out, with energy.

"You're really feeling about it just as I am.

You're not satisfied with what we're doing--with the life we're leading--any more than I am. I see that, plain enough, now. I didn't dream of it before. Somehow Igot the idea that you were enjoying it immensely--the greenhouses and gardens and all that sort of thing.

And do you know who it was that put me right--that told me you hated it?""Oh, don't let us talk of him!" Edith exclaimed, swiftly.

Thorpe laughed. "You're wrong. It wasn't your father.

I didn't see him. No--it was my sister. She's never seen you, but all the same she knew enough to give me points.

She told me I was a fool to suppose you were happy here.""How clever of her!" A certain bantering smile accompanied the words, but on the instant it faded away. She went on with a musing gravity. "I'm sorry I don't get to know your sister. She seems an extremely real sort of person.

I can understand that she might be difficult to live with--Idaresay all genuine characters are--but she's very real.

Although, apparently, conversation isn't her strong point, still I enjoy talking with her.""How do you mean?" Thorpe asked, knitting his brows in puzzlement.

"Oh, I often go to her shop--or did when I was in town.

I went almost immediately after our--our return to England.

I was half afraid she would recognize me--the portraits in the papers, you know--but apparently she didn't. And it's splendid--the way she says absolutely nothing more than it's necessary to say. And her candour! If she thinks books are bad she says so. Fancy that!"He still frowned uneasily as he looked down at her.

"You never mentioned to me that you had gone there,"he told her, as if in reproach.

"Ah, it was complicated," Edith explained. "She objects to knowing me--I think secretly I respect her a great deal for that--and therefore there is something clandestine about my getting to know her--and I could not be sure how it would impress you, and really it seemed simplest not to mention it.""It isn't that alone," he declared, grave-faced still, but with a softer voice. "Do you remember what I said the other day? It would make all the difference in the world to me, if--if you were really--actually my other half!"The phrase which he had caught at seemed, as it fell upon the air, to impregnate it with some benumbing quality.

The husband and wife looked dumbly, almost vacantly at one another, for what appeared a long time.

"I mean"--all at once Thorpe found tongue, and even a sort of fluency as he progressed--"I mean, if you shared things really with me! Oh, I'm not complaining; you mustn't think that. The agreement we made at the start--you've kept your part of it perfectly. You've done better than that: you've kept still about the fact that it made you unhappy.""Oh no," she interposed, gently. "It is not the fact that it has made me unhappy.""Well--discontented, then," he resumed, without pause.

"Here we are. We do the thing we want to do--we make the kind of home for ourselves that we've agreed we would like--and then it turns out that somehow it doesn't come up to expectations. You get tired of it.

I suppose, if the truth were known, I'm by way of being tired of it too. Well, if you look at it, that fact is the most important thing in the world for both of us.

同类推荐
  • 佛说波斯匿王太后崩尘土坌身经

    佛说波斯匿王太后崩尘土坌身经

    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。
  • 江淮异人录

    江淮异人录

    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。
  • 大乘百法明门论

    大乘百法明门论

    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。
  • 尊婆须蜜菩萨所集论

    尊婆须蜜菩萨所集论

    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。
  • 东岩集

    东岩集

    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
  • 重生之名门贵女

    重生之名门贵女

    她温婉可人,才满名城,却被她从小敬爱的父亲和对她慈爱有加的继母下药毁去清白,把她当礼物送人只为了换取一颗药丸。以为姐妹情深,却最终死在姐姐手里。情深意重的夫君和姐姐一起把自己和姐夫送上床,只为了却姐夫多年的心愿换取更多的权势。怒火之中,嗜血锥心之痛,她以血起誓若有来生定让他们血债血偿。重生归来,这一次她要撕破他们的面具,让他们虚伪的面容大白于天下。亲爹不喜?无所谓,那就脱离父女关系!后母面慈心狠,心机深沉?那就一步步揭开她狠毒的后母嘴脸,让她生不如死。姐姐阴毒?把她和渣男送做堆!这一世,她定要活出自己的风华绝代!
  • 涅槃重生:冷王的惊世狂妃

    涅槃重生:冷王的惊世狂妃

    她是名震天下的幽冥军之主,却在关键一战中遭爱人背叛,跌落神坛。受情敌折磨,被爱人射杀,她险些命丧城楼,却是华丽转身,走上扮猪吃虎的康庄大道,偶尔毒舌,刹那风华绽放,便是艳压天下,彼时能把敌人直接给气死,看不过又干不过。众人:原以为只是一头好吃懒做的猪,没想到却是一只吃人不吐骨头的怪兽。他是无情无心的西秦摄政王,孤冷铁血,俯视众生,亦是败她之人,做事极为霸道,不留任何情面,不受任何威胁。他们的相处本该这样这样,没想到却是这样这样。表白篇“我喜欢你。”“什么是喜欢?”江渊羞涩:“喜欢就是两个人像蜜糖一样黏在一起,一生一世。”摄政王一眼看穿本质:“所以你想和本王生孩子。”********************************************************养猪篇摄政王一本正经:“你变重了。”江渊尴尬提醒:“你知不知道,说一个女子重是一件不太好的事。”摄政王认真:“七八百斤本王还是举得起的。”“七八百斤!你是在养猪啊!”“摄政王府有的是食物。”江渊泪崩:“您这爱好够独特啊!”王爷爱好是养猪,资深养猪专业户。人家是一入侯门深似海,她是一入王府胖似猪啊!!!*************************************************惩罚篇独守空房的摄政王:“昨晚去哪儿了?”“和朋友喝酒去了……”摄政王释放冷气:“嗯?”江渊怂:“我错了。只要你肯原谅我,怎么惩罚都可以。”看着被吻咬的惨不忍睹的脖子,江渊:“我想用脂粉遮一遮。”摄政王:“不准。”上朝,损友:“战况够激烈的啊!”江渊连忙捂住脖子,清白道:“没有,真的没有。”满朝文武羡慕嫉妒恨:“有!真的有!”******************************************************女主,强势宠夫,霸气侧漏。格言:王爷太冷怎么办,扑倒,撩之!男主披着高冷的皮,做着腹黑的事,傲娇十足。男强女强,互宠,甜到飞起。
  • 知识结晶

    知识结晶

    歌德说:“名言集和格言集是社会上最大的财宝——只要懂得在适当的场合把前者带进会话里,在适当的时间唤起对后者的记忆。”我们人类社会那些出类拔萃的名家巨人,在推动人类社会向前不断发展的同时,也给我们留下了宝贵的物质财富。他们通过自身的体验和观察研究,还给我们留下了许多有益的经验和感悟,他们将其付诸语言表达出来,被称之为名言或格言,其中蕴含并闪耀着智慧的光芒,成为世人宝贵的精神财富。
  • 穿越之庶妃大翻身

    穿越之庶妃大翻身

    前世的她被人背叛,重生来到了古代。却被逼代姐出嫁。这个男人在迎娶她的同时,下令诛灭她家九族。于是在这个前门办婚事,后门办丧事的府中,她被人抬上轿,成为了这个暴君的弃妃。
  • 药师的狐妻之异世成凰

    药师的狐妻之异世成凰

    黎乐出生的那天被测试出是没有灵根的废物,宠爱她的母亲为她被活活打死,被贩给奴隶场斗兽,视如兄长的救命恩人眼睁着看着她被挑断脚筋,毁掉容貌,扔进镇兽塔。擦干血泪挣扎生存,镇兽塔中驭苍狼,觉醒隐灵根,凤凰涅槃,浴火重生。黎乐说:“那些辱我的,欺我的,杀我的,负我的,算计我的,陷害我的,不急,让他们把脖子洗干净了,我再逐一讨回来。”
  • 明星大小姐之总裁很霸道

    明星大小姐之总裁很霸道

    “你走开,我不想看见你。”苏雨熙大喊道。“干嘛呀?生气啦?”韩辰俞哄着苏雨熙,摸了摸她的头。苏雨熙家族出身,梦想想成为一个明星,她性格鲁莽、爱闯祸、爱爬树、爱闹事、无一优点。可他就是喜欢这样的他,他好像雨水侵蚀她的所有。
  • 建设富裕和谐秀美江西

    建设富裕和谐秀美江西

    共分为五篇,主要内容包括:奔向全面小康、唱响和谐之歌、保护绿色赣鄱、建设精神家园、弘扬文明新风。并选取了50个通俗易懂、生动有趣的小故事,形式新颖活泼,内容丰富厚实,是面向青少年宣传普及党代会精神的好读本、好教材。
  • 把最好的自己留给对的人

    把最好的自己留给对的人

    苏薇薇25岁,在过去的四年内,她和一个已婚的成功男人沉沦于一段婚外恋,享尽物质繁荣。一场意外的邂逅,阳光男孩郑东学走进了薇薇的生活。两个年轻人情投意合,渐渐走近。但薇薇的中年男友陆正隆却警告薇薇“不要再见那个男孩”。可就在此时,薇薇发现自己怀孕了,为保护薇薇和她的孩子,郑东学辞去工作,带薇薇远走他乡云游四海。他们从此远离世俗纷争。薇薇终于看懂,东学之所以能够接受她,接受一个不属于他自己的孩子,是因为他内心的爱不同于世俗人生狭隘的爱。薇薇也终于相信,东学才是她生命中那个“对的人”。
  • 生活小小过

    生活小小过

    希望有人能像我一样,即使狼狈不堪,即使不堪重负,也会笑着生活,平平淡淡才是生活,安安稳稳就是人生
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。