登陆注册
15459000000159

第159章 Chapter 6(4)

"Well," said Maggie presently, "perhaps that may be all. If I'm unhappy I'm jealous; it must come to the same thing; and with you at least I'm not afraid of the word. If I'm jealous, don't you see? I'm tormented," she went on--"and all the more if I'm helpless. And if I'm both helpless AND tormented I stuff my pocket-handkerchief into my mouth, I keep it there, for the most part, night and day, so as not to be heard too indecently moaning. Only now, with you, at last, I can't keep it longer; I've pulled it out and here I am fairly screaming at you. They're away," she wound up, "so they can't hear; and I'm by a miracle of arrangement not at luncheon with father at home. I live in the midst of miracles of arrangement, half of which I admit are my own; I go about on tiptoe, I watch for every sound, I feel every breath, and yet I try all the while to seem as smooth as old satin dyed rose-colour. Have you ever thought of me," she asked, "as really feeling as I do?"

Her companion, conspicuously, required to be clear. "Jealous, unhappy, tormented--? No," said Mrs. Assingham; "but at the same time--and though you may laugh at me for it!--I'm bound to confess I've never been so awfully sure of what I may call knowing you. Here you are indeed, as you say--such (111) a deep little person! I've never imagined your existence poisoned, and since you wish to know if I consider it need be I've not the least difficulty in speaking on the spot. Nothing decidedly strikes me as more unnecessary."

For a minute after this they remained face to face Maggie had sprung up while her friend sat enthroned, and, after moving to and fro in her intensity, now paused to receive the light she had invoked. It had accumulated, considerably, by this time, round Mrs. Assingham's ample presence, and it made, even to our young woman s own sense, a medium in which she could at last take a deeper breath. "I've affected you, these months--and these last weeks in especial--as quiet and natural and easy?"

But it was a question that took, not imperceptibly, some answering.

"You've never affected me, from the first hour I beheld you, as anything but--in a way all your own--absolutely good and sweet and beautiful. In a way, as I say," Mrs. Assingham almost caressingly repeated, "just all your very own--nobody else's at all. I've never thought of you but as OUTSIDE of ugly things, so ignorant of any falsity or cruelty or vulgarity as never to have to be touched by them or to touch them. I've never mixed you up with them; there would have been time enough for that if they had seemed to be near you. But they have n't--if that s what you want to know."

"You've only believed me contented then because you've believed me stupid?"

Mrs. Assingham had a free smile now for the length of this stride, dissimulated though it might be (112) in a graceful little frisk. "If I had believed you stupid I should n't have thought you interesting, and if I had n't thought you interesting I should n't have noted whether I 'knew' you, as I've called it, or not. What I've always been conscious of is your having concealed about you somewhere no small amount of character; quite as much in fact," Fanny smiled, "as one could suppose a person of your size able to carry. The only thing was," she explained, "that thanks to your never calling one's attention to it, I had n't made out much more about it, and should have been vague above all as to WHERE you carried it or kept it.

Somewhere UNDER, I should simply have said--like that little silver cross you once showed me, blest by the Holy Father, that you always wear, out of sight, next your skin. That relic I've had a glimpse of"--with which she continued to invoke the privilege of humour. "But the precious little innermost, say this time little golden personal nature of you--blest by a greater power I think even than the Pope--THAT you've never consentingly shown me. I'm not sure you've ever consentingly shown it to any one. You've been in general too modest."

Maggie, trying to follow, almost achieved a little fold of her forehead.

"I strike you as modest to-day--modest when I stand here and scream at you?"

"Oh your screaming, I've granted you, is something new. I must fit it on somewhere. The question is, however," Mrs. Assingham further proceeded, "of what the deuce I can fit it on to. Do you mean," she asked, "to the fact of our friends' being, from yesterday to to-morrow, at a place where they may more or (113) less irresponsibly meet?" She spoke with the air of putting it as badly for them as possible. "Are you thinking of their being there alone--of their having consented to be?" And then as she had waited without result for her companion to say: "But is n't it true that--after you had this time again, at the eleventh hour, said you would n't--they would really much rather not have gone?"

"Yes--they would certainly much rather not have gone. But I wanted them to go."

"Then, my dear child, what in the world is the matter?"

"I wanted to see if they WOULD. And they've had to," Maggie added. "It was the only thing."

Her friend appeared to wonder. "From the moment you and your father backed out?"

"Oh I don't mean go for those people. I mean go for us. For father and me," Maggie went on. "Because now they know."

"They 'know'?" Fanny Assingham quavered.

"That I've been for some time past taking more notice. Notice of the queer things in our life."

Maggie saw her companion for an instant on the point of asking her what these queer things might be; but Mrs. Assingham had the next minute brushed by that ambiguous opening and taken, as she evidently felt, a better one.

"And is it for that you did it? I mean gave up the visit."

"It's for that I did it. To leave them to themselves--as they less and less want, or at any rate less and less venture to appear to want, to be left. As they had for so long arranged things," the Princess went on, (114)

"you see they sometimes have to be." And then, as if baffled by the lucidity of this, Mrs. Assingham for a little said nothing: "Now do you think I'm modest?"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 异决

    异决

    异决,就是发挥到最大限度的异能,几个看似普通的高中生却是拥有异决的人,被看穿的心,瞬间消失的人,这一切,将在青都上演......
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 重生之修神落晗

    重生之修神落晗

    本文宠文,一对一,豪门中的豪门,女主绝美,男主妖孽。男强女强,美男多多。
  • 王俊凯我没有错过你

    王俊凯我没有错过你

    洛可兮为小螃蟹一枚,在遇上王俊凯后,会发生什么呢。。。。。。
  • 城南风雪

    城南风雪

    风雪山庄是江南第一的武林名家,一百多年前风雪山庄的传奇人物,当时的庄主苏雪容与来自东瀛的浪人首领荻野武藏的一场决战使风雪山庄的苏家在江湖中扬名立万。山庄的密阁中据说还保留着那场大战的证据——当时荻野武藏的佩刀。一百多年后,一个自称来自荻野武藏当时所统领的浪人组织黑鹰的神秘高手云鹤突然出现在中原,并接连打败掌管密阁钥匙的五个高手中的两个......他是为了夺取密阁中的宝刀?或者还有其他的目的?在真相逐步揭开的同时,风雪山庄上一辈的恩怨也逐步浮出水面......
  • 梦翔战记

    梦翔战记

    修身,制果,拼天下是为三大主。修身乃锻体之流,就好像工程建设,血液血肉,破而立之,五官五脏,血管筋脉,铜皮铁骨,金身不灭。以魔界,冥界位面为主。由于生活环境恶劣,资源溃乏。制果二流,就好像摇控养成,以天地之气儲之于单田,收发自如,气聚成液,可育养万物,液凝成丹,碎丹生婴,万物生灵,任你驱使。以修真界,仙界为主。生活环境极好。第三流的小宇宙,冥想增长精神力于脑海,驳使天地间各系元素为己用。以魔法斗气界为主。
  • 依楞严究竟事忏

    依楞严究竟事忏

    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。
  • 机铠英雄

    机铠英雄

    机动铠甲,外形如同古代的铠甲一般,却是未来科技的结晶。机动铠甲不但可以搭载各种威力强大的武器,还可以装备特殊的芯片、配件,从而拥有着让人难以想象的作战能力。这是一款以未来科幻为主题的游戏,玩家身着机动铠甲,手持各种未来神兵,更能建造太空战舰,开发小行星,甚至可以率领着自己的舰队,去占领浩瀚宇宙中的每一颗行星。另外,这款游戏还提供了一个特别的游戏模式:英雄模式。选择英雄模式的玩家,可以拥有各种与众不同的能力,接到史诗级的英雄任务,得到无比丰厚的奖励,但在这个模式下,游戏角色的生命却只有一次,一旦死亡,无法复活,所拥有的一切也将顷刻之间化为乌有。
  • 唯一的希望

    唯一的希望

    征服R国时,他只用了一句话,“难道我们不是长得一样吗?”当希望的脚步,步入M国时,他也只用了一句话,“华夏不就是联邦吗?”依稀记得M国,当时的情景,那是在一个广场上,无数人高马大的M国人轻抚着左胸,神情虔诚地喃喃道,“Ho,myGod!”但是身处土生土长的华夏,他却用了一辈子的时间也琢磨不透华夏人在想什么?他是人类末世五年后,弥留下来唯一的一个希望······他是否很改变人类走向灭亡命运的格局,难道你不想看看吗?(PS:本人看过现存将尽的所有生化或者末日类型的电影,小说,所以想写一本心里所想的末日小说)
  • 神医本倾城

    神医本倾城

    在一个月黑风高的实验夜,有全世界第一神医称号的潋舒被车撞了……then~华丽丽的穿越了~穿越就穿越吧,干嘛穿越到一个恶名远扬的花痴相府二小姐楚潋舒上面?!这个在她旁边的球是怎么回事?“娘亲~”不屑的撇撇嘴,这又怎样,咱不怕!开医馆,降白虎,三大美男跟她走~但是,她只要一生一世一双人君陌一把搂住云舒,“怎么,你不嫁与本宫?”“不不不,”潋舒仰头看着那双墨绿色如耀石的眸子,“你娶我!”在旁边的楚小仓直接被无视了,谁能告诉他这个和他长得有三分像的坏叔叔到底是谁...为虾米抢了他的妈妈?!嘤嘤嘤,求抚摸求安慰~【本文一对一~一生一世一双人~不喜者误入。】