登陆注册
25173400000075

第75章

But as she got out of the train at Morningside Park Station she had a shock. She saw, twenty yards down the platform, the shiny hat and broad back and inimitable swagger of Ramage. She dived at once behind the cover of the lamp-room and affected serious trouble with her shoe-lace until he was out of the station, and then she followed slowly and with extreme discretion until the bifurcation of the Avenue from the field way insured her escape.

Ramage went up the Avenue, and she hurried along the path with a beating heart and a disagreeable sense of unsolved problems in her mind.

"That thing's going on," she told herself. "Everything goes on, confound it! One doesn't change anything one has set going by ****** good resolutions."And then ahead of her she saw the radiant and welcoming figure of Manning. He came as an agreeable diversion from an insoluble perplexity. She smiled at the sight of him, and thereat his radiation increased.

"I missed the hour of your release," he said, "but I was at the Vindicator Restaurant. You did not see me, I know. I was among the common herd in the place below, but I took good care to see you.""Of course you're converted?" she said.

"To the view that all those Splendid Women in the movement ought to have votes. Rather! Who could help it?"He towered up over her and smiled down at her in his fatherly way.

"To the view that all women ought to have votes whether they like it or not."He shook his head, and his eyes and the mouth under the black mustache wrinkled with his smile. And as he walked by her side they began a wrangle that was none the less pleasant to Ann Veronica because it served to banish a disagreeable preoccupation. It seemed to her in her restored geniality that she liked Manning extremely. The brightness Capes had diffused over the world glorified even his rival.

Part 7

The steps by which Ann Veronica determined to engage herself to marry Manning were never very clear to her. A medley of motives warred in her, and it was certainly not one of the least of these that she knew herself to be passionately in love with Capes; at moments she had a giddy intimation that he was beginning to feel keenly interested in her. She realized more and more the quality of the brink upon which she stood--the dreadful readiness with which in certain moods she might plunge, the unmitigated wrongness and recklessness of such a self-abandonment. "He must never know," she would whisper to herself, "he must never know.

Or else--Else it will be impossible that I can be his friend."That ****** statement of the case was by no means all that went on in Ann Veronica's mind. But it was the form of her ruling determination; it was the only form that she ever allowed to see daylight. What else was there lurked in shadows and deep places;if in some mood of reverie it came out into the light, it was presently overwhelmed and hustled back again into hiding. She would never look squarely at these dream forms that mocked the social order in which she lived, never admit she listened to the soft whisperings in her ear. But Manning seemed more and more clearly indicated as a refuge, as security. Certain ****** purposes emerged from the disingenuous muddle of her feelings and desires. Seeing Capes from day to day made a bright eventfulness that hampered her in the course she had resolved to follow. She vanished from the laboratory for a week, a week of oddly interesting days. . . .

When she renewed her attendance at the Imperial College the third finger of her left hand was adorned with a very fine old ring with dark blue sapphires that had once belonged to a great-aunt of Manning's.

That ring manifestly occupied her thoughts a great deal. She kept pausing in her work and regarding it, and when Capes came round to her, she first put her hand in her lap and then rather awkwardly in front of him. But men are often blind to rings. He seemed to be.

In the afternoon she had considered certain doubts very carefully, and decided on a more emphatic course of action. "Are these ordinary sapphires?" she said. He bent to her hand, and she slipped off the ring and gave it to him to examine.

"Very good," he said. "Rather darker than most of them. But I'm generously ignorant of gems. Is it an old ring?" he asked, returning it.

"I believe it is. It's an engagement ring. . . ." She slipped it on her finger, and added, in a voice she tried to make matter-of-fact: "It was given to me last week.""Oh!" he said, in a colorless tone, and with his eyes on her face.

"Yes. Last week."

She glanced at him, and it was suddenly apparent for one instant of illumination that this ring upon her finger was the crowning blunder of her life. It was apparent, and then it faded into the quality of an inevitable necessity.

"Odd!" he remarked, rather surprisingly, after a little interval.

There was a brief pause, a crowded pause, between them.

She sat very still, and his eyes rested on that ornament for a moment, and then travelled slowly to her wrist and the soft lines of her forearm.

"I suppose I ought to congratulate you," he said. Their eyes met, and his expressed perplexity and curiosity. "The fact is--Idon't know why--this takes me by surprise. Somehow I haven't connected the idea with you. You seemed complete--without that.""Did I?" she said.

"I don't know why. But this is like--like walking round a house that looks square and complete and finding an unexpected long wing running out behind."She looked up at him, and found he was watching her closely. For some seconds of voluminous thinking they looked at the ring between them, and neither spoke. Then Capes shifted his eyes to her microscope and the little trays of unmounted sections beside it. "How is that carmine working?" he asked, with a forced interest.

"Better," said Ann Veronica, with an unreal alacrity. "But it still misses the nucleolus."

同类推荐
  • 隋唐英雄传

    隋唐英雄传

    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。
  • 女科百问

    女科百问

    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。
  • 释门章服仪

    释门章服仪

    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。
  • 天元五歌

    天元五歌

    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。
  • 谷城山馆诗

    谷城山馆诗

    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。
热门推荐
  • 风袭星辰

    风袭星辰

    山中的少年,不甘屈服,誓要荡尽阻碍,斩尽仇敌。在这个冷酷无情的世界,在无止境的修仙路上,缔造一个自己的传说。
  • 幻剑迷踪

    幻剑迷踪

    一个少年为了一个承诺,在生死之间闯荡着,更是在无意间知道了自己的身世,然而却又爱上了仇人的女儿,在爱恨情仇中苦苦的挣扎着。
  • 阴魂不散

    阴魂不散

    一个喊冤而死的女人,一个怨气的积压,几百年不变的诅咒,一切的恐惧,一切毒咒,都在无限的蔓延,这个蔓延是无止境的。无人去过的梨花山,无限诡异的开始让每一个人的心不在安稳,没有人知道故事的结局,没有人知道这无限的恐怖会蔓延到什么时代。
  • 《水知识篇》(上)

    《水知识篇》(上)

    科普知识百科全书:水知识篇(上)是科普知识百科全书系列之一,《科普知识百科全书》结合当前最新的知识理论,从自然到科学、原理、论述到社会发展的包罗万象,非常适合青少年阅读需求。该书是丰富青少年阅历,培养青少年的想象力、创造力,加强他们的探索兴趣和对未来的向往憧憬,热爱科学的难得教材,是青少年生活、工作必备的大型工具书。
  • 大神之校草求放过

    大神之校草求放过

    “早知道我当时就不多嘴了”小玉。“现在没得后悔了,你已经逃不掉”轩。一句“你怎么就知道……”
  • 魔天武神

    魔天武神

    天地初始,一幅武神榜自虚无而生,落于武神大陆中心之地,武神榜三万名,代表武神大陆最强的三万名强者,每进阶一名,不仅可获得强横实力,还可获得一年寿元。陆天为重新振兴陆家,调查老祖死亡之谜,也为了在乱世中存活而战,谁知发现惊天大秘。
  • 狐王大大求不吃

    狐王大大求不吃

    某男一脸黑气“再哭爷就吃了你!”“……呜哇!!!!”“……”手里拎着某女,面色不善道“你再乱跑一次,爷让你分分钟下肚!”“不要!不要!爷你会消化不良滴!”某女眨巴着狡黠的大眼睛。“放心好了,爷对自己的胃很有自信!”阿勒?爷!你不是只钟爱于鸡腿么?!这副真的要分分钟想把她吃了的节奏是要闹哪样?!
  • 探灵法师

    探灵法师

    中国民间流传着诸多灵异事件,封门村、朝内81号、375公车……主角一行人因为某种契机要到这些地方探寻生存。阴阳本有律,轮回自有道。在一次一次探寻中,一个个阴谋和真相逐渐浮出水面。友情、爱情、亲情在悬疑中沉淀,道术、法术、诡术在鬼怪中变强。
  • 都市游侠传

    都市游侠传

    高三学生孙逸安车祸后奇迹苏醒,脑子里多了个神念进阶系统。过目不忘?那只是最初级的技能。心想事成?那得等到进化成完全体以后。宦海沉浮,商业巨鳄,娱乐明星?看小人物孙逸安如何弄起这时代的潮流,深藏功与名
  • 千湘院:遥寄相思

    千湘院:遥寄相思

    有一个地方名为千湘院,各色人物诉说着自己的故事,托老板娘为自己找到相思人。。。