登陆注册
25539200000102

第102章

"Never!"For the next two or three days Jane had no occasion to observe that Alida was in the least degree obtrusive in her attention to the farmer. She was assiduous in her work and more diligent than ever in her conscious efforts to do what she thought he wished; but she was growing pale, constrained, and silent. She struggled heroically to appear as at first, but without much success, for she could not rally from the wound he had given her so unintentionally and which Jane's words had deepened. She almost loathed herself under her association with Mrs. Mumpson, and her morbid thoughts had hit upon a worse reason for Holcroft's apparent repulsion. As she questioned everything in the sleepless hours that followed the interview in the garden, she came to the miserable conclusion that he had discovered her love, and that by suggestion, natural to his mind, it reminded him of her pitiful story. He could be sorry for her and be kind; he could even be her honest friend and protector as a wronged and unhappy woman, but he could not love one with a history like hers and did not wish her to love him. This seemed an adequate explanation of the change in their relations, but she felt that it was one under which her life would wither and her heart break.

This promised to be worse than what she had dreaded at the almshouse--the facing the world alone and working till she died among strangers. The fact that they were strangers would enable her to see their averted faces with comparative indifference, but that the man to whom she had yielded her whole heart should turn away was intolerable. She felt that he could not do this willingly but only under the imperious instincts of his nature--that he was virtually helpless in the matter. There was an element in these thoughts which stung her woman's soul, and, as we have said, she could not rally.

Holcroft never suspected her morbid thoughts, and his loyal, loving heart was incapable of dreaming of them. He only grew more unhappy as he saw the changes in her, for he regarded himself as the cause. Yet he was perplexed and unable to account for her rapidly increasing pallor while he continued so kind, considerate, and especially so unobtrusive. He assuredly thought he was showing a disposition to give her all the time she wished to become reconciled to her lot. "Thunder!" he said to himself, "we can't grow old together without getting used to each other."On Saturday noon, at dinner, he remarked, "I shall have to begin haying on Monday and so I'll take everything to town this afternoon, for I won't be able to go again for some days. Is there anything you'd like me to get, Mrs.

Holcroft?"

She shook her head. "I don't need anything," she replied. He looked at her downcast face with troubled eyes and shivered. "She looks as if she were going to be sick," he thought. "Good Lord! I feel as if there was nothing but trouble ahead. Every mouthful I take seems to choke me."A little later he pushed away almost untasted a piece of delicious cherry pie, the first of the season. Alida could scarcely keep the tears back as she thought, "There was a time when he would have praised it without stint. Itook so much pains with it in the hope he'd notice, for he once said he was very fond of it." Such were the straws that were indicating the deep, dark currents.

As he rose, she said almost apathetically in her dejection, "Mr. Holcroft, Jane and I picked a basket of the early cherries. You may as well sell them, for there are plenty left on the tree for us.""That was too much for you to do in the hot sun. Well, I'll sell 'em and add what they bring to your egg money in the bank. You'll get rich," he continued, trying to smile, "if you don't spend more.""I don't wish to spend anything," she said, turning away with the thought, "How can he think I want finery when my heart is breaking?"Holcroft drove away, looking and feeling as if he were going to a funeral. At last he broke out, "I can't stand this another day. Tomorrow's Sunday, and I'll manage to send Jane somewhere or take Alida out to walk and tell her the whole truth. She shall be made to see that I can't help myself and that I'm willing to do anything she wishes. She's married to me and has got to make the best of it, and I'm sure I'm willing to make it as easy as I can."Jane was a little perplexed at the condition of affairs. Mrs. Holcroft had left her husband alone as far as possible, as she had advised, but apparently it had not helped matters much. But she believed that the trouble she had witnessed bode her no ill and so was inclined to regard it philosophically.

"He looks almost as glum, when he's goin' round alone, as if he'd married mother. She talked too much, and that didn't please him; this one talks less and less, and he don't seem pleased, nuther, but it seems to me he's very foolish to be so fault-findin' when she does everything for him top-notch. Inever lived so well in my life, nor he, nuther, I believe. He must be in a bad way when he couldn't eat that cherry pie."Alida was so weary and felt so ill that she went to the parlor and lay down upon the lounge. "My heart feels as if it were bleeding slowly away," she murmured. "If I'm going to be sick the best thing I can do is to die and end it all," and she gave way to that deep dejection in which there seems no remedy for trouble.

The hours dragged slowly by; Jane finished her household tasks very leisurely, then taking a basket, went out to the garden to pick some early peas. While thus engaged, she saw a man coming up the lane. His manner instantly riveted her attention and awakened her curiosity, and she crouched lower behind the pea vines for concealment. All her furtive, watchful instincts were awake, and her conscience was clear, too, for certainly she had a right to spy upon a stranger.

The man seemed almost as furtive as herself; his eyes were everywhere and his step slow and hesitating. Instead of going directly to the house he cautiously entered the barn, and she heard him a little later call Mr.

同类推荐
  • 要略

    要略

    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。
  • 大方广圆觉修多罗了义经略疏

    大方广圆觉修多罗了义经略疏

    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。
  • 诗考

    诗考

    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。
  • 公孙龙子

    公孙龙子

    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。
  • 中蛊门

    中蛊门

    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
  • 此事难知

    此事难知

    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。
  • 你让我哪都疼

    你让我哪都疼

    挣扎在欲望的苦海而无助地随波逐流是几年来命运给我唯一的选择。太多的爱与伤如长空的浮云飘来散去总不能施舍我一滴甘露。因此我曾憎恨女人,缘于我爱女人,因而忘却自已,我差不多被催毁了一切,当我的事业似被点燃了N吨火药的城堡灰飞烟灭、尊严的外套也被撕得褴褛遮羞时,这个超载的地球已把我抛弃,和一堆奇形怪状的垃圾漫无目的地在黑暗中旋转。
  • 成诀

    成诀

    林伊早就想好了这个故事的结局,虽然知道长痛不如短痛早放手对谁都好,可是还是没办法狠下心来结束。钟楼对林伊推心置腹,可面对这样的结局,还是不知所措……“人吧,经历过这样的喜乐,也该感激了。”“我不后悔那些如果,至少我和他曾经有过一段足够我回忆的过去就好‘’“我不完美,我确实恨,但是说到底这些代价是我愿意承受所以才选了当初的那条路不是吗。”
  • 邪王的傲慢皇妃

    邪王的傲慢皇妃

    她月神之女被心爱的男子利用,从棺材里走出来,再次重生,她必非凡人。他异国太子,放荡不羁,本以为她于自己只是一个棋子,却在看见她投身他人怀抱的时候,忍不住血脉倒流!什么?改嫁也就算了,她还敢给别人生孩子?看他不抓她回来重振夫纲!情节虚构,请勿模仿!
  • 废材九小姐回眸天下

    废材九小姐回眸天下

    她,废材逆袭,完美蜕变!他,暗夜之王,为她沦陷!片段:某女:你...别过来啊!...再过来,我就喊了!某男(猥琐的笑容):喊吧,反正你我都是夫妻了,还怕你喊不成。说着,朝某女扑去。门外的二人开始了议论:萧枫:殿下和夫人,好激烈!听的人家干柴烈火!萧玉:你个死娘娘腔,给我闭嘴!萧枫:嗯哼,娘子啊,太久没教训你了,都动土动到为夫头上了。说着一把抱起萧玉往房间走去......
  • 血域学院之血族女王

    血域学院之血族女王

    这是六界中的血族,就在三个月前,上代女王在与魔族交战中的战火中与魔君一起牺牲了,以她的牺牲了却了这战事,而这代女王就在昨天登基了,血族的子民说国不可一日无君。现在的女王,和六界的王子公主都是从小玩到大的,所以现在的六界是前所未有的和平,各界子民都和平共处,也有不少联姻的,就在大家以为已经可以安全生活的时候,一场把六界都算进去的阴谋,正在悄悄形成......
  • 恰如时光不负你

    恰如时光不负你

    倘若一个人的信念足够坚定,那么他的影子是不是真的能化生成人?但,为什么你不再出现了呢?是我的信念不够坚定,还是其实你从未存在过?他们都说你只是我的幻想,但是我知道你是存在过的。你一直都在,只是如今的你重新变成了专属于我的影子。真希望你的出现不是一场梦,可惜我是个被抛弃的疯子。——————————这一生,谁都可能会先行把你抛下,却只有你的影子会一直伴随着你。“生死相随,不离不弃。”这是影子对人忠诚的誓言,这也是人对影子产生依赖的前提。
  • 网游之盛世三国

    网游之盛世三国

    前一世,因为女朋友的自杀,韩政放弃了视之事业的网游,也拒绝跟随人类大部队移民到游戏世界中去。这一世,重生的韩政得以挽救前世没能挽救的悲剧,这一次,摆脱心理阴影的他要在三国的世界中闯出属于自己的一片天空。全新的世界,无数三国的名臣猛将,还有那些名留青史的美人们,韩政要一一征服!
  • 影后重生之小康家庭

    影后重生之小康家庭

    是小康?还是大富?“顾希安。”“顾希安...”“顾希安!”
  • 小娇妻,快到碗里来

    小娇妻,快到碗里来

    一夜过后,她不知道他是谁,得知她有了孩子而且偷偷的生了出来,为了龙家血脉,他不得不费心寻找。找到她,她却对他相当陌生……没办法,只好潜入她的家,为了她,为了孩子,他情愿从一介高高在上的大总裁沦落为契约“奶爸”。这个女人,从一开始就注定是他的,就算她不记得那一夜入的究竟是谁的口,但是,这个女人,永远逃不掉!