登陆注册
26259100000054

第54章 Chapter XXI. The Governess.(1)

Linley had one instant left, in which he might have drawn, back into the library in time to escape Sydney's notice. He was incapable of the effort of will. Grief and suspense had deprived him of that elastic readiness of mind which springs at once from thought to action. For a moment he hesitated. In that moment she looked up and saw him.

With a faint cry of alarm she let the cloak drop from her hands.

As helpless as he was, as silent as he was, she stood rooted to the spot.

He tried to control himself. Hardly knowing what he said, he made commonplace excuses, as if he had been a stranger: "I am sorry to have startled you; I had no idea of finding you in this room."

Sydney pointed to her cloak on the floor, and to her hat on a chair near it. Understanding the necessity which had brought her into the room, he did his best to reconcile her to the meeting that had followed.

"It's a relief to me to have seen you," he said, "before you leave us."

A relief to him to see her! Why? How? What did that strange word mean, addressed to _her?_ She roused herself, and put the question to him.

"It's surely better for me," he answered, "to hear the miserable news from you than from a servant."

"What miserable news?" she asked, still as perplexed as ever.

He could preserve his self-control no longer; the misery in him forced its way outward at last. The convulsive struggles for breath which burst from a man in tears shook him from head to foot.

"My poor little darling!" he gasped. "My only child!"

All that was embarrassing in her position passed from Sydney's mind in an instant. She stepped close up to him; she laid her hand gently and fearlessly on his arm. "Oh, Mr. Linley, what dreadful mistake is this?"

His dim eyes rested on her with a piteous expression of doubt. He heard her--and he was afraid to believe her. She was too deeply distressed, too full of the truest pity for him, to wait and think before she spoke. "Yes! yes!" she cried, under the impulse of the moment. "The dear child knew me again, the moment I spoke to her. Kitty's recovery is only a matter of time."

He staggered back--with a livid change in his face startling to see. The mischief done by Mrs. Presty's sense of injury had led already to serious results. If the thought in Linley, at that moment, had shaped itself into words, he would have said, "And Catherine never told me of it!" How bitterly he thought of the woman who had left him in suspense--how gratefully he felt toward the woman who had lightened his heart of the heaviest burden ever laid on it!

Innocent of all suspicion of the feeling that she had aroused, Sydney blamed her own want of discretion as the one cause of the change that she perceived in him. "How thoughtless, how cruel of me," she said, "not to have been more careful in telling you the good news! Pray forgive me."

"You thoughtless! you cruel!" At the bare idea of her speaking in that way of herself, his sense of what he owed to her defied all restraint. He seized her hands and covered them with grateful kisses. "Dear Sydney! dear, good Sydney!"

She drew back from him; not abruptly, not as if she felt offended. Her fine perception penetrated the meaning of those harmless kisses--the uncontrollable outburst of a sense of relief beyond the reach of expression in words. But she changed the subject. Mrs. Linley (she told him) had kindly ordered fresh horses to be put to the carriage, so that she might go back to her duties if the doctor sanctioned it.

She turned away to take up her cloak. Linley stopped her. "You can't leave Kitty," he said, positively.

A faint smile brightened her face for a moment. "Kitty has fallen asleep--such a sweet, peaceful sleep! I don't think I should have left her but for that. The maid is watching at the bedside, and Mrs. Linley is only away for a little while."

"Wait a few minutes," he pleaded; "it's so long since we have seen each other."

The tone in which he spoke warned her to persist in leaving him while her resolution remained firm. "I had arranged with Mrs.

MacEdwin," she began, "if all went well--"

"Speak of yourself," he interposed. "Tell me if you are happy."

同类推荐
  • Socialism

    Socialism

    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。
  • 内丹秘诀

    内丹秘诀

    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。
  • 佛说尊胜大明王经

    佛说尊胜大明王经

    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。
  • 太上飞步南斗太微玉经

    太上飞步南斗太微玉经

    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。
  • 颐园论画

    颐园论画

    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
  • 佛魔双修

    佛魔双修

    佛!魔!能不能双修?当高义把这两者完美融合之时,他已经从一个废物,摇身一变,成为了这个世界的主宰!
  • 还魂者的契约

    还魂者的契约

    少女的符剑贯穿伊森胸膛的时候,他才知道自己已经死了!而且死了很久。伊森不知道妹妹伊真临死之前做过什么,也不知道那个阴影里的家伙与他定下什么契约……但他不得不开始承认他还魂者的身份,然后接受并以此活下去。伊森开始找寻自己的记忆,寻求解脱。只是故事最终只是让他罪恶的灵魂更加难以超脱而已。他是还魂者,是契约者。他所签下的契约,即是一切血腥的根源!
  • 绝色皇后:朕知错了

    绝色皇后:朕知错了

    幻月,她背负着一个国家的命运,终究不能放弃一切埋没在后宫待尽一生。墨云,他只为那清丽人儿温柔相对,冷酷凌厉的手段只用来护她一生,最后,得到了一切却单单失去了她……◇◇小剧场◇◇:他淡淡一笑,“月儿,你逃不出去的,留下来吧,陪我。”她清冷一撇,“墨云,你知道,若是我想离开,无人可以阻拦。”这时,兰竹轻轻走上前来,小声说道:“小姐,皇上要册封您为妃。”她一怔,冷淡的目光看向面前威严的某人,随意说道:“你还真不要脸。”他却无所谓,任由她怎么想,留下一个莫名其妙的笑容大步离开。兰竹奇怪的看着皇上,怎么感觉皇上和平常不太一样了。
  • 王俊凯你是我戒不掉的烟

    王俊凯你是我戒不掉的烟

    “鹿鹿好帅啊”当某女在迷恋的时候,某男可就不乐意了,“咳咳,你老公就不帅了?”两个人为什么会走在一起,他们之间发生了什么,原来是那海誓山盟的约定。
  • 一叶之君,恋瑾卿

    一叶之君,恋瑾卿

    重生,系统,男强女强,她在前一世被最信任的人背叛,他在前一世便是,十分神秘的演员,拥有了他就有了票房保证。
  • 金陵物产风土志

    金陵物产风土志

    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。
  • 玄武独尊

    玄武独尊

    ——神明世界,南疆。大家族徐门少爷徐波因误中怪毒导致从天才沦陷为废材,但再一次怪毒发作之时,怪毒变异,将徐波一生的命运改变。体内怪毒化为神兽玄武之力将至阴寒气与至阳毒气与徐波融为一体,形成一扇玄武门,每当一扇玄武门觉醒,徐波的实力便会大大的提升,并获得一重至阴寒气与一重至阳毒气;玄武门总有百亿扇玄武之力,徐波将其全部觉醒便能得到玄武本命真传,成为一位巅峰武尊!哪里有我的地方,哪里便是一片冰天雪地,哪里便布满了天下剧毒,哪里便是死亡地狱!我皆为玄武!号称玄武毒尊!——徐波
  • 追逐者的游戏

    追逐者的游戏

    在世上诸般美好的事物中,有两者最公平,那就是青春与梦想,它不分尊卑,人人都可享有。这两者就像一枚青橄榄,苦中带甜,痛中带乐。在花季中的我们该怎么在亲情,友情,和那朦胧的情感中找到平衡……青柳:"我是青柳,我要告诉你生活可以是甜的,也可以是苦的,但不能是没味的。你可以胜利,也可以失败,但你不能屈服!”这一面的身份是普通的女生,另一面却是……后来的后来……“嘿,你会等我吗?”“当然……”不会。
  • 何处可采莲

    何处可采莲

    短篇,练笔。本文纯属虚构,如有雷同,并非巧合,采莲原型为唐朝女诗人鱼玄机。
  • 吾乃邪神

    吾乃邪神

    邪神,人如其名,邪!他曾一人搅得天界不得安宁,却又因为一件小事,自毁神魄,转世为人。手下三大邪君不得已下凡,奉命找寻那人。凡界也因为这群人的到来而出现了一些特殊群种......