登陆注册
26267700000044

第44章 CHAPTER XV(2)

"And she saw Mr. Van Brandt," my mother went on. "She gave me no detailed account of the interview between them. 'He reminded me,' she said, 'of what I knew to be true--that the woman who had entrapped him into marrying her was an incurable drunkard, and that his ever living with her again was out of the question. Still she was alive, and she had a right to the name at least of his wife. I won't attempt to excuse my returning to him, knowing the circumstances as I did. I will only say that I could see no other choice before me, in my position at the time. It is needless to trouble you with what I have suffered since, or to speak of what I may suffer still. I am a lost woman. Be under no alarm, madam, about your son. I shall remember proudly to the end of my life that he once offered me the honor and the happiness of becoming his wife; but I know what is due to him and to you. I have seen him for the last time. The one thing that remains to be done is to satisfy him that our marriage is impossible. You are a mother; you will understand why I reveal the obstacle which stands between us--not to him, but to you.' She rose saying those words, and opened the folding-doors which led from the parlor into a back room. After an absence of a few moments only, she returned." At that crowning point in the narrative, my mother stopped. Was she afraid to go on? or did she think it needless to say more?

"Well?" I said.

"Must I really tell it to you in words, George? Can't you guess how it ended, even yet?" There were two difficulties in the way of my understanding her. I had a man's bluntness of perception, and I was half maddened by suspense. Incredible as it may appear, I was too dull to guess the truth even now.

"When she returned to me," my mother resumed, "she was not alone. She had with her a lovely little girl, just old enough to walk with the help of her mother's hand. She tenderly kissed the child, and then she put it on my lap. 'There is my only comfort,' she said, simply; 'and there is the obstacle to my ever becoming Mr. Germaine's wife.' " Van Brandt's child! Van Brandt's child! The postscript which she had made me add to my letter; the incomprehensible withdrawal from the employment in which she was prospering; the disheartening difficulties which had brought her to the brink of starvation; the degrading return to the man who had cruelly deceived her--all was explained, all was excused now! With an infant at the breast, how could she obtain a new employment? With famine staring her in the face, what else could the friendless woman do but return to the father of her child? What claim had I on her, by comparison with _him_? What did it matter, now that the poor creature secretly returned the love that I felt for her? There was the child, an obstacle between us--there was _his_ hold on her, now that he had got her back! What was _my_ hold worth? All social proprieties and all social laws answered the question: Nothing! My head sunk on my breast; I received the blow in silence. My good mother took my hand. "You understand it now, George?" she said, sorrowfully.

"Yes, mother; I understand it."

"There was one thing she wished me to say to you, my dear, which I have not mentioned yet. She entreats you not to suppose that she had the faintest idea of her situation when she attempted to destroy herself. Her first suspicion that it was possible she might become a mother was conveyed to her at Edinburgh, in a conversation with her aunt. It is impossible, George, not to feel compassionately toward this poor woman. Regrettable as her position is, I cannot see that she is to blame for it. She was the innocent victim of a vile fraud when that man married her; she has suffered undeservedly since; and she has behaved nobly to you and to me. I only do her justice in saying that she is a woman in a thousand--a woman worthy, under happier circumstances, to be my daughter and your wife. I feel _for_ you, and feel _with_ you, my dear--I do, with my whole heart." So this scene in my life was, to all appearance, a scene closed forever. As it had been with my love, in the days of my boyhood, so it was again now with the love of my riper age! Later in the day, when I had in some degree recovered my self-possession, I wrote to Mr. Van Brandt--as _she_ had foreseen I should write!--to apologize for breaking my engagement to dine with him. Could I trust to a letter also, to say the farewell words for me to the woman whom I had loved and lost? No! It was better for her, and better for me, that I should not write. And yet the idea of leaving her in silence was more than my fortitude could endure. Her last words at parting (as they were repeated to me by my mother) had expressed the hope that I should not think hardly of her in the future. How could I assure her that I should think of her tenderly to the end of my life? My mother's delicate tact and true sympathy showed me the way. "Send a little present, George," she said, "to the child. You bear no malice to the poor little child?" God knows I was not hard on the child! I went out myself and bought her a toy. I brought it home, and before I sent it away, I pinned a slip of paper to it, bearing this inscription: "To your little daughter, from George Germaine." There is nothing very pathetic, I suppose, in those words. And yet I burst out crying when I had written them. The next morning my mother and I set forth for my country-house in Perthshire. London was now unendurable to me. Traveling abroad I had tried already. Nothing was left but to go back to the Highlands, and to try what I could make of my life, with my mother still left to live for.

同类推荐
  • 质疑录

    质疑录

    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。
  • 疑仙传

    疑仙传

    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。
  • 纳兰家族墓碑铭文

    纳兰家族墓碑铭文

    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。
  • 迦叶结经

    迦叶结经

    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。
  • 北郭集

    北郭集

    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。
热门推荐
  • 武霄神王

    武霄神王

    浩瀚无边神奇武界,万族林立,诸雄并起;苍穹无尽大千灵界,群英荟萃,一位位强者在这无尽区域演绎着无数传奇,追求着那傲世之境。废物少年驾万古不灭圣凤入武界,震灵界,一路傲笑苍穹,威震乾坤,编织着一段段惊世传奇。
  • 竹间续话

    竹间续话

    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。
  • 迦叶尊者之森林里的秘密

    迦叶尊者之森林里的秘密

    云南,一支有大学生组成的前往军队慰问演出的慰问团在路上遭到不明人物的袭击,五名女学生被劫到缅甸。三年前从北京xxx特种部队调来的炼狱突击队奉命前去营救。然而这一切事件的背后都是因为十年前的一场手术......
  • 石洞集

    石洞集

    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。
  • 我们相爱吧之上帝视角

    我们相爱吧之上帝视角

    上帝,神一般的存在,降临到一个导演身上,会发生什么事情呢。上帝一般的视角,你,又会看见什么!而在一张爱情真人秀之中,巴厘岛,台北,泰国,广州,香港,见证这一幕幕的爱情之旅
  • 马踏天下

    马踏天下

    他,只不过是一个想发点小财的青年,命运,竟然让他成为了大将军。他,只不过想在乱世中活下去,命运,却让他成为鞭挞天下的大英雄。传言中,他有三头六臂,勇不可挡,但是,他其实只是个平凡人,有爱,有恨,还有凡人的小贪婪。为了自己想守护的,让这个平凡人以一人之躯,挡万夫之阻,杀人无算,呵斥王侯,鞭挞天下。这是一条孤独的路,多年以后,他不光没有了敌人,也没有了朋友,只是孤独的守护着这片天地,执着的维护着他心中所认为的公平正义。
  • 混沌三国

    混沌三国

    他本只是一个小混混,却被天庭神仙招去拯救三国动乱,魔神刑天附于董卓之身,三国历史危在旦夕。他临危受命,是否能担当起拯救历史与人民的重任?且看他如何招兵买马,收拢人心,化险为夷,周旋于各势力之间,屡获奇胜,还历史本来面目……
  • 真灵锻造师

    真灵锻造师

    边荒之外,诡兽肆虐,苍穹倒转,唯有武者逆天而行。他出生时天降异象,被称为绝世天才,然而十岁之时,他却忽然自废武道,另辟蹊径,展现种种神奇手段。战边荒、平至尊国度、封灾厄八界,成就真灵传说。
  • 一个小公司老板的日常管理

    一个小公司老板的日常管理

    一个企业从创立那天开始,在领导的带领下,在团队的帮助下,通过扎实肯干打下一片属于自己的江山。然而,打江山容易,守江山难,若想让江山不断扩张,不断流传下去,就要看企业领导者的管理水平。只有把企业管理好了,企业才会拥有光明的前景。每个小老板都希望带领一支团队,为实现自己的个人追求和人生价值而奋斗,打造一份属于自己的光辉事业。
  • 空心岁月

    空心岁月

    李东文,70后。1999年开始学习写作,以小说及情感专栏为主,曾在《天涯》《长城》《十月》《西湖》《长江文艺》等杂志发表小说,作品多次被《小说选刊》《中篇小说选刊》《读者》等转载。