登陆注册
26289300000009

第9章 CHAPTER III(3)

Laetitia did continue. She saw Miss Durham at Patterne on several occasions. She admired the pair. She had a wish to witness the bridal ceremony. She was looking forward to the day with that mixture of eagerness and withholding which we have as we draw nigh the disenchanting termination of an enchanting romance, when Sir Willoughby met her on a Sunday morning, as she crossed his park solitarily to church. They were within ten days of the appointed ceremony. He should have been away at Miss Durham's end of the county. He had, Laetitia knew, ridden over to her the day before; but there he was; and very unwontedly, quite surprisingly, he presented his arm to conduct Laetitia to the church-door, and talked and laughed in a way that reminded her of a hunting gentleman she had seen once rising to his feet, staggering from an ugly fall across hedge and fence into one of the lanes of her short winter walks. "All's well, all sound, never better, only a scratch!" the gentleman had said, as he reeled and pressed a bleeding head. Sir Willoughby chattered of his felicity in meeting her. "I am really wonderfully lucky," he said, and he said that and other things over and over, incessantly talking, and telling an anecdote of county occurrences, and laughing at it with a mouth that would not widen. He went on talking in the church porch, and murmuring softly some steps up the aisle, passing the pews of Mrs.

Mountstuart Jenkinson and Lady Busshe. Of course he was entertaining, but what a strangeness it was to Laetitia! His face would have been half under an antique bonnet. It came very close to hers, and the scrutiny he bent on her was most solicitous.

After the service, he avoided the great ladies by sauntering up to within a yard or two of where she sat; he craved her hand on his arm to lead her forth by the park entrance to the church, all the while bending to her, discoursing rapidly, appearing radiantly interested in her quiet replies, with fits of intentness that stared itself out into dim abstraction. She hazarded the briefest replies for fear of not having understood him.

One question she asked: "Miss Durham is well, I trust?"

And he answered "Durham?" and said, "There is no Miss Durham to my knowledge."

The impression he left with her was, that he might yesterday during his ride have had an accident and fallen on his head.

She would have asked that, if she had not known him for so thorough an Englishman, in his dislike to have it thought that accidents could hurt even when they happened to him.

He called the next day to claim her for a walk. He assured her she had promised it, and he appealed to her father, who could not testify to a promise he had not heard, but begged her to leave him to have her walk. So once more she was in the park with Sir Willoughby, listening to his raptures over old days. A word of assent from her sufficed him. "I am now myself," was one of the remarks he repeated this day. She dilated on the beauty of the park and the Hall to gratify him.

He did not speak of Miss Durham, and Laetitia became afraid to mention her name.

At their parting, Willoughby promised Laetitia that he would call on the morrow. He did not come; and she could well excuse him, after her hearing of the tale.

It was a lamentable tale. He had ridden to Sir John Durham's mansion, a distance of thirty miles, to hear, on his arrival, that Constantia had quitted her father's house two days previously on a visit to an aunt in London, and had just sent word that she was the wife of Captain Oxford, hussar, and messmate of one of her brothers. A letter from the bride awaited Willoughby at the Hall.

He had ridden back at night, not caring how he used his horse in order to get swiftly home, so forgetful of himself was he under the terrible blow. That was the night of Saturday. On the day following, being Sunday, he met Laetitia in his park, led her to church, led her out of it, and the day after that, previous to his disappearance for some weeks, was walking with her in full view of the carriages along the road.

He had, indeed, you see, been very fortunately, if not considerately, liberated by Miss Durham. He, as a man of honour, could not have taken the initiative, but the frenzy of a jealous girl might urge her to such a course; and how little he suffered from it had been shown to the world. Miss Durham, the story went, was his mother's choice for him against his heart's inclinations; which had finally subdued Lady Patterne. Consequently, there was no longer an obstacle between Sir Willoughby and Miss Dale. It was a pleasant and romantic story, and it put most people in good humour with the county's favourite, as his choice of a portionless girl of no position would not have done without the shock of astonishment at the conduct of Miss Durham, and the desire to feel that so prevailing a gentleman was not in any degree pitiable.

Constantia was called "that mad thing". Laetitia broke forth in novel and abundant merits; and one of the chief points of requisition in relation to Patterne--a Lady Willoughby who would entertain well and animate the deadness of the Hall, became a certainty when her gentleness and liveliness and exceeding cleverness were considered. She was often a visitor at the Hall by Lady Patterne's express invitation, and sometimes on these occasions Willoughby was there too, superintending the filling up of his laboratory, though he was not at home to the county; it was not expected that he should be yet. He had taken heartily to the pursuit of science, and spoke of little else. Science, he said, was in our days the sole object worth a devoted pursuit. But the sweeping remark could hardly apply to Laetitia, of whom he was the courteous, quiet wooer you behold when a man has broken loose from an unhappy tangle to return to the lady of his first and strongest affections.

Some months of homely courtship ensued, and then, the decent interval prescribed by the situation having elapsed, Sir Willoughby Patterne left his native land on a tour of the globe.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 投资理财细节全书

    投资理财细节全书

    如今,理财已经越来越深入到我们的日常生活。那么,理财究竟是怎么回事?它能带给我们怎样的益处和价值?大部分人在谈到理财的时候都是说要通过理财来为他的钱保值增值,理财确实有这样的作用,但这只是理财带来的表面效应,人们对理财带给我们的益处和价值还并不完全了解。经济发展迎来“理财时代”,理财能给我们带来经济效益,带来舒适安全的生活。理财二字似乎还给人一种稳健的感觉,是低风险的,而投资或投机都是高风险的,实际上,在中国当前浓烈的投机氛围之下,理财二字几乎与金融投资或投机同义。本书即花费大量笔墨给大家描绘了投资理财的种种方式方法,希冀每个小细节都能让大家有所收获!
  • 萌宝在上:娘子我错了

    萌宝在上:娘子我错了

    她是一国之公主和一教之主,却因为爱上了一个不该爱的人,说自己是商贩之女,却不料被他的爱慕者而下药身亡,迎来了异世她的灵魂!人挡杀人,佛挡杀佛!!!带着小包子一起发家致富!!喂!就是你!给姐让开,别挡着姐谈情说爱!!
  • 未来军事战略

    未来军事战略

    公元2130年,火星在无任何预兆下宣布独立,对驻守在火星的地球士兵发动突袭。不到一周,地球各国派在火星的军队已经所剩无几,地球方面开始火速支援。令人意外的是,米国在火星却没有损失一兵一卒。是否米国实力强大,还是另有原因。究竟是火星能获得独立,还是地球能夺回在火星置放的资源与他们的管理权?
  • 1-2年级,激活孩子能力的关键期

    1-2年级,激活孩子能力的关键期

    结束幼儿园的生活,孩子就要进入小学低年级,也就是1-2年级。这个时候,无论是家长还是孩子,隐隐中都会透着一丝陌生感以及恐惧感。通常我们认为,小学是一个人学习生涯的开始,要帮孩子开好上小学的头,家长首先要做的一件事就是——帮助孩子顺利度过幼儿园与小学的衔接期。
  • 青春遗梦

    青春遗梦

    真实记录了一个普通人平凡而坎坷的经历,以酣畅淳朴的语言,真实感人的故事,给世人展示出半个世纪以来,贫苦农家孩子的自强不息,彰显了这一代人与时代同呼吸,与祖国共命运的高尚情操和不朽的生命价值。
  • 很久以后我仍爱你

    很久以后我仍爱你

    衡量一场爱恋的成功与否,是最终可以牵手走进婚姻的殿堂?还是与青春之时,爱的深亦爱的痛?
  • 古朝遗梦

    古朝遗梦

    有没有想过,我们存在的这个世界充满了多少秘密?你从哪里来,这并不仅仅是一个哲学问题。
  • 以情继往

    以情继往

    从美国回来的她,与他再次相遇,又经历了点点滴滴,是他们更加了解彼此,更加相爱,而他们的身世之谜,慢慢表露他们是兄妹?!乔洋和晓萻结婚,还有了孩子,但乔洋的前女友回来啦,使他们的婚姻支离破碎,他们该怎么办柏默和小黎的爱情,虽不是一帆风顺的,但他们所有的分离都是被迫,始终忠诚于对方
  • 霸道总裁的眷顾

    霸道总裁的眷顾

    她只是来自农村不幸家庭的女孩,靠着自己的努力和拼命考上了重点大学,总是被上帝遗忘,不幸的事情频频降落在这惹人怜惜的女孩的身上。他,来自豪门世家,是家中唯一的独子。从小就被家人捧在手里,爸爸是珠宝公司的董事长,林氏家族企业一直常盛不衰。毫无例外,他从小接受的都是最好的教育,他从小就知道自己与生俱来有莫大的责任感和使命感。
  • 千秋家国梦之铁血抗战

    千秋家国梦之铁血抗战

    南明在覆亡之际起死回生,将南方各省一一收复,与北清在淮河陕西一线对峙。一个不成功的穿越者遗留在山洞里的电脑笔记本被鄂西当地柳姓少年无意中得到,离奇的身世和遭遇加上严格的军事训练使得这个热血少年从此走上了一条极不寻常的奋斗之路。父母遭遇奇祸,远走他乡时被一路追杀。。。一战开始,加入德军并在东线成为英雄。。。当那个邪恶的东方近邻借口护侨蓄意侵略时,当养尊处优的内阁软弱无能屈辱求和步步退让时。面对侵略者强大的武力,中华民族的优秀子孙用铁和血去争取民族的独立和尊严,热血男儿心如铁,看只手,补天裂!