登陆注册
26332000000178

第178章 CHAPTER XXXIX(2)

Guy started,but still he kept his seat.The mother took her grandchild in her feeble arms,and kissed her,saying softly,"There--that is Uncle Guy.Go and speak to him."And then,touching his knees,Guy felt the tiny,fearless hand.He turned round,and looked at the little thing,reluctantly,inquisitively.Still he did not speak to or touch her.

"Are you Uncle Guy?"

"Yes."

"Why don't you kiss me?Everybody kisses me,"said everybody's pet;neither frightened nor shy;never dreaming of a repulse.

Nor did she find it.Her little fingers were suffered to cling round the tightly-closed hand.

"What is your name,my dear?"

"Louise--mamma's little Louise."

Guy put back the curls,and gazed long and wistfully into the childish face,where the inherited beauty was repeated line for line.

But softened,spiritualised,as,years after its burial,some ghost of a man's old sorrows may rise up and meet him,the very spirit of peace shining out of its celestial eyes.

"Little Louise,you are very like--"

He stopped--and bending down,kissed her.In that kiss vanished for ever the last shadow of his boyhood's love.Not that he forgot it--God forbid that any good man should ever either forget or be ashamed of his first love!But it and all its pain fled far away,back into the sacred eternities of dreamland.

When,looking up at last,he saw a large,fair,matronly lady sitting by his mother's sofa,Guy neither started nor turned pale.It was another,and not his lost Louise.He rose and offered her his hand.

"You see,your little daughter has made friends with me already.She is very like you;only she has Edwin's hair.Where is my brother Edwin?""Here,old fellow.Welcome home."

The two brothers met warmly,nay,affectionately.Edwin was not given to demonstration;but I saw how his features twitched,and how he busied himself over the knots in his little girl's pinafore for a minute or more.When he spoke again it was as if nothing had happened and Guy had never been away.

For the mother,she lay with her arms folded,looking from one to the other mutely,or closing her eyes with a faint stirring of the lips,like prayer.It seemed as if she dared only THUS to meet her exceeding joy.

Soon,Edwin and Louise left us for an hour or two,and Guy went on with the history of his life in America and his partner who had come home with him,and,like himself,had lost his all.

"Harder for him than for me;he is older than I am.He knew nothing whatever of business when he offered himself as my clerk;since then he has worked like a slave.In a fever I had he nursed me;he has been to me these three years the best,truest friend.He is the noblest fellow.Father,if you only knew--""Well,my son,let me know him.Invite the gentleman to Beechwood;or shall I write and ask him?Maud,fetch me your mother's desk.

Now then,Guy--you are a very forgetful fellow still;you have never yet told us your friend's name."Guy looked steadily at his father,in his own straightforward way;hesitated--then apparently made up his mind.

"I did not tell you because he wished me not;not till you understood him as well as I do.You knew him yourself once--but he has wisely dropped his title.Since he came over to me in America he has been only Mr.William Ravenel."This discovery--natural enough when one began to think over it,but incredible at first,astounded us all.For Maud--well was it that the little Louise seated in her lap hid and controlled in some measure the violent agitation of poor Auntie Maud.

Ay--Maud loved him.Perhaps she had guessed the secret cause of his departure,and love creates love often times.Then his brave renunciation of rank,fortune,even of herself--women glory in a moral hero--one who has strength to lose even love,and bear its loss,for the sake of duty or of honour.His absence,too,might have done much:--absence which smothers into decay a rootless fancy,but often nourishes the least seed of a true affection into full-flowering love.Ay--Maud loved him.How,or why,or when,at first no one could tell--perhaps not even herself;but so it was,and her parents saw it.

Both were deeply moved--her brother likewise.

"Father,"he whispered,"have I done wrong?I did not know--how could I guess?""No,no--my son.It is very strange--all things just now seem so strange.Maud,my child,"--and John roused himself out of a long silence into which he was falling,--"go,and take Louise to her mother."The girl rose,eager to get away.As she crossed the room--the little creature clinging round her neck,and she clasping it close,in the sweet motherliness of character which had come to her so early--I thought--I hoped--"Maud!"said John,catching her hand as she passed him by--"Maud is not afraid of her father?""No,"--in troubled uncertainty--then with a passionate decision,as if ashamed of herself--"No!"

She leaned over his chair-back and kissed him--then went out.

"Now--Guy."

Guy told,in his own frank way,all the history of himself and William Ravenel;how the latter had come to America,determined to throw his lot for good or ill,to sink or swim,with Maud's brother--chiefly,as Guy had slowly discovered,because he was Maud's brother.

At last--in the open boat,on the Atlantic,with death the great revealer of all things staring them in the face--the whole secret came out.It made them better than friends--brothers.

This was Guy's story,told with a certain spice of determination too,as if--let his father's will be what it might,his own,which had now also settled into the strong "family"will,was resolute on his friend's behalf.Yet when he saw how grave,nay sad,the father sat,he became humble again,and ended his tale even as he had begun,with the entreaty--"Father,if you only knew--""My knowing and my judging seem to have been of little value,my son.

同类推荐
  • From the Memoirs of a Minister of France

    From the Memoirs of a Minister of France

    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。
  • 畦乐诗集

    畦乐诗集

    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。
  • 梅谱

    梅谱

    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。
  • 两汉开国中兴传志

    两汉开国中兴传志

    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。
  • 海棠谱

    海棠谱

    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
  • 金牌神医:邪王欺上身

    金牌神医:邪王欺上身

    她,白染,21世纪华夏大陆的金牌杀手。她的名字让人闻风丧胆,却被心爱之人背叛。他,风亦辰,梦泽大陆的景王殿下,冷酷无情,万千少女的梦中情人,老少男女通吃。世人皆知她废材草包,强势的灵魂注入,唯有他慧眼识珠对她各种纠缠,霸道。看他们如何演绎这追逐与被追逐的好戏
  • 快穿之复仇女配

    快穿之复仇女配

    啊,爱与恨,相互依存。遥回当初,一抹纯粹的笑容,迷了谁的眼,乱了谁的心?时间不会治愈一切,只会掩盖一切,当血淋淋的真相被捅破,没有人会顾忌,因为这是命,从相遇的那一刻起,从爱上的那一秒起,就注定了结局。你是毒,引诱我心甘情愿坠入地狱,永生永世,痴心不悔。
  • 梦三国之从卧底开始

    梦三国之从卧底开始

    短篇祭奠陪伴我成长的梦三国~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~网吧怎么这么坑爹?开机的时候把隔壁姐姐的机子给关了!!!!
  • 魔道真神

    魔道真神

    恒古之心,风雷之怒,乾坤独舞,剑弑苍穹。一个地球人重生后略带传奇的一生。
  • 元曲名篇的人生哲理

    元曲名篇的人生哲理

    本书分修身、处世、持家、爱情、交友、职场、谋略七类,从“人生智慧”的角度,重新解读元曲。选入杂剧约50个,散曲14首。
  • 剑上铃铛响

    剑上铃铛响

    为了梦想,为了期待,少年在狭小的世界里想要写出一个美丽的世界
  • 苍白法典

    苍白法典

    指尖的火焰在翻飞,罪人的痛苦呻吟令人陶醉!血海翻滚狰狞的白骨巨人咆哮着冲击圣洁之城!美妙的灵魂啊,一点点的沉沦在永恒的罪恶之中!踏入巍峨的神殿、步入无底的深渊、混乱疯狂的世界只需要我的主宰!我将超脱永恒!——苍白之首·科尔瓦·阿撒托斯
  • 跟着哥们儿去见鬼

    跟着哥们儿去见鬼

    这一篇作品由于时间安排的原因一直没有写完,现在有这个正文活动的机会希望能写完吧。故事以我大学毕业后到地方电视台参加工作,并开展一档民间习俗调查的活动而经历的一系列诡异经历,故事并不惊悚,请恕笔者无法描写惊悚的笔触,但是还算有趣,给我的部分朋友读过,都觉得还不错。希望大家都来看看吧
  • 邪器之灵

    邪器之灵

    在那远古的呼唤,一个少年拥有邪恶与正义的。他该如何抉择?是否他会弃暗投明?还是做个,正直的人。在他这一生中他万万没想到,在自己的身上竟然会发生这些意想不到的事情。他自己的家族被诅咒,每一个家族的后人都活不过25岁他该如何抉择?是生还是死?请大家敬请期待:“邪器之灵”!!!
  • 低调魔修

    低调魔修

    重生前,他一怒为红颜,血屠百万,至死不悔,重生后他只想保护那份简单的幸福,然而事于愿违,身在奇门,注定不凡的他,不得不为那份简单幸福而挥刀天下,虽与千万人为敌,吾往已。