登陆注册
26507600000275

第275章

"My spirits have risen since the doctor left me. There is a pleasant sensation of security in feeling that no strangers are in possession of my address. I am easy enough in my mind to-day to notice how wonderfully well I look in my widow's weeds, and to make myself agreeable to the people of the house.

"Midwinter disturbed me a little again last night; but I have got over the ghastly delusion which possessed me yesterday.

I know better now than to dread violence from him when he discovers what I have done. And there is still less fear of his stooping to assert his claim to a woman who has practiced on him such a deception as mine. The one serious trial that I shall be put to when the day of reckoning comes will be the trial of preserving my false character in his presence. I shall be safe in his loathing and contempt for me, after that. On the day when Ihave denied him to his face, I shall have seen the last of him forever.

"Shall I be able to deny him to his face? Shall I be able to look at him and speak to him as if he had never been more to me than a friend? How do I know till the time comes? Was there ever such an infatuated fool as I am, to be writing of him at all, when writing only encourages me to think of him? I will make a new resolution. From this time forth, his name shall appear no more in these pages.

"Monday, December 1st.--The last month of the worn-out old year 1851! If I allowed myself to look back, what a miserable year Ishould see added to all the other miserable years that are gone!

But I have made my resolution to look forward only, and I mean to keep it.

"I have nothing to record of the last two days, except that on the twenty-ninth I remembered Bashwood, and wrote to tell him of my new address. This morning the lawyers heard again from Mr.

Darch. He acknowledges the receipt of the Declaration, but postpones stating the decision at which he has arrived until he has communicated with the trustees under the late Mr. Blanchard's will, and has received his final instructions from his client, Miss Blanchard. The doctor's lawyers declare that this last letter is a mere device for gaining time--with what object they are, of course, not in a position to guess. The doctor himself says, facetiously, it is the usual lawyer's object of ****** a long bill. My own idea is that Mr. Darch has his suspicions of something wrong, and that his purpose in trying to gain time--* * * * * * *

"Ten, at night.--I had written as far as that last unfinished sentence (toward four in the afternoon) when I was startled by hearing a cab drive up to the door. I went to the window, and got there just in time to see old Bashwood getting out with an activity of which I should never have supposed him capable. So little did I anticipate the tremendous discovery that was going to burst on me in another minute, that I turned to the glass, and wondered what the susceptible old gentleman would say to me in my widow's cap.

"The instant he entered the room, I saw that some serious disaster had happened. His eyes were wild, his wig was awry. He approached me with a strange mixture of eagerness and dismay.

'I've done as you told me,' he whispered, breathlessly. 'I've held my tongue about it, and come straight to _you!_' He caught me by the hand before I could speak, with a boldness quite new in my experience of him. 'Oh how can I break it to you!' he burst out. 'I'm beside myself when I think of it!'

" 'When you _can_ speak,' I said, putting him into a chair, 'speak out. I see in your face that you bring me news I don't look for from Thorpe Ambrose.'

"He put his hand into the breast-pocket of his coat, and drew out a letter. He looked at the letter, and looked at me.

'New--new--news you don't look for,' he stammered; 'but not from Thorpe Ambrose!'

" 'Not from Thorpe Ambrose!'

" 'No. From the sea!'

"The first dawning of the truth broke on me at those words. Icouldn't speak--I could only hold out my hand to him for the letter.

"He still shrank from giving it to me. 'I daren't! I daren't!' he said to himself, vacantly. 'The shock of it might be the death of her.'

"I snatched the letter from him. One glance at the writing on the address was enough. My hands fell on my lap, with the letter fast held in them. I sat petrified, without moving, without speaking, without hearing a word of what Bashwood was saying to me, and slowly realized the terrible truth. The man whose widow I had claimed to be was a living man to confront me! In vain I had mixed the drink at Naples--in vain I had betrayed him into Manuel's hands. Twice I had set the deadly snare for him, and twice Armadale had escaped me! "I came to my sense of outward things again, and found Bashwood on his knees at my feet, crying.

" 'You look angry,' he murmured, helplessly. 'Are you angry with _me?_ Oh, if you only knew what hopes I had when we last saw each other, and how cruelly that letter has dashed them all to the ground!'

"I put the miserable old creature back from me, but very gently.

'Hush!' I said. 'Don't distress me now. I want composure; I want to read the letter.'

"He went away submissively to the other end of the room. As soon as my eye was off him, I heard him say to himself, with impotent malignity, 'If the sea had been of my mind, the sea would have drowned him!'

"One by one I slowly opened the folds of the letter; feeling, while I did so, the strangest incapability of fixing my attention on the very lines that I was burning to read. But why dwell any longer on sensations which I can't describe? It will be more to the purpose if I place the letter itself, for future reference, on this page of my journal.

'Fiume, Illyria, November 21, 1851.

"MR. BASHWOOD--The address I date from will surprise you; and you will be more surprised still when you hear how it is that I come to write to you from a port on the Adriatic Sea.

"I have been the victim of a rascally attempt at robbery and murder. The robbery has succeeded; and it is only through the mercy of God that the murder did not succeed too.

同类推荐
  • The Foundations of Personality

    The Foundations of Personality

    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。
  • 茶解

    茶解

    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。
  • 事宜须知

    事宜须知

    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。
  • Chaucer

    Chaucer

    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。
  • 毛诗故训传

    毛诗故训传

    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。
热门推荐
  • 重生之洪荒称皇

    重生之洪荒称皇

    破碎混沌入洪荒,纵横天地凝玄黄。搅动洪荒力证圣,穿梭宇宙独称皇。正应了那句“人在家中坐,祸从天上来”,该你点背的时候,喝凉水也会塞牙啊!“不就是旅个游吗,至于用炸弹招呼我啊?!”林天身死前的最后一缕怨念随风飘散。本该身死的林天,竟到了鸿蒙未判,天地未开的混沌空间,与魔神为伴,以盘古为友,见证开天辟地,身死魂残终不灭,降临洪荒,再证大道。
  • 魏国生涯

    魏国生涯

    魏明,一个21世纪的灵魂来到了战国中期,他会让这波澜壮阔的战国变得多姿多彩吗?
  • EXO之我的异能守护者

    EXO之我的异能守护者

    一位人气超高的女艺人,在18岁时突然被告知自己是龙族的第54代传人,而且拥有世间万物元素的超能力。她母亲告诉她她要去到另一个时空保护另一个时空的安全,在哪里她遇见了同样是异能者的狼族十二少年······(主线吴世勋,复线鹿晗,吴亦凡,安宰贤)
  • The Dominion of the Air

    The Dominion of the Air

    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。
  • 致命纠缠:邪少不要太火爆

    致命纠缠:邪少不要太火爆

    被一个强取豪夺,位高权重,为达目的不择手段,要有多坏有多坏的富二代看上会有什么后果?那你会很惨!那被两个强取豪夺,有钱有势,为达目的不择手段,而且没有一点公德心,没有一人情味,只知道一味掠夺,还是花心大萝卜的富二代看上会有什么后果?呃…你可以请求上帝,让自己别死得太惨!
  • 尖兵混都市

    尖兵混都市

    他,有着神秘的身份,一次的任务成功却换来一个悲惨的结局,从而成为了不折不扣的平民一个,从此开始了他新的人生旅途。
  • 三国之江山我手

    三国之江山我手

    刘琪在参加同学聚会喝醉酒,醒来发现自己穿越乱世。既来之,则安之。既然来到这里,就好好的活下去!
  • 情缘劫.长安桃花

    情缘劫.长安桃花

    她,是一名杀手,被自己心爱的人抛弃、出卖,把她送入自己的皇叔怀中。她冷笑一声转身离去,成为了她皇叔的第九夫人,当情缘向她靠拢时,也迈向了毁灭。。他,是一国之君,一心向把她呵护手中,却不料旧病复发。。也许只有摧毁才能永恒。。————————————————————————————————第一次尝试写,肚子里只有这点墨,写不好请指教,莫怪
  • 宝镜三昧本义

    宝镜三昧本义

    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。
  • 易烊千玺的9999封情书

    易烊千玺的9999封情书

    在最美好的年纪喜欢上最遥不可及的人或许比早恋还要可怕但是在进入爱情殿堂的年纪静静守护着那个遥不可及的人何尝不是好事易烊千玺我爱你。