登陆注册
5582600000084

第84章 THE PARTING(5)

'I can! I can!' Her voice trembled for the first time. 'I know that you are so ready to give in to difficulties. Listen to me, and do as I bid you.' She spoke in the strangest tone of command.

It was command, not exhortation, but there was no harshness in her voice. 'Go at once to Mr Carter. Tell him you have made a ludicrous mistake--in a fit of low spirits; anything you like to say. Tell him you of course couldn't dream of becoming his clerk.

To-night; at once! You understand me, Edwin? Go now, this moment.'

'Have you determined to see how weak I am? Do you wish to be able to despise me more completely still?'

'I am determined to be your friend, and to save you from yourself. Go at once! Leave all the rest to me. If I have let things take their course till now, it shan't be so in future. The responsibility shall be with me. Only do as I tell you'

'You know it's impossible--'

'It is not! I will find money. No one shall be allowed to say that we are parting; no one has any such idea yet. You are going away for your health, just three summer months. I have been far more careful of appearances than you imagine, but you give me credit for so little. I will find the money you need, until you have written another book. I promise; I undertake it. Then I will find another home for us, of the proper kind. You shall have no trouble. You shall give yourself entirely to intellectual things.

But Mr Carter must be told at once, before he can spread a report. If he has spoken, he must contradict what he has said.'

'But you amaze me, Amy. Do you mean to say that you look upon it as a veritable disgrace, my taking this clerkship?'

'I do. I can't help my nature. I am ashamed through and through that you should sink to this.'

'But everyone knows that I was a clerk once!'

'Very few people know it. And then that isn't the same thing. It doesn't matter what one has been in the past. Especially a literary man; everyone expects to hear that he was once poor. But to fall from the position you now have, and to take weekly wages --you surely can't know how people of my world regard that.'

'Of your world? I had thought your world was the same as mine, and knew nothing whatever of these imbecilities.'

'It is getting late. Go and see Mr Carter, and afterwards I will talk as much as you like.'

He might perhaps have yielded, but the unemphasised contempt in that last sentence was more than he could bear. It demonstrated to him more completely than set terms could have done what a paltry weakling he would appear in Amy's eyes if he took his hat down from the peg and set out to obey her orders.

'You are asking too much,' he said, with unexpected coldness. 'If my opinions are so valueless to you that you dismiss them like those of a troublesome child, I wonder you think it worth while to try and keep up appearances about me. It is very simple: make known to everyone that you are in no way connected with the disgrace I have brought upon myself. Put an advertisement in the newspapers to that effect, if you like--as men do about their wives' debts. I have chosen my part. I can't stultify myself to please you.'

She knew that this was final. His voice had the true ring of shame in revolt.

'Then go your way, and I will go mine!'

Amy left the room.

When Reardon went into the bedchamber an hour later, he unfolded a chair-bedstead that stood there, threw some rugs upon it, and so lay down to pass the night. He did not close his eyes. Amy slept for an hour or two before dawn, and on waking she started up and looked anxiously about the room. But neither spoke.

There was a pretence of ordinary breakfast; the little servant necessitated that. When she saw her husband preparing to go out, Amy asked him to come into the study.

'How long shall you be away?' she asked, curtly.

'It is doubtful. I am going to look for rooms.'

'Then no doubt I shall be gone when you come back. There's no object, now, in my staying here till to-morrow.'

'As you please.'

'Do you wish Lizzie still to come?'

'No. Please to pay her wages and dismiss her. Here is some money.'

'I think you had better let me see to that.'

He flung the coin on to the table and opened the door. Amy stepped quickly forward and closed it again.

'This is our good-bye, is it?' she asked, her eyes on the ground.

'As you wish it--yes.'

'You will remember that I have not wished it.'

'In that case, you have only to go with me to the new home.'

'I can't.'

'Then you have made your choice.'

She did not prevent his opening the door this time, and he passed out without looking at her.

His return was at three in the afternoon. Amy and the child were gone; the servant was gone. The table in the dining-room was spread as if for one person's meal.

He went into the bedroom. Amy's trunks had disappeared. The child's cot was covered over. In the study, he saw that the sovereign he had thrown on to the table still lay in the same place.

As it was a very cold day he lit a fire. Whilst it burnt up he sat reading a torn portion of a newspaper, and became quite interested in the report of a commercial meeting in the City, a thing he would never have glanced at under ordinary circumstances. The fragment fell at length from his hands; his head drooped; he sank into a troubled sleep.

About six he had tea, then began the packing of the few books that were to go with him, and of such other things as could be enclosed in box or portmanteau. After a couple of hours of this occupation he could no longer resist his weariness, so he went to bed. Before falling asleep he heard the two familiar clocks strike eight; this evening they were in unusual accord, and the querulous notes from the workhouse sounded between the deeper ones from St Marylebone. Reardon tried to remember when he had last observed this; the matter seemed to have a peculiar interest for him, and in dreams he worried himself with a grotesque speculation thence derived.

同类推荐
  • 小儿初生护养门

    小儿初生护养门

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 胜天王般若波罗蜜经

    胜天王般若波罗蜜经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • ON INJURIES OF THE HEAD

    ON INJURIES OF THE HEAD

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 南史演义

    南史演义

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 海岳名言

    海岳名言

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 地狱之眼

    地狱之眼

    考古学家伯林汉先生准备将一具埃及的木乃伊捐献给大英博物馆,但在木乃伊进行展出的时候,他却离奇失踪了,除了一枚埃及十八王朝的圣甲虫宝饰,没有留下任何的线索,而他的失踪也关系到一份丰厚遗嘱的归属问题,在人们试图从那具封存千年的木乃伊身上寻找伯林汉先生失踪的线索时,却发现触碰的真相将会引发出一系列难以想象的灾难和阴谋……
  • 疯子毒猎

    疯子毒猎

    新的世界,全员登陆,集体数据化。主角带着记忆穿越到年幼的丰征身上,开始在这个特殊的世界探索,而在他身上,似乎捆绑着什么特殊的使命?……新书,求收藏!求推荐票!
  • 对你是离别,对我是等待

    对你是离别,对我是等待

    那一天,那个城市正遭遇近十年来最暴烈的风雪天。郁宁走进一座品位堪忧的大宅,并不知道将在那里见到再也无法忘记的人。她是美院一穷二白的学生,初衷只是一份报酬优越的工作,为此她成为年轻的舞台美术师严可铭的助手,却不知不觉中踏进一个从不曾想过的圈子。她觉得她像落水的人,在未知的河流中载沉载浮,迎接未可知的挑战和机遇,相识身份性情各异的人,但最美妙的是她爱上一个人。
  • 北城有陈

    北城有陈

    王小冉从读高二的时候就知道自己有个未婚夫。但是她不知道是谁,只知道是在A城。所以她大学选择了A城,遇见一个人。后来,她才知道,原来名义上的未婚夫是个渣。但是,隔壁病房的阿姨!我真的不是你未来儿媳哦!前来送饭的某男:你答应了我的求婚,还想嫁给谁?
  • 系统之我是暴食王

    系统之我是暴食王

    阿食意外来到了光耀大陆,他从新开启系统,暴食者。路漫漫,在与敌人的战斗中,逐渐变得更加强大。吸收敌人的能力,为自己所用。一个个阴谋,一个个强大的敌人,洪荒时代的怪物。几十个不同种族,十大强国争斗。2019年,不可错过的玄幻小说,这么漂亮的异族公主,我收不收,在线等!急!
  • 长河落日圆

    长河落日圆

    凝眺西天,红橙也似的一颗残阳渐次欺近了长河一线,窦克似乎看见许多面含不舍与不安的北匈奴人正沿河西去,斯情斯景,正如一卷残破的美梦。如果说在这个变幻时代、杀戮江湖里,真还有什么可依赖的话,那绝不会是权势、金钱、地位等等,而只有人对人、人对祖国的深厚情感才能把所有人团结成一个整体,相互扶持,以应付未来的挑战。
  • 傲世凰天

    傲世凰天

    2012年,来自未知世界的流星雨拉开了暗黑血腥的序幕。动植物进化,兽潮来袭,人类被逼迫至弹丸之地。有人说:这是世界末日。也有人说:这是新人类时代。林伊却发现这个男人真的变态。表面上斯文儒雅,但私底下尾随偷窥,自残索吻!哎呦喂,我的爷,让我安安静静拯救世界不好吗?
  • 精灵之外挂大师

    精灵之外挂大师

    外挂让你的生活充满愉悦……外挂虽然功能很强,不过智能为零。黎明让草系精灵学会了吐水球,鲤鱼王学会了飞行,飞行系精灵学会了潜水打洞……出招画面很美,请自行想象。不过,外挂虽好,却……叮!黎明兽偷袭并击败了晕倒的口呆花,获得了1点经验。系统你出来!!(注:本世界是架空出来的精灵世界,请勿完全代入原作世界的一切,本世界的所有精灵道具的制作均受某位神秘人魔改过……)
  • 九零兽语小悍妻

    九零兽语小悍妻

    重生的韩小叶有了空间灵泉,还有了一个神奇的秘技,那就是她能听懂很多动物说话了!在那个命运的拐角,她遇到了可咸可甜、有权有钱的萧子杰。稳住,不方!幸福是奋斗出来了!我们一起努力!蠢萌的猫头鹰,呆萌的鸭子,可爱的猫咪,忠诚的狗狗……都是她的好盆友呀!幸福的康庄大道,就在前方!跑!小剧场:[遇到坏人]萧子杰:小叶子,别怕,我保护你!小叶子:黑糖(狗子)上![钱包空空]萧子杰:小叶子,我的家当都给你小叶子:小煤球(猫咪),发现了一个宝藏[想要约会]萧子杰:小叶子,我们去看电影吧?小叶子:你给猫猫狗狗们买票了吗?萧子杰:!!!
  • 每天用一点读心识人术

    每天用一点读心识人术

    《每天用一点读心识人术》以社会学、心理学为理论基础,综合古今中外各种读心识人术的方法和技巧,主要从以下几个方面教你如何读懂一个人,如何穿过一个人外在的层层迷雾进入到他的核心,也就是他的气质和性格中去,进而得窥他行事的逻辑。这几个方面是:形体及着装、面容、朋友家人、兴趣爱好、语言、行为、置身环境时个人状态的自在与否。