登陆注册
5655000000010

第10章

"To be a proper rejoinder to my question," he said, rather neatly, "yours should be asked twenty-five years hence.""It remains perfectly true that at a given moment I was capable of doing as I say. That was what she wanted--a rich, susceptible, credulous, convenient young Englishman established near her en permanence. And yet," I added, "I must do her complete justice. Ihonestly believe she was fond of me." At this Stanmer got up and walked to the window; he stood looking out a moment, and then he turned round. "You know she was older than I," I went on. "Madame Scarabelli is older than you. One day in the garden, her mother asked me in an angry tone why I disliked Camerino; for I had been at no pains to conceal my feeling about him, and something had just happened to bring it out. 'I dislike him,' I said, 'because you like him so much.' 'I assure you I don't like him,' she answered. 'He has all the appearance of being your lover,' I retorted. It was a brutal speech, certainly, but any other man in my place would have made it. She took it very strangely; she turned pale, but she was not indignant. 'How can he be my lover after what he has done?' she asked. 'What has he done?' She hesitated a good while, then she said: 'He killed my husband.' 'Good heavens!' I cried, 'and you receive him!' Do you know what she said? She said, 'Che voule?'""Is that all?" asked Stanmer.

"No; she went on to say that Camerino had killed Count Salvi in a duel, and she admitted that her husband's jealousy had been the occasion of it. The Count, it appeared, was a monster of jealousy--he had led her a dreadful life. He himself, meanwhile, had been anything but irreproachable; he had done a mortal injury to a man of whom he pretended to be a friend, and this affair had become notorious. The gentleman in question had demanded satisfaction for his outraged honour; but for some reason or other (the Countess, to do her justice, did not tell me that her husband was a coward), he had not as yet obtained it. The duel with Camerino had come on first; in an access of jealous fury the Count had struck Camerino in the face; and this outrage, I know not how justly, was deemed expiable before the other. By an extraordinary arrangement (the Italians have certainly no sense of fair play) the other man was allowed to be Camerino's second. The duel was fought with swords, and the Count received a wound of which, though at first it was not expected to be fatal, he died on the following day. The matter was hushed up as much as possible for the sake of the Countess's good name, and so successfully that it was presently observed that, among the public, the other gentleman had the credit of having put his blade through M. de Salvi. This gentleman took a fancy not to contradict the impression, and it was allowed to subsist. So long as he consented, it was of course in Camerino's interest not to contradict it, as it left him much more free to keep up his intimacy with the Countess."Stanmer had listened to all this with extreme attention. "Why didn't SHE contradict it?"I shrugged my shoulders. "I am bound to believe it was for the same reason. I was horrified, at any rate, by the whole story. I was extremely shocked at the Countess's want of dignity in continuing to see the man by whose hand her husband had fallen.""The husband had been a great brute, and it was not known," said Stanmer.

"Its not being known made no difference. And as for Salvi having been a brute, that is but a way of saying that his wife, and the man whom his wife subsequently married, didn't like him."Stanmer hooked extremely meditative; his eyes were fixed on mine.

"Yes, that marriage is hard to get over. It was not becoming.""Ah," said I, "what a long breath I drew when I heard of it! Iremember the place and the hour. It was at a hill-station in India, seven years after I had left Florence. The post brought me some English papers, and in one of them was a letter from Italy, with a lot of so-called 'fashionable intelligence.' There, among various scandals in high life, and other delectable items, I read that the Countess Bianca Salvi, famous for some years as the presiding genius of the most agreeable seen in Florence, was about to bestow her hand upon Count Camerino, a distinguished Bolognese. Ah, my dear boy, it was a tremendous escape! I had been ready to marry the woman who was capable of that! But my instinct had warned me, and I had trusted my instinct.""'Instinct's everything,' as Falstaff says!" And Stanmer began to laugh. "Did you tell Madame de Salvi that your instinct was against her?""No; I told her that she frightened me, shocked me, horrified me.""That's about the same thing. And what did she say?""She asked me what I would have? I called her friendship with Camerino a scandal, and she answered that her husband had been a brute. Besides, no one knew it; therefore it was no scandal. Just YOUR argument! I retorted that this was odious reasoning, and that she had no moral sense. We had a passionate argument, and I declared I would never see her again. In the heat of my displeasure I left Florence, and I kept my vow. I never saw her again.""You couldn't have been much in love with her," said Stanmer.

"I was not--three months after."

"If you had been you would have come back--three days after.""So doubtless it seems to you. All I can say is that it was the great effort of my life. Being a military man, I have had on various occasions to face time enemy. But it was not then I needed my resolution; it was when I left Florence in a post-chaise."Stanmer turned about the room two or three times, and then he said:

"I don't understand! I don't understand why she should have told you that Camerino had killed her husband. It could only damage her.""She was afraid it would damage her more that I should think he was her lover. She wished to say the thing that would most effectually persuade me that he was not her lover--that he could never be. And then she wished to get the credit of being very frank.""Good heavens, how you must have analysed her!" cried my companion, staring.

同类推荐
  • 续世说

    续世说

    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。
  • 佛说八部佛名经

    佛说八部佛名经

    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。
  • 权书

    权书

    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。
  • 狱中上母书

    狱中上母书

    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。
  • 周书

    周书

    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
  • 仗舰走天涯

    仗舰走天涯

    2015年4月3日,作者随中国海军152舰艇编队从舟山出发,执行亚丁湾、索马里海域护航和环球访问任务。152舰艇编队圆满完成海军第二十批护航任务,共为39批90艘中外船舶护航,有效维护了战略通道安全。护航任务结束后,编队未经休整直接转入环球访问任务,横跨5大洲16个国家访问。152舰艇编队的护航和环球访问,成果丰硕,影响深远,充分展示了海军现代化建设成就和官兵过硬的军政素质,为祖国和军队赢得了荣誉。
  • 缺失的心理课

    缺失的心理课

    本书前两课是基础课和认知课,通过一些真实有趣的故事,将心理学知识结合到生活中,让读者从自己的身上寻找类似心理现象的影子,从而强化对心理学知识的理解。其余的课程则从心态、修养、情绪、梦想、职场、逆境、社交等方面展开,为读者提供全方位的心理建议。
  • 卿心可念不可说

    卿心可念不可说

    只有死过一次,才会知道什么最难以割舍。真正的爱永远也无法掩藏。日为朝,月为暮,卿为朝朝暮暮。
  • 梦幻的复仇之路

    梦幻的复仇之路

    一个人获得的东西究竟是上天的安排,还是阴谋的产物?小人物就只有小人物的道,反抗不了,就默默享受。(非爽文,无女主)
  • 物种入侵异世界

    物种入侵异世界

    当人类作为一个全新的物种入侵到一片恐怖的世界时,藏在暗处的怪物终于向着人类露出了狰狞的牙齿。这是一场关乎种族生死存亡的战争,也亦是一场文明的入侵!季如风骑着巨龙看着这方天地。人类,全面入侵!!!!
  • 道祖,我来自地球

    道祖,我来自地球

    他只想低调发育,苟到王者,稳健地走到人生巅峰,奈何实力却不允许他低调了。身为挂逼,两成功力同级无敌,四成功力越境碾压,咋低调?真是愁人啊……
  • 唐宋词精品鉴赏

    唐宋词精品鉴赏

    唐宋词从唐五代起,至北宋南宋而大成,由小令到中、长调,可谓名家辈出精品如林。本书博采众长,选唐宋名家各种流派杰作,精华毕呈,希望帮助读者朋友们更好地欣赏唐宋词名篇佳作、领略唐宋词的幽深情韵.
  • 萌狐下山,恩人你别跑

    萌狐下山,恩人你别跑

    小狐狸出山报当年恩公救命之恩,便顺手调查了一下恩公的为人,结果如下。“我的恩公有什么优点吗?”“有啊,杀人不眨眼,嗜血如命。”“……”“恩公的为人就这么不好吗?”“对!”“……”看来,只有她平一己之力为恩公洗白了。只是当她兴致勃勃的跑去找恩公,却迎面而来一个字。“滚!”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 千面师傅之徒儿知错了

    千面师傅之徒儿知错了

    高冷、护短仙尊Ys腹黑、蠢萌仙徒“仙尊,你的徒儿将受伤了。”“在哪?!”“东宫”一眨眼,刚刚还在批奏的人瞬间没影了。“仙尊,太上老君炼的丹药被您的徒弟弄炸了”“将库存的药草送一些过去”“没了,都送走了”仙童尴尬的摸摸鼻子。“那宝物呢”“也没了”“……”摊上这么一个爱惹事,又强大的徒弟怎么办。在线求解……
  • 对你不是心动但胜似心动

    对你不是心动但胜似心动

    ---我对你不是心动,但胜似心动--江泽熙---不想和你擦肩而过--宋清欢高中结束,宋清欢感叹“OMGD,我也考上了耶耶耶,终于不用被俩没心没肺的哥笑话了”。宋靖羽(老大)“还不是我给你补习的,这么开心干嘛”“切,拆台王”大一美术院分班结束,宋清欢这个花痴竟看起了帅哥???“怎么会有这么好看的男孩子呢,老夫的少女心啊”宋清华的花痴想法。“what,这女的也太花痴了吧,虽然我英俊潇洒,风流倜傥,玉树临风但也不需要这样子吧”没错,这是来自某个自恋男的心里想法。ps:甜文,为虐,会很长但是章数不多。