登陆注册
4806000000057

第57章 THE FLAT NEAR THE EDGWARE ROAD(1)

Geoffrey's journey to town was not altogether a cheerful one. To begin with, Effie wept copiously at parting with her beloved "auntie," as she called Beatrice, and would not be comforted. The prospect of rejoining her mother and the voluble Anne had no charms for Effie.

They all three got on best apart. Geoffrey himself had also much to think about, and found little satisfaction in the thinking. He threw his mind back over the events of the past few weeks. He remembered how he had first seen Beatrice's face through the thick mist on the Red Rocks, and how her beauty had struck him as no beauty ever had before.

Then he thought of the adventure of their shipwreck, and of the desperate courage with which she had saved his life, almost at the cost of her own. He thought, too, of that scene when on the following day he had entered the room where she was asleep, when the wandering ray of light had wavered from her breast to his own, when that strange presentiment of the ultimate intermingling of their lives had flashed upon him, and when she had awakened with an unearthly greeting on her lips. While Effie slowly sobbed herself to silence in the corner opposite to him, one by one, he recalled every phase and scene of their ever-growing intimacy, till the review culminated in his mysterious experience of the past night, and the memory of Beatrice's parting words.

Of all men Geoffrey was among those least inclined to any sort of superstition; from boyhood he had been noted for common sense, and a somewhat disbelieving turn of mind. But he had intellect, and imagination which is simply intellect etherealised. Without these, with his peculiar mental constitution, he would, for instance, probably have been a religious sceptic; having them, he was nothing of the sort. So in this matter of his experience of the previous night, and generally of the strange and almost unnatural sympathy in which he found himself with this lady, common sense and the results of his observation and experience pointed to the whole thing being nonsense--the result of "propinquity, Sir, propinquity," and a pretty face--and nothing more.

But here his intellect and his imagination stepped in, telling him plainly that it was not nonsense, that he had not merely made a donkey of himself over an hysterical, or possibly a love-sick girl. They told him that because a thing is a mystery it is not necessarily a folly, though mysteries are for the most part dealt in by fools. They suggested that there may be many things and forces above us and around us, invisible as an electric current, intangible as light, yet existent and capable of manifestation under certain rare and favourable conditions.

And was it not possible that such conditions should unite in a woman like Beatrice, who combined in herself a beauty of body which was only outpassed by the beauty of her mind? It was no answer to say that most women could never inspire the unearthly passion with which he had been shaken some ten hours past, or that most men could never become aware of the inspiration. Has not humanity powers and perceptions denied to the cattle of the fields, and may there not be men and women as far removed from their fellows in this respect as these are from the cattle?

But the weak point of mysterious occurrences is that they lead nowhere, and do not materially alter the facts of life. One cannot, for instance, plead a mystery in a court of law; so, dropping the imaginative side of the question as one beyond him, Geoffrey came to its practical aspect, only to find it equally thorny.

Odd as it may seem, Geoffrey did not to this moment know the exact position which he occupied in the mind of Beatrice, or that she occupied in his. He was not in love with her, at least not in a way in which he had ever experienced the influence of that, on the whole, inconvenient and disagreeable passion. At any rate he argued from the hypothesis that he was not in love with her. This he refused to admit now in the light of day, though he had admitted it fully in the watches of the night. It would not do to admit it. But he was forced to acknowledge that she had crept into his life and possessed it so completely that then and for months afterwards, except in deep sleep or in hours of severe mental strain, not a single half hour would pass without bringing its thought of Beatrice. Everything that was beautiful, or grand, or elevating, reminded him of her--and what higher compliment could a mistress have? If he listened to glorious music, the voice of Beatrice spoke to him through the notes; if he watched the clouds rolling in heavy pomp across a broken sky he thought of Beatrice; if some chance poem or novel moved him, why Beatrice was in his mind to share the pleasure. All of which was very interesting, and in some ways delightful, but under our current system not otherwise than inconvenient to a married man.

And now Beatrice was gone, and he must come back to his daily toil, sweetened by Honoria's bitter complaints of their poverty, and see her no more. The thought made Geoffrey's heart ache with a physical pain, but his reason told him that it was best so. After all, there were no bones broken; there had been no love scenes, no kiss, no words that cannot be recalled; whatever there was lay beneath the surface, and while appearances were kept up all was well. No doubt it was an hypocrisy, but then hypocrisy is one of the great pillars of civilization, and how does it matter what the heart says while the lips are silent? The Recording Angel can alone read hearts, and he must often find them singularly contradictory and untrustworthy writings.

Die of them, die of her dreams! No, Beatrice would not die of them, and certainly he should not. Probably in the end she would marry that pious earthly lump, Owen Davies. It was not pleasant to think of, it was even dreadful, but really if she were to ask him his opinion, "as a friend," he should tell her it was the best thing that she could do.

同类推荐
  • 根本说一切有部毗奈耶

    根本说一切有部毗奈耶

    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。
  • 孝经

    孝经

    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。
  • 金刚童子持念经

    金刚童子持念经

    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。
  • 丹溪治法心要

    丹溪治法心要

    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。
  • 乐府传声

    乐府传声

    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
  • 妃诚勿扰

    妃诚勿扰

    浑身冷戾的男子矛盾纠结地望着她君儿,你敢不从本王她冷漠地瞪了他一眼,一字一顿的回答你是谁,我不认识你
  • 落宅的双身少女

    落宅的双身少女

    她因冥冥之中的纠葛遇上死亡,被心莫名与她相通、在人世中不停找寻自己失散的恋人的阎王爷儿子用执掌冥间的信物救活,成了与正常人一样却也不太一样的活死人。死而复生,她渐渐地去接受自己的特殊,忍住随时有可能离世的不安和诸多的苦痛,在人与鬼的纷扰之中努力过着正常人的生活。不料,掩在远久尘埃之下的残酷真相意外揭开,曾经的恩怨情仇又摆在面前,原本的她竟是一族之主,统治着一方妖灵,却为爱叛族。匆匆一世,遍体鳞伤后才知,爱恨挣扎,皆因她在阎王爷的儿子还是小孩子的时候坑过他……
  • 恶魔扑上小绵羊:夫君在上

    恶魔扑上小绵羊:夫君在上

    一见钟情不适合她,聪明的她无心留恋风花雪月,然而突来的一切,打破她的计划。家破人亡,没有钱,没有亲人,没有朋友……被‘狼’看中是什么感觉,他一副高高在上,笑脸迎人,转身狠狠的在她肩头上咬了一口,抬起头时,唇上沾染了她的血,恶魔般的笑,让她失去一切。他对她说:“不要走,否则我会拉你一起去下地狱!”“地狱?我没有走出你的地狱之门,候爷!”他是人,还是魔,嘴唇上染的鲜红颜色,是什么?是她的血,说不出的诡异。说不出的感觉……她伤痕累累,将心收藏,小心翼翼无心去爱,默默将自己掩埋,就让他自己一个人高高在上吧!“祝候爷同新人,永结同心,白头到老。”喜房内,她跪着向他与新娘子磕头拜首“我从来不知道,你这么会说话。”转身,她对他一笑,惟一的一笑,毫不留恋的投入别人的怀抱,他沦陷了……一场为爱复仇的阴谋,人性变故,性情改变,你,我,他,谁都摆脱不了命运之神的控制,是是非非,谁能作主……爱我,你就要知我,惜我,怜我,疼我!内容简介:<夫君在上>视频不方便加V的朋友,我会把故事简介,慢慢传上来让大家欣赏。
  • 花言灵

    花言灵

    “拒绝说话”的咲田继实在一家丧礼花专卖店打工,在日常工作过程中逐渐了解每一种花的花语,以及每个花语所承载的功能,认识到了“花言灵”的神奇力量。在这段期间,他也通过花言灵知晓了自己家庭的秘密。花语无声,物语有情。花店版的《深夜食堂》。
  • 北齐书

    北齐书

    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。
  • 至尊邪王:盛世小狂妻

    至尊邪王:盛世小狂妻

    当腹黑遇上腹黑当高冷撞上呆萌当无情碰上柔情当逗逼遇上美男这将会擦出一场怎样的爱情火花呢?
  • 快穿契约:炮灰逆袭,反派极度宠

    快穿契约:炮灰逆袭,反派极度宠

    【本书1V1】----系统:[我家主人日常虐渣!]古代夺权位面——主角:我明明是这个世界男主!凭什么我一剑就挂了!?!墨夜:因为你渣。主角:……现代校园位面——主角:我不是世界最厉害的人吗,你一个炮灰怎么可能斗得过我,天道莫不是给了我个假身份!?墨夜:因为你渣。主角:……末日丧尸位面——主角:我才是这个世界救世主,为什么我连个炮灰一剑都扛不了,为什么我那么轻易就领盒饭了!!?墨夜:因为你渣。主角:……………………系统淡定的点了一根烟:[主人日常虐渣。]某个被墨夜遗忘在了犄角旮旯里的男人温润道:……墨墨你坐我身边来,渣我来虐,你只管高贵冷艳就好……
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 你是我的盛世阑珊

    你是我的盛世阑珊

    她一见到他的第一眼,就说道:“我要和你结婚!”他淡淡一笑,“好!我们现在就去民政局。”婚后,他宠她入骨,她爱他至深;只是代价却是每晚都让她下不来床。到最后,真相昭然若揭——他用了十年时间,设了一场局,一场让她爱上他的局。…………………………………………【小剧场】“黎少,少奶奶离家出走了。”“没事,她会回来的。”果不其然只过了一个小时,她就回来了。“你居然敢冻结我的卡!”“不然你会回来吗?”晚上,他便继续让她下不来床。“不公平!”“很公平,我们要努力造宝宝。”【总之,这是一个高冷总裁腹黑设局追妻宠妻的故事,很甜很宠,放心入坑】
  • 薰衣草下的罪恶

    薰衣草下的罪恶

    本书主要内容包括:《谁是凶手》、《青玉案》、《蝶恋花》、《爱的迷惘》、《恨的冷漠》、《恋的惨烈》、《狂飙状态》、《薰衣草下的罪恶》、《满江红》等。