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april hopes-第70部分

小说: april hopes 字数: 每页4000字

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ovn。  This is; perhaps; a hint from the infinite sympathy which feels for
us all that none of us can hope to free himself from the troubles of
others; that we are each bound to each by ties which; for the most part;
we cannot perceive; but which; at the moment their stress comes; we cannot
break。

Mrs。 Brinkley lay awake and raged impotently against her complicity with
the unhappiness of that distasteful girl and her more than distasteful
mother。  In her revolt against it she renounced the interest she had felt
in that silly boy; and his ridiculous love business; so really unimportant
to her whatever turn it took。  She asked herself what it mattered to her
whether those children marred their lives one way or another way。  There
was a lurid moment before she slept when she wished Brinkley to go down
and recall her telegram; but he refused to be a fool at so much
inconvenience to himself。

Mrs。 Brinkley came to breakfast feeling so much more haggard than she
found either of the Pasmers looking; that she was able to throw off her
lingering remorse for having told Mavering not to come。  She had the
advantage also of doubt as to her precise motive in having done so; she
had either done so because she had judged it best for him not to see Miss
Pasmer again; or else she had done so to relieve the girl from the pain of
an encounter which her mother evidently dreaded for her。  If one motive
seemed at moments outrageously meddling and presumptuous; the other was so
nobly good and kind that it more than counterbalanced it in Mrs。
Brinkley's mind; who knew very well in spite of her doubt that she had;
acted from a mixture of both。  With this conviction; it was both a comfort
and a pang to find by the register of the hotel; which she furtively
consulted; that Dan had not arrived by the morning boat; as she
groundlessly feared and hoped he might have done。

In any case; however; and at the end of all the ends; she had that girl on
her hands more than ever; and believing as she did that Dan and Alice had
only to meet in order to be reconciled; she felt that the girl whom she
had balked of her prey was her innocent victim。  What right had she to
interfere?  Was he not her natural prey?  If he liked being a prey; who
was lawfully to forbid him?  He was not perfect; he would know how to take
care of himself probably; in marriage things equalised themselves。  She
looked at the girl's thin cheeks and lack…lustre eyes; and pitied and
hated her with that strange mixture of feeling which our victims aspire in
us。

She walked out on the verandah with the Pasmers after breakfast; and
chatted a while about indifferent things; and Alice made an effort to
ignore the event of the night before with a pathos which wrung Mrs。
Brinkley's heart; and with a gay resolution which ought to have been a
great pleasure to such a veteran dissembler as her mother。  She said she
had never found the air so delicious; she really believed it would begin
to do her good now; but it was a little fresh just there; and with her
eyes she invited her mother to come with her round the corner into that
sheltered recess; and invited Mrs。 Brinkley not to come。

It was that effect of resentment which is lighter even than a touch; the
waft of the arrow's feather; but it could wound a guilty heart; and Mrs。
Brinkley sat down where she was; realising with a pang that the time when
she might have been everything to this unhappy girl had just passed for
ever; and henceforth she could be nothing。  She remained musing sadly upon
the contradictions she had felt in the girl's character; the confusion of
good and evil; the potentialities of misery and harm; the potentialities
of bliss and good; and she felt less and less satisfied with herself。  She
had really presumed to interfere with Fate; perhaps she had interfered
with Providence。  She would have given anything to recall her act; and
then with a flash she realised that it was quite possible to recall it。
She could telegraph Mavering to come; and she rose; humbly and gratefully;
as if from an answered prayer; to go and do so。

She was not at all a young woman; and many things had come and gone in her
life that ought to have fortified her against surprise; but she wanted to
scream like a little frightened girl as Dan Mavering stepped out of the
parlour door toward her。  The habit of not screaming; however; prevailed;
and she made a tolerably successful effort to treat him with decent
composure。  She gave him a rigid hand。  〃Where in the world did you come
from?  Did you get my telegram?〃

〃No。  Did you get my letter?〃

〃Yes。〃

〃Well; I took a notion to come right on after I wrote; and I started on
the same train with it。  But they said it was no use trying to get into
the Hygeia; and I stopped last night at the little hotel in Hampton。  I've
just walked over; and Mr。 Brinkley told me you were out here somewhere。
That's the whole story; I believe。〃  He gave his nervous laugh; but it
seemed to Mrs。 Brinkley that it had not much joy in it。

〃Hush!〃 she said involuntarily; receding to her chair and sinking back
into it again。  He looked surprised。  〃You know the Van Hooks are gone?〃

He laughed harshly。  〃I should think they were dead from your manner; Mrs。
Brinkley。  But I didn't come to see the Van Hooks。  What made you think I
did?〃

He gave her a look which she found so dishonest; so really insincere; that
she resolved to abandon him to Providence as soon as she could。  〃Oh; I
didn't know but there had been some little understanding at Washington。〃

〃Perhaps on their part。  They were people who seemed to take a good many
things for granted; but they could hardly expect to control other people's
movements。〃

He looked sharply at Mrs。 Brinkley; as if to question how much she knew;
but she had now measured him; and she said; 〃Oh! then the visit's to me?〃

〃Entirely;〃 cried Dan。  The old sweetness came into his laughing eyes
again; and went to Mrs。 Brinkley's heart。  She wished him to be happy;
somehow; she would have done anything for him; she wished she knew what to
do。  Ought she to tell him the Pasmers were there?  Ought she to make up
some excuse and get him away before he met them?  She felt herself getting
more and more bewildered and helpless。  Those women might come round that
corner any moment and then she know the first sight of Alice's face would
do or undo everything with Dan。  Did she wish them reconciled?  Did she
wish them for ever parted?  She no longer knew what she wished; she only
knew that she had no right to wish anything。  She continued to talk on
with Dan; who grew more and more at ease; and did most of the talking;
while Mrs。 Brinkley's whole being narrowed itself to the question。  Would
the Pasmers come back that way; or would they go round the further corner;
and get into the hotel by another door?

The suspense seemed interminable; they must have already gone that other
way。  Suddenly she heard the pushing back of chairs in that recess。  She
could not bear it。  She jumped to her feet。

〃Just wait a moment; Mr。 Mavering!  I'll join you again。  Mr。 Brinkley is
expectingI must〃

      。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。

One morning of the following June Mrs。 Brinkley sat well forward in the
beautiful church where Dan and Alice were to be married。  The lovely day
became a still lovelier day within; enriched by the dyes of the stained
windows through which it streamed; the still place was dim yet bright with
it; the figures painted on the walls had a soft distinctness; a body of
light seemed to irradiate from the depths of the dome like lamp…light。

There was a subdued murmur of voices among the people in the pews: they
were in a sacred edifice without being exactly at church; and they might
talk; now and then a muffled; nervous laugh escaped。  A delicate scent of
flowers from the masses in the chancel mixed with the light and the
prevailing silence。  There was a soft; continuous rustle of drapery as the
ladies advanced up the thickly carpeted aisles on the arms of the young
ushers and compressed themselves into place in the pews。

Two or three people whom she did not know were put into the pew with Mrs。
Brinkley; but she kept her seat next the aisle; presently an usher brought
up a lady who sat down beside her; and then for a moment or two seemed to
sink and rise; as if on the springs of an intense excitement。

It was Miss Cotton; who; while this process of quiescing lasted; appeared
not to know Mrs。 Brinkley。  When she became aware of her; all was lost
again。  〃Mrs。 Brinkley!〃 she cried; as well as one can cry in whisper。
〃Is it possible?〃

〃I have my doubts;〃 Mrs。 Brinkley whispered back。  〃But we'll suppose the
case。〃

〃Oh; it's all too good to he true!  How I envy you being the means of
bringing them together; Mrs。 Brinkley!〃

〃Means?〃

〃Yesthey owe it all to you; you needn't try to deny it; he's told every
one!〃

〃I was sure she hadn't;〃 said Mrs。 Brinkley; remembering how Alice had
marked an increasing ignorance of any part she might have had in the
affair from the first moment of her reconciliation with Dan; she had the
effect of feeling tha

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