登陆注册
37373200000142

第142章

'GET ROUND HIM.'

Ferdinand Lopez maintained his anger against his wife for more than a week, after the scene at Richmond, feeding it with reflections on what he called her disobedience.Nor was it a make-believe anger.She had declared her intention to act in opposition to his expressed orders.He felt that his present condition was prejudicial to his interests, and that he must take his wife back into favour, in order the he might make progress with her father, but could hardly bring himself to swallow his wrath.He thought it was her duty to obey him in everything,--and that disobedience on a matter touching her old lover was an abominable offence, to be visited with severest marital displeasure, and with a succession of scowls that should make her miserable for a month at least.Nor on her behalf would he have hesitated, though the misery might have continued three months.

But then the old man was the main hope in his life, and must be made its mainstay.Brilliant prospects were before him.He used to think that Mr Wharton was a hale man, with some terribly vexatious term of his life before him.But now, now that he was seen more closely, he appeared to be very old.He would sit half bent in the arm-chair in Stone Buildings, and look as though he were near a hundred.And from day to day he seemed to lean more upon his son-in-law, whose visits to him were continued, and always well taken.The constant subject of discourse between them was Everett Wharton, who had not yet seen his father since the misfortune of their quarrel.Everett had declared to Lopez a dozen times that he would go to his father if his father wished it, and Lopez as often reported the father that Everett would not go to him unless he expressed such a wish.And so they had been kept apart.Lopez did not suppose that the old man would disinherit his son altogether,--did not, perhaps, wish it.But he thought that the condition of the old man's mind would affect the partition of his property, and that the old man would surely make some new will in the present state of his affairs.The old man always asked after his daughter, begging that she would come to see him, and at last it was necessary that an evening should be fixed.'We shall be delighted to come to-day or to-morrow,'

Lopez said.

'We had better say to-morrow.There would be nothing to eat to-day.The house isn't now what it used to be.' It was therefore expedient that Lopez should drop his anger when he got home, and prepare his wife to dine in Manchester Square in a proper frame of mind.

Her misery had been extreme;--very much more bitter than he had imagined.It was not only that his displeasure made her life for the time wearisome, and robbed the only society she had of all its charms.It was not only that her heart was wounded by his anger.Those evils might have been short-lived.But she had seen,--she could not fail to see,--that his conduct was unworthy of her and of her deep love.Though she struggled hard against the feeling, she could not but despise the meanness of his jealousy.She knew thoroughly well that there had been no grain of offence in that letter from Arthur Fletcher,--and she knew that no man, to true man, would have taken offence at it.

She tried to quench her judgement, and to silence the verdict which her intellect gave against him, but her intellect was too strong even for her heart.She was beginning to learn that the god of idolatry was but a little human creature, and that she should not have worshipped at so poor a shrine.But nevertheless the love should be continued, and, if possible, the worship, though the idol had been already found to have feet of clay.He was her husband, and she would be true to him.As morning after morning he left her still with that harsh, unmanly frown upon his face, she would look up at him with entreating eyes, and when he returned would receive him with her fondest smile.At length he, too, smiled.He came to after that interview with Mr Wharton and told her, speaking with the soft yet incisive voice which she used to love so well, that they were to dine in the Square on the following day.'Let there be an end of all of this,' he said, taking her in his arms and kissing her.Of course she did not tell him that 'all this' had sprung from his ill-humour and not from hers.'I own I have been angry,' he continued.'I will say nothing more about it now; but that man did vex me.'

'I have been so sorry that you should have been vexed.'

'Well;--let it pass away.I don't think your father is looking very well.'

'He is not ill?'

'Oh no.He feels the loss of your society.He is so much alone.

You must be more with him.'

'Has he not seen Everett yet?'

'No.Everett is not behaving altogether well.' Emily was made unhappy by this, and showed it.'He is the best fellow in the world.I may safely say there is no other man whom I regard so warmly as I do your brother.But he takes wrong ideas into his head, and nothing will knock them out.I wonder what your father has done about his will.'

'I have not an idea.Nothing you may be sure will make him unjust to Everett.'

'Ah!--You don't happen to know whether he ever made a will?'

'Not at all.He would be sure to say nothing to me about it,--or to anybody.'

'That is the kind of secrecy which I think is wrong.It leads to so much uncertainty.You wouldn't like to ask him?'

'No;--certainly.'

'It is astonishing to me how afraid you are of your father.He hasn't any land, has he?'

'Land!'

'Real estate.You know what I mean.He couldn't well have landed property without your knowing it.' She shook her head.

'It might make an immense difference to us, you know.'

'Why so?'

'If he were to die without a will, any land,--houses and that kind of property,--would go to Everett.I never knew a man who told his children so little.I want you to understand these things.You and I will be badly off if he doesn't do something for us.'

'You don't think he is really ill?'

'No;--not ill.Men above seventy are apt to die, you know.'

'Oh, Ferdinand,--what a way to talk of it!'

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 苟三莲的战斗生存日记

    苟三莲的战斗生存日记

    腹黑却又强力的苟三莲,人傻钱多功夫好的表弟苟富贵。不打不相识的疯狗强,号称千杯不醉的扎力······情比金坚的兄弟感情,叱咤风云的武馆大战。热血的打斗,快意情仇的江湖。苟三莲的战斗生存日记,要你们一起来谱写。
  • 剧变人生:我的后半生

    剧变人生:我的后半生

    我不知道我是谁,我有一个名字叫“周莉”。我对这个名字熟悉又陌生。我曾坚定的认为周莉就是我,我就是周莉。但后来发生的事让我迷惘。我是谁?
  • 御剑踏歌行

    御剑踏歌行

    一柄心剑了无痕,年少有梦当敢行!一位患有神经病的少年在治好病打通经最后成神的故事。一剑当如一念。道,仙,神,人,灵,魂,转生,长生,永生。超生!共12境
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 神界之夜

    神界之夜

    序:远去了太古洪荒,消散了天地玄黄。我曾于百世中寻你,却于人海中失去。天地悠悠,葬神墓于地下;众生凄凄,赴黄泉以求生。天地为局,众生为棋,是谁将大世破灭,布下万年大局?千年之前,究竟发生了什么?是外敌入侵,还是内乱生起,是黑手操纵,还是天地不容?千年之后,叶晨自大荒中走出,却发现,太古的秘密才刚刚浮现……
  • 爱神来晚总裁请留步

    爱神来晚总裁请留步

    “昨天的事,你是不是该给我一个解释!”她悲愤地大声质问。“解释什么?你该不会天真地以为我昨天真打算跟你结婚吧?”他好看的唇边随意吐着冷酷的字眼:“你只是我当作替补的玩物,现在已经失去了利用价值。所以,滚吧!记得把肚子里的野种拿掉!”被母亲的阴谋驱使,她来到他身边,窃取他对别的女人的爱,并在他的爱里沦陷,但随着那个女人的意外回归,她的悲剧接踵而至,带着一身伤痛离开。她并不知道,他残忍的表象背后,却是对她的保护和至爱。数年后,她强势回归,与他宣战,并将他逼上绝路,他却始终不肯讲出隐情。当她得知真相,他却已经消失在茫茫人海。她立誓要找到他:总裁,从此以后,换我爱你。
  • 改变生活的68个心理学故事

    改变生活的68个心理学故事

    本书所收录的故事,涵盖实验心理学、人格心理学、社会心理学等多个方面,让我们在初步了解心理学知识的同时,也对我们的内在世界有所了解,有所认识,从而使我们心眼大开,豁然开朗。
  • 炫舞之逸蝶风舞

    炫舞之逸蝶风舞

    蝶飞风舞,究竟是蝶的痴迷还是风的不舍,花开花落,风随随蝶舞,只为伴蝶左右,风去风来,蝶寻风万里,只为随风起舞……群号:480625959
  • 熊崽今天爬床又失败了

    熊崽今天爬床又失败了

    每天都在防备坐骑爬床的蚩尤*每天都在耍流氓的食铁兽?熊沛沛是只食铁兽,她一直在找自己转世的大哥,这一找就是5000多年。好不容易混进姜元国食铁兽饲养基地,喝到了梦寐以求的盆盆奶。一天捧着盆盆奶的熊沛沛看到一个穿着白T恤和大花裤衩的青年来到食铁兽饲养基地……熊沛沛震惊的瞪着青年,抱着盆盆奶跑到他面前:“大哥!”朱峻看着脚下的妖兽崽子:“这熊崽子……劲儿不小……”小剧场:自打熊沛沛尾随朱峻(蚩尤)回家之后。熊沛沛:大哥,上背来,我驮你!朱峻沉默的看着眼前抱着奶盆子的熊崽子,半响憋出一句话:你确定?黄帝看向炎帝:我也……炎帝:滚!熊沛沛(化为人形后):大哥,上背来,我驮你!朱峻沉默的看着158的熊沛沛,又想了想自己182的身高,5分钟后:你确定?
  • 逆修

    逆修

    被毁灭了所有的王诩在地狱般的地方生存下来后,重生的他冷血,淡然,整个世界没有他在意的东西。他所要做的就是完成他爹死去时的那句话,站在巅峰!可是他的命,却有那么多的人想来拿,他的命,他能留住几时?他的路,又能走到那一步?