登陆注册
37811300000077

第77章 Chapter XXXII. Miss Westerfield.(1)

She locked the door of her bedchamber, and threw off her walking-dress; light as it was, she felt as if it would stifle her. Even the ribbon round her neck was more than she could endure and breathe freely. Her overburdened heart found no relief in tears. In the solitude of her room she thought of the future.

The dreary foreboding of what it might be, filled her with a superstitious dread from which she recoiled. One of the windows was open already; she threw up the other to get more air. In the cooler atmosphere her memory recovered itself; she recollected the newspaper, that Herbert had taken from her. Instantly she rang for the maid. "Ask the first waiter you see downstairs for today's newspaper; any one will do, so long as I don't wait for it." The report of the Divorce--she was in a frenzy of impatience to read what _he_ had read--the report of the Divorce.

When her wish had been gratified, when she had read it from beginning to end, one vivid impression only was left on her mind.

She could think of nothing but what the judge had said, in speaking of Mrs. Linley.

A cruel reproof, and worse than cruel, a public reproof, administered to the generous friend, the true wife, the devoted mother--and for what? For having been too ready to forgive the wretch who had taken her husband from her, and had repaid a hundred acts of kindness by unpardonable ingratitude.

She fell on her knees; she tried wildly to pray for inspiration that should tell her what to do. "Oh, God, how can I give that woman back the happiness of which I have robbed her!"

The composing influence of prayer on a troubled mind was something that she had heard of. It was not something that she experienced now. An overpowering impatience to make the speediest and completest atonement possessed her. Must she wait till Herbert Linley no longer concealed that he was weary of her, and cast her off? No! It should be her own act that parted them, and that did it at once. She threw open the door, and hurried half-way down the stairs before she remembered the one terrible obstacle in her way--the Divorce.

Slowly and sadly she submitted, and went back to her room.

There was no disguising it; the two who had once been husband and wife were parted irrevocably--by the wife's own act. Let him repent ever so sincerely, let him be ever so ready to return, would the woman whose faith Herbert Linley had betrayed take him back? The Divorce, the merciless Divorce, answered:--No!

She paused, thinking of the marriage that was now a marriage no more. The toilet-table was close to her; she looked absently at her haggard face in the glass. What a lost wretch she saw! The generous impulses which other women were free to feel were forbidden luxuries to her. She was ashamed of her wickedness; she was eager to sacrifice herself, for the good of the once-dear friend whom she had wronged. Useless longings! Too late! too late!

She regretted it bitterly. Why?

Comparing Mrs. Linley's prospects with hers, was there anything to justify regret for the divorced wife? She had her sweet little child to make her happy; she had a fortune of her own to lift her above sordid cares; she was still handsome, still a woman to be admired. While she held her place in the world as high as ever, what was the prospect before Sydney Westerfield? The miserable sinner would end as she had deserved to end. Absolutely dependent on a man who was at that moment perhaps lamenting the wife whom he had deserted and lost, how long would it be before she found herself an outcast, without a friend to help her--with a reputation hopelessly lost--face to face with the temptation to drown herself or poison herself, as other women had drowned themselves or poisoned themselves, when the brightest future before them was rest in death?

If she had been a few years older, Herbert Linley might never again have seen her a living creature. But she was too young to follow any train of repellent thought persistently to its end.

The man she had guiltily (and yet how naturally) loved was lord and master in her heart, doubt him as she might. Even in his absence he pleaded with her to have some faith in him still.

She reviewed his language and his conduct toward her, when she had returned that morning from her walk. He had been kind and considerate; he had listened to her little story of the relics of her father, found in the garret, as if her interests were his interests. There had been nothing to disappoint her, nothing to complain of, until she had rashly attempted to discover whether he was free to make her his wife. She had only herself to blame if he was cold and distant when she had alluded to that delicate subject, on the day when he first knew that the Divorce had been granted and his child had been taken from him. And yet, he might have found a kinder way of reproving a sensitive woman than looking into the street--as if he had forgotten her in the interest of watching the strangers passing by! Perhaps he was not thinking of the strangers; perhaps his mind was dwelling fondly and regretfully on his wife?

Instinctively, she felt that her thoughts were leading her back again to a state of doubt from which her youthful hopefulness recoiled. Was there nothing she could find to do which would offer some other subject to occupy her mind than herself and her future?

Looking absently round the room, she noticed the packet of her father's letters placed on the table by her bedside.

The first three letters that she examined, after untying the packet, were briefly written, and were signed by names unknown to her. They all related to race-horses, and to cunningly devised bets which were certain to make the fortunes of the clever gamblers on the turf who laid them. Absolute indifference on the part of the winners to the ruin of the losers, who were not in the secret, was the one feeling in common, which her father's correspondents presented. In mercy to his memory she threw the letters into the empty fireplace, and destroyed them by burning.

同类推荐
  • 陆氏家制

    陆氏家制

    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。
  • 太上老君戒经

    太上老君戒经

    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。
  • 海客论

    海客论

    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。
  • 明伦汇编人事典讳忌部

    明伦汇编人事典讳忌部

    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。
  • 太白山人漫稿

    太白山人漫稿

    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。
热门推荐
  • 重生南北第一花

    重生南北第一花

    主角莫名脑梗穿越回南北朝,发现历史上的东晋变南显,当此淝水之战,而谢幼昀(谢道韫)是妙龄追星女,王沐之(王羲之)和王挥之(王徽之)成了兄弟,主角开始传奇的一生,南北第一花魁,佛门女金刚,外邦女皇帝。她使权贵胆寒天下止战……她的作用相当于前世的核威慑……她武道成就如高山压世间万万年……她创建的银河护卫队动辄斩敌首头颅……她想将一代雄主拓跋珪变成妻宝,硬生生改北魏国号为汉……
  • 腹黑萌宝:爹地别惹我妈咪

    腹黑萌宝:爹地别惹我妈咪

    当腹黑爹地遇上腹黑萌宝,注定展开一场轰轰烈烈的抢妈咪大战。在某大型魔术直播秀上,因为某天才萌娃的魔术表演,作为重要嘉宾的某男,腿间突然燃起大火……“唐棠,我可是你亲爹地。”“爹地,你再欺负我妈咪的话,我保证,下次烧的可就不止……”某娃打量起某男两腿间……
  • 夏日秦空

    夏日秦空

    夏日是大四的国防生,梦想成为特种兵,秦空是大一新生,面对直系学长的教官欧巴,秦空在不知不觉中产生了爱情的火苗,而夏日面对自己喜欢的人,却因为自己毕业要去当兵,给不了她幸福,选择放弃,两个人会有怎样的结局?敬请期待
  • 王,只准宠我

    王,只准宠我

    他,贪恋鲜血,偌大的‘血库’养无数,只为他提供新鲜血液。然而,那个凭空出现的女子,却有着异样腥香的血液,竟让他一次上瘾…身受恶毒诅咒,致使他五年未沾女色!意外目睹这个诡异独特的女子,竟勾起了他冷感躯中久违的冲动!不管她是天降仙子,还是幻界的妖女,都只能是他唯一的餐点和独宠…
  • 雪灵缘

    雪灵缘

    缘终殒-梦终殇~天让我顺从天意,我偏要逆天而行~命运,从来掌握我手!天命难违,我便踏碎这天-天道什么的,都是浮云~唯有强者,才能战胜一切~缘,便是我----厉殇雪亦缘辞缘~永世绝缘雪灵花开~缘现世
  • 灵眸之紫

    灵眸之紫

    一位急万千宠爱于一身的苏紫伊,是堂堂伊克家族的千金!却在一夜之间全家惨遭灭门!明明就只想当一个普普通通的女孩,却因灵力二度觉醒而卷入一场阴谋!当天才少女发现自己的灭门仇人,她怎样复仇?当这一切变得不在仅仅关于自家的事,而是关于天下安危!她又会如何选择?一切尽在《灵眸之紫》噢~进请关注!
  • 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!
  • 黑人老公

    黑人老公

    “不要回去多罗泰,你还没有告诉我我们的关系。。”艾丽儿哭喊着跑过马路。“我们没有任何关系!”多罗泰的心在滴血,我不想等你再次爱上我,再等着你为我死去,你是我老婆,就算再来一百次,我也只爱你。。
  • 豪门戏婚

    豪门戏婚

    腹黑大灰狼溺宠可爱小猫咪,联手打怪兽升级过幸福小日子的甜蜜故事:豪门婚姻,在豪门大少唐裕眼里,不过是一场儿戏!
  • 无上仙侠传

    无上仙侠传

    凡人修仙,何其困难。修仙之路,何其漫漫。可一但修成,就有长生不死之身,有毁天灭地之能。故此,无数人踏上了修仙路。上官云青从大陆边缘的一个小镇子上出生,传说,也从这里开始!