登陆注册
37813500000096

第96章 CHAPTER XXXIII(1)

Her fingers seemingly all thumbs, her heart swelling with misery and loneliness, wanting to go to him but fearing she would be misunderstood, Kitty scooped up the dazzling stones and poured them hastily into the tobacco pouch, which she thrust into Cutty's hands. What she had heard was not the cry of a disordered brain.

There was some clear reason for the horror in Hawksley's tones.

What tragedy lay behind these wonderful prisms of colour that the legitimate owner could not look upon them without being stirred in this manner?

"Take them into the study," urged Kitty.

"Wait!" interposed Hawksley. "I give one of the emeralds to you, Cutty. They came out of hell - if you want to risk it! The other is for Miss Conover, with Mister Hawksley's compliments." He was looking at Kitty now, his face drawn, his eyes bloodshot. "Don't be apprehensive. They bring evil only to men. With one in your possession you will be happy ever after, as the saying goes. Oh, they are mine to give; mine by right of inheritance. God knows I paid for them!"

"If I said Mister - " began Kitty, her brain confused, her tongue clumsy.

"You haven't forgiven!" he interrupted. "A thoroughbred like you, to hold last night against me! Mister - after what we two have shared together! Why didn't you leave me there to die?"

Cutty observed that the drama had resolved itself into two characters; he had been relegated to the scenes. He tiptoed toward his study door, and as he slipped inside he knew that Gethsemane was not an orchard but a condition of the mind. He tossed the pouch on his desk, eyed it ironically, and sat down. His, one of them - one of those marvellous emeralds was his! He interlaced his fingers and rested his brow upon them. He was very tired.

Kitty missed him only when she heard the latch snap.

She was alone with Hawksley; and all her terror returned. Not to touch him, not to console him; to stand staring at him like a dumb thing!

"I do forgive - Johnny! But your world and my world -"

"Those stains! The wretches hurt you!"

"What? Where?" - bewildered.

"The blood on your waist!"

Kitty looked down. "That is not my blood, Johnny. It is yours."

"Mine?" Johnny. Something in the way she said it. "Mine?" - trying to solve the riddle.

"Yes. It is where your cheek rested when - I thought you were dead."

The sense of misery, of oppression, of terror, all fell away miraculously, leaving only the flower of glory. She would be his plaything if he wanted her.

Silence.

"Kitty, I came out of a dark world - to find you. I loved you the moment I entered your kitchen that night. But I did not know it.

I loved you the night you brought the wallet. Still I did not understand. It was when I heard the lift door and knew you had gone forever that I understood. Loved you with all my heart, with all that poor old Stefani had fashioned out of muck and clay. If you held my head to your heart, if that is my blood there - Do you, can you care a little?"

"I can and do care very much, Johnny."

Her voice to his ears was like the G string of the Amati. "Will you go with me?"

"Anywhere. But you are a prince of some great Russian house, Johnny, and I am nobody."

"What am I, Kitty? Less than nobody - a homeless outcast, with only you and Cutty. An American! Well, when I'm that it will be different; I'll be somebody. God forgive me if I do not give it absolute loyalty, this new country! ... Never call me anything but Johnny."

"Johnny." Anywhere, whatever he willed her to be.

"I'm a child, Kitty. I want to grow up - if I can - to be an American, something like that ripping old thoroughbred yonder."

Cutty! Johnny wanted to be something like Cutty. Johnny would have to grow up to be his own true self; for nobody could ever be like Cutty. He was as high and far away from the average man as this apartment was from hers. Would he understand her attitude? Could she say anything until it would be too late for him to interfere?

She was this man's woman. She would have her span of happiness, come ill, come good, even if it hurt Cutty, whom she loved in another fashion. But for Johnny dropping through that trap she might never have really known, married Cutty, and been happy. Happy until one or the other died; never gloriously, never furiously, but mildly happy; perhaps understanding each other far better than Johnny and she would understand each other. The average woman's lot. But to give her heart, her mind, her body in a whirlwind of emotions, absolute surrender, to know for once the highest state of exaltation - to love!

All this tender exchange with half a dozen feet between them. Kitty had not stirred from the far side of the tea cart, and he had not opened his arms. She had given herself with magnificent abandon; for the present that satisfied her instincts. As for him, he was not quite sure this miracle might not be a dream, and one false move might cause her to vanish.

"Johnny, who is Olga?" The question was irrepressible. Perhaps it was the last shred of caution binding her. All of him or none of him. There must be no other woman intervening.

Hawksley stiffened in his chair. His hands closed convulsively and his eyes lost their brightness. "Johnny?" Kitty ran round the tea cart. "What is it?" She knelt beside the chair, alarmed, for the horror had returned to his face. "What did they do to you back there?" She clasped one of his hands tensely in hers.

"In my dreams at night!" he said, staring into space. "I could run away from my pursuers, but I could not run away from my dreams!

Torches and hobnailed boots! ... They trampled on her; and I, up there in the gallery with those damned emeralds in my hands! Ah, if I hadn't gone for them, if I hadn't thought of the extra comforts their sale would bring! There would have been time then, Kitty.

I had all the other jewels in the pouch. Horses were ready for us to flee on, loyal servants ready to help us; but I thought of the drums. A few more worldly comforts - with hell forcing in the doors!

同类推荐
  • 上清太玄鉴诫论

    上清太玄鉴诫论

    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。
  • 雪庵从瑾禅师颂古

    雪庵从瑾禅师颂古

    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。
  • 刑幕要略

    刑幕要略

    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。
  • 三十六水法

    三十六水法

    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。
  • Ponkapog Papers

    Ponkapog Papers

    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
  • 元素龙帝

    元素龙帝

    这是一个关于穿越的故事,龙一种很神奇的生物,祖龙更是传奇版的存在,没有人知道他在哪,也没有人知道他到底有多强,他从未出现在人世间却默默守护着这个世界,直到有一天祖龙传承者出现了……祖龙吗?我不知道自己能不能超越猴哥,我也不知道自己能不能达到父亲的高度,我更不知道自己能不能保护自己的爱人,但……我却可以为此付出生命。
  • 巅峰小神农

    巅峰小神农

    穿越过来成为山村小子,一路驰奔,成就神农巅峰小小农民也能名扬四海,响彻寰宇,创造了一个时代的传奇他,就是巅峰小神农
  • 永恒的伊甸园:正说古代巴比伦文明

    永恒的伊甸园:正说古代巴比伦文明

    古代文明探索之旅系列丛书发现古老的文明,探寻逝去的记忆,掀开古代世界神秘的面纱,介绍古代文明的政治军事和社会生活的发展,展示各大文明的经济、文化、艺术和科学的辉煌,带你领略几千年前古代人类的风采,充分了解人类无穷的智慧和叹为观止的成就……拨开历史的层层迷雾,人类文明之谜向你娓娓道来!
  • 阿诗玛

    阿诗玛

    《阿诗玛》是云南彝族撒尼人的民间叙事诗,被撒尼人民称为“我们民族的歌”,阿诗玛的传说已经成为撒尼人民日常生活、婚丧礼节以及其他风俗习惯的一部分,在人民中间广为传唱。民族叙事长诗是民族民间文学最重要、最丰富的组成部分之一。新中国成立后,一批少数民族文化工作者以及云南各地的文艺调查队对云南的少数民族诗歌进行了收集、翻译、整理,并出版了一大批优秀的云南少数民族诗歌,形成了一个汉译民族民间诗歌的宝库。《阿诗玛》便是其中影响巨大、流传颇广的经典之一。
  • 将王传

    将王传

    大天神梵天创世之后,天神界进入了长久的稳定。然而经过了三千年的繁荣,乱世在不经意间重新降临天神界。东方的阿修罗,西方的摩侯罗伽,北方的夜叉,南方的迦楼罗,西南方的紧那罗,东南方的龙众,东北方的天众,西北方的乾达婆,八位武神将王将在渐渐动荡的天神界施展自己的雄才大略,守护自己想守护的一切。当天神再次落泪之时,大战一触即发,各路神魔在为自己盘算的同时各显神通,天神界能否再次获得新的和平······
  • 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!
  • 新石器王朝

    新石器王朝

    王孝举在河姆渡的一次考古发现中,突然的一次意外使他穿越到了新石器时代。为了生存,为了找到自己一直梦寐以求的石器时代的那段真正的历史,也为了找到回家的路,王孝举踏上了征服的路。
  • 被抚养的少年是魔王

    被抚养的少年是魔王

    战场上少年挥舞着漆黑的魔剑,黑色的短发与黑色的衣裤在风中缓缓飘动着,少年名为血色黑暗。
  • 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!
  • 宝儿的江湖

    宝儿的江湖

    江湖是风,江湖是雨;江湖是信,江湖是义;江湖是一朵花,江湖也是一壶茶。江湖上最躲不开的还是情。张宝儿初入江湖,纠葛在‘侠女’和‘妖女’之间,终将何去何从?