登陆注册
37829100000003

第3章 THE LOST ROAD(3)

"I am going to keep that," he said, "as long as I live. It means you were once my 'partner.' It's a sign that once we two worked together for something and won." In the words the man showed such feeling that the girl said soberly:

"Mine means that to me, too. I will never part with mine, either."Lee turned to her and smiled, appealing wistfully.

"It seems a pity to separate them," he said. "They'd look well together over an open fireplace."The girl frowned unhappily. "I don't know," she protested. "Idon't know."

The next day Lee received from the War Department a telegram directing him to "proceed without delay" to San Francisco, and there to embark for the Philippines.

That night he put the question to her directly, but again she shook her head unhappily; again she said: "I don't know!"So he sailed without her, and each evening at sunset, as the great transport heaved her way across the swell of the Pacific, he stood at the rail and looked back. With the aid of the first officer he calculated the difference in time between a whaling village situated at forty-four degrees north and an army transport dropping rapidly toward the equator, and so, each day, kept in step with the girl he loved.

"Now," he would tell himself, "she is in her cart in front of the post-office, and while they sort the morning mail she gossips with the fisher folks, the summer folks, the grooms, and chauffeurs. Now she is sitting for her portrait to Stedman" (he did not dwell long on that part of her day), "and now she is at tennis, or, as she promised, riding alone at sunset down our lost road through the woods."But that part of her day from which Lee hurried was that part over which the girl herself lingered. As he turned his eyes from his canvas to meet hers, Stedman, the charming, the deferential, the adroit, who never allowed his painting to interrupt his talk, told her of what he was pleased to call his dreams and ambitions, of the great and beautiful ladies who had sat before his easel, and of the only one of them who had given him inspiration.

Especially of the only one who had given him inspiration. With her always to uplift him, he could become one of the world's most famous artists, and she would go down into history as the beautiful woman who had helped him, as the wife of Rembrandt had inspired Rembrandt, as "Mona Lisa" had made Leonardo.

Gilbert wrote: "It is not the lover who comes to woo, but the lover's way of wooing!" His successful lover was the one who threw the girl across his saddle and rode away with her. But one kind of woman does not like to have her lover approach shouting:

"At the gallop! Charge!"

She prefers a man not because he is masterful, but because he is not. She likes to believe the man needs her more than she needs him, that she, and only she, can steady him, cheer him, keep him true to the work he is in the world to perform. It is called the "mothering" instinct.

Frances felt this mothering instinct toward the sensitive, imaginative, charming Stedman. She believed he had but two thoughts, his art and herself. She was content to place his art first.

She could not guess that to one so unworldly, to one so wrapped up in his art, the fortune of a rich aunt might prove alluring.

When the transport finally picked up the landfalls of Cavite Harbor, Lee, with the instinct of a soldier, did not exclaim:

"This is where Dewey ran the forts and sank the Spanish fleet!"On the contrary, he was saying: "When she comes to join me, it will be here I will first see her steamer. I will be waiting with a field-glass on the end of that wharf. No, I will be out here in a shore-boat waving my hat. And of all those along the rail, my heart will tell me which is she!"Then a barefooted Filipino boy handed him an unsigned cablegram.

It read: "If I wrote a thousand words I could not make it easier for either of us. I am to marry Arthur Stedman in December."Lee was grateful for the fact that he was not permitted to linger in Manila. Instead, he was at once ordered up-country, where at a one-troop post he administered the affairs of a somewhat hectic province, and under the guidance of the local constabulary chased will-o'-the-wisp brigands. On a shelf in his quarters he placed the silver loving-cup, and at night, when the village slept, he would sit facing it, filling one pipe after another, and through the smoke staring at the evidence to the fact that once Frances Gardner and he had been partners.

In these post-mortems he saw nothing morbid. With his present activities they in no way interfered, and in thinking of the days when they had been together, in thinking of what he had lost, he found deep content. Another man, having lost the woman he loved, would have tried to forget her and all she meant to him. But Lee was far too honest with himself to substitute other thoughts for those that were glorious, that still thrilled him. The girl could take herself from him, but she could not take his love for her from him. And for that he was grateful. He never had considered himself worthy, and so could not believe he had been ill used. In his thoughts of her there was no bitterness: for that also he was grateful. And, as he knew he would not care for any other woman in the way he cared for her, he preferred to care in that way, even for one who was lost, than in a lesser way for a possible she who some day might greatly care for him. So she still remained in his thoughts, and was so constantly with him that he led a dual existence, in which by day he directed the affairs of an alien and hostile people and by night again lived through the wonderful moments when she had thought she loved him, when he first had learned to love her. At times she seemed actually at his side, and he could not tell whether he was pretending that this were so or whether the force of his love had projected her image half around the world.

同类推荐
  • 十八部论

    十八部论

    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。
  • 佛说华积陀罗尼神咒经

    佛说华积陀罗尼神咒经

    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。
  • 农战

    农战

    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。
  • 善法方便陀罗尼咒经

    善法方便陀罗尼咒经

    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。
  • 南岳九真人传

    南岳九真人传

    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
  • 我有一个仙灵岛

    我有一个仙灵岛

    一名普通青年顺利地赶上了穿越潮流,并获得了一个与自身绑定的神秘岛屿。修炼闯关,种田美食,占卜预测,还有…穿越诸天。
  • 九鼎仙府

    九鼎仙府

    一部逆天的功法,一座神奇的仙府,一段缠绵的爱情,上改天地法则,下灭东瀛魔道。燕无双不畏荆棘,奋勇向前,为鸿龙大陆的仙道,力挽狂澜!
  • 我和我的女神们

    我和我的女神们

    他是如假包换的人族,修炼的却是妖族功法;他本想着报完父仇,老老实实的欺男霸女过完这一辈子,却被迫去征战天下,统一大陆。他自诩可以为兄弟两肋插刀,身边却是女人多过男人;他自诩肯为千金轻一笑,却又不敢招惹身边的任何一位女神。他从东北边陲的一座小城起家,灭妖族,平内乱,纵横沙漠三千里,笑傲海疆五十年。他是两大帝国的摄政王,是一大教派的创始人。他是兄弟眼中的好哥们,他是女人眼中的好男人。有他在,妖族重新焕发了生机;有他在,人族的未来不是梦;有他在,四海升平,海晏河清。他被各族人民尊崇为:大帝天尊!本书讲述的便是他的传奇故事!
  • 乱世群龙

    乱世群龙

    一个不想做英雄的英雄,一群追求自由和生存意义的人们,在乱世中扮演自己的角色。可以算做另类的修真题材,老庄、佛家思想贯穿其中,武技、魔法层出不穷,诗词曲赋、琴棋书画偶尔装点,甚至现代科学、哲学思想也以另一种面目出现。问世间情为何物?爱与恨都至纯至真。无所谓帅哥美女,无所谓YY,一切顺其自然。
  • 从神仙给我打工开始

    从神仙给我打工开始

    我是世界上最牛的老板没有之一因为给我打工的都是神仙食神在我的饭店当厨师,一碗蛋炒饭都要888月老开了个婚姻介绍所,牵手率百分之百嫦娥进了娱乐圈,全世界都疯了七仙女织的布,是全世界顶级奢侈品牌必争的产品还有,牛魔王给我养牛,猪八戒给我养猪龙王在东海给我建了个渔场…………当然,也有伤脑筋的,比如孙悟空和哪吒,名义上是私人保镖,但不怎么服从管理,拆了钢铁侠的钢铁战衣不说,顺道还把西方雷神和绿巨人给揍了当老板,也难啊!
  • 顶级透视眼

    顶级透视眼

    找工作找上车祸,谁知竟然意外获得透视异能,从此打牌、赌博、缉毒、鉴宝、行医……事事顺利,财源滚滚。名车豪宅信手拈来,美女不招而至,逍遥似神仙,人生何复求。
  • 有效沟通的艺术

    有效沟通的艺术

    本书包括:有效沟通的基本原则;有效沟通的三大要素;不同场合的沟通方式;与人沟通的艺术等内容。这不是一本普通的演讲与口才训练教程,不是着重介绍一些如何讲话的技巧和法则。卡耐基强调要让自己获得一种自信、勇气和能力,以便在你当众发表谈话时能够冷静面清晰地思考。本书传授了让你获得勇气和自信的方法及与人有效沟通的技巧。
  • 豪门宠婚:亿万绯闻妻

    豪门宠婚:亿万绯闻妻

    “瞳瞳,既然无法说服你回到我身边,看来……我只能睡服你!”男人冷魅的说完,一把将她推到……他是唐家继承人,明明年轻却被人称之为“七爷”。传说,他宠一个女人到无法无天……没有人知道那个女人是谁……直到,季四少嚣张的用几十架直升机在空中拼成“Marryme”向她正式求婚。“你准备让我的孩子认谁做爹?”他嘴角勾着阴笑,带扛着火箭筒的三百多人包围教堂,不顾新郎嗜血的眸光,只是睥睨的看着她,“今天这婚你敢结,我就让这里的人一个都走不出去……包括我!”他淡淡的威胁,却目光柔和宠溺的看着她。原来,有一种伤叫做逃不开,当两个天生死对头的男人中间横插入了一个女人,这场以爱为名,以恨为利的故事要如何收场?"
  • 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!
  • 落梅剑客

    落梅剑客

    江湖中从不缺少神话,但有一个神话却在近二十年内让江湖中人谈之色变“一柄没有剑刃只有剑锋的剑,一名视剑如生命的剑客,没有人见过他完整的剑招,因为他只出一剑。”