登陆注册
38578600000252

第252章

"What am I to do with myself all the morning? I can't go out, it's raining. If I open the piano, I shall disturb the industrious journalist who is scribbling in the next room. Oh, dear, it was lonely enough in my lodging in Thorpe Ambrose, but how much lonelier it is here! Shall I read? No; books don't interest me; I hate the whole tribe of authors. I think I shall look back through these pages, and live my life over again when Iwas plotting and planning, and finding a new excitement to occupy me in every new hour of the day.

"He might have looked at me, though he _was_ so busy with his writing.--He might have said, 'How nicely you are dressed this morning!' He might have remembered--never mind what! All he remembers is the newspaper.

"Twelve o'clock.--I have been reading and thinking; and, thanks to my Diary, I have got through an hour.

"What a time it was--what a life it was, at Thorpe Ambrose! Iwonder I kept my senses. It makes my heart beat, it makes my face flush, only to read about it now!

"The rain still falls, and the journalist still scribbles. Idon't want to think the thoughts of that past time over again.

And yet, what else can I do?

"Supposing--I only say supposing--I felt now, as I felt when Itraveled to London with Armadale; and when I saw my way to his life as plainly as I saw the man himself all through the journey.

. . . ?

"I'll go and look out of the window. I'll go and count the people as they pass by.

"A funeral has gone by, with the penitents in their black hoods, and the wax torches sputtering in the wet, and the little bell ringing, and the priests droning their monotonous chant. Apleasant sight to meet me at the window! I shall go back to my Diary.

"Supposing I was not the altered woman I am--I only say, supposing--how would the Grand Risk that I once thought of running look now? I have married Midwinter in the name that is really his own. And by doing that I have taken the first of those three steps which were once to lead me, through Armadale's life, to the fortune and the station of Armadale's widow. No matter how innocent my intentions might have been on the wedding-day--and they _were_ innocent--this is one of the unalterable results of the marriage. Well, having taken the first step, then, whether Iwould or no, how--supposing I meant to take the second step, which I don't--how would present circumstances stand toward me?

Would they warn me to draw back, I wonder? or would they encourage me to go on?

"It will interest me to calculate the chances; and I can easily tear the leaf out, and destroy it, if the prospect looks too encouraging.

"We are living here (for economy's sake) far away from the expensive English quarter, in a suburb of the city, on the Portici side. We have made no traveling acquaintances among our own country people. Our poverty is against us; Midwinter's shyness is against us; and (with the women) my personal appearance is against us. The men from whom my husband gets his information for the newspaper meet him at the cafe, and never come here. I discourage his bringing any strangers to see me;for, though years have passed since I was last at Naples, Icannot be sure that some of the many people I once knew in this place may not be living still. The moral of all this is (as the children's storybooks say), that not a single witness has come to this house who could declare, if any after-inquiry took place in England, that Midwinter and I had been living here as man and wife. So much for present circumstances as they affect Me.

"Armadale next. Has any unforeseen accident led him to communicate with Thorpe Ambrose? Has he broken the conditions which the major imposed on him, and asserted himself in the character of Miss Milroy's promised husband since I saw him last?

"Nothing of the sort has taken place. No unforeseen accident has altered his position--his tempting position--toward myself. Iknow all that has happened to him since he left England, through the letters which he writes to Midwinter, and which Midwinter shows to me.

"He has been wrecked, to begin with. His trumpery little yacht has actually tried to drown him, after all, and has failed! It happened (as Midwinter warned him it might happen with so small a vessel) in a sudden storm. They were blown ashore on the coast of Portugal. The yacht went to pieces, but the lives, and papers, and so on, were saved. The men have been sent back to Bristol, with recommendations from their master which have already got them employment on board an outward-bound ship. And the master himself is on his way here, after stopping first at Lisbon, and next at Gibraltar, and trying ineffectually in both places to supply himself with another vessel. His third attempt is to be made at Naples, where there is an English yacht 'laid up,' as they call it, to be had for sale or hire. He has had no occasion to write home since the wreck; for he took away from Coutts's the whole of the large sum of money lodged there for him, in circular notes. And he has felt no inclination to go back to England himself; for, with Mr. Brock dead, Miss Milroy at school, and Midwinter here, he has not a living creature in whom he is interested to welcome him if he returned. To see us, and to see the new yacht, are the only two present objects he has in view.

Midwinter has been expecting him for a week past, and he may walk into this very room in which I am writing, at this very moment, for all I know to the contrary.

"Tempting circumstances, these--with all the wrongs I have suffered at his mother's hands and at his, still alive in my memory; with Miss Milroy confidently waiting to take her place at the head of his household; with my dream of living happy and innocent in Midwinter's love dispelled forever, and with nothing left in its place to help me against myself. I wish it wasn't raining; I wish I could go out.

"Perhaps something may happen to prevent Armadale from coming to Naples? When he last wrote, he was waiting at Gibraltar for an English steamer in the Mediterranean trade to bring him on here.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 超级强者来到异界

    超级强者来到异界

    一个在星空中探险的超级强者被黑洞吸入而来到异界,在异界中生活的故事
  • 我梦到的有趣的事

    我梦到的有趣的事

    我做梦梦到的有趣的事情,把它写下来,你们看一看。
  • 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!
  • 妖神赋之神君降临

    妖神赋之神君降临

    汐禾是这天上唯一的女神君,大家都说她是关系户,虽然这话也没说错,可她好歹也是正正经经通过考试的。这天上的小仙女,小神女们非要听些胡说八道的八卦,那她只好做些什么让大家相信她真的是正儿八经的女神君。于是她就借着职务之便去找那魔族的神君打了一架,可是打完之后她的奇怪传闻好像更夸张了。。。
  • 怪物世界我为王

    怪物世界我为王

    这里有肩比山高的史诗巨兽熔山龙有身长2000米的移动天灾蛇王龙有号称古龙之王的神秘古龙冥灯龙更有连神都畏惧三分的光与暗交织者煌黑龙......当一个人能够收服它们,敢问世间谁敢阻挡?【不正经的争霸流,轻松搞笑,魔改怪物猎人世界,生态圈并非一致】
  • 我的射手座生活

    我的射手座生活

    我是王佩羽。来自河北省邢台市。爱好写作,多次获得写作证书。可以说出版自己写的书一直是我的梦想。希望大家支持我的作品。
  • 无敌强神豪系统

    无敌强神豪系统

    【万人追读,高评分爽文】别人的小目标是先赚它一个亿,陆辰的小目标是先花他十个亿。(QQ群:699230205)
  • 轮回之清衣行

    轮回之清衣行

    他曾是守护神界的根基女娲神殿的大神,因一次神界大乱,神殿内五件神器遗落人间,他自罚下界,寻回神器,却因那次神界大乱给三界九重未来埋下灭顶之灾。下界后的他,竟然将一切忘得干干净净。最后一个梦,他潜藏的意识模模糊糊的将一切重新输回的的记忆中。下界后的他潜意识的将其化作一个很怪的梦。冥冥之中这一切早便是安排好了。这个少年居然想逆天行事。本文就是讲述这个下界的神的故事。说声不好的,因为这两天我的病情加重,没时间更文,也心情去更文。
  • 改变命运的死亡枷锁

    改变命运的死亡枷锁

    一场意外的车祸,让吴欲住进了江海市人民医院手术室。在生命尽头之时,吴欲与改变命运枷锁系统签订了契约,并获得了生命的延续。重获新生的吴欲不仅做着原来送快递的工作,还多了一份特殊的的工作。看小人物吴欲如何一步步改变他人命运的枷锁,并为社会贡献出自己的爱心。这是一个充满正能量的故事。
  • 女扮男装:腹黑千金玩转学园

    女扮男装:腹黑千金玩转学园

    苏氏千金女扮男装进学院,狂,是她的性格;拽,是她的代名词。真实的自己已被封存,谁能让她找回自我?