登陆注册
14821000000066

第66章

Then it occurred to her that after all there might be a mistake; perhaps Mr. Ratcliffe could explain the charge away. But this thought only laid bare another smarting wound in her pride. Not only did she believe the charge, but she believed that Mr. Ratcliffe would defend his act. She had been willing to marry a man whom she thought capable of such a crime, and now she shuddered at the idea that this charge might have been brought against her husband, and that she could not dismiss it with instant incredulity, with indignant contempt. How had this happened? how had she got into so foul a complication? When she left New York, she had meant to be a mere spectator in Washington. Had it entered her head that she could be drawn into any project of a second marriage, she never would have come at all, for she was proud of her loyalty to her husband's memory, and second marriages were her abhorrence. In her restlessness and solitude, she had forgotten this; she had only asked whether any life was worth living for a woman who had neither husband nor children. Was the family all that life had to offer? could she find no interest outside the household? And so, led by this will-of-the-wisp, she had, with her eyes open, walked into the quagmire of politics, in spite of remonstrance, in spite of conscience.

She rose and paced the room, while Sybil lay on the couch, watching her with eyes half shut. She grew more and more angry with herself, and as her self-reproach increased, her anger against Ratcliffe faded away. She had no right to be angry with Ratcliffe.

He had never deceived her. He had always openly enough avowed that he knew no code of morals in politics; that if virtue did not answer his purpose he used vice. How could she blame him for acts which he had repeatedly defended in her presence and with her tacit assent, on principles that warranted this or any other villainy?

The worst was that this discovery had come on her as a blow, not as a reprieve from execution. At this thought she became furious with herself.

She had not known the recesses of her own heart. She had honestly supposed that Sybil's interests and Sybil's happiness were forcing her to an act of self-sacrifice; and now she saw that in the depths of her soul very different motives had been at work: ambition, thirst for power, restless eagerness to meddle in what did not concern her, blind longing to escape from the torture of watching other women with full lives and satisfied instincts, while her own life was hungry and sad. For a time she had actually, unconscious as she was of the delusion, hugged a hope that a new field of usefulness was open to her; that great opportunities for doing good were to supply the aching emptiness of that good which had been taken away; and that here at last was an object for which there would be almost a pleasure in squandering the rest of existence even if she knew in advance that the experiment would fail. Life was emptier than ever now that this dream was over. Yet the worst was not in that disappointment, but in the discovery of her own weakness and self-deception.

Worn out by long-continued anxiety, excitement and sleeplessness, she was unfit to struggle with the creatures of her own imagination. Such a strain could only end in a nervous crisis, and at length it came:

"Oh, what a vile thing life is!" she cried, throwing up her arms with a gesture of helpless rage and despair. "Oh, how I wish I were dead! how I wish the universe were annihilated!" and she flung herself down by Sybil's side in a frenzy of tears.

Sybil, who had watched all this exhibition in silence, waited quietly for the excitement to pass. There was little to say. She could only soothe.

After the paroxysm had exhausted itself Madeleine lay quiet for a time, until other thoughts began to disturb her. From reproaching herself about Ratcliffe she went on to reproach herself about Sybil, who really looked worn and pale, as though almost overcome by fatigue.

"Sybil," said she, "you must go to bed at once. You are tired out. It was very wrong in me to let you sit up so late. Go now, and get some sleep."

"I am not going to bed till you do, Maude!" replied Sybil, with quiet obstinacy.

"Go, dear! it is all settled. I shall not marry Mr. Ratcliffe. You need not be anxious about it any more."

"Are you very unhappy?"

"Only very angry with myself. I ought to have taken Mr. Carrington's advice sooner."

"Oh, Maude!" exclaimed Sybil, with a sudden explosion of energy;

"I wish you had taken him!"

This remark roused Mrs. Lee to new interest: "Why, Sybil," said she, "surely you are not in earnest?"

"Indeed, I am," replied Sybil, very decidedly. "I know you think I am in love with Mr. Carrington myself, but I'm not. I would a great deal rather have him for a brother-in-law, and he is so much the nicest man you know, and you could help his sisters."

Mrs. Lee hesitated a moment, for she was not quite certain whether it was wise to probe a healing wound, but she was anxious to clear this last weight from her mind, and she dashed recklessly forward:

"Are you sure you are telling the truth, Sybil? Why, then, did you say that you cared for him? and why have you been so miserable ever since he went away?"

"Why? I should think it was plain enough why! Because I thought, as every one else did, that you were going to marry Mr. Ratcliffe; and because if you married Mr. Ratcliffe, I must go and live alone; and because you treated me like a child, and never took me into your confidence at all; and because Mr. Carrington was the only person I had to advise me, and after he went away, I was left all alone to fight Mr. Ratcliffe and you both together, without a human soul to help me in case I made a mistake. You would have been a great deal more miserable than I if you had been in my place."

Madeleine looked at her for a moment in doubt. Would this last? did Sybil herself know the depth of her own wound? But what could Mrs. Lee do now?

Perhaps Sybil did deceive herself a little. When this excitement had passed away, perhaps Carrington's image might recur to her mind a little too often for her own comfort. The future must take care of itself. Mrs. Lee drew her sister closer to her, and said:

"Sybil, I have made a horrible mistake, and you must forgive me."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 剑心印

    剑心印

    简介庶人之剑,蓬头突鬓,垂冠,曼胡之缨,短后之衣,瞋目面语难,相击于前,上斩颈领,下决肝肺。诸侯之剑,以知勇士为锋,以清廉士为名锷,以贤良士为脊,以豪桀士为夹。天子之剑,以燕谿、石城为锋,齐岱为锷,晋魏为脊,周宋为镡,韩魏为夹,包以四夷,裹以四时,绕以渤海,带以常山,制以五行,论以刑德,开以阴阳,持以春夏,行以秋冬。
  • 超级虚拟帝国

    超级虚拟帝国

    VR,虚拟现实。有人说VR设备的普及至少要到2020年……夏日的某天,夏铉捡到了一个快递,并获得一款装载着幻想应用的黑科技手环,于是世界因他天翻地覆。“只存在小说中,脑后插管玩游戏的大虚拟时代,正迈步向我们走来……”某科技杂志文章的标题如此写道。——————————————新人新书,求推荐,求收藏!
  • 总裁霸道爱:火宠刁蛮妻

    总裁霸道爱:火宠刁蛮妻

    对不起......真的对不起!她好想再起身看看他沉睡的模样,哪怕远远望着,一眼就好。只是,她没了力气,她不想心痛,更不想有再次心碎的的希望,唯一割舍不下的,也许就只是这身旁的小东西。希望,来年的樱花,开的话藏其中,寄托,来世的樱花,落得不在如此。
  • Anne of the Island

    Anne of the Island

    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。
  • TFboys之爱情对对碰

    TFboys之爱情对对碰

    他们,是当今最红的歌手TFboys,却遇到实力超凡的对手Feizai,当敌人变成朋友时,又会有什么样的故事呢?
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 豪门盛宠:前夫请走开

    豪门盛宠:前夫请走开

    六年前,她在新婚前夕发现未婚夫跟人苟且。于是换了新郎,他是众人趋之若鹜的豪门总裁,而她是寄人篱下的落魄千金。本是一段不被人看好的婚姻,他却对她百般宠溺,柔情似水,商商深陷其中,却发现这一切的幸福如泡沫般易碎,只是一场算计。看清一切真相,遍体鳞伤的愤而离去。六年后,她看着面前的男人,“时封,你有病吧。”对面的男人回答的一本正经,“我是有病,还是不治之症,但是没关系,你就我的药啊。”
  • 噩梦齿轮

    噩梦齿轮

    一个梦,改变了一生的轨迹。从此狼雨化身正义的伙伴,战斗围绕在身边,与其他伙伴一起讨伐邪恶。亲情,友情,爱情的守卫挑在他们的肩上,汗与泪与血交织,描绘青春的颜色。直到她说,闭上眼睛,世界皆在掌控之中。
  • 信子花开,你我再次相遇

    信子花开,你我再次相遇

    一个四岁的小女孩,从小被爸爸妈妈卖掉,还未等买主上门,早就拿着钱离开了,而她却被当时的第一杀手漠芊荨带到杀手培训基地“迷岛”,经过二十年的培训,她早已经超过了她的老师漠芊荨,如今,出门在外,物是人非,在寻父寻母的过程中,她能够相信自始自终都陪着她的那个男人吗?
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)