登陆注册
15477100000064

第64章 XX(4)

Lansing's brief colloquy in the Nouveau Luxe window had lifted the scales from his eyes. Innumerable dim corners of memory had been flooded with light by that one quick glance of the aide-de- camp's: things he had heard, hints he had let pass, smiles, insinuations, cordialities, rumours of the improbability of the Prince's founding a family, suggestions as to the urgent need of replenishing the Teutoburger treasury ....

Miss Hicks, perforce, had accompanied her parents and their princely guests to the ballroom; but as she did not dance, and took little interest in the sight of others so engaged, she remained aloof from the party, absorbed in an archaeological discussion with the baffled but smiling savant who was to have enlightened the party on the difference between Sassanian and Byzantine ornament.

Lansing, also aloof, had picked out a post from which he could observe the girl: she wore a new look to him since he had seen her as the centre of all these scattered threads of intrigue.

Yes; decidedly she was growing handsomer; or else she had learned how to set off her massive lines instead of trying to disguise them. As she held up her long eye-glass to glance absently at the dancers he was struck by the large beauty of her arm and the careless assurance of the gesture. There was nothing nervous or fussy about Coral Hicks; and he was not surprised that, plastically at least, the Princess Mother had discerned her possibilities.

Nick Lansing, all that night, sat up and stared at his future.

He knew enough of the society into which the Hickses had drifted to guess that, within a very short time, the hint of the Prince's aide-de-camp would reappear in the form of a direct proposal. Lansing himself would probably--as the one person in the Hicks entourage with whom one could intelligibly commune-be entrusted with the next step in the negotiations: he would be asked, as the aide-de-camp would have said, "to feel the ground." It was clearly part of the state policy of Teutoburg to offer Miss Hicks, with the hand of its sovereign, an opportunity to replenish its treasury.

What would the girl do? Lansing could not guess; yet he dimly felt that her attitude would depend in a great degree upon his own. And he knew no more what his own was going to be than on the night, four months earlier, when he had flung out of his wife's room in Venice to take the midnight express for Genoa.

The whole of his past, and above all the tendency, on which he had once prided himself, to live in the present and take whatever chances it offered, now made it harder for him to act.

He began to see that he had never, even in the closest relations of life, looked ahead of his immediate satisfaction. He had thought it rather fine to be able to give himself so intensely to the fullness of each moment instead of hurrying past it in pursuit of something more, or something else, in the manner of the over-scrupulous or the under-imaginative, whom he had always grouped together and equally pitied. It was not till he had linked his life with Susy's that he had begun to feel it reaching forward into a future he longed to make sure of, to fasten upon and shape to his own wants and purposes, till, by an imperceptible substitution, that future had become his real present, his all-absorbing moment of time.

Now the moment was shattered, and the power to rebuild it failed him. He had never before thought about putting together broken bits: he felt like a man whose house has been wrecked by an earthquake, and who, for lack of skilled labour, is called upon for the first time to wield a trowel and carry bricks. He simply did not know how.

Will-power, he saw, was not a thing one could suddenly decree oneself to possess. It must be built up imperceptibly and laboriously out of a succession of small efforts to meet definite objects, out of the facing of daily difficulties instead of cleverly eluding them, or shifting their burden on others. The making of the substance called character was a process about as slow and arduous as the building of the Pyramids; and the thing itself, like those awful edifices, was mainly useful to lodge one's descendants in, after they too were dust. Yet the Pyramid-instinct was the one which had made the world, made man, and caused his fugitive joys to linger like fading frescoes on imperishable walls ....

同类推荐
  • 律二十二明了论

    律二十二明了论

    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。
  • 全相二十四孝诗选

    全相二十四孝诗选

    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。
  • 碧里杂存

    碧里杂存

    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。
  • 咏袜

    咏袜

    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。
  • A Dog's Tale

    A Dog's Tale

    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
  • 佛说四自侵经

    佛说四自侵经

    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。
  • 叙事:中国版 第二辑

    叙事:中国版 第二辑

    本书收录了“叙事、病残与身份”、“短篇小说的叙事进程:语料库文体学方法初探”、“关于建构诗歌叙事学的设想”、“广义叙述学:一个建议”等文章。
  • 亡魂系统

    亡魂系统

    亡魂的世界,系统的人生,这里将给你一个不一样的未来
  • 总裁赖上小甜妻

    总裁赖上小甜妻

    她,身为落魄千金,在生死刹那,是他拯救了她。命运之门,从此开启。他,富可敌国,腹黑狠辣,给她一纸契约,占为已用。她以为契约,只是契约,却在这其中深陷。该死的,他那个撩人的娇妻,居然敢违背他!向来护短的他,废了那些欺负她的人,再教她如何做好他的女人!
  • 呆萌小妃:王妃,求你快嫁了

    呆萌小妃:王妃,求你快嫁了

    一次执行任务,没想深陷险境。死里逃生,还是躲不过一死,含恨而死。或是内心恨意十足,一朝魂穿,异界降临,狠戾绝现。降临之时,乌云蔽日,电闪雷鸣。说我是天煞孤星,笑话,本小姐要惩治人类。说我孤立无援,NO,绝傲王爷陪着呢。
  • 梦忆:只为续未完爱恋

    梦忆:只为续未完爱恋

    霁秦永远记得姐姐在自己怀里是多么的痛彻心扉般含恨死去,孔姬雨重回万年不知名空间不知是否还会重蹈覆辙……霁秦是否会让自己姐姐放弃那段他认为的噩梦呢?一切都将重现……(如有雷同,纯属巧合)
  • 霸道男神甜宠小千金

    霸道男神甜宠小千金

    他和她一起长大,是青梅竹马,并相互承诺,长大后,他娶她,她嫁他。她却在八岁那年惨遭车祸,选择性失忆的忘记了他。命运是多么让人难以琢磨,又让他和她在高中时代再次相遇。他还爱着她,却因自己的一次次失误,险些失去了她。他对她说:“小云,我不会让你受伤,不会让你哭泣,更不会让别人先得到你!”
  • 冷情校花PK霸道少爷

    冷情校花PK霸道少爷

    伊朵,你终于回来了,这次,我再也不会放手了!笑话,你以为你是谁,你以为我还是当时那个软弱无能的小女孩,看清楚了,现在站在你面前的,是5年后破茧成蝶的伊朵,不是你以前的伊朵!5年前,他们曾相爱;5年后,他在她眼里读到冷漠可是,就算5年,10年,他依旧爱她。他已错过她5年,这次,他再也不会让她从他身边逃开。
  • 摸金尉

    摸金尉

    他从一个混混学生成长为一品摸金校尉只要有盗墓者的地方就有他的传说故事要从那一天说起那一天,死人出棺,活人消失,地塌天荒··········
  • 大叔,不可以

    大叔,不可以

    季云姿这辈子最悲剧的事情就是,被自己的亲姐姐抢走了相恋三年的未婚夫萧睿。被狗男女逼得走头无路,季云姿咬牙,做了一个大胆的决定,她要嫁给萧睿的小叔!她要赶在两狗男女跟前结婚,让他们每天叫自己小婶婶!膈应死他们!可萧睿的小叔萧宸是什么人呢?高大英俊,身材性感,目光里总是充满着无人能及的自信。二十八岁就上了福布斯排行榜的人,怎么会看上她这么一个没胸没屁股的小女人?