登陆注册
20031000000038

第38章 VII(4)

Some one--probably a Frenchman--has said that there are always in a man's life three women--the one on the way out, the one that is, and the one that is to be. Norman--ever the industrious trafficker with the feminine that the man of the intense vitality necessary to a great career of action is apt to be--was by no means new to the situation in which he now found himself. But never before had the circumstances been so difficult. Josephine in no way resembled any woman with whom he had been involved; she was the first he had taken seriously. Nor did the other woman resemble the central figure in any of his affairs. He did not know what she was like, how to classify her; but he did know that she was unlike any woman he had ever known and that his feeling for her was different--appallingly different--from any emotion any other woman had inspired in him. So--a walk alone with Josephine--a first talk with her after his secret treachery--was no light matter. "Deeper and deeper," he said to himself. "Where is this going to end?"

She began by sympathizing with him for having so much to do--"and father says you can get through more work than any man he ever knew, not excluding himself." She was full of tenderness and compliment, of a kind of love that made him feel as the dirt beneath his feet. She respected him so highly; she believed in him so entirely. The thought of her discovering the truth, or any part of it, gave him a sensation of nausea.

He was watching her out of the corner of his eye. Never had he seen her more statelily beautiful. If he should lose her!" I'm mad--MAD!" he said to himself.

"Josephine is as high above her as heaven above earth.

What is there to her, anyhow? Not brains--nor taste --nor such miraculous beauty. Why do I make an ass of myself about her? I ought to go to my doctor."

"I don't believe you're listening to what I'm saying," laughed Josephine.

"My head's in a terrible state," replied he. "I can't think of anything."

"Don't try to talk or to listen, dearest," said she in the sweet and soothing tone that is neither sweet nor soothing to a man in a certain species of unresponsive mood. "This air will do you good. It doesn't annoy you for me to talk to you, does it?"

The question was one of those which confidently expects, even demands, a sincere and strenuous negative for answer. It fretted him, this matter-of-course assumption of hers that she could not but be altogether pleasing, not to say enchanting to him. Her position, her wealth, the attentions she had received, the flatteries-- In her circumstances could it be in human nature not to think extremely well of oneself? And he admitted that she had the right so to think. Still--For the first time she scraped upon his nerves. His reply, "Annoy me? The contrary," was distinctly crisp. To an experienced ear there would have sounded the faint warning under-note of sullenness.

But she, believing in his love and in herself, saw nothing, suspected nothing. "We know each other so thoroughly," she went on, "that we don't need to make any effort. How congenial we are! I always understand you. I feel such a sense of the perfect freedom and perfect frankness between us. Don't you?"

"You have wonderful intuitions," said he.

It was the time to alarm him by coldness, by capr-ciousness. But how could she know it? And she was in love--really in love--not with herself, not with love, but with him. Thus, she made the mistake of all true lovers in those difficult moments. She let him see how absolutely she was his. Nor did the spectacle of her sincerity, of her belief in his sincerity put him in any better humor with himself.

The walk was a mere matter of a dozen blocks. He thought it would never end. "You are sure you aren't ill?" she said, when they were at her door--a superb bronze door it was, opening into a house of the splendor that for the acclimated New Yorker quite conceals and more than compensates absence of individual taste.

"You don't look ill. But you act queerly."

"I'm often this way when they drive me too hard down town."

She looked at him with fond admiration; he might have been better pleased had there not been in the look a suggestion of the possessive. "How they do need you! Father says-- But I mustn't make you any vainer than you are."

同类推荐
  • 紫柏尊者全集

    紫柏尊者全集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 重订广温热论

    重订广温热论

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说大乘庄严宝王经

    佛说大乘庄严宝王经

    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。
  • 萨婆多宗五事论

    萨婆多宗五事论

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 拈八方珠玉集

    拈八方珠玉集

    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
  • 龙临异界

    龙临异界

    一个在大学过着颓废生活的大学生,意外来到异界,被龙族误认为是龙族之人,并在脑海中留下几部绝世功法,不爱正教,偏爱邪道,修魔功,炼魔体,夺神兵瑰宝,泡绝世美女,执戟扫天下,问异界苍生,谁与争雄。
  • 死神请柬

    死神请柬

    自小得不到家庭温暖的陈雨孤身在都市闯荡,结识一群孤儿,因长期出没市井,后搞起了情报生意。最终因为仇恨,报复。踏入了黑暗的漩涡,看他如何破解重重阴谋,一张死神请柬走遍天下。宁洒热血破苍穹,不效苟且度残生。。。。。
  • 大唐秦国公

    大唐秦国公

    这是历史上最辉煌的时代。看主角和李世民秦琼程咬金等名将一起争锋天下!“老夫这辈子无憾了!”朱茂弥留之际说道。
  • 天棱星纹

    天棱星纹

    一个心智过于常人的少年,有时搞怪,有时正义,会为了羁绊舍弃一切,能力超群,身为通灵人的他却背负着一族的仇恨与守护的使命,不知道这一切都是谎言的他,接受了神的召唤成为了神之继承者,故事就围绕着他悄然展开......科学怪人降临,通灵人当老师?通往未来的神之路的一切都还是个迷。
  • 秦陵地宫

    秦陵地宫

    几个人以盗墓的方式进入秦始皇陵,你可能说我是痴人说梦,如果我告诉你,利用着最超前最尖端的科技支持和掌握了秦陵的秘密的话,就能有震惊世界和考古界的结果,你还不相信吗,下面就向你全面地展现一个世界上最大、最神秘的地下宫殿。
  • 采茶女传奇

    采茶女传奇

    岭上竹石寨有一片神奇的高山茶园.竹石寨高山路远,常有大虫出没,不过有个奇女上岭采茶却独立独行,却未出过危险。
  • 我没有翅膀

    我没有翅膀

    一个特别的学校!一个总是发光的女孩!但是她的爱恨情仇又有几人明白!没有血缘的朋友,她们真的能走到最后吗?爱情最终又会降临吗?
  • 误打误撞来相爱

    误打误撞来相爱

    内容简介:我安晓苒,一个没心没肺且不知天高地厚的小丫头,第一次恋爱竟遭遇劈腿,被劈腿的对象既然是那变态男人的老婆,这世道,难道连谁是小三都分不清楚了吗?好吧,这种骚男不要也罢,就当我年轻,认人不清。可这又是怎么回事,我就去酒吧买个醉,为什么会招惹上这个来历不明,非要让我住他家……天要灭我,无处可逃啊!看安晓苒如何大战"流氓",并和他发生一系列爱恨纠葛
  • 武侠游方行

    武侠游方行

    浮凡尘离,三世而悟!孤独的路,应有孤独的人来走!大千世界,仙魔何在?佛陀何应?隐居红尘,独行修道!随凡行,代天罚!孤独之下既为天,我便永生永世接受孤独,以祭天殇!顺,孤独!逆,寂寞!不生不死,亿世轮回!
  • 致谢青春

    致谢青春

    借一家境贫寒的少年幕野讲述贫寒给他人生带来的重大思想变革,在步入青春之后对青春甚至对于人生的超境界理解和阐述,给正处青春季节的青年以正确的引导,还予青春本应该拥有的心智与品质,为不留遗憾的青春奋力向前。