登陆注册
15466900000074

第74章 CHAPTER THE TWENTY-SEVENTH(2)

There was no difficulty in accounting for his readiness to sacrifice himself in the interests of Oscar's tranquillity. He never did things by halves--he liked dashing at difficulties which would have made other men pause. The same zeal in his brother's service which had saved Oscar's life at the Trial, might well be the zeal that animated him now. The perplexity that I felt was not roused in me by the course that he had taken--but by the language in which he justified himself, and, more still, by his behavior to me while he was speaking. The well-bred brilliant young fellow of my previous experience, had now turned as dogged and as ungracious as a man could be. He waited to hear what I had to say to him next, with a hard defiance and desperation of manner entirely uncalled for by the circumstances, and entirely out of harmony with his character, so far as I had observed it. That there was something lurking under the surface, some inner motive at work in him which he was concealing from his brother and concealing from me, was as plainly visible as the sunshine and shade on the view that I was looking at from the summer-house. But what that something was, or what that inner motive might be, it baffled my utmost sagacity to guess. Not the faintest idea of the terrible secret that he was hiding from me, crossed my mind.

Innocent of all suspicion of the truth, there I sat opposite to him, the unconscious witness of that unhappy man's final struggle to be true to the brother whom he loved, and to master the devouring passion that consumed him. So long as Lucilla falsely believed him to be disfigured by the drug, so long the commonest consideration for her tranquillity would, in the estimation of others, excuse and explain his keeping out of her presence. In that separation, lay his last chance of raising an insurmountable barrier between Lucilla and himself. He had already tried uselessly to place another obstacle in the way--he had vainly attempted to hasten the marriage which would have made Lucilla sacred to him as his brother's wife. That effort having failed, there was but one honorable alternative left to him--to keep out of her society, until she was married to Oscar. He had accepted the position in which Oscar had placed him, as the one means of reaching the end in view without exciting suspicion of the truth--and he had encountered, as his reward for the sacrifice, my ignorant protest, my stupid opposition, set as obstacles in his way! There were the motives--the pure, the noble motives--which animated him, as I know them now. There is the right reading of the dogged language that mystified me, of the defiant manner that offended me; interpreted by the one light that I have to guide my pen--the light of later events!

"Well?" he said. "Are we allies, or not? Are you with me or against me?"

I gave up attempting to understand him; and answered that plain question, plainly.

"I don't deny that the consequences of undeceiving her may be serious," I said. "But, for all that, I will have no share in the cruelty of keeping her deceived."

Nugent held up his forefinger, warningly.

"Pause, and reflect, Madame Pratolungo! The mischief that you may do, as matters stand now, may be mischief that you can never repair. It's useless to ask you to alter your mind. I only ask you to wait a little.

There is plenty of time before the wedding-day. Something may happen which will spare you the necessity of enlightening Lucilla with your own lips."

"What can happen?" I asked.

"Lucilla may yet see him, as we see him," Nugent answered. "Lucilla's own eyes may discover the truth."

"What! have you not abandoned the mad notion of curing her blindness, yet?"

"I will abandon my notion when the German surgeon tells me it is mad. Not before."

"Have you said anything about it to Oscar?"

"Not a word. I shall say nothing about it to anybody but you, until the German is safe on the shores of England."

"Do you expect him to arrive before the marriage?"

"Certainly! He would have left New York with me, but for one patient who still required his care. No new patients will tempt him to stay in America. His extraordinary success has made his fortune. The ambition of his life is to see England: and he can afford to gratify it. He may be here by the next steamer that reaches Liverpool."

"And when he does come, you mean to bring him to Dimchurch?"

"Yes--unless Lucilla objects to it."

"Suppose Oscar objects? She is resigned to be blind for life. If you disturb that resignation with no useful result, you may make an unhappy woman of her for the rest of her days. In your brother's place, I should object to running that risk."

"My brother is doubly interested in running the risk. I repeat what I have already told you. The physical result will not be the only result, if her sight can be restored. There will be a new mind put into her as well as a new sense. Oscar has everything to dread from this morbid fancy of hers as long as she is blind. Only let her eyes correct her fancy--only let her see him as we see him, and get used to him, as we have got used to him; and Oscar's future with her is safe. Will you leave things as they are for the present, on the chance that the German surgeon may get here before the wedding-day?"

I consented to that; being influenced, in spite of myself, by the remarkable coincidence between what Nugent had just said of Lucilla, and what Lucilla had said to me of herself earlier in the day. It was impossible to deny that Nugent's theory, wild as it sounded, found its confirmation, so far, in Lucilla's view of her own case. Having settled the difference between us in this way, for the time being, I shifted our talk next to the difficult question of Nugent's relations towards Lucilla. "How are you to meet her again," I said, "after the effect you produced on her at the meeting to-day?"

He spoke far more pleasantly in discussing this side of the subject. His language and his manner both improved together.

同类推荐
  • 太平天国战记

    太平天国战记

    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。
  • 情梦柝

    情梦柝

    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。
  • 双节堂庸训

    双节堂庸训

    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。
  • 两汉刊误补遗

    两汉刊误补遗

    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。
  • 差摩婆帝授记经

    差摩婆帝授记经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 扣扣聊三国

    扣扣聊三国

    啥?你说手机被雷劈了,不能用了?我一巴掌呼你脸上,没看见我的手机被雷劈了三下后不但没事而且越来越吊了,还可以和三国人物聊天吹牛逼了吗?啥?你说我和三国谁聊上了?诸葛亮听过吗?曹操知道吗?贾诩我都没有放在眼里!全是大佬,吓都吓坏你。你问我是谁?现实敢调戏美女,坑大神;扣扣敢聊三国大佬,连坑带骗哄。
  • 唯有森林不哭泣

    唯有森林不哭泣

    那个时候,我有着及腰的柔软长发,洁白的脸颊晶莹美丽,他叫我小公主。他是干净温润的少年,我是任性妄为的少女。我们的命运在彼此的掌纹里纠缠错绕,我们以为可以永不分离,日月为鉴。可是我们却沿着相反的方向行走,背道而驰。再遇见,他终于长成眉角隐忍坚毅的男子,而我早就没有那一头温柔的长发。我只能用那样顽劣的姿态与他相爱。不论十年,二十年,五十年,除了你,我再也不会爱别人。他是林溓,我是木晓。【我从来不曾忘记的,是时光与你。】
  • 世界旅行器

    世界旅行器

    游走与诸天万界,本书节奏较快,不喜勿喷,各位看官请支持虐杀原形。生化危机。学园默示录。倚天屠龙记。三国演义
  • 杨叶巅峰记

    杨叶巅峰记

    本书乃是上乘佳作。切勿不可多看。。。本书乃是虐主书。不坑不断章。....
  • 女王也玩穿越

    女王也玩穿越

    血族、魔族、妖族、鬼族,人类所说的吸血鬼、恶魔、妖怪、生灵,它们被统一称为邪恶一族,而统领它们的是:月,拥有比爱与美之神阿芙洛狄沁更为美丽的绝世容颜,一举一动透露着优雅,全身散发着魅惑,集合了吸血鬼、恶魔、妖怪、生灵的非人类,头脑那叫一个聪明,多变的性格下将一切掌握在手中,无人能及的力量让神明都对她敬而远之。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 竹马少爷太别扭

    竹马少爷太别扭

    顾亦临作为一个合格的竹马,在她尚懵懂时就已用他独有的方式守候着她。有人问:有人追求她你会怎么做,不留余力的在她面前抹黑情敌?顾亦临淡淡一睨:直接将她的烂桃花掐死在摇篮就好了,反正又不是第一次做这种事了!原以为会这样守候下去,燕京的一通电话却打破了这样的生活。
  • 做人不要太复杂

    做人不要太复杂

    生活中总有一些人活的太累、很紧张。其实人应该活得要简单一点、要以一颗平静的心去对待世间的万事万物。本书就是教你如何活得不要太复杂。
  • 瓦洛然编年史

    瓦洛然编年史

    历史回归到起点,洛克萨斯刚刚结束被称为血腥革命的军人政变,德莱兄弟在政变中脱颖而出。在德玛西亚,嘉文四世成年,另一方面的艾欧尼亚,均衡教派也选出了继承远古血脉的暗影战士,远方的暗影岛,蓝焰海,班德尔城,皮尔特沃夫,恕瑞玛。。。在瓦洛然的每一个角落,无数颗新星冉冉升起。
  • 穿越之时间守护者

    穿越之时间守护者

    魔界混乱,玄女出现,青梅竹马入魔,怎么办?不能有朋友,不能恋爱,结婚,青梅竹马表白怎么办?
  • 废土地仙界

    废土地仙界

    是末日?是新生?这个满目疮痍的大陆就是地仙界?神话里果然都是骗人的么!末日的仙!仙的末日!来自破灭地球的李峰,终结了这个末日,开启了另一个时代。PS:新人新书,望神通广大的各位书友不吝支持