登陆注册
14811400000039

第39章

She stood listening to him, noticing against her will the more than suspicion of cockney accent and the thick drawl with which the words were uttered.

His eyes sought her face piteously. She noticed that too, and stood before him torn by conflicting emotions, pity and disgust struggling in a hand-to-hand fight within her.

"Mr. Broomhurst and I are going down by the well to sit; it's cooler there. Won't you come?" she said at last, gently.

He did not reply for a moment; then he turned his head aside, sharply for him.

"No, my dear, thank you; I'm comfortable enough here," he returned, huskily.

She stood over him, hesitating a second; then moved abruptly to the table, from which she took a book.

He had risen from his seat by the time she turned to go out, and he intercepted her timorously.

"Kathie, give me a kiss before you go," he whispered, hoarsely. "I--I don't often bother you."

She drew her breath in deeply as he put his arms clumsily about her; but she stood still, and he kissed her on the forehead, and touched the little wavy curls that strayed across it gently with his big, trembling fingers.

When he released her, she moved at once impetuously to the open doorway. On the threshold she hesitated, paused a moment irresolutely, and then turned back.

"Shall I--does your pipe want filling, John?" she asked, softly.

"No, thank you, my dear."

"Would you like me to stay, read to you, or anything?"

He looked up at her wistfully. "N-no, thank you; I'm not much of a reader, you know, my dear--somehow."

She hated herself for knowing that there would be a "my dear," probably a "somehow," in his reply, and despised herself for the sense of irritated impatience she felt by anticipation, even before the words were uttered.

There was a moment's hesitating silence, broken by the sound of quick, firm footsteps without. Broomhurst paused at the entrance, and looked into the tent.

"Aren't you coming, Drayton?" he asked, looking first at Drayton's wife and then swiftly putting in his name with a scarcely perceptible pause. "Too lazy? But you, Mrs. Drayton?"

"Yes, I'm coming," she said.

They left the tent together, and walked some few steps in silence.

Broomhurst shot a quick glance at his companion's face.

"Anything wrong?" he asked, presently.

Though the words were ordinary enough, the voice in which they were spoken was in some subtle fashion a different voice from that in which he had talked to her nearly two months ago, though it would have required a keen sense of nice shades in sound to have detected the change.

Mrs. Drayton's sense of niceties in sound was particularly keen, but she answered quietly, "Nothing, thank you."

They did not speak again till the trees round the stone well were reached.

Broomhurst arranged their seats comfortably beside it.

"Are we going to read or talk?" he asked, looking up at her from his lower place.

"Well, we generally talk most when we arrange to read; so shall we agree to talk to-day for a change, by way of getting some reading done?" she rejoined, smiling. "/You/ begin."

Broomhurst seemed in no hurry to avail himself of the permission; he was apparently engrossed in watching the flecks of sunshine on Mrs.

Drayton's white dress. The whirring of insects, and the creaking of a Persian wheel somewhere in the neighbourhood, filtered through the hot silence.

Mrs. Drayton laughed after a few minutes; there was a touch of embarrassment in the sound.

"The new plan doesn't answer. Suppose you read, as usual, and let me interrupt, also as usual, after the first two lines."

He opened the book obediently, but turned the pages at random.

She watched him for a moment, and then bent a little forward toward him.

"It is my turn now," she said, suddenly; "is anything wrong?"

He raised his head, and their eyes met. There was a pause. "I will be more honest than you," he returned; "yes, there is."

"What?"

"I've had orders to move on."

She drew back, and her lips whitened, though she kept them steady.

"When do you go?"

"On Wednesday."

There was silence again; the man still kept his eyes on her face.

The whirring of the insects and the creaking of the wheel had suddenly grown so strangely loud and insistent that it was in a half-dazed fashion she at length heard her name--"/Kathleen!/"

"Kathleen!" he whispered again, hoarsely.

She looked him full in the face, and once more their eyes met in a long, grave gaze.

The man's face flushed, and he half rose from his seat with an impetuous movement; but Kathleen stopped him with a glance.

"Will you go and fetch my work? I left it in the tent," she said, speaking very clearly and distinctly; "and then will you go on reading? I will find the place while you are gone."

She took the book from his hand, and he rose and stood before her.

There was a mute appeal in his silence, and she raised her head slowly.

Her face was white to the lips, but she looked at him unflinchingly; and without a word he turned and left her.

Mrs. Drayton was resting in the tent on Tuesday afternoon. With the help of cushions and some low chairs, she had improvised a couch, on which she lay quietly with her eyes closed. There was a tenseness, however, in her attitude which indicated that sleep was far from her.

Her features seemed to have sharpened during the last few days, and there were hollows in her cheeks. She had been very ill for a long time, but all at once, with a sudden movement, she turned her head and buried her face in the cushions with a groan. Slipping from her place, she fell on her knees beside the couch, and put both hands before her mouth to force back the cry that she felt struggling to her lips.

For some moments the wild effort she was making for outward calm, which even when she was alone was her first instinct, strained every nerve and blotted out sight and hearing, and it was not till the sound was very near that she was conscious of the ring of horse's hoofs on the plain.

She raised her head sharply, with a thrill of fear, still kneeling, and listened.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 军妓

    军妓

    本书是一部充满传奇色彩的长篇小说,其主要描述日军在侵华战争时期,为满足官兵的兽欲,对中日两国妇女所犯下的滔天罪行,也反映了妇女们的斗争英雄壮举。
  • 灵道传说

    灵道传说

    一拳一剑闯天下,历经劫难行仁侠。千击万磨还坚韧,任凭风吹雨来打。造化降,吞噬漩,五灵七绝撼乾坤。命运捉弄人……【求推荐、收藏!】
  • 感悟心灵:滋养一生的85个记忆

    感悟心灵:滋养一生的85个记忆

    岁月如歌,让我们点燃记忆之灯;蹒跚学步到懵懂无知,从初入社会到感慨万千,人生的每个阶段,我们都有无数的感悟,感悟真情,感悟智慧,感悟人生,感悟生活;分享感人的故事,咀嚼震撼的心情;品位优美上进的文章,体验别样精彩的人生。感悟系列丛书用不一样的感动,带给我们一样的感悟,直接撞击我们的灵魂深处,激励我们奋发图强,铸造我们的高尚人格。《感悟心灵——滋养一生的85个记忆》,催人泪下的感人故事,震撼心灵的世间真情,刻骨铭心的温馨感动!
  • 北大经济管理课

    北大经济管理课

    经济学和管理学本身都是研究人的学问,是世间最简单也最复杂的学科。经济学本质上是一种视角,一种方法,人们通过它观察现实、分析现实并生产出现实中所必须的种种观点、策略。管理学是典型的智慧积聚地,教人怎样利用团队的力量完成个人永远只能望洋兴叹的丰功伟业。学了经济学,你应该有自己的观点,而学了管理学,你应该再也不会对现实有所恐惧了。否则你就是还没学到家或者说根本就学错了。北大经济课、管理课实际上就是要达到这两个目的,让每一个学生都能够“有自己的观点”“不会对现实有所恐惧”。
  • 天降公主带着球

    天降公主带着球

    穿越之后,又经历了失忆。别人穿越都是在皇宫将府中,而她却流落在小山村。一场暗涌的阴谋,一场秘处的刺杀。她真实的身份却是落难民间的公主,她的前身到底经历了什么……未来,迎接她的,她将面对的,是后宫、朝堂,各种腥风血雨!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 能量战神

    能量战神

    这是一个能量的世界,没有魔法,也没有斗气,更没有高科技。在这个疯狂而残酷但却又不失精彩的世界中,不变的原则还是弱肉强、强者为尊、适者生存~~~~~~~~李雷南,平宁侯的儿子。从小便被父亲残酷地训练,刚开始的厌恶到后来享受。最终,李雷南对力量极其渴求。他拥有最疼爱他的双亲,他拥有对强大的力量追求的权利,他拥有辉煌的未来~~~~~~~~~一切似乎那么美好,变化却只在一瞬间~~~~~~~~~梦已经消失,念已经不在,欲已经无存。活着,只为心而存在。随心所欲,注定李雷南一生充满精彩与悲哀~~~~~~~~
  • 万爱一身的小小姐驾到

    万爱一身的小小姐驾到

    飞机失事千金大小姐穿越到古代,成了万人宠爱的萧家小小姐。活泼开朗的她在一个黄昏下遇见了他。他是漓城第一冷美男,在那一刻一见钟情了萧荷洛......
  • 重生之无敌星际

    重生之无敌星际

    李靖一个普通的少年,因一次意外来到了未来世界,他将发生怎样的故事呢?让我们敬请期待。
  • 耀武大帝

    耀武大帝

    七界大陆万族林立,皇天域七国称霸,大楚王朝九州动荡,江州十三氏各领风骚。曾经的万族之首,如今的没落吴家。少年吴耀,出生吴氏一族,奈何家族败落,屈辱一生。上天怜悯,重生五年之前。今世誓要攀那武道巅峰,斩奸除佞,重振吴氏之威,还我荣耀万丈,正我耀武大帝之名!
  • 今生有你,来生无憾

    今生有你,来生无憾

    “哥哥,我们来玩过家家好不好,我当妈妈,你是爸爸......”“呜呜,哥哥你在哪,瑜源哥哥,瑜源哥哥你出来啊。”十年了,王瑜源你在哪,,,缘分又把他们两个绑在了一起。十年后,女的貌美如花,艳镇群芳,男的帅气优雅,冷酷无情,唯独对她。某机场,“哎呀,谁阿,没长眼睛,敢撞本小姐?!”一身红色的米字衣,脚下却一双白布鞋,十分不搭,“诶呦,大小姐您慢点,咱把鞋换上好不?”一个女孩提着一双黑色的高跟鞋向这边大喊跑来,“哼,本小姐暂时不和你计较!”说完便跑了,却不知这边这个男人的脸却已经黑了......