登陆注册
15459000000176

第176章 Chapter 9(6)

Mrs. Assingham gave it up. "How could n't I, how could n't I?" Then with a fine freedom she went all her way. "How CAN'T I, how can't I?"

It fixed afresh Maggie's wide eyes on her. "I see--I see. Well, it's beautiful for you to be able to. And of course," she added, "you wanted to help Charlotte."

"Yes"--Fanny considered it--"I wanted to help Charlotte. But I wanted also, you see, to help you--by not digging up a past that I believed, with so much on top of it, solidly buried. I wanted, as I still want," she richly declared, "to help everyone."

It set Maggie once more in movement--movement which however spent itself again with a quick emphasis. "Then it's a good deal my fault--if everything really began so well?"

Fanny Assingham met it as she could. "You've been only too perfect.

You've thought only too much--"

But the Princess had already caught at the words. "Yes--I've thought only too much!" Yet she appeared to continue for the minute full of that fault. (173) She had it in fact, by this prompted thought, all before her.

"Of him, dear man, of HIM--!"

Her friend, able to take in thus directly her vision of her father, watched her with a new suspense. THAT way might safety lie--it was like a wider chink of light. "He believed--with a beauty!--in Charlotte."

"Yes, and it was I who had made him believe. I did n't mean to at the time so much, for I had no idea then of what was coming. But I did it, I did it!" the Princess declared.

"With a beauty--ah with a beauty you too!" Mrs. Assingham insisted.

Maggie at all events was seeing for herself--it was another matter.

"The thing was that he made her think it would be so possible."

Fanny again hesitated. "The Prince made her think--?"

Maggie stared--she had meant her father. But her vision seemed to spread.

"They both made her think. She would n't have thought without them."

"Yet Amerigo's good faith," Mrs. Assingham insisted, "was perfect. And there was nothing, all the more," she added, "against your father's."

The remark kept Maggie for a moment still. "Nothing perhaps but his knowing that she knew."

"'Knew'--?"

"That he was doing it so much for me. To what extent," she suddenly asked of her friend, "do you think he was aware she knew?"

"Ah who can say what passes between people in such a relation? The only thing one can be sure of is that he was generous." And Mrs. Assingham (174) conclusively smiled. "He doubtless knew as much as was right for himself."

"As much, that is, as was right for her."

"Yes then--as was right for her. The point is," Fanny declared, "that whatever his knowledge it made all the way it went for his good faith."

Maggie continued to gaze, and her friend now fairly waited on her successive movements. "Is n't the point, very considerably, that his good faith must have been his faith in her taking almost as much interest in me as he himself took?"

Fanny Assingham thought. "He recognised, he adopted, your long friendship.

But he founded on it no selfishness."

"No," said Maggie with still deeper consideration: "he counted her selfishness out almost as he counted his own."

"So you may say."

"Very well," Maggie went on; "if he had none of his own, he invited her, may have expected her, on her side, to have as little. And she may only since have found that out."

Mrs. Assingham looked blank. "Since--?"

"And he may have become aware," Maggie pursued, "that she has found it out. That she has taken the measure, since their marriage," she explained, "of how much he had asked of her--more say than she had understood at the time. He may have made out at last how such a demand was in the long run to affect her."

"He may have done many things," Mrs. Assingham responded; "but there's one thing he certainly (175) won't have done. He'll never have shown that he expected of her a quarter as much as she must have understood he was to give."

"I've often wondered," Maggie mused, "what Charlotte really understood.

But it's one of the things she has never told me."

"Then as it's one of the things she has never told me either we shall probably never know it, and we may regard it as none of our business. There are many things," said Mrs. Assingham, "that we shall never know."

Maggie took it in with a long reflexion. "Never."

"But there are others," her friend went on, "that stare us in the face and that--under whatever difficulty you may feel you labour--may now be enough for us. Your father has been extraordinary."

It had been as if Maggie were feeling her way, but she rallied to this with a rush. "Extraordinary."

"Magnificent," said Fanny Assingham.

Her companion held tight to it. "Magnificent."

"Then he'll do for himself whatever there may be to do. What he undertook for you he'll do to the end. He did n't undertake it to break down; in what--quiet patient exquisite as he is--did he EVER break down? He had never in his life proposed to himself to have failed, and he won't have done it on this occasion."

"Ah this occasion!"--and Maggie's wail showed her of a sudden thrown back on it. "Am I in the least sure that, with everything, he even knows what it is? And yet am I in the least sure he does n't?"

(176) "If he does n't then so much the better. Leave him alone."

"Do you mean give him up?"

"Leave HER," Fanny Assingham went on. "Leave her TO him."

Maggie looked at her darkly. "Do you mean leave him to HER? After this?"

"After everything. Are n't they, for that matter, intimately together now?"

"'Intimately'--? How do I know?"

But Fanny kept it up. "Are n't you and your husband--in spite of everything?"

Maggie's eyes still further if possible dilated. "It remains to be seen!"

"If you're not then where's your faith?"

"In my husband--?"

Mrs. Assingham but for an instant hesitated. "In your father. It all comes back to that. Rest on it."

"On his ignorance?"

Fanny met it again. "On whatever he may offer you. TAKE that."

"Take it--?" Maggie stared.

Mrs. Assingham held up her head. "And be grateful." On which for a minute she let the Princess face her. "Do you see?"

"I see," said Maggie at last.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 露从今夜白,月是故乡明

    露从今夜白,月是故乡明

    穿越到一个架空的朝代,又要代嫁东宫成为太子侧妃。初次见面,他为自己心爱的人差点要了她的命。也罢,此处不留爷自有留爷处。她悄然离开,他却寻遍天下。两次穿越,两度心伤。十四年后的她容颜依旧,他却悄然老去。国破山河在,身为亡国太后的她又将何去何从……
  • 鬼道执法者

    鬼道执法者

    一身鬼术纵横人、妖、鬼、三界,天生雷体与妖肉搏与鬼死磕。
  • 独尊八方

    独尊八方

    少年楚天隐,自幼被人暗算,成为废体,寄人篱下。长大后偶的奇遇,纵横八方。
  • 遗忘的年华

    遗忘的年华

    李乐原是一位自卑男生,因机缘巧合结识班里漂亮班花,面对兄弟和爱人,看他如何在爱情友情亲情之间选择属于自己的未来
  • 南怀瑾大师开释人生

    南怀瑾大师开释人生

    上下五千年,步履如飞,尽情体会传统文化智慧的精髓;纵横十万里,目光如炬,穿透历史风尘品味生活的繁华与精彩。人们习惯称他为“居士”,也有人喜欢尊他为“教授”,然而更多的是敬他为“大师”。他是“台湾十大最有影响力的人物”之一。人们希望通过他的指引,找到阅读传统文化的捷径。他就是南怀瑾,是“国学大师”,是“禅宗大师”,是宗教家、哲学家,也是温暖人生的最佳顾问。
  • 开阔眼界的语文故事

    开阔眼界的语文故事

    从人牙牙学语时,就开始接触语文。许多深情的诗句,永远地烙印在世人的脑海里。许多抒情的文章,曾打动过你我的心房。语文,是学习、工作、生活都不可缺少的一部分。也是人类永恒的主题。
  • 网游吾为法则

    网游吾为法则

    秩序的掌控,魔法的传承。孤寡老人的嘱托,莫名其妙的预言。我的记忆在哪里?是恶魔的吞噬?是天命的注定?为何空幻的开启会波动我的心弦?预言已成真。
  • 最强医生

    最强医生

    阎京本是一无业游民,在某次上网购物的时候,得到一本来路不明的医经,无师自通地学习医术,还开了一家小诊所,这里不但有奇形怪状的搏斗用具,还有见所未见的医疗器械,更重要的是,各式各样的美女,都喜欢往他这里钻……
  • 凯爷擒爱记

    凯爷擒爱记

    当明星遇到特工,当暖男遇到冰山美人受到感情挫折的冰月,该怎样对待如此宠爱他的小凯,是接受还是离开,他又怎该面对恋她多年的夏殇,当真相解开的那一刻,他有该如何抉择
  • 执刀传

    执刀传

    上古时代,强大的上古巨人一族湮没在神秘的浩劫之中。曾经在巨人脚下寻求庇护的种族快速崛起,逐渐占领这个大陆。因为利益,因为理念,因为血脉,崛起的五大种族开始无休止的征战。在长达万年的战争之中,人类这个种族最终凭借着无与伦比的可塑性,以及恐怖的繁殖能力,占据中原最肥美的沃土。时光悠悠千年逝,人类在繁华的国度中逐渐沉沦,安逸与享受消磨了他们的斗志,权利与欲望蒙蔽了他们的心智。随着深海一族千年难遇的雄主“无间”一统海洋,人类国度便进入风雨飘摇的时代。少年苏毅因为心中的执着,背着破旧的陌刀,踏入了阴云笼罩的临海城,就此徘徊在生死之间,于乱世中活生生劈出千秋太平!