登陆注册
15460200000005

第5章 CHAPTER II(1)

"LOUISA, the long and short of it is this," said Thorpe, half an hour later: "you never did believe in me, as a sister should do."He was seated alone with this sister, in a small, low, rather dismally-appointed room, half-heartedly lighted by two flickering gasjets. They sat somewhat apart, confronting a fireplace, where only the laid materials for a fire disclosed themselves in the cold grate. Above the mantel hung an enlarged photograph of a scowling old man.

Thorpe's gaze recurred automatically at brief intervals to this portrait--which somehow produced the effect upon him of responsibility for the cheerlessness of the room.

There were other pictures on the walls of which he was dimly conscious--small, faded, old prints about Dido and AEneas and Agamemnon, which seemed to be coming back to him out of the mists of his childhood.

Vagrant impressions and associations of this childhood strayed with quaint inconsequence across the field of his preoccupied mind. The peculiar odour of the ancient book-shop on the floor below remained like snuff in his nostrils.

Somewhere underneath, or in the wainscoting at the side, he could hear the assiduous gnawing of a rat. Was it the same rat, he wondered with a mental grin, that used to keep him awake nights, in one of the rooms next to this, with that same foolish noise, when he was a boy?

"I know you always say that," replied Louisa, impassively.

She was years older than her brother, but, without a trace of artifice or intention, contrived to look the younger of the two. Her thick hair, drawn simply from her temples into a knot behind, was of that palest brown which assimilates grey. Her face, long, plain, masculine in contour and spirit, conveyed no message as to years.

Long and spare of figure, she sat upright in her straight-backed chair, with her large, capable hands on her knees.

"I believed in you as much as you'd let me," she went on, indifferently, almost wearily. "But I don't see that it mattered to you whether I did or didn't. You went your own way: you did what you wanted to do. What had I to do with it? I don't suppose I even knew what part of the world you were in more than once in two or three years.

How should I know whether you were going to succeed, when I didn't even know what it was you were at? Certainly you hadn't succeeded here in London--but elsewhere you might or you might not--how could I tell? And moreover, I don't feel that I know you very well; you've grown into something very different from the boy Joel that left the shop--it must be twenty years ago. I can only know about you and your affairs what you tell me.""But my point is," pursued Thorpe, watching her face with a curiously intent glance, "you never said to yourself:

'I KNOW he's going to succeed. I KNOW he'll be a rich man before he dies.'"She shook her head dispassionately. Her manner expressed fatigued failure to comprehend why he was making so much of this purposeless point.

"No--I don't remember ever having said that to myself,"she admitted, listlessly. Then a comment upon his words occurred to her, and she spoke with more animation:

"You don't seem to understand, Joel, that what was very important to you, didn't occupy me at all. You were always talking about getting rich; you kept the idea before you of sometime, at a stroke, finding yourself a millionaire. That's been the idea of your life.

But what do I know about all that? My work has been to keep a roof over my head--to keep the little business from disappearing altogether. It's been hard enough, I can tell you, these last few years, with the big jobbers cutting the hearts out of the small traders.

I had the invalid husband to support for between three and four years--a dead weight on me every week--and then the children to look after, to clothe and educate."At the last word she hesitated suddenly, and looked at him. "Don't think I'm ungrateful"--she went on, with a troubled effort at a smile--"but I almost wish you'd never sent me that four hundred pounds at all.

What it means is that they've had two years at schools where now I shan't be able to keep them any longer.

They'll be spoiled for my kind of life--and they won't have a fair chance for any other. I don't know what will become of them."The profound apprehension in the mother's voice did not dull the gleam in Thorpe's eyes. He even began a smile in the shadows of his unkempt moustache.

"But when I sent that money, for example, two years ago, and over," he persisted, doggedly--"and I told you there'd be more where that came from, and that I stood to pull off the great event--even then, now, you didn't believe in your innermost heart that I knew what I was talking about, did you?"She frowned with impatience as she turned toward him.

"For heaven's sake, Joel," she said, sharply--"you become a bore with that stupid nonsense. I want to be patient with you--I do indeed sympathize with you in your misfortunes--you know that well enough--but you're very tiresome with that eternal harping on what I believed and what I didn't believe. Now, are you going to stop to supper or not?--because if you are I must send the maid out.

And there's another thing--would it be of any help to you to bring your things here from the hotel? You can have Alfred's room as well as not--till Christmas, at least.""Supposing I couldn't get my luggage out of the hotel till I'd settled my bill," suggested Thorpe tentatively, in a muffled voice.

The practical woman reflected for an instant.

"I was thinking," she confessed then, "that it might be cheaper to leave your things there, and buy what little you want--I don't imagine, from what I've seen, that your wardrobe is so very valuable--but no, I suppose the bill ought to be paid. Perhaps it can be managed;how much will it be?"

Thorpe musingly rose to his feet, and strolled over to her chair. With his thick hands on his sister's shoulders he stooped and kissed her on the forehead.

"You believe in me now, anyway, eh, Lou?" he said, as he straightened himself behind her.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 眼泪是最无声的祝福

    眼泪是最无声的祝福

    这是关于tfboys的小说哦,不喜勿喷~,她叫半子烟,他们的第一次相遇是在她13岁时,她从小就没有朋友,就是因为脸上那道疤,只有他不排挤她。而在后来,他因为一个女孩,离开了她,他们将会怎样?敬请期待~
  • 渊灵传

    渊灵传

    神界与魔界的一场关乎整个世界的战争即将开始,为争夺决定战争胜利的渊灵珠,神魔各有所谋,而人界却浑然不知。寒剑在蛰伏了七年之后,踏向真正的复仇之路,她冷静,冷漠,却未察觉自己冰冷外表之下无法舍弃的善良。生活中也渐渐出现着改变她的人,亲情,友情,爱情,命运的齿轮也从此开始转动。
  • 断鸿零雁记

    断鸿零雁记

    《断鸿零雁记》的剧情描述三郎自幼与亲母和妹妹分离,受尽义母的虐待, 结果选择削发为僧。 其后, 三郎得一红颜知己相助, 赠予他盘川到扶桑与母亲和妹妹重逢。 然而,待三郎归来时, 他的红颜知己却早已香销玉殒。
  • 相思谋:妃常难娶

    相思谋:妃常难娶

    某日某王府张灯结彩,婚礼进行时,突然不知从哪冒出来一个小孩,对着新郎道:“爹爹,今天您的大婚之喜,娘亲让我来还一样东西。”说完提着手中的玉佩在新郎面前晃悠。此话一出,一府宾客哗然,然当大家看清这小孩与新郎如一个模子刻出来的面容时,顿时石化。此时某屋顶,一个绝色女子不耐烦的声音响起:“儿子,事情办完了我们走,别在那磨矶,耽误时间。”新郎一看屋顶上的女子,当下怒火攻心,扔下新娘就往女子所在的方向扑去,吼道:“女人,你给本王站住。”一场爱与被爱的追逐正式开始、、、、、、、
  • 至尊嫡女:妖孽王爷滚远点

    至尊嫡女:妖孽王爷滚远点

    世人皆说她痴,笑她丑,欺她傻!她是堂堂镇国公府大小姐,却连一个奴婢都敢随意欺辱!新婚夜,她躺在婚床上,却听见纱帐外嫡亲妹妹娇嗔暧昧的对她夫君说:我想要~一朝重生,她风光潋滟,惩治刁奴白莲花,虐无情渣男,欺她辱她者,不得善终!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 异世巫妖技能

    异世巫妖技能

    这一天,自从联邦进军宇宙遭遇滑铁卢之后沉默了三十年的联盟频道突然响了起来。联盟通告!!在这个伟大的日子里,基因进化技术正是研发成功……基因进化分为初级进化、中级进化、高级进化、终极进化…………初级进化成功可以增加人类一百到二百年的寿命,使人类至少达到三级战士的水平…………中级进化成功可以增加人类三百到五百年的寿命,使人类至少达到六级战士的水平…………高级进化…………终极进化……永生…………由于基因的进化是一个十分痛苦和漫长的过程,经过几十年的研究决定,通过虚拟技术使人类精神和肉体隔绝……十天后《轮回》正式开启!这一刻,世界开始沸腾。
  • 泰戈尔创作不朽诗歌的故事

    泰戈尔创作不朽诗歌的故事

    我们辑录这些影响名人人生成长的主要事件,就是为了让广大读者知道,名人在他们做好思想准备进行人生不懈追求的进程中,怎么从日常司空见惯的普通小事上,碰出生命的火花,化渺小为伟大,化平凡为神奇,获得灵感和启发的,从而获得伟大的精神力量,实现了较高的人生追求。
  • 一品剑豪

    一品剑豪

    曾梦想仗剑走天涯,曾幻想爱情美如画!如今剑指苍穹,气势豪迈,却渴望佳人携手话桑麻!少年提剑,一路艰险,只想渴望拥有一个家!成一品剑豪,饮天下佳酿,躺美人膝下,如此便不枉一生繁华。
  • 修真高手战都市

    修真高手战都市

    一个傻子被一个疯子劫持了,接下来会发生什么?玄武大陆十阶大帝,飞升失败灵魂附在傻子易风身上。从此——这个傻子摆平胸大无脑的美女警花!搞定傲娇的大小姐未婚妻!迷住曾经暗恋的女神老师!
  • 我的驸马是太监

    我的驸马是太监

    一个二十一世纪特种兵穿越到热门目的地明末,却阴差阳错的成了一个有名无实的太监,面对这突如其来的荣誉,他没有选择逃避,更没有退缩,而是勇敢的挑起了拯救民族危亡的重担,发出了千百年来太监界的最强音——天下兴亡,太监有责!他是一个太监,他曾临危受命,拯万民于水火。他是一个太监他曾力挽狂澜,扶社稷于危亡。让刀与剑见证一个太监的铁血雄心,用爱与殇感悟两位公主的似水柔情。更多精彩,尽在鲁陵王新作——我的驸马是太监