登陆注册
15697800000027

第27章

Severne then made the revelation which he had been preparing for a day or two past; and, to avoid eternal comments by the author, I must once more call in the artful aid of the printers. The true part of Mr. Severne's revelation is in italics; the false in ordinary type.

_"When my father died, I inherited an estate in Huntingdonshire. It was not so large as Vizard's, but it was clear. Not a mortgage nor incumbrance on it. I had a younger brother;_ a fellow with charming manners, and very accomplished. These were his ruin: he got into high society in London; _but high society is not always good society._ He became connected with a fast lot, some of the young nobility. Of course he could not vie with them. He got deeply in debt. Not but what they were in debt too, every one of them. He used to send to me for money oftener than I liked; but I never suspected the rate he was going at. I was anxious, too, about him; but I said to myself he was just sowing his wild oats, like other fellows. Well, it went on, until--to his misfortune and mine--he got entangled in some disgraceful transactions; the general features are known to all the world. I dare say you have heard of one or two young noblemen who committed forgeries on their relations and friends some years ago. _One of them, the son of an earl, took his sister's whole fortune out of her bank, with a single forged check. I believe the sum total of his forgeries was over one hundred thousand pounds. His father could not find half the money. A number of the nobility had to combine to repurchase the documents; many of them were in the hands of the Jews; and I believe a composition was effected, with the help of a very powerful barrister, an M. P. He went out of his line on this occasion, and mediated between the parties._ What will you think when I tell you that my brother, the son of my father and my mother, was one of these forgers--a criminal?""My poor friend!" cried Zoe, clasping her innocent hands.

"It was a thunder-clap. I had a great mind to wash my hands of it, and let him go to prison. But how could I? The struggle ended in my doing like the rest. Only poor, I had no noble kinsmen with long purses to help me, and no solicitor-general to mediate _sub rosa._ The total amount would have swamped my family acres. I got them down to sixty per cent, and that only crippled my estate forever. As for my brother, he fell on his knees to me. But I could not forgive him. _He left the country with a hundred pounds_ I gave him. _He is in Canada; and only known there as a most respectable farmer._ He talks of paying me back. That I shall believe when I see it. All I know for certain is that his crime has mortgaged my estate, and left me poor--and suspected."While Severne related this, there passed a somewhat notable thing in the world of mind. The inventor of this history did not understand it; the hearer did, and accompanied it with innocent sympathetic sighs. Her imagination, more powerful and precise than the inventor's, pictured the horror of the high-minded brother, his agony, his shame, his respect for law and honesty, his pity for his own flesh and blood, his struggle, and the final triumph of fraternal affection. Every line of the figment was alive to her, and she _realized_ the tale. Severne only repeated it.

At the last touch of his cold art, the warm-hearted girl could contain no longer.

"Oh, poor Mr. Severne!" she cried; "poor Mr. Severne!" And the tears ran down her cheeks.

He looked at her first with a little astonishment--fancy taking his little narrative to heart like that--then with compunction, and then with a momentary horror at himself, and terror at the impassable gulf fixed between them, by her rare goodness and his depravity.

Then for a moment he felt, and felt all manner of things at once. "Oh, don't cry," he blurted out, and began to blubber himself at having made her cry at all, and so unfairly. It was his lucky hour; this hysterical effusion, undignified by a single grain of active contrition, or even penitent resolve, told in his favor. They mingled their tears; and hearts cannot hold aloof when tears come together. Yes, they mingled their tears, and the crocodile tears were the male's, if you please, and the woman's tears were pure holy drops, that angels might have gathered and carried them to God for pearls of the human soul.

After they had cried together over the cool figment, Zoe said: "I do not repent my curiosity now. You did well to tell me. Oh, no, you were right, and I will never tell anybody. People are narrow-minded. They shall never cast your brother's crime in your teeth, nor your own losses I esteem you for--oh, so much more than ever! I wonder you could tell me.""You would not wonder if you knew how superior you are to all the world:

how noble, how generous, and how I--"

"Oh, Mr. Severne, it is going to rain! We must get home as fast as ever we can."They turned, and Zoe, with true virgin coyness, and elastic limbs, made the coming rain an excuse for such swift walking that Severne could not make tender love to her. To be sure, Apollo ran after Daphne, with his little proposals; but, I take it, he ran mute--till he found he couldn't catch her. Indeed, it was as much as Severne could do to keep up with her "fair heel and toe." But I ascribe this to her not wearing high heels ever since Fanny told her she was just a little too tall, and she was novice enough to believe her.

She would not stop for the drizzle; but at last it came down with such a vengeance that she was persuaded to leave the path and run for a cattle-shed at some distance. Here she and Severne were imprisoned.

Luckily for them "the kye had not come hame," and the shed was empty.

They got into the farthest corner of it; for it was all open toward the river; and the rain pattered on the roof as if it would break it.

Thus driven together, was it wonderful that soon her hand was in his, and that, as they purred together, and murmured soft nothings, more than once she was surprised into returning the soft pressure which he gave it so often?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 南有青栀

    南有青栀

    有些事往往很早就能看出端倪,只不过最初有的人不愿意深想,最后有的人愿意装傻充楞。如果有些事可以早点知道结局,也许夏青栀不会选择遇见秦皓然。
  • 嘿!原始人

    嘿!原始人

    “嘿!你们这是在拍电视剧吗?”谢双双看着站在自己面前的原始人,心里有一千万只草泥马飞奔而过。“电视剧是什么?小雌性,你说的话我们这么都听不懂啊?”某双:……难道我是穿越了?!!!
  • 天外世界

    天外世界

    宇宙,永远都有你不知道的秘密,越是探索,就越发觉得它无边无际,不可认知。宇宙之中星球无数,那宇宙之外呢!是否更加浩瀚,藏着人们不可探知的秘密。于是今天,人们沿着古代预言探索出星空之路,终于冲出宇宙。宇宙之外,是一片传承无尽岁月的大陆,仙派妖兽并立,地球人成了弱者,科技不再有用,身体无比脆弱,他们该如何生存。一个普通人,意外得到仙药,种下灵种,踏上修仙路,只为报仇。本书纯修仙,不科幻。
  • 灯的伏罗门

    灯的伏罗门

    萧洛、陈舒和一只优雅的黑猫,面对那些所谓中强大的敌人他们该怎么办?也许敌人根本不存在,也许敌人那里都是,真正阴险的敌人不在于树勇强大的魂力,也许,萧洛和陈舒知道后来发生了什么。迪拉德的秘密,等待你探索。
  • 北船余音巷与柠月

    北船余音巷与柠月

    各种各样的标签无非都是别人来定义你的亦或是强加在你身上的那,你还是原来的你不需要因为这些标签去改变自己随心就好
  • 新编市场营销理论与实务

    新编市场营销理论与实务

    本书主要介绍市场营销环境,消费者购买行为分析,市场营销调研与预测,市场营销战略与管理,目标市场营销及各种营销策略等。
  • exo一切变了

    exo一切变了

    一切都变了,他们互相原谅,原来并没有互相讨厌。别让我在死以后在叫你一声。我们一直在一起。本文纯属虚构噢!
  • 曾许流年不相负

    曾许流年不相负

    一个好勇斗狠,所向披靡,却因失去挚爱而痛改前非的不良少年,一个生来运气爆棚,却甘愿未来被一个心爱的女孩所绑住的自来熟话痨,一名背负着沉默重罪,欲寄身于新生活中寻求解脱的年轻女教师,一个具有强大统率力和惨淡异性缘,追寻一段不可捉摸恋情的女汉子,一个害羞内向却不失坚韧,甘愿默默为所爱奉献的暖男,以及,一名被环境所排斥,却不肯为环境所改变的留学生。这是他们的故事。也许他们终将老去,也许他们终将成长,但不管结局会如何,他们都不会后悔,在他们最应奋不顾身,最不应瞻前顾后的那个年代,曾许流年不相负。
  • 无限穿越:误惹虚拟恋人

    无限穿越:误惹虚拟恋人

    新工作居然是要我跟一群穷凶极恶的罪犯战斗?!而搭档是个完全不顾虑后果,只顾自己开心的混蛋!还是个爱对她动手动脚的混蛋!偏偏她完全拿他没办法。有本事你从网络上滚下来真人PK啊?!于是有一天,他真的来了……云木樨怂了……
  • 解放战争国军中的奇人怪事儿

    解放战争国军中的奇人怪事儿

    本书主要讲述了1945——1949年国共第二次内战期间的一部分国军将领和发生在他们身上的令人啼笑皆非的种种怪事。本书在尊重史实的前提下,对国民党将领不夸大不掩饰不污蔑,用诙谐幽默的语言讲述他们的故事,揭开面纱,还原出他们的真实面容,让枯燥乏味的历史有趣起来,同时让大家有兴趣去了解那段炮火纷飞的年代,去了解革命先辈为中国解放事业做出的巨大牺牲。本文毫不避讳地提及解放战争中解放军作战失利的数次战役,诸如绥远战役、两次四平战役、陇东战役、两次榆林攻坚战、二打运城战役、西府战役、两淮战役、南麻临朐战役、青树坪战役、金门战役等等,前事不忘后事之师,通过这些失利战役,我们可以从中吸取宝贵的经验教训。