登陆注册
19924300000031

第31章

Once," she went on, "I thought I had everything clear before me; but now I seem only to have made confusion of my life. Yes," she added drearily, "it was foolish and wicked, and it was perfectly useless, too. I can't escape from the consequences of what I did. It makes no difference what he believed or any one believed. I drove them on to risk their lives because I thought myself so much better than they; because I was self-righteous and suspicious and stubborn. Well, I must bear the penalty: and oh, if I could only bear it alone!" With a long sigh she took back the burden which she had been struggling to cast off, and from which for a time she had actually seemed to escape. She put away her hat and shawl, and stood before the glass, smoothing her hair. "When will it ever end?" she moaned to the reflection there, rather than to her mother, who did not interrupt this spiritual ordeal. In another age, such a New England girl would have tortured herself with inquisition as to some neglected duty to God;--in ours, when religion is so largely humanified, this Puritan soul could only wreak itself in a sense of irreparable wrong to her fellow-creature.

When she went out she met Miss Gleason half-way down the corridor to Mrs.

Maynard's door. The latter had a book in her hand, and came forward whispering. "She's asleep," she said very sibilantly. " I have read her to sleep, and she's sleeping beautifully. Have you ever read it?" she asked, with hoarse breaks from her undertone, as she held up one of those cheap library-editions of a novel toward Grace.

"Jane Eyre? Why, of course. Long ago."

"So have I," said Miss Gleason. "But I sent and got it again, to refresh my impressions of Rochester. We all think Dr. Mulbridge is just like him. Rochester is my ideal character,--a perfect conception of a man: so abrupt, so rough, so savage. Oh, I like those men! Don't you?" she fluted. "Mrs. Maynard sees the resemblance, as well as the rest of us.

But I know! You don't approve of them. I suppose they can't be defended on some grounds; but I can see how, even in such a case as this, the perfect mastery of the man-physician constitutes the highest usefulness of the woman-physician. The advancement of women must be as women.

'Male and female created he them,' and it is only in remembering this that we are helping Gawd, whether as an anthropomorphic conception or a universally pervading instinct of love, don't you think?"

With her novel clapped against her breast, she leaned winningly over toward Grace, and fixed her with her wide eyes, which had rings of white round the pupils.

"Do tell me!" she ran on without waiting an answer. "Didn't you go with Mr. Libby because you hoped it might storm, and wished to take the same risk as Mrs. Maynard? I told Mrs. Alger you did!"

Grace flushed guiltily, and Miss Gleason cowered a little, perhaps interpreting the color as resentment. "I should consider that a very silly motive," she said, helplessly ashamed that she was leaving the weight of the blow upon Miss Gleason's shoulders instead of her own.

"Of course," said Miss Gleason enthusiastically, "you can't confess it.

But I know you are capable of such a thing--of anything heroic!

Do forgive me," she said, seizing Grace's hand. She held it a moment, gazing with a devouring fondness into her face, which she stooped a little sidewise to peer up into. Then she quickly dropped her hand, and, whirling away, glided slimly out of the corridor.

Grace softly opened Mrs. Maynard's door, and the sick woman opened her eyes. "I was n't asleep," she said hoarsely, "but I had to pretend to be, or that woman would have killed me."

Grace went to her and felt her hands and her flushed forehead.

"I am worse this evening," said Mrs. Maynard.

"Oh, no," sighed the girl, dropping into a chair at the bedside, with her eyes fixed in a sort of fascination on the lurid face of the sick woman.

"After getting me here," continued Mrs. Maynard, in the same low, hoarse murmur, "you might at least stay with me a little. What kept you so long?"

"The wind fell. We were becalmed."

"We were not becalmed the day I went out with Mr. Libby. But perhaps nobody forced you to go.

Having launched this dart, she closed her eyes again with something more like content than she had yet shown: it had an aim of which she could always be sure.

"We have heard from Mr. Maynard," said Grace humbly. "There was a despatch waiting for Mr. Libby at Leyden. He is on his way."

Mrs. Maynard betrayed no immediate effect of this other than to say, "He had better hurry," and did not open her eyes.

Grace went about the room with a leaden weight in every fibre, putting the place in order, and Mrs. Maynard did not speak again till she had finished. Then she said, "I want you to tell me just how bad Dr.

Mulbridge thinks I am."

"He has never expressed any anxiety," Grace began, with her inaptness at evasion.

"Of course he has n't," murmured the sick woman. "He isn't a fool!

What does he say?"

This passed the sufferance even of remorse. "He says you mustn't talk," the girl flashed out. "And if you insist upon doing so, I will leave you, and send some one else to take care of you."

"Very well, then. I know what that means. When a doctor tells you not to talk, it's because he knows he can't do you any good. As soon as George Maynard gets here I will have some one that can cure me, or I will know the reason why." The conception of her husband as a champion seemed to commend him to her in novel degree. She shed some tears, and after a little reflection she asked, "How soon will he be here?"

"I don't know," said Grace. "He seems to have started yesterday morning."

"He can be here by day after to-morrow," Mrs. Maynard computed. "There will be some one to look after poor little Bella then," she added, as if, during her sickness, Bella must have been wholly neglected. "Don't let the child be all dirt when her father comes."

同类推荐
  • 题兴善寺隋松院与人

    题兴善寺隋松院与人

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 北京楚林禅师语录

    北京楚林禅师语录

    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。
  • 鸳鸯针

    鸳鸯针

    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。
  • Derrick Vaughan--Novelist

    Derrick Vaughan--Novelist

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 六十种曲杀狗记

    六十种曲杀狗记

    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。
热门推荐
  • 豪门婚宠:天价老婆买一送一

    豪门婚宠:天价老婆买一送一

    【已完结】苏三怎么也没想到自己会任务失败,还好死不活的碰上言情里的穿越剧情,一醒来,她要面对的新身份居然是一个三流小演员,而且还蹦跶出一个三岁的儿子!而五菱因为他的救命之恩,以身相许,与见过一次的男人在床单上翻滚,本以为只是一夜风流,谁承想,这就一晚,居然荣幸中奖,且看她如何带着儿子去相亲~
  • WTF战

    WTF战

    2114年,科技飞速发展,网络游戏也变得不仅仅只能存在于某种扁形长方形中……22世纪,人们能利用3D立体影像系统将游戏中的画面投射到现实中并实体化,且使用第一人称视角,让玩家身临其境……
  • 神级剑圣

    神级剑圣

    带着完整的三年游戏记忆与经验,易流风重生回到了三年前那款改变了整个世界命运的游戏《创世纪》正式开服的前夜。快人一步发掘隐藏任务转职英雄职业,再弄一身专属神装,然后摧枯拉朽,神魔辟易。以剑圣之威名,将来犯之敌统统终结于剑下!
  • Cowley's Essays

    Cowley's Essays

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 幽云珮

    幽云珮

    神奇异界,绚丽的魔法,强大的元气,无数的种族等等........一块残缺玉珮,见证了一个悲惨少年曲折离奇的成长历程..........精彩的故事在这片大陆上演.......
  • 商人物语

    商人物语

    他们低调但高傲,他们谦和但不择手断,他们奸诈但锄强扶弱,他们玩物人生但也会遵循市场和谐,他们就是游戏商人!
  • 那个小偷,你站住!

    那个小偷,你站住!

    偷个东西怎么这么倒霉啊?一次两次都让人给抓住了!她可是从来都没有失过手的空手盗弟子啊,怎么连一点面子也不给她啊?好吧,这次她决定换个方式偷。见过偷东西的,没见过偷心的吧?没错,这次她就是要把男人的心偷回来!让她想不通的是,是偷那个耿直无私的小捕快的心呢?还是那个戏谑腹黑的王爷的心?
  • 我家宿主萌萌哒

    我家宿主萌萌哒

    写的是现代第一杀手沈翊馨,穿越到各个界面,完成各种任务
  • 非卖品(完本)

    非卖品(完本)

    一个奢华的流金地域,一段浪漫的豪门爱情。她,聪明、漂亮,拥有无数女孩梦寐以求的身材,而且是法律系研究生,得天独厚、才貌双全,他,是她的男友,及金钱和地位于一身,他是他的发小,当他遇到她时,注定改变一生。她永远清楚自己需要什么,并为其不惜一切代价,他正欣赏她这点,于是两人发生了不寻常的关系,而他的发小却在遇到她之后,方寸大乱,一夜之间,兄弟,恋人,也许都是泡影……一个聪明的女人也许注定一辈子孤独,而她的路是自己选择的,她周围的男人甘愿做她的奴隶,她如何主宰他们,我们拭目以待!················佳期的分隔线················有些人,我们注定要为此付出一辈子。我们以为自己可以忘记的事情,过了之后才明白,那时永远扎根在心底的毒瘤。原来,回忆是最痛彻心扉的幸福。非卖品第二步全线登陆,全新的情节脉路,柔情引爆这个夏天最唯美的豪门恋曲。《双生复仇:总裁明星妻》http://novel.hongxiu.com/a/119699/
  • 至尊殇

    至尊殇

    他是小山村中的一平凡少年,是最最奇葩的五行之体,同时也是天眷大陆的铮铮男儿。这是一部男儿的奋斗史。义之所在,虽千万人吾往矣情之所钟,世俗礼法如粪土。兴之所起,与君痛饮三百杯又如何。且看我斩妖除魔,傲骨擎天。