友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
飞读中文网 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

april hopes-第87章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



had kept out of the Pasmers' way during the day。

〃She has been ill all the latter part of the winter;〃 said Mrs。 Pasmer to
Mrs。 Brinkley that night in the corner of the spreading hotel parlours;
where they found themselves。  Mrs。 Pasmer did not look well herself; she
spoke with her eyes fixed anxiously on the door Alice had just passed out
of。  〃She is going to bed; but I know I shall find her awake whenever I
go。〃

〃Perhaps;〃 suggested Mrs。 Brinkley; 〃this soft; heavy sea air will put her
to sleep。〃  She tried to speak drily and indifferently; but she could not;
she was; in fact; very much interested by the situation; and she was
touched; in spite of her distaste for them both; by the evident
unhappiness of mother and daughter。  She knew what it came from; and she
said to herself that they deserved it; but this did not altogether fortify
her against their pathos。  〃I can hardly keep awake myself;〃 she added
gruffly。

〃I hope it may help her;〃 said Mrs。 Pasmer; 〃the doctor strongly urged our
coming。〃

Mr。 Pasmer isn't with you;〃 said Mrs。 Brinkley; feeling that it was decent
to say something about him。

〃No; he was detained。〃  Mrs。 Pasmer did not explain the cause of his
detention; and the two ladies slowly waved their fans a moment in silence。
〃Are there many Boston People in the house?〃 Mrs。 Pasmer asked。

〃It's full of them;〃 cried Mrs。 Brinkley。

〃I had scarcely noticed;〃 sighed Mrs。 Pasmer; and Mrs。 Brinkley knew that
this was not true。  〃 Alice takes up all my thoughts;〃 she added; and this
might be true enough。  She leaned a little forward and asked; in a low;
entreating voice over her fan; 〃Mrs。 Brinkley; have you seen Mr。 Mavering
lately?〃

Mrs。 Brinkley considered this a little too bold; a little too brazen。  Had
they actually come South in pursuit of him?  It was shameless; and she let
Mrs: Pasmer know something of her feeling in the shortness with which she
answered; 〃I saw him in Washington the other dayfor a moment。〃  She
shortened the time she had spent in Dan's company so as to cut Mrs。 Pasmer
off from as much comfort as possible; and she stared at her in open
astonishment。

Mrs。 Pasmer dropped her eyes and fingered the edge of her fan with a
submissiveness that seemed to Mrs。 Brinkley the perfection of duplicity;
she wanted to shake her。  〃I knew;〃 sighed Mrs。 Pasmer; 〃that you had
always been such a friend of his。〃

It is the last straw which breaks the camel's back; Mrs。 Brinkley felt her
moral vertebrae give way; she almost heard them crack; but if there was
really a detonation; the drowned the noise with a harsh laugh。  〃Oh; he
had other friends in Washington。  I met him everywhere with Miss
Anderson。〃  This statement conflicted with the theory of her single
instant with Dan; but she felt that in such a cause; in the cause of
giving pain to a woman like Mrs。 Pasmer; the deflection from exact truth
was justifiable。  She hurried on: 〃I rather expected he might run down
here; but now that they're gone; I don't suppose he'll come。  You remember
Miss Anderson's aunt; Miss Van Hook?〃

〃Oh yes;〃 said Mrs。 Pasmer。

〃She was here with her。〃

〃Miss Van Hook was such a New York typeof a certain kind;〃 said Mrs。
Pasmer。  She rose; with a smile at once so conventional; so heroic; and so
pitiful that Mrs。 Brinkley felt the remorse of a generous victor。

She went to her room; hardening her heart; and she burst in with a flood
of voluble exasperation that threatened all the neighbouring rooms with
overflow。

〃Well; she cried; 〃they have shown their hands completely。  They have come
here to hound Dan Mavering down; and get him into their toils again。  Why;
the woman actually said as much!  But I fancy I have given her a fit of
insomnia that will enable her to share her daughter's vigils。  Really such
impudence I never heard of!〃

〃Do you want everybody in the corridor to hear of it?〃 asked Brinkley;
from behind a newspaper。

〃I know one thing;〃 continued Mrs。 Brinkley; dropping her voice a couple
of octaves。  They will never get him here if I can help it。  He won't
come; anyway; now Miss Anderson is gone; but I'll make assurance doubly
sure by writing him not to come; I'll tell him they've gone; and than we
are going too。〃

〃You had better remember the man in Chicago;〃 said her husband。

〃Well; this is my businessor I'll make it my business!〃 cried Mrs。
Brinkley。  She went on talking rapidly; rising with great excitement in
her voice at times; and then remembering to speak lower; and her husband
apparently read on through most of her talk; though now and then he made
some comment that seemed of almost inspired aptness。

〃The way they both made up to me was disgusting。  But I know the girl is
just a tool in her mother's hands。  Her mother seemed actually passive in
comparison。  For skilful wheedling I could fall down and worship that
woman; I really admire her。  As long as the girl was with us she kept
herself in the background and put the girl at me。  It was simply a
masterpiece。〃

〃How do you know she put her at you?〃 asked Brinkley。

〃How?  By the way she seemed not to do it!  And because from what I know
of that stupid Pasmer pride it would be perfectly impossible for any one
who was a Pasmer to take her deprecatory manner toward me of herself。  You
ought to have seen it!  It was simply perfect。〃

〃Perhaps;〃 said Brinkley; with a remote dreaminess; 〃she was truly sorry。〃

〃Truly stuff!  No; indeed; she hates me as much as evermore!〃

〃Well; then; may be she's doing it because she hates youdoing it for her
soul's goodsort of penance; sort of atonement to Mavering。〃

Mrs。 Brinkley turned round from her dressing…table to see what her husband
meant; but the newspaper hid him。  We all know that our own natures are
mixed and contradictory; but we each attribute to others a logical
consistency which we never find in any one out of the novels。  Alice
Pasmer was cold and reticent; and Mrs。 Brinkley; who had lived half a
century in a world full of paradoxes; could not imagine her subject to
gusts of passionate frankness; she knew the girl to be proud and distant;
and she could not conceive of an abject humility and longing for sympathy
in her heart。  If Alice felt; when she saw Mrs。 Brinkley; that she had a
providential opportunity to punish herself for her injustice to Dan; the
fact could not be established upon Mrs。 Brinkley's theory of her。  If the
ascetic impulse is the most purely selfish impulse in human nature; Mrs。
Brinkley might not have been mistaken in suspecting her of an ignoble
motive; though it might have had for the girl the last sublimity of self…
sacrifice。  The woman who disliked her and pitied her knew that she had
no arts; and rather than adopt so simple a theory of her behaviour as her
husband had advanced she held all the more strenuously to her own theory
that Alice was practising her mother's arts。  This was inevitable; partly
from the sense of Mrs。 Pasmer's artfulness which everybody had; and partly
from the allegiance which we payand women especially like to payto the
tradition of the playwrights and the novelists; that social results of all
kinds are the work of deep; an
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!