登陆注册
37337500000041

第41章 THE RECKONING August, 1902(5)

This, as Julia now reviewed the past, she perceived to have been her theoretical attitude toward marriage.It was unconsciously, insidiously, that her ten years of happiness with Westall had developed another conception of the tie; a reversion, rather, to the old instinct of passionate dependencyand possessorship that now made her blood revolt at the mere hint of change.Change? Renewal? Was that what they had called it, in their foolish jargon? Destruction, extermination rather--this rending of a myriad fibres interwoven with another's being! Another? But he was not other! He and she were one, one in the mystic sense which alone gave marriage its significance.The new law was not for them, but for the disunited creatures forced into a mockery of union.The gospel she had felt called on to proclaim had no bearing on her own case....She sent for the doctor and told him she was sure she needed a nerve tonic.

She took the nerve tonic diligently, but it failed to act as a sedative to her fears.She did not know what she feared; but that made her anxiety the more pervasive.Her husband had not reverted to the subject of his Saturday talks.He was unusually kind and considerate, with a softening of his quick manner, a touch of shyness in his consideration, that sickened her with new fears.She told herself that it was because she looked badly-- because he knew about the doctor and the nerve tonic--that he showed this deference to her wishes, this eagerness to screen her from moral draughts; but the explanation simply cleared the way for fresh inferences.

The week passed slowly, vacantly, like a prolonged Sunday.On Saturday the morning post brought a note from Mrs.Van Sideren.Would dear Julia ask Mr.Westall to come half an hour earlier than usual, as there was to be some music after his "talk"? Westall was just leaving for his office when his wife read the note.She opened the drawing-room door and called him back to deliver the message.

He glanced at the note and tossed it aside."What a bore! I shall have to cut my game of racquets.Well, I suppose it can't be helped.Will you write and say it's all right?"Julia hesitated a moment, her hand stiffening on the chair-back against which she leaned.

"You mean to go on with these talks?" she asked.

"I--why not?" he returned; and this time it struck her that his surprise was not quite unfeigned.The discovery helped her to find words.

"You said you had started them with the idea of pleasing me--" "Well?""I told you last week that they didn't please me.""Last week? Oh--" He seemed to make an effort of memory."I thought you were nervous then; you sent for the doctor the next day.""It was not the doctor I needed; it was your assurance--" "My assurance?"Suddenly she felt the floor fail under her.She sank into the chair with a choking throat, her words, her reasons slipping away from her like straws down a whirling flood.

"Clement," she cried, "isn't it enough for you to know that I hate it?"He turned to close the door behind them; then he walked toward her and sat down."What is it that you hate?" he asked gently.

She had made a desperate effort to rally her routed argument.

"I can't bear to have you speak as if--as if--our marriage--were like the other kind--the wrong kind.When I heard you there, the other afternoon, before all those inquisitive gossiping people, proclaiming that husbands and wives had a right to leave each other whenever they were tired--or had seen some one else--"Westall sat motionless, his eyes fixed on a pattern of the carpet.

"You HAVE ceased to take this view, then?" he said as she broke off."You no longer believe that husbands and wives ARE justified in separating--under such conditions?""Under such conditions?" she stammered."Yes--I still believe that--but how can we judge for others? What can we know of the circumstances--?" He interrupted her."I thought it was a fundamental article of our creed that the special circumstances produced by marriage were not to interfere with the full assertion of individual liberty." He paused a moment."Ithought that was your reason for leaving Arment."She flushed to the forehead.It was not like him to give a personal turn to the argument.

"It was my reason," she said simply.

"Well, then--why do you refuse to recognize its validity now?" "I don't--I don't--I only say that one can't judge for others."He made an impatient movement."This is mere hair-splitting.What you mean is that, the doctrine having served your purpose when youneeded it, you now repudiate it."

"Well," she exclaimed, flushing again, "what if I do? What does it matter to us?"Westall rose from his chair.He was excessively pale, and stood before his wife with something of the formality of a stranger.

"It matters to me," he said in a low voice, "because I do NOT repudiateit."

"Well--?"

"And because I had intended to invoke it as"--He paused and drew his breath deeply.She sat silent, almost deafenedby her heart-beats.

--"as a complete justification of the course I am about to take." Julia remained motionless."What course is that?" she asked.

He cleared his throat."I mean to claim the fulfilment of your promise." For an instant the room wavered and darkened; then she recovered a torturing acuteness of vision.Every detail of her surroundings pressed upon her: the tick of the clock, the slant of sunlight on the wall, the hardness of the chair-arms that she grasped, were a separate wound to eachsense.

"My promise--" she faltered.

"Your part of our mutual agreement to set each other free if one or the other should wish to be released."She was silent again.He waited a moment, shifting his position nervously; then he said, with a touch of irritability: "You acknowledge the agreement?"The question went through her like a shock.She lifted her head to it proudly."I acknowledge the agreement," she said.

"And--you don't mean to repudiate it?"

A log on the hearth fell forward, and mechanically he advanced and pushed it back.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 暗夜魔君

    暗夜魔君

    每当夜幕降临,霓虹闪耀,醉酒的人们激情呐喊,或以各种方式,宣泄白天工作上的压力及苦闷,这便是罪恶的开始!在罪恶的夜晚,黑暗中潜行的疾影,赤红瞳光若隐若现间,以摄夺人类灵魂而生存的贪婪种族,我们称之为,魔族!
  • 神役世界

    神役世界

    古陆合一,脱离地球,飞向星空。等待着五名幸存者的会是什么?中州归来,天降尸雨,传承始出。其中又有什么阴谋?上古大战,颠覆天道,重启混沌。是谁奴役了亿万神灵?仙凡相隔百万年之久,身为上古仙庭的传承人,等待着林寒的却是无尽谜团,他该怎么一一解答。总之,这是一个凡人奴役神灵的世界。役,可以解释为奴役,也可以解释为战役。作者寄语:我只想挑战一下自己想象的极限,或许会写得有些匪夷所思,但绝不失精彩,有完整大纲,欢迎阅读!
  • 平行日记之龙马

    平行日记之龙马

    平行空间(parallelUniverse),这是近几年提出的一个新概念。生活中你有没有过这种感觉,和别人擦肩而过时,觉得这个人我见过,和别人对话时,觉得这句话、这个场景似曾相识。明明没有去过的地方却感觉我曾来过。但是,却无法清晰、完整的想起,这个人是谁,这个地方何时来过,其实,这些事情都是真实发生过的,就在另一个空间……
  • 虚拟修仙传

    虚拟修仙传

    被厌恶的富二代挖了墙角被女神捡回家包养被仙侠世界所缔造传奇热血抒写在今天的修仙世界这里有绝色的仙子、传承的道法、林立的宗门、逆天的丹药、无上的神通、毁天灭地灵宝,还有同往无上大道的一条坎坷之路
  • 纪之夜落白羽

    纪之夜落白羽

    两个少年的初遇初识,印证了那句古老的预言,那个深蓝眼眸的孩子是否能拯救一切,一切都未知、、、、(仅以此文纪念十二年来的同学么,有任何重名,纯属恶意)
  • 宠妻成瘾:国民总裁超正点

    宠妻成瘾:国民总裁超正点

    第一次见面,他不小心撕开她的礼服。第二次见面,她不小心泼湿他的裤子。第三次见面,他与她浴室冷眼相对,她不情愿地为他宽衣解带。本来只是想让她低头认错,邵御铭想不到的是竟然舍不得放手了。嗯,既然看上了,那就是他的了!“滚开!呜呜——”苏语棠哭的花枝乱颤,她才不是他的!
  • 恋上迷之校花

    恋上迷之校花

    来自异世界的女主,在外人眼里是位暖心女神,实则冷漠至极。这一次,无意闯入学院禁地的女主,邂逅了一系列连科学都无法解释的灵异事件。明知道查下去会有绳命的危险,却还是忍不住心中的悸动……
  • 阿厢

    阿厢

    阿厢的故事。蝼蚁也要生存不是嘛.....
  • 天下追梦人

    天下追梦人

    这是一颗神奇的星球,那里有两种人,一种在社会上生活,他们过的十分普通,另一种人是武林中人,他们一生只为追求更好的武学,所有人都要夺得天下第一...那一年,那个男人对女人说:“待我夺得天下第一,必许你四海为家,与你共话桑麻,陪你游尽天涯海角,看尽世间繁华...”
  • 锦绣玄天录

    锦绣玄天录

    锦绣大陆,剑起玄天,少女执剑而出,谁说女子不如男。我陈希望,全家的希望,全村的希望,全宗的希望,当带领玄天宗屹立于大陆之巅。骄傲.jpg新人新书,欢迎大家提出建议(??ω??)??