登陆注册
38750100000026

第26章

He hesitated, as if still uncertain of her mood from this intonation, and then he went on: "But I had some little hope you would tolerate me, after all. You looked like a friend I used to have. --Do you mind my telling you?"

"Oh, no. Though I can't say that it's ever very comfortable to be told that you look like some one else."

"I don't suppose any one else would have been struck by the resemblance," said Libby, with a laugh of reminiscence. "He was huge. But he had eyes like a girl,--I beg your pardon,--like yours."

"You mean that I have eyes like a man."

He laughed, and said, "No," and then turned grave. "As long as he lived"--"Oh, is he dead?" she asked more gently than she had yet spoken.

"Yes, he died just before I went abroad. I went out on business for my father,--he's an importer and jobber,--and bought goods for him. Do you despise business?"

"I don't know anything about it."

"I did it to please my father, and he said I was a very good buyer. He thinks there's nothing like buying--except selling. He used to sell things himself, over the counter, and not so long ago, either.

I fancied it made a difference for me when I was in college, and that the yardstick came between me and society. I was an ass for thinking anything about it. Though I did n't really care, much. I never liked society, and I did like boats and horses. I thought of a profession, once. But it would n't work. I've been round the world twice, and I've done nothing but enjoy myself since I left college,--or try to. When I first saw you I was hesitating about letting my father make me of use.

He wants me to become one of the most respectable members of society, he wants me to be a cotton-spinner. You know there 's nothing so irreproachable as cotton, for a business?"

"No. I don't know about those things."

"Well, there is n't. When I was abroad, buying and selling, I made a little discovery: I found that there were goods we could make and sell in the European market cheaper than the English, and that gave my father the notion of buying a mill to make them. I'm boring you!"

"No."

"Well, he bought it; and he wants me to take charge of it."

"And shall you?"

"Do you think I'm fit for it?"

"I? How should I know?"

"You don't know cotton; but you know me a little. Do I strike you as fit for anything?" She made no reply to this, and he laughed. "I assure you I felt small enough when I heard what you had done, and thought--what I had done. It gave me a start; and I wrote my father that night that I would go in for it."

"I once thought of going to a factory town," she answered, without wilful evasion, "to begin my practice there among the operatives' children. I should have done it if it had not been for coming here with Mrs. Maynard.

It would have been better."

"Come to my factory town, Miss Breen! There ought to be fevers there in the autumn, with all the low lands that I'm allowed to flood Mrs. Maynard told me about your plan."

"Pray, what else did Mrs. Maynard tell you about me?"

"About your taking up a profession, in the way you did, when you needn't, and when you did n't particularly like it."

"Oh!" she said. Then she added, "And because I was n't obliged to it, and did n't like it, you tolerated me?"

"Tolerated?" he echoed.

This vexed her. "Yes, tolerate! Everybody, interested or not, has to make up his mind whether to tolerate me as soon as he hears what I am.

What excuse did you make for me?"

"I did n't make any," said Libby.

"But you had your misgiving, your surprise."

"I thought if you could stand it, other people might. I thought it was your affair."

"Just as if I had been a young man?"

"No! That wasn't possible."

She was silent. Then, "The conversation has- got back into the old quarter," she said. "You are talking about me again. Have you heard from your friends since they went away?"

"What friends?"

"Those you were camping with."

"No."

"What did they say when they heard that you had found a young doctress at Jocelyn's? How did you break the fact to them? What jokes did they make? You need n't be afraid to tell me!" she cried. "Give me Mr. Johnson's comments."

He looked at her in surprise that incensed her still more, and rendered her incapable of regarding the pain with which he answered her. "I 'm afraid," he said, "that I have done something to offend you."

"Oh no! What could you have done?"

"Then you really mean to ask me whether I would let any one make a joke of you in my presence?"

"Yes; why not?"

"Because it was impossible," he answered.

"Why was it impossible?" she pursued.

"Because--I love you."

She had been looking him defiantly in the eyes, and she could not withdraw her gaze. For the endless moment that ensued, her breath was taken away. Then she asked in a low, steady voice, "Did you mean to say that?"

"No."

"I believe you, and I forgive you. No, no!" she cried, at a demonstration of protest from him, "don't speak again!"

He obeyed, instantly, implicitly. With the tiller in his hand he looked past her and guided the boat's course. It became intolerable.

"Have I ever done anything that gave you the right to--to--say that?" she asked, without the self-command which she might have wished to show.

"No," he said, "you were only the most beautiful"--"I am not beautiful! And if I were"--"It wasn't to be helped! I saw from the first how good and noble you were, and"--"This is absurd!" she exclaimed. "I am neither good nor noble; and if I were"--"It wouldn't make any difference. Whatever you are, you are the one woman in the world to me; and you always will be."

"Mr. Libby!"

"Oh, I must speak now! You were always thinking, because you had studied a man's profession, that no one would think of you as a woman, as if that could make any difference to a man that had the soul of a man in him!"

"No, no!" she protested. "I did n't think that. I always expected to be considered as a woman."

"But not as a woman to fall in love with. I understood. And that somehow made you all the dearer to me. If you had been a girl like other girls, I should n't have cared for you."

"Oh!"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 世界劳模从燃烧卡路里开始

    世界劳模从燃烧卡路里开始

    劳动光荣,劳动使我快乐,劳动使我富有。冲击世界劳模,从燃烧卡路里开始。每燃烧1卡热量,都会获得响应财富奖励。系统提示:有益燃烧卡路里可增加卡币点数,也就是说跑步、健身、打游戏等属于无益燃烧。卡币可兑换财富值,计算公式为(点数*等级),还等什么?燃烧起来吧,世界首富也在向你招手。
  • 无限培养公司系统

    无限培养公司系统

    获得无限培养系群众演员培养N下,成为宇宙影视协会第一任会长。普通兽宠培养N下,成为传奇兽宠。苏平表示只要有钱,猪都给你培养成兽神。(新手作品,不喜勿喷,学生作品)
  • 闪电刺客

    闪电刺客

    这个纪元,每个人只能修炼四种招式,它们被称作本命招式,修道者的一生只能使用和提升自己的本命招式。他想要成为刺客,他的本命招式给这个世界带来了震惊。他是只存在于光中的剑客!他的一生都在速度与激情之间彷徨,上一世的轮回,他身边的他都知道,但他却忘记了他。这是一个轮回的故事,这是一个剑客成为刺客的故事,这是一个江山恩怨前世情仇的仙侠传说!而他,就是一个传说。那个只存在光中的剑客,却也是轮回中的过客。······
  • 太渊魔法纪元

    太渊魔法纪元

    他是杀死神魔的霸者。……是操纵世界的神灵。他的话是人间真理。他的座右铭是——魔法纪元,你们恐惧吧!
  • 远离尘世的幻想之乡

    远离尘世的幻想之乡

    这是一个少年穿越到幻想乡的故事,少年:“哈哈哈哈哈哈,我要在这里大开后....啊,紫MA,不紫姐姐绕过我吧,我不要被隙间啊,啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊~”
  • 龙傲天的冒险之旅

    龙傲天的冒险之旅

    祖上三代都是普通NPC,本来龙傲天这辈子也只能做个在新手村给新手指路的NPC,谁知有一天他上班摸鱼的过程中捡到了一把散发着赤色光芒的大剑——从此成为天下至尊受万人仰慕,最终称为一代大侠(以上内容均不会在本文出现,请放心食用)
  • 冷少撞上呆萌少女

    冷少撞上呆萌少女

    她,是被人抛弃的妖女,只因天生妖瞳。他,是身世强横的少主。当他遇上她,又会擦出怎样的火花。(某一天,亲爱的,有人欺负我。。。宝贝,告诉我谁。你弟弟。某弟弟:我这是躺着也中枪)
  • 侦察观行动

    侦察观行动

    我是夏东洋,在偶然的一次情况下,我和一个知名侦探李尹萧被卷进了一场杀人案里,无数证据指向我曾经的那个兄弟,我一直不敢相信,想借此查出真相,虽然是个学生,却有多重身份,不能活得逍遥自在,只能向往外面,可,外面的世界是残酷的……
  • 神罚之上

    神罚之上

    诸天神魔是在大草原上奔跑的牛羊,哪里水草肥美,哪里就有牛羊。我叫夏青,是个放羊娃。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!