登陆注册
38027800000048

第48章 CHAPTER X(2)

"With pleasure. I will make them at you!" answered Felix.

"How much longer," asked Eugenia, in a moment, "do you propose to remain in this lovely spot?"

Felix stared. "Do you want to go away--already?"

" 'Already' is delicious. I am not so happy as you."

Felix dropped into a chair, looking at the fire. "The fact is I am happy," he said in his light, clear tone.

"And do you propose to spend your life in ****** love to Gertrude Wentworth?"

"Yes!" said Felix, smiling sidewise at his sister.

The Baroness returned his glance, much more gravely; and then, "Do you like her?" she asked.

"Don't you?" Felix demanded.

The Baroness was silent a moment. "I will answer you in the words of the gentleman who was asked if he liked music:

'Je ne la crains pas!'"

"She admires you immensely," said Felix.

"I don't care for that. Other women should not admire one."

"They should dislike you?"

Again Madame Munster hesitated. "They should hate me!

It 's a measure of the time I have been losing here that they don't."

"No time is lost in which one has been happy!" said Felix, with a bright sententiousness which may well have been a little irritating.

"And in which," rejoined his sister, with a harsher laugh, "one has secured the affections of a young lady with a fortune!"

Felix explained, very candidly and seriously. "I have secured Gertrude's affection, but I am by no means sure that I have secured her fortune.

That may come--or it may not."

"Ah, well, it may! That 's the great point."

"It depends upon her father. He does n't smile upon our union.

You know he wants her to marry Mr. Brand."

"I know nothing about it!" cried the Baroness. "Please to put on a log."

Felix complied with her request and sat watching the quickening of the flame.

Presently his sister added, "And you propose to elope with mademoiselle?"

"By no means. I don't wish to do anything that 's disagreeable to Mr. Wentworth. He has been far too kind to us."

"But you must choose between pleasing yourself and pleasing him."

"I want to please every one!" exclaimed Felix, joyously.

"I have a good conscience. I made up my mind at the outset that it was not my place to make love to Gertrude."

"So, to simplify matters, she made love to you!"

Felix looked at his sister with sudden gravity. "You say you are not afraid of her," he said. "But perhaps you ought to be--a little.

She 's a very clever person."

"I begin to see it!" cried the Baroness. Her brother, ****** no rejoinder, leaned back in his chair, and there was a long silence.

At last, with an altered accent, Madame Munster put another question.

"You expect, at any rate, to marry?"

"I shall be greatly disappointed if we don't."

"A disappointment or two will do you good!" the Baroness declared.

"And, afterwards, do you mean to turn American?"

"It seems to me I am a very good American already.

But we shall go to Europe. Gertrude wants extremely to see the world."

"Ah, like me, when I came here!" said the Baroness, with a little laugh.

"No, not like you," Felix rejoined, looking at his sister with a certain gentle seriousness. While he looked at her she rose from her chair, and he also got up. "Gertrude is not at all like you," he went on; "but in her own way she is almost as clever."

He paused a moment; his soul was full of an agreeable feeling and of a lively disposition to express it.

His sister, to his spiritual vision, was always like the lunar disk when only a part of it is lighted. The shadow on this bright surface seemed to him to expand and to contract; but whatever its proportions, he always appreciated the moonlight.

He looked at the Baroness, and then he kissed her.

"I am very much in love with Gertrude," he said.

Eugenia turned away and walked about the room, and Felix continued.

"She is very interesting, and very different from what she seems.

She has never had a chance. She is very brilliant.

We will go to Europe and amuse ourselves."

The Baroness had gone to the window, where she stood looking out.

The day was drearier than ever; the rain was doggedly falling.

"Yes, to amuse yourselves," she said at last, "you had decidedly better go to Europe!" Then she turned round, looking at her brother.

A chair stood near her; she leaned her hands upon the back of it.

"Don't you think it is very good of me," she asked, "to come all this way with you simply to see you properly married--if properly it is?"

"Oh, it will be properly!" cried Felix, with light eagerness.

The Baroness gave a little laugh. "You are thinking only of yourself, and you don't answer my question. While you are amusing yourself--with the brilliant Gertrude--what shall I be doing?"

"Vous serez de la partie!" cried Felix.

"Thank you: I should spoil it." The Baroness dropped her eyes for some moments. "Do you propose, however, to leave me here?" she inquired.

Felix smiled at her. "My dearest sister, where you are concerned I never propose. I execute your commands."

"I believe," said Eugenia, slowly, "that you are the most heartless person living. Don't you see that I am in trouble?"

"I saw that you were not cheerful, and I gave you some good news."

"Well, let me give you some news," said the Baroness.

"You probably will not have discovered it for yourself.

Robert Acton wants to marry me."

"No, I had not discovered that. But I quite understand it.

Why does it make you unhappy?"

"Because I can't decide."

"Accept him, accept him!" cried Felix, joyously. "He is the best fellow in the world."

"He is immensely in love with me," said the Baroness.

"And he has a large fortune. Permit me in turn to remind you of that."

"Oh, I am perfectly aware of it," said Eugenia.

"That 's a great item in his favor. I am terribly candid."

And she left her place and came nearer her brother, looking at him hard. He was turning over several things; she was wondering in what manner he really understood her.

There were several ways of understanding her: there was what she said, and there was what she meant, and there was something, between the two, that was neither.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 羞容图

    羞容图

    她从官爵的绿荫深院走来,热血娴静,爱诗弹琴赋画,本如水仙般透彻,却因得知胞姐的死因,而踏上黑暗的复仇之路。遇见他,他们,她们,故事便一点点晕开。
  • 神级技能系统

    神级技能系统

    脚踏杀意波动,头顶波动刻印,身背鬼神幻影,狂暴的血气,绚丽的剑术,各系魔法层出不穷,谁与争锋?云风携带逆天游戏系统穿越异世界,从此踏上了一条热血征伐之路,一条武道巅峰之路!新书等级:锻体境,炼气境,人魂境,地魂境,天魂境,凝魄境,聚神境……
  • 科学天才之热血少年

    科学天才之热血少年

    这是一个热血冒险的科技时代,世界各国无不涌进科技的历史潮流。各国人才辈出,纷纷投入科技的激烈竞争中。生在科技时代,热爱科学发明的中学生明哲,经常沉迷于自己的发明创造之中。有一次,明哲设计出栩栩如生的机械风神翼龙。操控着机械风神翼龙,明哲到处抱打不平,阻止了一些犯罪现象。
  • 开局重生无敌黑龙

    开局重生无敌黑龙

    在这个全体人类逐渐变成动物的世界。重生回学生时代的黑铭,化形是一条无敌黑龙。他的目标很简单——自由地活一场,击碎一切不公之事。从这座城市的底层开始,一步一步走上世界的顶端。并赶在即将到来的大灭绝发生之前,稳健布局,改变未来。多年后,方舟庇护所成为了唯一的希望。众人敬畏地看着天空之上的巨大阴影。“有些宿命,神明都无力挽回。”“所以,我来了。”(类BNA兽化形设定,快节奏无敌流)
  • 床下的女人

    床下的女人

    《床下的女人》这本小说讲述了一个让人看了会头皮发麻的小说。这一天,我刚刚搬进找了好久的出租屋,房东人很好,但是奇怪的是住进来的房客是少之又少。晚上,“咚咚咚”我的床下有敲击声,我不知道我是不是在做梦,那声音由小变大,又由大变小。我发现了,我看见了。这一刻,我感觉我快窒息了,因为我发现我床下有个女人,她很苗条,但是,头却没有了。我拼命的想要打开门,跑向门外,因为那有光,会让我感觉不到一点点的恐惧和害怕。
  • 隔壁住着弗洛伊德

    隔壁住着弗洛伊德

    这是个在破案过程中顺便谈谈人生的故事。这是个披着悬疑皮的言情小故事。正经版。夏安季喝了一口咖啡,说道“凶手逃跑时,没有留下任何指纹,但是在现场发现了非死者的遗留物,你知道这是为什么吗?”赵叙略微思索“扰乱警方思路?”她又问道“那么要把警方思路扰乱到哪里?”他的嘴角扬了起来,直起身来,越过半张桌子,抓住了夏安季的手腕,扯向自己的方向,在她的耳边轻声细语地说到“我心里。”然后,他满意的看到媳妇的耳垂变了颜色。逗比版。“凶手只有一个,就是,他。”“宝宝说的对”
  • 对不起来不及说爱你

    对不起来不及说爱你

    爱生活,爱自由,又崇拜大神一样的人物,高冷且有逗逼。
  • 灾害对策全书

    灾害对策全书

    《灾害对策全书》是在四川省社会科学院与兵库震灾纪念21世纪研究机构共同设立的翻译编辑委员会的指导下,结合中国的灾害特点与行之有效的防灾对策,从日语版的《灾害对策全书》全四卷中精选了39篇文章翻译,集成一册。《灾害对策全书》包含了应对灾害所需的法律、政策、方针,各种应对手段和工作流程,防灾教育和防灾文化等各个方面,为从事防灾减灾工作人员和研究者提供参考,是一本结合了理论和实践的综合性的灾害对策指南。本书是以真实的自然灾害为案例,对灾后经验教训的总结有很强的客观性和针对性,提高灾害对策的能力,为构建安全与和谐社会有重要的借鉴意义。
  • 三小只的新恋期

    三小只的新恋期

    TFBOY与3位女主在重庆8中发生的恋爱故事......
  • 大唐王侯

    大唐王侯

    梦回大唐,我不力改变历史的走向,我只想让百姓过的更好一点。