登陆注册
37736000000108

第108章

THE CHARIOT OF FIRE

When Jane, scolded by Aunt Anne for an untidy appearance, gave notice and at once departed, Maggie felt as though the ground was giving way under her feet.

A week until the New Year, and no opportunity of hearing from Martin during that time.Then she laughed at herself:

"You're losing your sense of proportion, my dear, over this.Laugh at yourself.What's a week?"She did laugh at herself, but she had not very much to base her laughter upon.Martin's last letters had been short and very uneasy.

She had already, in a surprising fashion for one so young, acquired a very wise and just estimate of Martin's character.

"He's only a boy," she used to say to herself and feel his elder by at least twenty years.Nevertheless the thought of his struggling on there alone was not a happy one.She longed, even though she might not advise him, to comfort him.She was beginning to realise something of her own power over him and to see, too, the strange mixture of superstition and self-reproach and self-distrust that overwhelmed him when she was not with him.She had indeed her own need of struggle against superstition.Her aunts continued to treat her with a quiet distant severity.Aunt Elizabeth, she fancied, would like to have been kind to her, but she was entirely under the influence of her sister, and there, too, Maggie was generous enough to see that Aunt Anne behaved as she did rather from a stern sense of duty than any real unkindness.Aunt Anne could not feel unkindly;she was too far removed from human temper and discontent and weakness.Nevertheless she had been deeply shocked at the revelation of Maggie's bad behaviour, and it was a shock from which, in all probability she would never recover.

"WE'LL never be friends again." Maggie thought, watching her aunt's austere composure from the other side of the dining-table.She was sad at the thought of that, remembering moments--that first visit to St.Dreot's, the departure in the cab, the night when she had sat at her aunt's bedside--that had given glimpses of the kind human creature Aunt Anne might have been had she never heard of the Inside Saints.

Maggie, during these last days, did everything that her aunts told her.She was as good and docile as she could be.But, oh! there were some dreary hours as she sat, alone, in that stuffy drawing-room, trying to sew, her heart aching with loneliness, her needle always doing the wrong thing, the clock heavily ticking, Thomas watching her from the mat in front of the fire, and the family group sneering at her from the wall-paper.

It was during these hours that superstitious terrors gained upon her.Could it be possible that all those women whom she had seen gathered together in Miss Avies's room really expected God to come when the clock struck twelve on the last night of the year? It was like some old story of ghosts and witches that her nurse used to tell her when she was a little girl at St.Dreot's.And yet, in that dark dreary room, almost anything seemed possible.After all, if there was a God, why should He not, one day, suddenly appear? And if He wished to spare certain of His servants, why should He not prepare them first before He came? There were things just as strange in the Old and New Testament.But if He did come, what would His Coming be like? Would every one be burnt to death or would they all be summoned before some judgment and punished for the wicked things they had done? Would her father perhaps return and give evidence against her? And poor Uncle Mathew, how would he fare with all his weaknesses? Her efforts at laughing at herself rescued her from some of the more incredible of these pictures.Nevertheless the uncertainty remained and only increased her loneliness.Had Martin been there in five minutes they would, together, have chased all these ghosts away.But he was not there.And at the thought of him she would have to set her mouth very firmly, indeed, to prevent her lips from trembling.She took out her ring and kissed it, and looked at the already tattered copy of the programme of the play to which they had been, and recalled every minute of their walks together.

Christmas Day was a very miserable affair.There were no presents and no festivities.They went to Chapel and Mr.Thurston preached the sermon.Maggie did, however, receive one letter.It was from Uncle Mathew.He wrote to her from some town in the north.He didn't seem very happy, and asked her whether she could possibly lend him five pounds.Alluding with a characteristic vagueness to "business plans of the first importance that were likely to mature very shortly."She told Aunt Anne that she wanted five pounds of her money, but she did not say for what she needed them.

Aunt Anne gave her the money at once without a word--as though she said: "We have given up all control of you except to see that you behave decently whilst you are still with us."When the fog arrived it seemed to penetrate every nook and corner of the house.The daily afternoon walk that Maggie took with Aunt Elizabeth was cancelled because of the difficulty of finding one's way from street to street and "because some rude man might steal one's money in the darkness," and Maggie was not sorry.Those walks had not been amusing, Aunt Elizabeth having nothing to say and being fully occupied with keeping an eye on Maggie, her idea apparently being that the girl would suddenly dash off to ******* and wickedness and be lost for ever.Maggie had no such intention and developed during these weeks a queer motherly affection for both the aunts, so lost they were and helpless and ignorant of the world! "My dear," said Maggie to herself, "you're a bit of a fool as far as common-sense goes, but you're nothing to what they are, poor dears."She tried to improve herself in every way for their benefit, but her memory was no better.She forgot all the things that were, in their eyes, the most important--closing doors, punctuality for meals, neat stitches, careful putting away of books and clothes.

同类推荐
  • Heart of the West

    Heart of the West

    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。
  • 净土晨钟

    净土晨钟

    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。
  • 眼科阐微

    眼科阐微

    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。
  • Man of Property

    Man of Property

    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。
  • 明实录穆宗实录

    明实录穆宗实录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 跟空气斗智斗勇

    跟空气斗智斗勇

    相比于天赋异禀的他人,平凡不过的你也就催眠下自已,假装有钱,假装有文化,或者假装有实力……但问题是,我假装的都有人相信,怎么办?此刻,开始与空气斗智斗勇!
  • 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!
  • 我是艾斯杀手

    我是艾斯杀手

    曾经击败奥特曼的艾斯杀手,左手为利爪,右手持怪刃一柄,招牌动作是两臂左右张开呈狂笑状。全身覆盖金黄色的铠甲,可以生吃奥特兄弟各种光线技而无伤。可以毫不费力的窃取敌方的各种技能便是艾斯杀手。面对连奥特曼都无法战胜的强大对手,人类还有多少的可能性?
  • 夫人又被厉先生拉黑了

    夫人又被厉先生拉黑了

    乔以沫原本是个正经记者,外出采稿时,一不小心从楼梯上滚了下去,摔坏了脑子。本以为自己摔坏脑子失忆已经够惨了,可没想到那位和她结婚四年的老公竟然还要和自己离婚。乔以沫表示,离就离呗,反正她什么都不记得了,拜拜就拜拜,下一个更长久,她一富婆,还怕找不到更好的?后来,她看到了自家老公那张俊到令人发指的脸——乔以沫:“老公呀,商量个事呗,这婚……咱就不离了呗?”厉祈川:“不是你一直要闹离婚吗?”乔以沫:“呃……我有错,我眼瞎,我以后再也不敢了,老公,那咱还离婚吗?”厉祈川:“……看我心情。”
  • 海棠花开之金谷园

    海棠花开之金谷园

    一个世世代代以种植海棠花的地方金谷园,小海棠诞生在一个平凡而极具爱心的家庭,本来她可以快乐的生长在海棠村,但是一个神奇的遇见,改变了她的人生轨迹。随后,小海棠开启了她奇幻的人生旅程……
  • 邪王绝宠:腹黑小魔妃

    邪王绝宠:腹黑小魔妃

    简介:21世纪的被誉为“人形兵器”的煞星王牌杀手秦瑶,被人以“魂祭”禁术将魂魄召到了御灵为尊的太苍大陆,附身被封印了灵根的废物步青瑶的身上。什么?要我乖乖让个废物,别惹事生非。她偏要将这太苍六国搅个天翻地覆,活得光芒万丈。打脸未婚夫,碾压一众天才俊杰,推翻太苍最高统治的长生殿,一生就是一个大写的“牛”。可是,这个妖孽男夜夜跑来暖床,天天追着要她负责,到底是个什么鬼?
  • 复苏

    复苏

    地球毁灭,人类新生。2000年后某前地球雌性人类从休眠中醒来,面对的是完全陌生的世界。女尊社会大好,不过金发碧眼的白种女人更加吃香,纯华裔的柔弱物种只能继续作为平民苟活。草根在地球毁灭之后它仍旧是草根。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 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!
  • 他身上养条龙

    他身上养条龙

    铁血特种兵,因为学历问题无法晋升,愤然退伍,龙回都市,得到特殊际遇,实力大增,应召入中华龙组特别行动队!
  • 后会有期爱无期

    后会有期爱无期

    吴晓事业做得顺风顺水,逐渐成为人们眼中的黄金单身男,但是他始终保守着放不下初恋的秘密。他从未停止找寻她的脚步。终于有一天,在一次叔叔刻意安排的他与酒店老板的孙女林嘉文的酒席上,吴晓无意得到了许昭昭的消息。二人再次相遇,很快坠入爱河。可是在二人准备婚礼的时候,吴晓却发现许昭昭已经不是当年自己爱恋的那个人,甚至和脑海中的那个女神相差甚远。他做了爱情的叛者,同时他的伤害也让许昭昭重新审视自己的生活,命运再次眷顾她,当她再次赢得万众瞩目的眼光时,却不知如何面对后悔不已的吴晓。