登陆注册
25538500000011

第11章

How did Susan pass the time? For the first day or so, she was too angry and offended to cry. She went about her household duties in a quick, sharp, jerking, yet absent way; shrinking one moment from Will, overwhelming him with remorseful caresses the next. The third day of Michael's absence, she had the relief of a good fit of crying;and after that, she grew softer and more tender; she felt how harshly she had spoken to him, and remembered how angry she had been. She made excuses for him. "It was no wonder," she said to herself, "that he had been vexed with her; and no wonder he would not give in, when she had never tried to speak gently or to reason with him. She was to blame, and she would tell him so, and tell him once again all that her mother had bade her to be to Willie, and all the horrible stories she had heard about madhouses, and he would be on her side at once."And so she watched for his coming, intending to apologise as soon as ever she saw him. She hurried over her household work, in order to sit quietly at her sewing, and hear the first distant sound of his well-known step or whistle. But even the sound of her flying needle seemed too loud--perhaps she was losing an exquisite instant of anticipation; so she stopped sewing, and looked longingly out through the geranium leaves, in order that her eye might catch the first stir of the branches in the wood-path by which he generally came. Now and then a bird might spring out of the covert; otherwise the leaves were heavily still in the sultry weather of early autumn. Then she would take up her sewing, and, with a spasm of resolution, she would determine that a certain task should be fulfilled before she would again allow herself the poignant luxury of expectation. Sick at heart was she when the evening closed in, and the chances of that day diminished. Yet she stayed up longer than usual, thinking that if he were coming--if he were only passing along the distant road--the sight of a light in the window might encourage him to make his appearance even at that late hour, while seeing the house all darkened and shut up might quench any such intention.

Very sick and weary at heart, she went to bed; too desolate and despairing to cry, or make any moan. But in the morning hope came afresh. Another day--another chance! And so it went on for weeks.

Peggy understood her young mistress's sorrow full well, and respected it by her silence on the subject. Willie seemed happier now that the irritation of Michael's presence was removed; for the poor idiot had a sort of antipathy to Michael, which was a kind of heart's echo to the repugnance in which the latter held him. Altogether, just at this time, Willie was the happiest of the three.

As Susan went into Coniston, to sell her butter, one Saturday, some inconsiderate person told her that she had seen Michael Hurst the night before. I said inconsiderate, but I might rather have said unobservant; for any one who had spent half-an-hour in Susan Dixon's company might have seen that she disliked having any reference made to the subjects nearest her heart, were they joyous or grievous. Now she went a little paler than usual (and she had never recovered her colour since she had had the fever), and tried to keep silence. But an irrepressible pang forced out the question -"Where?""At Thomas Applethwaite's, in Langdale. They had a kind of harvest-home, and he were there among the young folk, and very thick wi'

Nelly Hebthwaite, old Thomas's niece. Thou'lt have to look after him a bit, Susan!"She neither smiled nor sighed. The neighbour who had been speaking to her was struck with the gray stillness of her face. Susan herself felt how well her self-command was obeyed by every little muscle, and said to herself in her Spartan manner, "I can bear it without either wincing or blenching." She went home early, at a tearing, passionate pace, trampling and breaking through all obstacles of briar or bush.

Willie was moping in her absence--hanging listlessly on the farm-yard gate to watch for her. When he saw her, he set up one of his strange, inarticulate cries, of which she was now learning the meaning, and came towards her with his loose, galloping run, head and limbs all shaking and wagging with pleasant excitement. Suddenly she turned from him, and burst into tears. She sat down on a stone by the wayside, not a hundred yards from home, and buried her face in her hands, and gave way to a passion of pent-up sorrow; so terrible and full of agony were her low cries, that the idiot stood by her, aghast and silent. All his joy gone for the time, but not, like her joy, turned into ashes. Some thought struck him. Yes! the sight of her woe made him think, great as the exertion was. He ran, and stumbled, and shambled home, buzzing with his lips all the time. She never missed him. He came back in a trice, bringing with him his cherished paper windmill, bought on that fatal day when Michael had taken him into Kendal to have his doom of perpetual idiocy pronounced. He thrust it into Susan's face, her hands, her lap, regardless of the injury his frail plaything thereby received. He leapt before her to think how he had cured all heart-sorrow, buzzing louder than ever. Susan looked up at him, and that glance of her sad eyes sobered him. He began to whimper, he knew not why: and she now, comforter in her turn, tried to soothe him by twirling his windmill. But it was broken; it made no noise; it would not go round. This seemed to afflict Susan more than him. She tried to make it right, although she saw the task was hopeless; and while she did so, the tears rained down unheeded from her bent head on the paper toy.

"It won't do," said she, at last. "It will never do again." And, somehow, she took the accident and her words as omens of the love that was broken, and that she feared could never be pieced together more. She rose up and took Willie's hand, and the two went slowly into the house.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 守护甜心之玲梦公主

    守护甜心之玲梦公主

    一个转校生的来临让守护者们不信任亚梦,然而亚梦的身世竟是皇室贵族里的大公主,世界首富的大小姐:幻霜玲梦…………
  • 哲学家们都干了些什么?

    哲学家们都干了些什么?

    这是一本有趣的哲学简明史,也是人类最厉害的天才们自我折磨的历史。哲学家们只想在思考中寻找终极真理,但在他们的争吵中,世界却意外地被改变。从苏格拉底到笛卡尔,从休谟到康德,两千多年的哲学史,一代代哲学家不断思考,并对我们的世界做出形形色色的阐释,而哲学却并没有所谓的终极真理。那么,哲学家们都干了些什么,他们在重复没有意义的活动吗?
  • 剑染秋枫

    剑染秋枫

    “暗想欢游,浑如昨,韶光虚设。杨柳陌,老枝衰叶,早经易节。甘果掷时须并剖,秋千荡处还同列。费思量,吟笔写衷肠,从头说。念解佩,恩分绝。耽病酒,心期烈。叹斜阳红雨,渐归尘屑。浅笑可君经久醉,凝颦忍语今朝别。纵他年,镜里影如花,不堪折。”叶青十年学剑,读书不多,但这首《满江红》却是他亲手所写。情动于中,即使剑客也能为词。面对情感的打击,穷路的磨折,叶青能否找到他的自赎之路?
  • 晋封

    晋封

    嗜血少女齐琀裳盗墓取得归轮明珠穿越九州大陆,一人智退千军万马。谜样身世潜藏杀机。帝王、公子、商贾、将军……十几位不同身份的美男与她纠缠不清,她却只想异世求生,解开身世之谜。野马一般的女主,遇到各路美男如何抵挡诱惑,驰骋江湖,经历多番感情纠葛,求真爱,求永存,真爱难寻,只有伤心默然,情路坎坷,命运多舛,她如何才能活着走下去……雨幕虹裳倾情力作,但求看官多多点击,多多推荐。美男子各个循环登场亮相,往下看,总有一款适合您~
  • 十二星座之星缘冒险

    十二星座之星缘冒险

    本书讲述了一个十四多岁的少女和一只来自赫尔克星的精灵小炫,踏上寻找能继承十二星座的艰苦路程。
  • 一等闲医:神女在异世

    一等闲医:神女在异世

    重生后的千莫离以为她之所以会出现在这个世界,是巧合。经年之后,她才恍然得知,在她那一厢情愿的巧合背后,竟背负了那人如此厚重的一腔深情……对此,莫离表示:唯己真心相待,托君深情不负。每每午夜梦回惊醒南熠的,是身受重创的她,气若游丝的依偎在别人怀中,强撑着一口气用着她此生从未如此冷淡的语气,留给他最后一句话:“此生,我不再欠你。”……
  • 破神道

    破神道

    号苍茫大地,谁与争锋?唯道傲立苍穹,无法不破。论道一生,谁又能与道同生,立于群雄傲世,破天而出,画地为牢.....
  • 五玉传说

    五玉传说

    殊心真人说:剑乃百兵之君,心握此君,便能破尽天下妖邪。张决之说:如果有一天,我的剑没了该怎么办?
  • 无上天神

    无上天神

    青山市的萧氏集团的少爷萧风,因无意间买到一块黑色的石头,从而穿越到天神大陆,在萧家的一个叫萧风少年体内,因实力不好遭萧家之人嫌弃,为了成为强者,踏上了强者之路,最后统治天神大陆
  • 美艳飞贼

    美艳飞贼

    话说江湖之中出现新的飞贼。无人知其面目,人们只是称之“美艳飞贼“。美艳飞贼劫富济贫,但主要是劫富。不过劫富偷财是不是已经不够了呢?也许还是劫色偷心才是“美艳飞贼“的目的?