登陆注册
26267200000003

第3章 A SOCIETY SCANDAL(3)

"According to Lady Ruth's evidence," he said thoughtfully, "her husband entered the room at the exact moment when she was rejecting Wingrave's advances, and indignantly refusing a check which he was endeavoring to persuade her to accept. A struggle followed between the two men, with fatal results for Sir William. That," he added slowly, "is the story which the whole world read, and which most of it believes. Here, however, are a few corrections of my own, and a suggestion or two for you, Aynesworth, and those of you who like to consider yourselves truth seekers. First, then, Lady Ruth was a self-invited guest at White Lodge. She had asked Wingrave to return with her, and as they sat together in his room, she confessed that she was worried, and asked for his advice. She was in some money trouble, ingeniously explained, no doubt. Wingrave, with the utmost delicacy, offered his assistance, which was of course accepted. It was exactly what she was there for. She was in the act of taking the check, when she saw her husband and Lumley. Her reputation was at stake. Her subsequent course of action and evidence becomes obvious. The check unexplained was ruin. She explained it!

"Of the struggle, and of the exact means by which Sir William received his injuries, I know nothing. There is the evidence! It may or may not be true.

The most serious part of the case, so far as Lady Ruth was concerned, lay in the facts as to her husband's removal from the White Lodge. In an unconscious state he was driven almost twelve miles at a walking pace. No stimulants were administered, and though they passed two doctors' houses no stop was made. Adoctor was not sent for until half an hour after they reached home, and even then they seemed to have chosen the one who lived furthest away. The conclusion is obvious enough to anyone who knows the facts of the case. Sir William was not meant to live!

"Wingrave's trial was a famous one. He had no friends and few sympathizers, and he insisted upon defending himself. His cross examination of the man who had been his friend created something like a sensation. Amongst other things, he elicited the fact that Lumley, after first seeing the two together, had gone and fetched Sir William. It was a terrible half hour for Lumley, and when he left the box, amongst the averted faces of his friends, the sweat was pouring down his face. I can seem him now, as though it were yesterday. Then Lady Ruth followed. She was quietly dressed; the effect she produced was excellent. She told her story. She hinted at the insult. She spoke of the check. She had imagined no harm in accepting Wingrave's invitation to tea. Men and women of the hunt, who were on friendly terms, treated one another as comrades. She spoke of the blow. She had seen it delivered, and so on. And all the time, I sat within a few feet of Wingrave, and I knew that in the black box before him were burning love letters from this woman, to the man whose code of honor would ever have protected her husband from disgrace; and I knew that I was listening to the thing which you, Aynesworth, and many of your fellow story writers, have so wisely and so ignorantly dilated upon--the vengeance of a woman denied. Only I heard the words themselves, cold, earnest words, fall one by one from her lips like a sentence of doom--and there was life in the thing, life and death! When she had finished, the whole court was in a state of tension. Everyone was leaning forward. It would be the most piquant, the most wonderful cross examination every heard--the woman lying to save her honor and to achieve her vengeance; the man on trial for his life.

Wingrave stood up. Lady Ruth raised her veil, and looked at him from the witness box. There was the most intense silence I ever realized. Who could tell the things which flashed from one to the other across the dark well of the court; who could measure the fierce, silent scorn which seemed to blaze from his eyes, as he held her there--his slave until he chose to give the signal for release? At last he looked away towards the judge, and the woman fell forward in the box gasping, a crumpled up, nerveless heap of humanity.

"'My lord,' he said, 'I have no questions to ask this witness!'

"Everyone staggered. Wingrave's few friends were horrified. After that there was, of course, no hope for him. He got fifteen years' penal servitude."Like an echo from that pent-up murmur of feeling which had rippled through the crowded court many years ago, his little group of auditors almost gasped as Lovell left his place and strolled down the room. Aynesworth laid his hand upon his shoulder.

"All the time," he said, "you were looking at that calendar! Why?"Lovell once more faced them. He was standing with his back to a round table, strewn with papers and magazines.

"It was the date," he said, "and the fact that I must leave England within a few hours, which forced this story from me. Tomorrow Wingrave will be free!

Listen, Aynesworth," he continued, turning towards him, "and the rest of you who fancy that it is I who am leaving a humdrum city for the world of tragedies! I leave you the legacy of a greater one than all Asia will yield to me! Lady Ruth is married to Lumley, and they hold today in London a very distinguished social position. Tomorrow Wingrave takes a hand in the game. He was once my friend; I was in court when he was tried; I was intimately acquainted with the lawyer's clerk who had the arrangement of his papers. Iknow what no one else breathing knows. He is a man who never forgives; a man who was brutally deceived, and who for years has had no other occupation than to brood upon his wrongs. He is very wealthy indeed, still young, he has marvelous tenacity of purpose, and he has brains. Tomorrow he will be free!"Aynesworth drew a little breath.

"I wonder," he murmured, "if anything will happen."Lovell shrugged his shoulders.

"Where I go," he said, "the cruder passions may rage, and life and death be reckoned things of little account. But you who remain--who can tell?--you may look into the face of mightier things."

同类推荐
  • 佛说大七宝陀罗尼经

    佛说大七宝陀罗尼经

    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。
  • 茶谱

    茶谱

    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。
  • 辨疑志

    辨疑志

    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。
  • A Little Tour In France

    A Little Tour In France

    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。
  • 蒙养诗教

    蒙养诗教

    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
  • 梦里残花片片

    梦里残花片片

    此小说讲述了两姐妹外出嗨皮夜归骑车不小心掉进水塘后穿越的点滴。一个是痴缠难挡的旧情人,一个是柔情似水的共枕人,来势汹汹,现代女如何招架他们的痴缠?!怎样演绎各种爱恨情仇。
  • 心尖独宠:高冷总裁住隔壁

    心尖独宠:高冷总裁住隔壁

    爱与恨交织纠缠着,是豪门,更是商战,他们在恨的力量中各自成长,在爱的力量下各自强大,恨让人疯狂,爱让人发狂!!他是商界的王,俯瞰一切,冷酷残忍。她不小心撞进了他的世界,他危险的气息将她笼罩:“既然闯进来了,就别想逃!”
  • 秦并六国平话

    秦并六国平话

    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。
  • 僵尸终极进化

    僵尸终极进化

    不一样的探险,不一样的经历。远古的文明,失落的宝藏,神秘的古墓。当主角把它们从沉睡中,再次翻找出来。又会是怎么样的一种经历呢!主角是继续寻求自己的进化之路,还是沉迷在无尽的探险中?让我们一起追随主角的脚步,揭开这些神秘的面纱。
  • 爱你么么哒

    爱你么么哒

    一段段经典的对话诉说着感情的召唤爱你么么哒是有你们的日子春风十里的番外篇快来看萌萌哒的对话吧
  • 瘟疫狂徒

    瘟疫狂徒

    饱受疾病摧残的的坦克。传播瘟疫的MT!霸线!反杀!看张狂如何虐死盖伦,强掳女警。英雄们,在疾病的淫威下颤抖吧!
  • 三寸旧城七寸执念

    三寸旧城七寸执念

    韩晓静静的站在办公楼的一楼,听着丈夫用着几年没用听到过的温柔语气问着一个女孩,你怎么连签到都不会那,小笨笨,我帮你。她知道我自己输了,但是她知道这个是自己爱的男人,是自己孩子的父亲,她决定用一个全新的自己赢回这个男人,赢回这个家。
  • 传奇成仙

    传奇成仙

    宇宙洪荒,天地三分。一为凡界,众生平等;二为神界,强者为尊;三为仙界,万众膜拜。然三万年前,神界大乱,修真体系自此两分。凡界也随之变化,阵营分明。只是成仙之路自此唯一,谁可成仙?唯我传奇!
  • 心灵的探险

    心灵的探险

    大师像辛勤的园丁,努力灌溉佛教文化的花园。从关怀现今人类所面临的,生活、生死、生命等问题,乃至忧心升斗百姓的生行,令人感怀一代大师对世人的温柔。禅是亘古今而不变的宁宙之心,禅像一朵花、一幅画,增添人生无限的妩媚与气氛;禅是大自然、是生活禅是永恒的生命禅更是自性本心拥有了禅,才拥有自己。日常生活中,行住坐卧,语默动静只要能拥有平和安然的心境,就是禅。
  • 专属幸福之冷王子的失忆丫头

    专属幸福之冷王子的失忆丫头

    “难道一个一个普通人就必须不能得到幸福吗?是不是在有钱人的眼里伟大的爱情就是不如权势?”她一个平凡的女生,为了得到大家的认可,不断的完善自己,但是即使如此,还是注定屈服在权势之下。“泽,对不起,我们注定不是一个世界的人,我们之间有太多的隔阂,忘了我吧!”被逼无奈之下,她还是选择离他而去,也许,上天都怜悯她,让她忘记了一切但是似乎事情根本没有结束,他们注定纠缠在一起,经过重重磨难的她,能否得到自己的幸福呢???