登陆注册
26619400000010

第10章

"To be a proper rejoinder to my question," he said, rather neatly, "yours should be asked twenty-five years hence.""It remains perfectly true that at a given moment I was capable of doing as I say. That was what she wanted--a rich, susceptible, credulous, convenient young Englishman established near her en permanence. And yet," I added, "I must do her complete justice. Ihonestly believe she was fond of me." At this Stanmer got up and walked to the window; he stood looking out a moment, and then he turned round. "You know she was older than I," I went on. "Madame Scarabelli is older than you. One day in the garden, her mother asked me in an angry tone why I disliked Camerino; for I had been at no pains to conceal my feeling about him, and something had just happened to bring it out. 'I dislike him,' I said, 'because you like him so much.' 'I assure you I don't like him,' she answered. 'He has all the appearance of being your lover,' I retorted. It was a brutal speech, certainly, but any other man in my place would have made it. She took it very strangely; she turned pale, but she was not indignant. 'How can he be my lover after what he has done?' she asked. 'What has he done?' She hesitated a good while, then she said: 'He killed my husband.' 'Good heavens!' I cried, 'and you receive him!' Do you know what she said? She said, 'Che voule?'""Is that all?" asked Stanmer.

"No; she went on to say that Camerino had killed Count Salvi in a duel, and she admitted that her husband's jealousy had been the occasion of it. The Count, it appeared, was a monster of jealousy--he had led her a dreadful life. He himself, meanwhile, had been anything but irreproachable; he had done a mortal injury to a man of whom he pretended to be a friend, and this affair had become notorious. The gentleman in question had demanded satisfaction for his outraged honour; but for some reason or other (the Countess, to do her justice, did not tell me that her husband was a coward), he had not as yet obtained it. The duel with Camerino had come on first; in an access of jealous fury the Count had struck Camerino in the face; and this outrage, I know not how justly, was deemed expiable before the other. By an extraordinary arrangement (the Italians have certainly no sense of fair play) the other man was allowed to be Camerino's second. The duel was fought with swords, and the Count received a wound of which, though at first it was not expected to be fatal, he died on the following day. The matter was hushed up as much as possible for the sake of the Countess's good name, and so successfully that it was presently observed that, among the public, the other gentleman had the credit of having put his blade through M. de Salvi. This gentleman took a fancy not to contradict the impression, and it was allowed to subsist. So long as he consented, it was of course in Camerino's interest not to contradict it, as it left him much more free to keep up his intimacy with the Countess."Stanmer had listened to all this with extreme attention. "Why didn't SHE contradict it?"I shrugged my shoulders. "I am bound to believe it was for the same reason. I was horrified, at any rate, by the whole story. I was extremely shocked at the Countess's want of dignity in continuing to see the man by whose hand her husband had fallen.""The husband had been a great brute, and it was not known," said Stanmer.

"Its not being known made no difference. And as for Salvi having been a brute, that is but a way of saying that his wife, and the man whom his wife subsequently married, didn't like him."Stanmer hooked extremely meditative; his eyes were fixed on mine.

"Yes, that marriage is hard to get over. It was not becoming.""Ah," said I, "what a long breath I drew when I heard of it! Iremember the place and the hour. It was at a hill-station in India, seven years after I had left Florence. The post brought me some English papers, and in one of them was a letter from Italy, with a lot of so-called 'fashionable intelligence.' There, among various scandals in high life, and other delectable items, I read that the Countess Bianca Salvi, famous for some years as the presiding genius of the most agreeable seen in Florence, was about to bestow her hand upon Count Camerino, a distinguished Bolognese. Ah, my dear boy, it was a tremendous escape! I had been ready to marry the woman who was capable of that! But my instinct had warned me, and I had trusted my instinct.""'Instinct's everything,' as Falstaff says!" And Stanmer began to laugh. "Did you tell Madame de Salvi that your instinct was against her?""No; I told her that she frightened me, shocked me, horrified me.""That's about the same thing. And what did she say?""She asked me what I would have? I called her friendship with Camerino a scandal, and she answered that her husband had been a brute. Besides, no one knew it; therefore it was no scandal. Just YOUR argument! I retorted that this was odious reasoning, and that she had no moral sense. We had a passionate argument, and I declared I would never see her again. In the heat of my displeasure I left Florence, and I kept my vow. I never saw her again.""You couldn't have been much in love with her," said Stanmer.

"I was not--three months after."

"If you had been you would have come back--three days after.""So doubtless it seems to you. All I can say is that it was the great effort of my life. Being a military man, I have had on various occasions to face time enemy. But it was not then I needed my resolution; it was when I left Florence in a post-chaise."Stanmer turned about the room two or three times, and then he said:

"I don't understand! I don't understand why she should have told you that Camerino had killed her husband. It could only damage her.""She was afraid it would damage her more that I should think he was her lover. She wished to say the thing that would most effectually persuade me that he was not her lover--that he could never be. And then she wished to get the credit of being very frank.""Good heavens, how you must have analysed her!" cried my companion, staring.

同类推荐
  • 大慧度经宗要

    大慧度经宗要

    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。
  • 八识规矩直解

    八识规矩直解

    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。
  • 剡录

    剡录

    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。
  • 救度佛母二十一种礼赞经

    救度佛母二十一种礼赞经

    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。
  • 崇祯长编

    崇祯长编

    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
  • 腹黑玺子哥爱上我

    腹黑玺子哥爱上我

    一个平凡女孩在一次偶然,看到了Tfboys并且喜欢上了一个叫易烊千玺的男孩……
  • 绝世鬼医:废材四小姐

    绝世鬼医:废材四小姐

    纪栎(yue)祈,22世纪令人闻风丧胆的鬼医,既可救人,也可杀人!一朝穿越,成了人人唾弃的小废物,原以为人生此行多艰难,却不料遇见了他。“诶,那个谁,帮我捏个肩膀。”某女指着某男使唤。某男屁颠屁颠跑过去帮她捏肩膀。“诶,那个谁,帮我买个东西。”某女继续使唤。某男自觉拎着自己的钱上街买东西。“诶,就是你,帮我生个孩子!”某女噘着嘴巴,水汪汪的看着某男。他邪笑:“这种事,还是夫人你来做比较好,没关系,为夫来帮你……”某女惊恐摇头,第二天晚上,某男进不了房门。这里栖昀!QQ群:577434481欢迎大家么么么!
  • 领导学

    领导学

    本书系统论述了领导学的基本概念与理论,阐述了文化、胜任力、影响力与领导的关系,并对传统领导模式(领导行为模式、权变领导模式、情境领导模式等),以及现代领导模式(魅力型领导模式、转换型领导模式、五级经理人模式、极客与怪杰领导模式、平衡领导模式、量子物理视角下的领导模式等)进行了简要的阐述,在此基础上,论述了领导的战略管理、决策、用人、团队管理、激励、沟通等各项职能,并对领导定位和领导力开发进行了总结。
  • 超能者学园

    超能者学园

    这是一个关于超能者的欢(dou)乐(bi)故事。在很久很久以后,出现了一种叫做超能者的学园,苏炀快(er)乐(bi)地生活着,有房有妹有妹子,然而......
  • 混沌传说

    混沌传说

    主角王强出生在普普通通的一个农民家庭里,从小王强便与父亲住在一起,一起种地,而王强除了种地外,他还不断的修炼战天功,他从小就有一个愿望,就是希望有朝一日自己能修炼很厉害很强大的功法。当王强长大后,他与一个名叫林欣的女孩相爱了,林欣总是帮着王强他们种地,时间长了,他们便告别了父亲朝着村外走去。一路上,王强与林欣去过很多城市,后来他俩在一个特殊的环境下认识了一个少年,因此,他们三人便凭借着自己的本事走上了一条闯荡之路。
  • 一生的资本(最伟大的励志书)

    一生的资本(最伟大的励志书)

    成功之道是相通的,本书最大的特点就是实用性和可读性,它挖掘了不同的背景、不同条件下客观存在的人们身上的每一种资本,以我们身边和大家熟知的成功人士的真实硌事说明这些资本对人生的重要性,以及运用这些资本走向成功的可能性和必然性。在《一生的资本》里,马登告诉你,每个人都拥有获得财富的资本,认识到这些资本,并懂得如何运用这些资本,将会让你梦想成真。
  • 总裁身边的女人们

    总裁身边的女人们

    当爱情来的时候,总是那么不小心,不经意,让人唯唯诺诺,却丢不掉那份真心。
  • 昔日战神传

    昔日战神传

    战神之子,本成战神;凝天地之造化,聚世间之灵气,终成天地之子,控神器,战魔域,夺天界。
  • 鬼轿

    鬼轿

    短篇小说,我是一个普通人。我从来都没有想到……我后来知道,其实我一直都知道,只是我……但是在这时我却又不得不相信了。
  • 阻止风暴

    阻止风暴

    次时代小说,非架空历史。懦弱的少年,如何扭转命运,岂知掉进一场上位者的阴谋。偶然获得的“金魔方”让自己有了可以徘徊在这场深水的实力,以及潜力。清除邪恶猎魔人,清心寡欲的僧人,弘扬世间正道的茅山道士,白道,蓝道?智商超高的死宅,司令的儿子,挥手便是加强连?一切的一切,碰撞在一起,会蹭出什么样的烟火!我就是我,不一样的烟火。南茅北马,黑暗的次世纪欧洲,挖掘神秘的历史“真相”!