登陆注册
37808200000091

第91章 CHAPTER XXII(1)

It was late in August when Mary received the letter from Crawford in which he told of his determination to wait no longer but to tell his father of his love for her. Edwin Smith was much better. By way of proof, his son inclosed a photograph which he had taken of his father sitting beneath a tree on the lawn of their home. The picture showed Mr. Smith without his beard, which had been shaved off during his illness. Either this or the illness itself had changed him a great deal. He looked thinner and, which was odd under the circumstances, younger. Mary, looking at this photograph, felt more than ever the impossible conviction that somewhere or other at some time in her life she must have met Mr. Edwin Smith.

So, in my next letter [wrote Crawford], I shall have news to tell.

And I am sure it will be good news. "Ask your father first," you said. Of course you remember that, and I have remembered it every moment since. Now I am going to ask him. After that you will give me your answer, won't you? And it can't be anything but yes, because I won't let it be.

What Mary's feelings were when she received this letter, whether or not she slept as soundly that night and other nights immediately following, whether or not the sight of Isaiah returning from the post-office at mail times caused her breath to come a little quicker and her nerves to thrill--these are questions the answers to which must be guessed. Suffice it to say that she manifested no marked symptoms of impatience and anxiety during that week and when at last Isaiah handed her another letter postmarked Carson City the trembling of the hand which received it was so slight as to be unnoticed by Mr. Chase.

She put aside the letter until that night when she was alone in her room. Then she opened it and read what Crawford had written. His father had not only refused consent to his son's contemplated marriage but had manifested such extraordinary agitation and such savage and unreasonable obstinacy that Crawford was almost inclined to believe his parent's recent illness had affected his mind.

That is the only explanation I can think of [he wrote]. It seems as if he must be insane. And yet he seemed rational enough at the beginning of our first interview and during most of the second.

Even when I had broken the news that there was a girl in whom I felt an especial interest he did not show any sign of the outbreak that came afterward. It wasn't until I began to tell how I first met you there at South Harniss, who you were, and about Captain Gould and Mr. Hamilton, that I noticed he was acting queerly. I was head over heels in my story, trying to make plain how desperate my case was and doing my best to make him appreciate how tremendously lucky his son was to have even a glimmer of a chance to get a girl like you for a wife, when I heard him make an odd noise in his throat. I looked up--I don't know where I had been looking before--certainly not at him--and there he was, leaning back in his chair, his face as white as his collar, and waving a hand at me. I thought he was choking, or was desperately ill or something, and I sprang toward him, but he waved me back. "Stop! Wait!" he said, or stammered, or choked; it was more like a croak than a human voice. "Don't come here! Let me be! What are you trying to tell me? Who--who is this girl?" I asked him what was the matter--his manner and his look frightened me--but he wouldn't answer, kept ordering me to tell him again who you were. So I did tell him that you were the daughter of the Reverend Charles Lathrop and Augusta Lathrop, and of your mother's second marriage to Captain Marcellus Hall. "But he died when she was seven years old," I went on, "and since that time she has been living with her guardians, the two fine old fellows who adopted her, Captain Shadrach Gould and Zoeth Hamilton. They live at South Harniss on Cape Cod." I had gotten no further than this when he interrupted me. "She--she has been living with Zoeth Hamilton?" he cried. "With Zoeth Hamilton! Oh, my God! Did--did Zoeth Hamilton send you to me?" Yes, that is exactly what he said:

"Did Zoeth Hamilton send you to me?" I stared at him. "Why, no, Dad," I said, as soon as I could say anything. "Of course he didn't. I have met Mr. Hamilton but once in my life. What IS the matter? Sit down again. Don't you think I had better call the doctor?" I thought surely his brain was going. But no, he wouldn't answer or listen. Instead he looked at me with the wildest, craziest expression and said: "Did Zoeth Hamilton tell you?" "He told me nothing, Dad," I said, as gently as I could. "Of course he didn't. I am almost a stranger to him. Besides, what in the world was there to tell? I came to you because I had something to tell.

I mean to marry Mary Lathrop, if she will have me--" I got no further than that. "No!" he fairly screamed. "No! No! No! Oh, my God, no!" And then the doctor came running in, we got Dad to bed, and it was all over for that day, except that I naturally was tremendously upset and conscience-stricken. I could see that the doctor thought I was to blame, that I had confessed something or other--something criminal, I imagine he surmised--to Dad and that it had knocked the poor old chap over. And I couldn't explain, because what I had told him was not for outsiders to hear.

同类推荐
  • 六道集

    六道集

    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。
  • 明伦汇编人事典十八岁部

    明伦汇编人事典十八岁部

    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。
  • 茶笺

    茶笺

    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。
  • 诗地理考

    诗地理考

    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。
  • 东亭闲望

    东亭闲望

    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
  • 南宋史学研究

    南宋史学研究

    本书除《绪论》及《结论》外,共分六章,首先叙述鲜明的时代特色,以修当代史,地方志及军事史为重点。然后论史书体裁的创新,史书的多样化,官修和私修的相互配合,史部目录学的功用。其三论及史学思想,就其会通史观,正统论,夷夏说,义理观念及史学批评,逐一分析。其四称述庞大的治史团队,有家族,有地区,或精于考证,或长于说理,或优于文学,各展所长。其五则是对个案加以分析,对同一史事因记述者非一入而观点有异,各种史籍的纂修都负有其特殊的功用。最后讨论到南宋史学的独特地位与影响,先就北、南宋对前代史及当代史之编修作一比较,再论南宋史家在史书编修方面的贡献和影响,而史学思想影响后世最大。
  • 经转千年帝九天长

    经转千年帝九天长

    一个是青丘最受宠的小神女,一个是九重天石头一般的上古神器,一段因报恩而展开的千年羁绊,她终究还是将他拉入了万丈红尘,东华凤九,四字成双,好在一切如他们所愿,八荒六合,生生世世东华凤九甜蜜向小同人~穿插凡间故事,不弃坑!
  • 我试用了N个系统

    我试用了N个系统

    此书暂停更新,有意者请移步新书《从魔童降世开始打穿万界》!!!秀破苍穹、超兽武装、灵主大陆、魔童哪吒、只手遮天、大话西游、七界传说、仙剑奇侠、爱情公寓、垂钓之祖、大千世界、特种兵王、白蛇缘起、唯我圣王、星辰之主、最强狗熊……诸天万界,无限轮回,万千系统,让我们跟随主角一起秀破天际吧!PS:这其实是一本披着系统皮的诸天流小说,因此,又名为《从高仿斗破开始的万界之旅》、《萧大忽悠的万界作死日志》、《秀儿的诸天史》
  • 重生之超级女王

    重生之超级女王

    夜溟歌望着窗外飞过的鸽群,心中无比惆怅。重生,这等怪事都给她遇上了。是的,你没听错,她重生在和她同名的一个女孩身上了。她本是87世纪最霸气的凡斯特林贵族族长——雷奥娜.安.凡斯特林,雷奥娜亲王,却被自己家里的一个小机关弄死了,哎丫丫,好丢人有木有!要是被暗帮那些兄弟知道了,还不是笑掉大牙!她本是夜家唯一的小公主夜溟歌,因为一个贱女人而和一群小太妹打起来掉入河里淹死。当她代替她,霸气代替懦弱,面瘫代替柔弱,看一代战神如何打造自己当王国!楠竹不透露,耐心等待吧(??ω?)
  • 很高兴认识你

    很高兴认识你

    [花雨授权]?很高兴认识你,当一个可爱的女生这么说明,所有男人都会很高兴。但这个“所有男人”中可不包括他!天知道他为什么答应接下这个任务,这个可爱却即将因为他而变得可怜的女生,知道真相后是否会离他而去?
  • 灵榕残花

    灵榕残花

    一颗无魂的苍天榕树,一片无情的绝命毒毒花……她原是三界不容的异种,却因拥有真纯的性格和善良的心灵而被三界接受。她自强但不自傲,自尊但不自负,她自爱,她不服输,她明白,如果连自己都放弃自己了,那么没有人会可怜你。一次次的偶遇,她收养了一个个无辜的孤童。一次次的帮助,她结识了一名名真实的好哥们。谁说妖本无情?看《浮生物语》启蒙小说《灵榕残花》,听一听妖怪们的真心话。
  • 怀念那年夏天的风

    怀念那年夏天的风

    高中生林希转学圣星一中却是垫底生,同学们的嘲笑令她孤僻,直到遇见同样转学的他——顾晨,他们之间会有结果吗……
  • 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!
  • 斗罗之我是小舞他弟

    斗罗之我是小舞他弟

    萧竹,无父无母,标准的穿越模板。来到了斗罗大陆,变成了星斗森林的瑞兽——四方竹。(主角是人型的,武魂是四方竹(第一次写文))
  • 生死疲劳

    生死疲劳

    小说描写了一个被冤杀的地主经历了六道轮回,变成驴、牛、猪、狗、猴,最后终于又转生为一个带着先天性不可治愈疾病的大头婴儿;这个大头婴儿滔滔不绝地讲述着他身为畜牲时的种种奇特感受,以及地主西门闹一家和农民蓝解放一家半个多世纪生死疲劳的悲欢故事……