登陆注册
38589800000024

第24章 FOREWARNED(1)

Alethia Debchance sat in a corner of an otherwise empty railway carriage, more or less at ease as regarded body, but in some trepidation as to mind. She had embarked on a social adventure of no little magnitude as compared with the accustomed seclusion and stagnation of her past life. At the age of twenty-eight she could look back on nothing more eventful than the daily round of her existence in her aunt's house at Webblehinton, a hamlet four and a half miles distant from a country town and about a quarter of a century removed from modern times. Their neighbours had been elderly and few, not much given to social intercourse, but helpful or politely sympathetic in times of illness. Newspapers of the ordinary kind were a rarity; those that Alethia saw regularly were devoted exclusively either to religion or to poultry, and the world of politics was to her an unheeded unexplored region. Her ideas on life in general had been acquired through the medium of popular respectable novel-writers, and modified or emphasised by such knowledge as her aunt, the vicar, and her aunt's housekeeper had put at her disposal. And now, in her twenty-ninth year, her aunt's death had left her, well provided for as regards income, but somewhat isolated in the matter of kith and kin and human companionship. She had some cousins who were on terms of friendly, though infrequent, correspondence with her, but as they lived permanently in Ceylon, a locality about which she knew little, beyond the assurance contained in the missionary hymn that the human element there was vile, they were not of much immediate use to her.

Other cousins she also possessed, more distant as regards relationship, but not quite so geographically remote, seeing that they lived somewhere in the Midlands. She could hardly remember ever having met them, but once or twice in the course of the last three or four years they had expressed a polite wish that she should pay them a visit; they had probably not been unduly depressed by the fact that her aunt's failing health had prevented her from accepting their invitation. The note of condolence that had arrived on the occasion of her aunt's death had included a vague hope that Alethia would find time in the near future to spend a few days with her cousins, and after much deliberation and many hesitations she had written to propose herself as a guest for a definite date some week ahead. The family, she reflected with relief, was not a large one; the two daughters were married and away, there was only old Mrs.

Bludward and her son Robert at home. Mrs. Bludward was something of an invalid, and Robert was a young man who had been at Oxford and was going into Parliament. Further than that Alethia's information did not go; her imagination, founded on her extensive knowledge of the people one met in novels, had to supply the gaps. The mother was not difficult to place; she would either be an ultra-amiable old lady, bearing her feeble health with uncomplaining fortitude, and having a kind word for the gardener's boy and a sunny smile for the chance visitor, or else she would be cold and peevish, with eyes that pierced you like a gimlet, and a unreasoning idolatry of her son. Alethia's imagination rather inclined her to the latter view.

Robert was more of a problem. There were three dominant types of manhood to be taken into consideration in working out his classification; there was Hugo, who was strong, good, and beautiful, a rare type and not very often met with; there was Sir Jasper, who was utterly vile and absolutely unscrupulous, and there was Nevil, who was not really bad at heart, but had a weak mouth and usually required the life-work of two good women to keep him from ultimate disaster. It was probable, Alethia considered, that Robert came into the last category, in which case she was certain to enjoy the companionship of one or two excellent women, and might possibly catch glimpses of undesirable adventuresses or come face to face with reckless admiration-seeking married women. It was altogether an exciting prospect, this sudden venture into an unexplored world of unknown human beings, and Alethia rather wished that she could have taken the vicar with her; she was not, however, rich or important enough to travel with a chaplain, as the Marquis of Moystoncleugh always did in the novel she had just been reading, so she recognised that such a proceeding was out of the question.

The train which carried Alethia towards her destination was a local one, with the wayside station habit strongly developed. At most of the stations no one seemed to want to get into the train or to leave it, but at one there were several market folk on the platform, and two men, of the farmer or small cattle-dealer class, entered Alethia's carriage. Apparently they had just foregathered, after a day's business, and their conversation consisted of a rapid exchange of short friendly inquiries as to health, family, stock, and so forth, and some grumbling remarks on the weather. Suddenly, however, their talk took a dramatically interesting turn, and Alethia listened with wide-eyed attention.

"What do you think of Mister Robert Bludward, eh?"

There was a certain scornful ring in his question.

"Robert Bludward? An out-an'-out rotter, that's what he is. Ought to be ashamed to look any decent man in the face. Send him to Parliament to represent us--not much! He'd rob a poor man of his last shilling, he would."

"Ah, that he would. Tells a pack of lies to get our votes, that's all that he's after, damn him. Did you see the way the Argus showed him up this week? Properly exposed him, hip and thigh, I tell you."

And so on they ran, in their withering indictment. There could be no doubt that it was Alethia's cousin and prospective host to whom they were referring; the allusion to a Parliamentary candidature settled that. What could Robert Bludward have done, what manner of man could he be, that people should speak of him with such obvious reprobation?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 慕榕春

    慕榕春

    “睦春君死了?谁干的?”“说出来你都不信,是她的道侣慕任然杀的。”“啊?为啥?”“慕榕派对外说是走火入魔,我看不是。”“谁又知道呢?”
  • 乡野小神农

    乡野小神农

    坐牢三年,无奈只能回家务农的小农民,意外得到了混沌至宝,种出来的蔬菜都是天下少见的珍品,不仅味道绝佳,还能延年益寿,一上市就被哄抢一空。小农民也从此走上了数钱数得手抽筋的快乐之路,而且桃花运一个接一个,实在是让人烦恼。
  • 紫天星神

    紫天星神

    万年之前,诸神之战,陨落无数天神千年之前,诸神消失,成为千古谜题现在,天魔乱舞,为了拯救天下,一代天命者横空出世,跨越时空的界限,与千年前的众神签下神之契约,众神轮回,盛世降临。但是,阻止我者,死。我愿为你踏破轮回,逆转天命,杀破众神,战碎苍穹!跨越千年的等待,只为你许下的诺言,至死不悔穿越历史的界限,只为你倾城的微笑,至死不悔
  • 狼妾:新妃不安分

    狼妾:新妃不安分

    她不小心吻到青蛙,穿越到新房内,不小心非礼了一尊“雕像”,悲惨的被吃干抹净。拜托,她可不是他仇人!她只不过起了一点小色心而已,但她可不是受虐狂。这个男人既霸道、冷血、又目中无人,还动不动就对她动手动脚,一群小妾对她的位子虎视耽耽,好,敢欺负她,她让她们看看新时代女性的厉害。情节虚构,切勿模仿。
  • 弑天问仙路

    弑天问仙路

    看地球人玩转异界!今日,我必斩开这仙路!今日,必破开这仙界!天道!你敢阻我?!众神阻我,我便屠了这众神,天道挡我,我便弑了这天道,我自拔剑向天问:“还有谁,敢与我一战?!”玉儿,十万年了,我……来了!
  • 我在火影当校长

    我在火影当校长

    当炼丹、炼器、神通、法术、阵法等神通出现在火影世界会发生怎样有趣的事情?
  • 高新技术企业集群自组织机制与条件研究

    高新技术企业集群自组织机制与条件研究

    本书以国内外高新技术企业集群(科技园区)为研究对象,以自组织理论和企业集群理论为基础,运用理论演绎、逻辑分析等方法提出了高新技术集群自组织机制及条件的假设,成为研究的逻辑起点;选择国内外游代表性的高技术企业集群进行案例论证,并根据研究结论提出相关的政策建议。
  • 雇佣兵异界归来

    雇佣兵异界归来

    我是一个雇佣兵,在一次任务后无意间打开了前往异界之门,在异界我用两千年时间到达了那个时间的巅峰,我又回到了异界之门回到了我带着一身修为原本的世界
  • 神魔临世

    神魔临世

    远古仙魔一战,毁天灭地,从此天下在无仙魔。在经过无尽岁月后,神诞生了。而神却凌驾一切之上。求推荐,求收藏,本书每天稳定更新,还有不定期的爆发加更。希望大家多多支持。
  • 让灵魂飞起来

    让灵魂飞起来

    一个生命从呱呱坠地伊始,就开始拥有了两个世界,一个是眼睛所能看到的外部世界,另一个则是自己的内心世界。当我们的内心世界得到外部世界满足时,就会心花怒放,有一种依山面海,桃花盛开般的舒怀;当我们的内心世界与外部世界冲突时,就会黯然神伤,有一种山崩海啸,乌云密布般的压抑。我们生活中所做的一切努力,都是在试图让我们的灵魂得到安然和满足。当我们的内心世界与外部世界完美契合时,我们就会激情四射,把自己的全部精神都投入到创造外部世界的行动中,从而奏响时代的凯歌;当我们的内心世界和外部世界相抵触时,我们就会让自己扎挣在无法摆脱的病苦之中,让自己的灵魂遭到社会生活的鞭挞。我们都希望能够平静地生活,想让灵魂波澜不惊,但这只能是一种幻想。外部世界的无常变化始终在搅动着我们的灵魂,让它无法苟且偷安。或许我们能选择肉体的逃避,但缺失了社会生活的历练,我们的灵魂就无法升华。所以,接受现实是我们不二的选择。本书从剖析人的灵魂入手,来向读者揭示主人公在红尘滚滚的社会中,内心的复杂活动和真实感受,为大家解读来自他内心的独白。希望大家能够喜欢!