登陆注册
15753300000049

第49章

Dr. Mulbridge did not wait for the time he had fixed for his return. He may have judged that her tendency against him would strengthen by delay, or he may have yielded to his own impatience in coming the next day. He asked for Grace with his wonted abruptness, and waited for her coming in the little parlor of the hotel, walking up and down the floor, with his shaggy head bent forward, and his big hands clasped behind him.

As she hovered at the door before entering, she could watch him while he walked the whole room's length away, and she felt a pang at sight of him.

If she could have believed that he loved her, she could not have faced him, but must have turned and run away; and even as it was she grieved for him. Such a man would not have made up his mind to this step without a deep motive, if not a deep feeling. Her heart had been softened so that she could not think of frustrating his ambition, if it were no better than that, without pity. One man had made her feel very kindly toward all other men; she wished in the tender confusion of the moment that she need not reject her importunate suitor, whose importunity even she could not resent.

He caught sight of her as soon as he made his turn at the end of the room, and with a quick "Ah, Ah!" he hastened to meet her, with the smile in which there was certainly something attractive. "You see I've come back a day sooner than I promised. I haven't the sort of turnout you've been used to, but I want you to drive with me." "I can't drive with you, Dr. Mulbridge," she faltered.

"Well, walk, then. I should prefer to walk."

"You must excuse me," she answered, and remained standing before him.

"Sit down," he bade her, and pushed up a chair towards her. His audacity, if it had been a finer courage, would have been splendid, and as it was she helplessly obeyed him, as if she were his patient, and must do so. "If I were superstitious I should say that you receive me ominously," he said, fixing his gray eyes keenly upon her.

"I do!" she forced herself to reply. "I wish you had not come."

"That's explicit, at any rate. Have you thought it over?"

"No; I had no need to do that, I had fully resolved when I spoke yesterday. Dr. Mulbridge, why didn't you spare me this? It's unkind of you to insist, after what I said. You know that I must hate to repeat it. I do value you so highly in some ways that I blame you for obliging me to hurt you--if it does hurt--by telling you again that I don't love you."

He drew in a long breath, and set his teeth hard upon his lip. "You may depend upon its hurting," he said, "but I was glad to risk the pain, whatever it was, for the chance of getting you to reconsider. I presume I'm not the conventional wooer. I'm too old for it, and I'm too blunt and plain a man. I've been thirty-five years making up my mind to ask you to marry me. You're the first woman, and you shall be the last. You couldn't suppose I was going to give you up for one no?"

"You had better."

"Not for twenty! I can understand very well how you never thought of me in this way; but there's no reason why you shouldn't. Come, it's a matter that we can reason about, like anything else."

"No. I told you, it's something we can't reason about. Or yes, it is.

I will reason with you. You say that you love me?"

"Yes."

"If you did n't love me, you would n't ask me to marry you?"

"No."

"Then how can you expect me to marry you without loving you?"

"I don't. All that I ask is that you won't refuse me. I know that you can love me."

"No, no, never!"

"And I only want you to take time to try."

"I don't wish to try. If you persist, I must leave the room. We had better part. I was foolish to see you. But I thought--I was sorry--I hoped to make it less unkind to you."

"In spite of yourself, you were relenting."

"Not at all!"

"But if you pitied me, you did care for me a little?"

"You know that I had the highest respect for you as a physician. I tell you that you were my ideal in that way, and I will tell you that if"--she stopped, and he continued for her.

"If you had not resolved to give it up, you might have done what I asked."

"I did not say that," she answered indignantly.

"But why do you give it up?"

"Because I am not equal to it."

"How do you know it? Who told you?"

"You have told me,--by every look and act of yours,--and I'm grateful to you for it."

"And if I told you now by word that you were fit for it."

"I shouldn't believe you."

"You would n't believe my word?" She did not answer. "I see," he said presently, "that you doubt me somehow as a man. What is it you think of me?"

"You wouldn't like to know."

"Oh, yes, I should."

"Well, I will tell you. I think you are a tyrant, and that you want a slave, not a wife. You wish to be obeyed. You despise women. I don't mean their minds,--they 're despicable enough, in most cases, as men's are,--but their nature."

"This is news to me," he said, laughing. "I never knew that I despised women's nature."

"It's true, whether you knew it or not."

"Do I despise you?"

"You would, if you saw that I was afraid of you: Oh, why do you force me to say such things? Why don't you spare me--spare yourself?"

"In this cause I couldn't spare myself. I can't bear to give you up!

I'm what I am, whatever you say; but with you, I could be whatever you would. I could show you that you are wrong if you gave me the chance.

I know that I could make you happy. Listen to me a moment."

"It's useless."

"No! If you have taken the trouble to read me in this way, there must have been a time when you might have cared."

"There never was any such time. I read you from the first."

"I will go away," he said, after a pause, in which she had risen, and began a retreat towards the door. "But I will not--I cannot--give you up. I will see you again."

"No, sir. You shall not see me again. I will not submit to it. I will not be persecuted." She was trembling, and she knew that he saw her tremor.

"Well," he said, with a smile that recognized her trepidation, "I will not persecute you. I'll renounce these pretensions. But I'll ask you to see me once more, as a friend,--an acquaintance."

"I will not see you again."

同类推荐
  • 昭觉竹峰续禅师语录

    昭觉竹峰续禅师语录

    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。
  • 紫柏尊者别集

    紫柏尊者别集

    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。
  • 中山传信录

    中山传信录

    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。
  • 风俗通义校注

    风俗通义校注

    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。
  • 焦氏喉科枕秘

    焦氏喉科枕秘

    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
  • 各归其途

    各归其途

    林院长发现罪行暴露,准备杀死自己的妻子曾梦灵,用于嫁祸和掩盖事实,正好被刘福满碰到,刘福满拼死相救,结果被打昏,和曾医生一起,被林院长带走准备谋害。这些事情,被追踪到这里的涛哥和小超看到,两人随后也跟了去,于是两帮人为了抢钱,发生械斗,
  • 非礼皇上

    非礼皇上

    她脚踩黑白两道,执掌庞大势力!一朝穿越,却被处处欺压?且看她咸鱼翻身,一鸣惊人!“皇后胆敢非礼朕,其罪当诛、当即赐死!”某男为铲除眼中钉,可谓费尽心思,她妖娆一笑,迅即掷出锋利小飞刀,“咻咻”几下将男人身上衣衫割成碎片,还不忘上下其手将他狼吻一番:“看清楚,这才叫非礼?”他终于明白:他能抵挡她惊世的美貌,却难挡她浑身的胆识和超人的谋略。他的心,已被俘虏。“欣儿,欢迎继续非礼我。”他洗得香香,摆好姿势,大抛媚眼儿。她厉眸淡扫,飞腿而去!
  • 我是逆天九尾狐

    我是逆天九尾狐

    我是天师我怕谁,邪魔遇我成棒槌,吸血妖尊毒舌鬼,拈花一笑促姻缘。
  • 宫辰香

    宫辰香

    无奈,是生错了性别,可未曾后悔过,遇上你是我这辈子的命,老天爷注定的。我一介凡人之时无力改变,至我成仙,我也未曾想过与你断了这份牵挂。伤我的是你,背叛我的是你,为我而死的也是你,爱我的是你,疼我的依旧是你,保护我的还是你。错综复杂。开心的,甜蜜的,放不下的,放心吧,我会在十八年后等你,到那时你不认识我,而我却识得你,一切从头开始可好么莲?
  • 同桌高乐高(同桌好好玩)

    同桌高乐高(同桌好好玩)

    《同桌好好玩》从同桌到邻桌,从校园到家庭和社会,形成环环相扣的教育链条。主要人物有“福尔摩斯”巴奇,调皮鬼周大齐,爽歪歪李晓果,见义勇为的侯洋,学习好的小美女纪阳,等等。别小瞧这些爱玩的孩子,他们的本事可不小,他们在玩侦探中竟能让一个快破裂的家庭获得重生,他们通过卖花给贫困的小伙伴温暖;他们在集体的力量中让顽劣的小混混尝尝拳头,也让他们自己从恶作剧中醒悟。
  • 悠香古韵:茶典故

    悠香古韵:茶典故

    本书将中国茶文化分为茶史、饮茶习俗、茶典故、品茶赏艺四部分,介绍了茶事在我国各个朝代中所起的作用和影响、我国茶叶品目的分类以及各种名茶的概况、饮茶方面的各种讲究和规习等。
  • 极修武致

    极修武致

    这个世界谁比谁更加平凡,总有一些自大狂妄之人到处嚣张,而等他们踢到铁板的那一刻后悔确已经来不及了。杨勇一个平凡的学生但身上却有一些常人不知的秘密。“嚣张是你的事,但在我面前嚣张那对不起。”杨勇这样说。
  • 神奇红包群

    神奇红包群

    太上老君发红包了!恭喜你,抢到仙丹一瓶!紫霞仙子发红包了!恭喜你,抢到月光宝盒一个!齐天大圣孙悟空也发红包啦!我去,猴哥你怎么把如意金箍棒都给发了?这样真的好吗?王大波得意的拿着手机,脸上已经乐开了花。自从有了这个神奇的红包群,哥想低调都不行啊!
  • 神隐王朝

    神隐王朝

    龙盘:“不管有没有祭司,这秘境的力量,我都不会拱手想让。想让我成为寻找祭司的棋子,真是笑话!那就让那所谓的祭司,成为我的敲门砖好了。”齐毅:“死了个龙盘,又来一个陌魂,老天一定要跟我作对,那我就把这天给翻过来!祭司也好,神力也好,那只能是我的,只有我才是秘境之主!”司马蝶:“我将来要嫁人的话,一定要嫁一个一等一的大英雄。”凉月侑:“你自己死了,却害得我们求死不能,不人不鬼的活在这世上,你休想自己一个安安稳稳的去死,即使你去到地狱,我也要再把你揪出来!”凉月清河:“既然人生如一梦,你就叫我幻梦好了。”……这是一个因爱成恨,以秘境、神力为饵,引得人间纷争不断,天下混战不休的故事。
  • 女配修仙:红衣逆袭

    女配修仙:红衣逆袭

    苦逼的由因被雷劈死后,发现自己穿越了!乖乖,现在穿越可吃香啊,肯定被大把男神追,从此走上人生巅峰。不过显然她想多了,自己穿的不是女主而是女配!好吧,由因认命。碰到不苏不白冷静隐忍的女主大大,由因选择了躲。可是谁能告诉她,为嘛女主大大一见到她就一脸愤怒,自己貌似也没有惹她吧?哼!既然你不给我好脸色,我也不会对你有笑脸,别栽在我由因手里,小心有你的好果子吃!还有那谁,别拽人家衣服了!不要以为你卖萌打滚就可以让我买糖给你吃,前辈你要注意你邪魅的形象!别打扰人家一身红衣惊艳天下的计划!